Russia has issued an official statement on the New York Times report that cited U.S. officials' transactions with Russian senior intelligence officials prior to the presidential election.
A Spanish court has issued arrest warrant against 12 Russian senior officials for their alleged links with Petrov’s mafia gang. The arrest warrants are certain outcome of multi-stage investigation enduring a decade by Spanish prosecutors and intelligence services into Russian Mafia activity.
As the U.S. seemingly cleans its slate of any more troublesome involvements, Putin may have plans that will cause heavier damage than what is intended for. The problem stays, however, that the plan or intention is still unknown.
The government of Venezuela has set up an investigation on the people mentioned in the Panama Papers as having hidden money in offshore bank accounts and companies.
Argentine President Mauricio Macri, who was named in the controversial Panama Papers, promised to declare all documents pertaining to his alleged involved in offshore holdings to prove his innocence.
Russia has filed a lawsuit against Ukraine for its upaid debt amounting to $3 billion. The lawsuit was filed after Ukraine failed to meet for debt restructuring.
Russian anti-corruption leader Alexei Navalny has filed a lawsuit against Russian president Vladimir Putin. He is suing the president over the $1.75 billion transfer that he's alleging a conflict of interest.
Russian opposition leader, Alexei Navalny, filed a lawsuit against President Putin accusing him of violating corruption laws. But a Moscow court rejected the lawsuit.
The US State Department has added five more Russians to the Magnitsky list which prohibits them from the entering the US as punishment for human rights violations in Russia.
Russian magazine New Times is faced with a state fine and string of cyber-attacks after it released an article on the whereabouts and activities of older Putin daughter Maria.
The British government could be sued for its comments about the inquiry into the murder of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. Russia's foreign minister says the inquiry makes serious allegations but with no evidence to back it up.
British ministers want transparency on list of foreigners banned from the UK after the Litvinenko murder inquiry. The murdered spy’s brother claims that the UK government was behind the assassination.
British courts could hold Russian president Vladimir Putin responsible for the murder of a former Russian spy. The case’s verdict might jeopardize Britain’s diplomatic ties with Russia.
New law restricting foreign ownership on media outlets to only 20% has taken effect on the beginning of this year. The 20-percent-share rule compelled companies to sell their assets and leave the country.
President Vladimir Putin has signed a law allowing Russia's Constitutional Court to decide whether or not to implement rulings of international human rights courts.
It was an agreement born from a fear of failure, delivered by the smoothness of French diplomacy. Six years earlier, countries had bitterly walked away from global climate talks in Copenhagen without a deal.