Euractiv.com with Reuters Est. 2min 28-03-2024 (updated: 30-05-2024 ) Content-Type: News Service News Service Produced externally by an organization we trust to adhere to journalistic standards. File photo. Viktor Medvedchuk, the Ukrainian politician and a leader of the Opposition Platform-For Life party, answers questions of journalists after his visit to the Prosecutor General office in Kiev, Ukraine, 12 May 2021. [EPA-EFE/SERGEY DOLZHENKO] Euractiv is part of the Trust Project >>> Languages: DeutschPrint Email Facebook X LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram The Czech government on Wednesday (27 March) sanctioned two people including pro-Russian Ukrainian politician Viktor Medvedchuk and the news website voiceofeurope.com for leading a pro-Russian influence operation in Europe, the Czech Foreign Ministry said. Medvedchuk, who was transferred to Russia in 2022, had been covertly financing the Czech-registered Voice of Europe’s influence operations ahead of this year’s European Parliamentary election, including financial support for European politicians, the ministry said. The pro-Russian influence campaign was aimed against Ukraine’s “territorial integrity, sovereignty and liberty,” the ministry said. The sanctions would help Czechia’s security and “protect democratic conduct” during the impending European Parliament elections, it said. Medvedchuk is a business magnate and former parliamentarian who was sent to exile in Russia in 2022 in exchange for Ukrainian prisoners of war. He was stripped of Ukrainian citizenship. Also sanctioned over the same activity was Ukrainian and Israeli citizen Artem Marchevskyi, who led Voice of Europe under Medvedchuk’s instructions, the ministry said, using the website to spread anti-Ukrainian propaganda and disinformation. The government’s sanctions list said Medvedchuk used the firm and Marchevskyi “in multiple EU member states for financing cooperation with journalists and for covert financial support for selected individual candidates in the European Parliament election, with the aim of supporting the foreign policy interests of the Russian Federation.” Reuters was not able to reach Medvedchuk or Marchevskyi for comment on the sanctions. Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala told a news conference the sanctioned persons’ activities were aimed outside the Czech Republic, to help Russia gain influence in EU countries and eventually in the European Parliament. He said the decision to impose the sanctions was based on information from Czech secret service agency BIS. BIS said on social network X that it had uncovered the activities of a Russian-financed influence network in the Czech Republic. “The BIS action discovered how Russia uses influence on European Union member states’ territory and how it tries to influence political processes in our countries,” it said. Being sanctioned entails the freezing of the financial accounts of the subjects involved. Voice of Europe did not immediately respond to Reuters’ questions. Read more with Euractiv Russia says it is hard to believe Islamic State could have launched Moscow attackRussian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday (27 March) that it was "extremely hard to believe" that Islamic State would have had the capacity to launch an attack on a Moscow concert hall last Friday that killed at least 143 people.