Archive May 30, 2025

Serbia probes arms to Ukraine after Russia alleges ‘stab in the back’

Serbia and Russia have come to an agreement to jointly investigate allegations that Serbian-made weapons were given to Ukraine after Belgrade was accused of lying about reports that Serbian-made ammunition had reached Kyiv.

Serbia’s defense sector is accused of passing weapons to Ukraine through NATO-linked nations like the Czech Republic, Poland, and Bulgaria, as well as unnamed African states, according to Russian foreign intelligence agency SVR, which described the alleged transfers as “stab in the back.”

In a statement released on Thursday, SVR stated that “they have one clear goal: to kill and maim Russian military personnel and the civilian population.”

According to the Russian statement, “It seems that the employees of the Serbian defense industry and their patrons have completely forgotten who their real friends are and who their enemies are because of the desire of fraternal Slavic peoples,” the statement said.

Joint investigation

Aleksandar Vucic, the president of Serbia, confirmed that a working group with Russian officials had been established to verify the allegations, but he refuted some of them.

Vucic told the state broadcaster RTS that “some of the things that have been said are untrue,” adding that he had spoken with Vladimir Putin about the situation during a trip to Moscow earlier this month.

Belgrade’s tradition of cooperating with Russia and its desire to acclimate to the European Union continues to be a tiger’s foot. Serbia has resisted joining Western sanctions despite condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine at the UN.

Serbia agreed to provide arms to Ukraine, despite the country’s official declaration of military neutrality, according to a Pentagon document that was leaked in 2023.

Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, Serbia has exported at least $908 million worth of ammunition to Ukraine, according to The Financial Times in 2024.

Serbia’s weapons sector produces weapons that are both compatible with those used by Ukrainian and Russian forces and is heavily influenced by Soviet designs.

Slovakia’s PM slams judge over conviction of central bank boss

Robert Fico, the prime minister of Slovakia, has criticised the judge who found the governor of the country’s central bank guilty of corruption.

The combative premier reacted on Friday to Petr Kazimir’s conviction as his former finance minister, suggesting that the verdict was motivated by politics and that Specialised Criminal Court judge Milan Cisarik should face criminal charges.

Since regaining control in 2023, Fico has dissolved the police and prosecutor branches that were established to investigate corruption between 2012 and 2020.

Kazimir was found guilty and fined $200, 000 ($226,500) on Thursday for bribing a tax official while Fico’s previous government was in power. He denied any wrongdoing and said he plans to file an appeal, claiming that the long-standing allegations were made up.

Peter Kazimir was a member of Fico’s previous government when he was accused of bribery.

Even a law school student must see fatal nonsense in the verdict, the Slovak leader said on Thursday, “sooner question whether the judge’s decision should have served the opposition’s political objectives to harm the ruling parties.”

“I can’t help but feel that the judge’s inquiry into the possibility of a number of criminal acts and the intended purpose of the ruling is justified.”

Fico’s remarks were not addressed by the court. The For Open Justice (ZOJ) NGO warned that “direct political pressure on the judiciary can also be felt when members of the government make public statements.”

Revenge

In the wake of the controversies surrounding Jan Kuciak’s assassination in 2018, Fico resigned from power. The former prime minister and his inner circle are suspected of having a network of corruption, according to the new government’s investigation.

Fico frequently argued that the measures were motivated by politics. He immediately began tearing up the units and changing the criminal code to lower corruption penalties when he came back to power in late 2023.

He has been accused of committing retaliation against those who are being investigated by his circle by critics.

Kazimir was the first former Fico minister to face legal action when he was first accused of paying the country’s tax office’s chief a bribe of 48, 000 euros ($54, 360) in 2017-18 in connection with an audit of a number of private companies in April of that year.

Premiership finale – five teams in play-off hunt

Getty Images

Five teams go into the Premiership’s dramatic final day with a chance of joining table-toppers Bath in this season’s play-offs – and of winning the title at Twickenham in two weeks’ time.

Leicester, Sale, Bristol, Gloucester and Saracens could remarkably all still finish anywhere from second to sixth as they go into the weekend separated by just five points after 17 matches.

Johann van Graan’s Bath side have come back from last season’s final defeat against Northampton with a vengeance, winning 14 games this term and leading the table by 15 points.

Such is Bath’s dominance they secured first place and a home semi-final at the Recreation Ground with three rounds of games to go, and will play whoever finishes fourth on Friday, 6 June, while second will host third on Saturday, 7 June.

Second: Leicester – 56 points, 10 wins

Leicester's Ollie Chessum is tackled by Bath's Finn Russell Getty Images

For the Tigers, the task is simple – beat Newcastle at home and second place in the table, along with a home semi-final, is theirs. One point is enough to secure the top four.

The league’s most successful side are on the prowl for their record-extending 12th title and have a two-point cushion over third-placed Sale.

Leicester have the most amount of wiggle room if they do lose and drop points, as at least three results would need to go against them for them to drop out of the top four.

Third: Sale – 54 points, 11 wins

George FordGetty Images

If the Tigers do slip up, the Sharks will be circling.

Sale visit Exeter, with the Chiefs already assured of a ninth-placed finish and therefore have nothing to play for.

A repeat of December’s win over the Chiefs and Alex Sanderson’s team will cement third place regardless of other results. A loss with two bonus points would still be enough for the top four.

It’s been 19 years since the club’s sole Premiership title.

But the Manchester side have a trick up their sleeve in that they have the most league wins of any club aside from Bath, meaning if they end the season on the same number of points as any of their competitors, they would finish above them.

The Sharks also have England fly-half George Ford arriving at the end of the season in stunning form as they have won three of their past four Premiership games.

Fourth: Bristol – 53 points, nine wins

Gabriel Ibitoye running with the ball Getty Images

Currently occupying the final play-off spot are Pat Lam’s Bristol Bears and they face a highly unpredictable Harlequins side.

Victory would guarantee a top-four finish but anything less than that and the Bears will be looking over their shoulders, with Gloucester and Saracens ready to strike.

Ashton Gate holds a special place in the hearts of Quins fans, as the scene of their epic semi-final fightback victory at ‘Bristanbul’ in 2021 en route to claiming their second Premiership title.

Fifth: Gloucester – 51 points, nine wins

Seb Atkinson scores for Gloucester against NewcastleGetty Images

Gloucester go into the game knowing nothing less than victory over reigning champions Northampton will do.

Do that and they need Sale to lose without any bonus points or Bristol just to lose and they could sneak into the top four at the finish line.

In what would be an astonishing story, the Cherry and Whites could mathematically still secure a home semi-final at Kingsholm if they all suffer defeat and pick up no bonus points.

If they were to secure a bonus-point victory over Saints they would jump up to 56 points, level with Leicester.

Given both teams would have 10 wins, Gloucester would finish above the Tigers due to their superior points difference (currently Gloucester +74, Leicester +72).

Sixth: Saracens – 51 points, nine wins

Hugh Tizard [left] and Maro Itoje [right] looking dejected after Saracens' defeat at Northampton SaintsGetty Images

Saracens host Bath at StoneX Stadium with their destiny out of their hands as they bid to avoid missing out on the top four for only the third time since 2009.

Those two occasions were 2020, when they were relegated in the wake of the salary cap scandal, and the following season when they played in the second tier.

It has been a season of rebuilding for Mark McCall and his coaching staff after the departures of legendary players including Owen Farrell and Billy and Mako Vunipola last summer, while full-back Alex Goode has announced he would retire at the end of the season after making a Sarries record 400th appearance earlier this month.

Their play-off hopes were struck a huge blow at Northampton a fortnight ago with Tarek Haffar’s last-second try stealing a 28-24 victory for the Saints that left the Men in Black’s hopes dangling.

Their task is similar to that of Gloucester, as they go into the game with the same number of points and wins as the Cherry and Whites, but they have a substantially lower points difference of +30.

Premiership round 18 – full fixture list

All matches kick-off Saturday, 31 May, 15:05 BST

Related topics

  • Exeter Chiefs
  • Newcastle Falcons
  • Sale
  • Northampton Saints
  • Gloucester
  • Saracens
  • Rugby Union
  • Bath
  • Bristol
  • Leicester Tigers
  • Harlequins

Premiership finale – five teams in play-off hunt

Getty Images

Five teams go into the Premiership’s dramatic final day with a chance of joining table-toppers Bath in this season’s play-offs – and of winning the title at Twickenham in two weeks’ time.

Leicester, Sale, Bristol, Gloucester and Saracens could remarkably all still finish anywhere from second to sixth as they go into the weekend separated by just five points after 17 matches.

Johann van Graan’s Bath side have come back from last season’s final defeat against Northampton with a vengeance, winning 14 games this term and leading the table by 15 points.

Such is Bath’s dominance they secured first place and a home semi-final at the Recreation Ground with three rounds of games to go, and will play whoever finishes fourth on Friday, 6 June, while second will host third on Saturday, 7 June.

Second: Leicester – 56 points, 10 wins

Leicester's Ollie Chessum is tackled by Bath's Finn Russell Getty Images

For the Tigers, the task is simple – beat Newcastle at home and second place in the table, along with a home semi-final, is theirs. One point is enough to secure the top four.

The league’s most successful side are on the prowl for their record-extending 12th title and have a two-point cushion over third-placed Sale.

Leicester have the most amount of wiggle room if they do lose and drop points, as at least three results would need to go against them for them to drop out of the top four.

Third: Sale – 54 points, 11 wins

George FordGetty Images

If the Tigers do slip up, the Sharks will be circling.

Sale visit Exeter, with the Chiefs already assured of a ninth-placed finish and therefore have nothing to play for.

A repeat of December’s win over the Chiefs and Alex Sanderson’s team will cement third place regardless of other results. A loss with two bonus points would still be enough for the top four.

It’s been 19 years since the club’s sole Premiership title.

But the Manchester side have a trick up their sleeve in that they have the most league wins of any club aside from Bath, meaning if they end the season on the same number of points as any of their competitors, they would finish above them.

The Sharks also have England fly-half George Ford arriving at the end of the season in stunning form as they have won three of their past four Premiership games.

Fourth: Bristol – 53 points, nine wins

Gabriel Ibitoye running with the ball Getty Images

Currently occupying the final play-off spot are Pat Lam’s Bristol Bears and they face a highly unpredictable Harlequins side.

Victory would guarantee a top-four finish but anything less than that and the Bears will be looking over their shoulders, with Gloucester and Saracens ready to strike.

Ashton Gate holds a special place in the hearts of Quins fans, as the scene of their epic semi-final fightback victory at ‘Bristanbul’ in 2021 en route to claiming their second Premiership title.

Fifth: Gloucester – 51 points, nine wins

Seb Atkinson scores for Gloucester against NewcastleGetty Images

Gloucester go into the game knowing nothing less than victory over reigning champions Northampton will do.

Do that and they need Sale to lose without any bonus points or Bristol just to lose and they could sneak into the top four at the finish line.

In what would be an astonishing story, the Cherry and Whites could mathematically still secure a home semi-final at Kingsholm if they all suffer defeat and pick up no bonus points.

If they were to secure a bonus-point victory over Saints they would jump up to 56 points, level with Leicester.

Given both teams would have 10 wins, Gloucester would finish above the Tigers due to their superior points difference (currently Gloucester +74, Leicester +72).

Sixth: Saracens – 51 points, nine wins

Hugh Tizard [left] and Maro Itoje [right] looking dejected after Saracens' defeat at Northampton SaintsGetty Images

Saracens host Bath at StoneX Stadium with their destiny out of their hands as they bid to avoid missing out on the top four for only the third time since 2009.

Those two occasions were 2020, when they were relegated in the wake of the salary cap scandal, and the following season when they played in the second tier.

It has been a season of rebuilding for Mark McCall and his coaching staff after the departures of legendary players including Owen Farrell and Billy and Mako Vunipola last summer, while full-back Alex Goode has announced he would retire at the end of the season after making a Sarries record 400th appearance earlier this month.

Their play-off hopes were struck a huge blow at Northampton a fortnight ago with Tarek Haffar’s last-second try stealing a 28-24 victory for the Saints that left the Men in Black’s hopes dangling.

Their task is similar to that of Gloucester, as they go into the game with the same number of points and wins as the Cherry and Whites, but they have a substantially lower points difference of +30.

Premiership round 18 – full fixture list

All matches kick-off Saturday, 31 May, 15:05 BST

Related topics

  • Exeter Chiefs
  • Newcastle Falcons
  • Sale
  • Northampton Saints
  • Gloucester
  • Saracens
  • Rugby Union
  • Bath
  • Bristol
  • Leicester Tigers
  • Harlequins

Scarlets to embrace ‘greatest challenge’ in Dublin

Huw Evans Agency
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United Rugby Championship quarter-final: Leinster v Scarlets

Venue: Aviva Stadium, Dublin Date: Saturday, 31 May Kick-off: 15:00 BST

Scarlets head coach Dwayne Peel says there is no greater task than facing Leinster in Dublin, but has urged his side to embrace the challenge.

Peel’s side are underdogs against the Irish team for the United Rugby Championship (URC) play-off quarter-final at the Aviva Stadium.

Leinster topped the league after the regular season, although one of only two defeats for Leo Cullen’s men came against Scarlets in Llanelli in April.

With former Wales scrum-half Gareth Davies injured, Scarlets have named an unchanged 23 from the final-day league defeat against Sharks in Durban.

Leinster are missing Ireland centres Robbie Henshaw and Garry Ringrose, and British and Irish Lions prop Tadhg Furlong.

‘No shying away’

Scarlets scrum-half Archie Hughes in actionHuw Evans Agency

Scarlets qualified for the play-offs for the first time in seven years after finishing eighth in the URC, with the prize tackling top seeds Leinster on their home turf.

“It’s going to be a great occasion and a case of embracing it,” said Peel.

“It’s not about chasing five points, it’s knockout rugby and it’s all on the day.

“We want to go further, we want to push a great team in Leinster as far as we can.”

This is Scarlets’ first appearance in the league play-offs since they were finalists in 2018.

After a 35-22 victory against a second-string Leinster last month, Scarlets have not won successive matches against the Irish side since 2015, but know they will be facing a different proposition this weekend.

“There’s no greater task than going to Dublin and we’re looking forward to that challenge,” said Peel.

“We won’t shy away from it, you’ve got to have confidence in your own group when you go there.

‘Welsh rugby looking for shining light’

Robin McBryde is a former Wales and Scarlets hookerHuw Evans Agency

Peel faced more questions this week on the off-the-field uncertainty surrounding Welsh rugby with Scarlets and Ospreys in dispute with the Welsh Rugby Union.

There are suggestions the WRU is contemplating cutting a professional team with the two west Wales regions in a more precarious position that Cardiff and Dragons having not signed the new Professional Rugby Agreement (PRA).

Scarlets are the only Welsh side to have reached the play-offs during a season in which the Wales men’s national side extended their losing international streak to a record 17 matches.

Leinster have former Scarlets and Wales forwards coach Robin McBryde in their backroom staff.

McBryde stated in February he feared rugby has lost its soul in Wales and called the situation “very sad” after Warren Gatland had left his role as head coach.

“It has been a difficult year for Welsh rugby so everybody is looking for some sort of shining light,” said McBryde.

“Hopefully it [Welsh rugby] will get back to where it was before.

“I am not sure if Scarlets feel they have nothing to lose and can throw the kitchen sink at it against us.

“If so that could make them an even more dangerous team.

Leinster looking to recover from Northampton hangover

Leinster players dejected after Challenge Cup semi-final defeat by NorthamptonGetty Images

Leinster are reeling from their Challenge Cup semi-final defeat by Northampton at the Aviva Stadium earlier this month.

“Everybody has looked at themselves across the board since the Northampton defeat,” said McBryde.

“We have had a couple of good sessions where we have had some honest feedback of where we can improve.

“We have spoken about it as players and coaches. Was our mindset in the right frame of mind going into that game? Did we think we had a right to be in the final? I don’t know.

“We have fallen short again in the Champions Cup so hopefully we can go a step further in the URC this season.”

“The URC quarter-finals gives us another opportunity to show we can do that in a knockout phase of a competition because in the last three seasons up to this point of the year we have been pretty good.

This is Leinster’s 10th successive appearance in the play-offs, but they have not won the league title since 2021, which was the last of four straight successes.

“It’s one game at a time,” said McBryde.

“If we can be good enough on the weekend and beat what is a very cohesive Scarlets team then we will end up reaching the same stage as the last three seasons.

“It will be give us an opportunity to go a step further, but that’s about it. You can’t take anything for granted and it’s all on the day.

“We have seen in the past teams come to play against Leinster in the Aviva and raise their game.

How they line up

Leinster: Hugo Keenan; Jimmy O’Brien, Jamie Osborne, Jordie Barrett, James Lowe; Sam Prendergast, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Ronan Kelleher, Thomas Clarkson, Joe McCarthy, James Ryan, Ryan Baird, Josh van der Flier, Jack Conan (capt).

Replacements: Dan Sheehan, Jack Boyle, Rabah Slimani, RG Snyman, Max Deegan, Scott Penny, Luke McGrath, Ciaran Frawley.

Scarlets: Blair Murray; Tom Rogers, Joe Roberts, Johnny Williams, Ellis Mee; Sam Costelow, Archie Hughes; Alec Hepburn, Ryan Elias, Henry Thomas, Alex Craig, Sam Lousi, Vaea Fifita, Josh Macleod (capt), Taine Plumtree.

Replacements: Marnus van der Merwe, Kemsley Mathias, Sam Wainwright, Dan Davis, Jarrod Taylor, Efan Jones, Ioan Lloyd, Macs Page.

Referee: Hollie Davidson (SRU)

Assistant referees: Gianluca Gnecchi (FIR), Federico Vedovelli (FIR)

Related topics

  • Welsh Rugby
  • Leinster
  • Scarlets
  • Rugby Union

Tinubu’s Govt ‘Must’ Be Allowed To Continue For Another Six Years — NBTE Boss

Idris Bugaje, the executive secretary of the National Board for Technical Education, called on Friday to keep in place President Bola Tinubu’s administration after the 2027 general elections.

At the TETFUND Auditorium, where the Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa, was present, he made this call in Abuja during the launch of the Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Initiative.

Nigerians should give Tinubu’s administration another six years to continue making progress in the education sector, Bugaje specifically told the audience.

He stated, “These are important sectors to which the government is committed, and that is why I believe we must allow this government to continue for another six years.”

APC Declares Tinubu to Be the Only Candidate for the 2027 Presidential Elections.

The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) endorsed Tinubu as the party’s sole candidate for the 2027 presidential election, according to Bugaje’s remarks.

Abdullahi Ganduje, the party’s national leader, made the announcement at the party’s national summit in Abuja.

At the gathering attended by APC governors, ministers, and other political heavyweights of the ruling party, Ganduje said, “As the chairman of the party and on behalf of the National Working Committee, the only recognized platform, I believe, legally, to field a candidate for president in any election,” Ganduje said.

Members of the cabinet were able to present their accomplishments at the celebration of President Tinubu’s second anniversary in office.

The APC stalwarts at the event claimed the president has done well and deserves a second and final term in office despite criticism for his policies, including the elimination of the fuel subsidy and the floating of the naira, the nation’s currency.

Isn’t it the National Assembly, if this president did well, that we (the Assembly) will say that? Isn’t it us who will impeach him if he hasn’t done well?