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Monday, May 11, 2026

Corruption is Everywhere > The Orban era is over in Hungary; Shinawatra out of prison in Thailand; Billions slip-sliding from Austria to Ukraine; Zelenski's former Chief of Staff investigated again

 

As Hungary’s new PM, Magyar’s hunt for Orban’s protégés has already begun


EUROPE

Peter Magyar had only been Hungary’s prime minister for a few minutes on Saturday before he turned to the country’s president, renewing calls for him to resign. The move is the clearest sign yet that the new leader intends to make good on his promise to rid the country of Viktor Orban’s vast network of loyalists. Analysts say those who benefited from the former system should be “very afraid”.  

Peter Magyar delivers his first speech after having been sworn in as Hungary's prime minister in the parliament in Budapest, on May 9, 2026.
Peter Magyar delivers his first speech after having been sworn in as Hungary's prime minister in the parliament in Budapest, on May 9, 2026. © ©Bernadett Szabo, Reuters

When 45-year-old Peter Magyar took to the podium in parliament on Saturday to deliver his first speech as Hungary’s new prime minister, he had one message: the Viktor Orban era – and the network of loyalists who helped sustain it – was over.

He then renewed his calls for President Tamas Salyok to resign, alongside a string of other Orban-appointed figures occupying key judicial and oversight bodies. “It’s time to leave with some dignity, while it’s possible,” Magyar said, handing them a May 31 deadline to do so.

Magyar, whose centre-right Tisza party last month swept Fidesz from power in a landslide election victory, has made no secret of the fact that he intends to tear down the “opposition-proof” state his predecessor had spent more than 15 years building.

Zsolt Kerner, a Budapest-based journalist for the Hungarian online news outlet 24.hu, said Magyar had gone to the polls vowing justice, and that he was now dead-set on delivering it.

“He seems like a very hard-headed guy,” he said. “The first, second and third tier [of Orban’s network] should be very afraid,” he said.

READ MOREDismantling Orban’s legacy: the reforms that lie ahead for Hungary

From wanted politicians to billionaires

Magyar has also made it clear that under his rule, Hungary will no longer serve as a safe haven for corrupt officials or political allies fleeing prosecution.

Poland’s former justice minister Zbigniew Ziobro was one of the first who appeared to take the threats seriously. On Sunday, barely 36 hours after Magyar had taken office, Ziobro confirmed he had fled Hungary.

“I’m in the United States,” he told right-wing Polish broadcaster Republika. “I arrived yesterday, and this is my third time travelling around the country.”

Ziobro was granted asylum in Hungary last year after facing a string of charges in Poland, including abuse of power, leading an organised criminal group and allegedly diverting public funds to purchase spyware to monitor political opponents. If he is convicted, he could face up to 25 years in prison.

According to media reports, US President Donald Trump himself granted Ziobro the American visa.

Kerner said that Ziobro likely would have been among Magyar’s first targets – not least because he is keen to repair ties with both Poland’s EU-friendly Prime Minister Donald Tusk and the Visegrad group. Relations within the key eastern alliance – which also comprises Czech Republic and Slovakia – deteriorated sharply under Orban’s rule due to his pro-Russia stance.

“If Poland requested it, Magyar has already said he would hand them over,” he said, referring to both Ziobro and his former deputy, Marcin Romanowski, who was also granted asylum under Orban’s government.

Kerner said figures who amassed vast fortunes under the former government — including businessmen widely viewed as proxies for the old regime — could also soon come under pressure.

In the weeks running up to Magyar’s installation, The Guardian reported that several former Orban associates had allegedly begun transferring their riches out of the country for fear of the incoming leader’s vow to crack down on corruption.

Some were also looking into US visa options, “hoping to find work at Maga-linked institutions”, the paper wrote.

Changing the constitution?

But Magyar’s bigger challenge, said Zsuzsanna Vegh, a political analyst at the German Marshall Fund, will be to dismantle the vast network of allies that Orban placed – and still has – in state institutions, like the president, the heads of the public prosecution office and the state audit office.

“Just because Magyar calls on these people to resign, it doesn’t mean they have to,” she said.

“If they do not, then I think we can expect that there is going to be a legal battle. Constitutional changes will need to be made to be able to remove these people from office.”

One thing, however, that Magyar has demonstrated – even before he officially became prime minister on Saturday – is that he likes to move fast. That in itself could be a gamechanger, Vegh said.

“Given that the deadline that Magyar gave for these people to resign is [already] at the end of May, I expect that Tisza has a very clear roadmap for how to move ahead should they decide to remain in office beyond this deadline.”

Vegh said that the system Orban once built to secure his rule has already started to crumble.

“The election in April showed that Orban’s strategy no longer works,” she said. “His system was to a large degree built on loyalty and corruption and patronage, but also on the belief that he is not defeatable. Then that belief was broken by the evidence that he is.”





Former Thai PM Thaksin Shinawatra released from prison on parole

Asia / Pacific

Former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra was released from prison on parole on Monday after serving eight months of a reduced sentence tied to corruption charges. His return to public life marks another chapter in a political saga that has dominated and deeply divided Thailand for nearly two decades.


Thailand’s former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, whose 21st-century political odyssey sharply divided Thai society for decades, was released from a Bangkok prison on Monday after serving eight months of a one-year sentence for a corruption-related charge.

A crowd of about 300 supporters and political allies gathered outside the Klong Prem Central Prison to greet the 76-year-old billionaire populist.

Thaksin was a telecommunications magnate who founded his own political party in 1998 and served as prime minister from 2001 until a military coup ousted him in 2006 while he was abroad. His ouster triggered nearly two decades of deep and sometimes violent political polarisation, while his political machine staged several comebacks even as Thaksin himself stayed in self-imposed exile to escape what he said was political persecution through the courts.

His three children, including former prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, and other family members also arrived early to welcome him.

Thaksin emerged from the prison gate in a white polo shirt and blue trousers and was embraced by his family. He smiled brightly as he walked around to greet his supporters who chanted “we love Thaksin”, and gave red roses to him. He then left without speaking to reporters.

Thaksin was the first elected prime minister in Thai history to serve a full four-year term. Policies like a national healthcare scheme and projects to build roads in less developed parts of the country drew devoted support from the poorer segments of society, particularly in the rural north and northeast, but his popularity and sometimes high-handed style created deep fractures between his base and the country’s urban elites, royalists, and military.

Read moreFamily matters: Thaksin's party down, maybe not out

He was charged with abuse of power over allegations including using his position to benefit his own business interests and illegally approving a state lottery project that caused losses to the government.

Thaksin was convicted in absentia, but returned to Thailand to be sentenced in 2023 as the Pheu Thai Party, his most recent political vehicle, formed a government. He was widely believed to have reached a secret accommodation with the traditional royalist establishment. He was originally sentenced to eight years in prison, but it was commuted to one year by King Maha Vajiralongkorn, which he was granted permission to serve from a suite in Bangkok’s Police Hospital on medical grounds.

After protests that he had received unwarranted special treatment, the Supreme Court in September 2025 ordered Thaksin to serve his sentence in prison.

A Justice Ministry panel agreed last month to grant him parole as part of a review of more than 900 eligible prisoners’ cases, citing his good behaviour in prison, his age and the low risk that he would repeat his offence.

After his release, Thaksin will be on probation for four months, during which he must reside at his declared home in Bangkok, wear an electronic monitoring bracelet, and report regularly to probation officials.

Thaksin’s daughter Paetongtarn Shinawatra became the country’s youngest prime minister in 2024 but was removed from office by the Constitutional Court in August 2025 after a recording was released of a compromising phone call with former Cambodian leader Hun Sen.

The Pheu Thai party managed only a third-place finish in this year’s general election.

(FRANCE 24 with AP)




Nearly $22 billion secretly shipped to Ukraine – Austrian politician

Euroskeptic FPO leader Christian Hafenecker has called on Vienna’s money laundering watchdog to investigate

Published 11 May, 2026 16:50 | Updated 11 May, 2026 17:55

Nearly $22 billion secretly shipped to Ukraine – Austrian politician










A right-wing Austrian politician has demanded that the country’s Finance Ministry explain how nearly $22 billion in cash and gold was shipped to Ukraine from Austria since 2022 without triggering concerns about money laundering or regulatory oversight.

In a statement published on Sunday, Austrian Freedom Party (FPO) Secretary General Christian Hafenecker called out what he described as Vienna’s “two-class justice system” for overlooking massive payments to Kiev, while keeping a tight hold on taxpayers’ purse strings.

“We’re not talking about play money here: 1,030 registered cash and gold shipments, around €12 billion ($14 billion) plus $7.75 billion, physically transported over 1,300 kilometers into the war zone,” Hafenecker said.

“And the responsible finance minister simply tells me… ‘We know nothing, we’re not investigating anything, we haven’t collected any information.’ That’s not an answer, that’s dereliction of duty,” he added.

By comparison, Austrian money laundering rules require a private citizen withdrawing as little as €12,000 from an inherited account to prove the origin of the funds, and any person crossing the EU’s external border with more than €10,000 in cash must declare it, Hafenecker said. “This is a two-class justice system in finance.”

The politician demanded full disclosure on all cash shipments from Austria to Ukraine since the escalation of the conflict, a full audit by the country’s Financial Market Supervisory Authority, and a report by the Austrian Money Laundering Reporting Office in parliament.

Earlier this year, the Euroskeptic FPO party demanded that Vienna cut all financial aid to Ukraine, denouncing the country as a corrupt “bottomless pit,” following a wave of high-level embezzlement scandals in Kiev.

Major probes by Ukraine’s Western-backed anti-graft agencies have implicated senior officials in Vladimir Zelensky’s government since last year. Two ministers and the Ukrainian leader’s chief of staff, Andrey Yermak, stepped down following the massive scandal.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has slammed the current leadership in Kiev, calling it a “criminal gang” sitting on golden potties,” and interested far more in personal enrichment than in the fate of ordinary Ukrainians.






Former Zelensky chief of staff faces new criminal case

Andrey Yermak is suspected of participating in a money laundering scheme worth $10 million, Ukrainian anti-corruption bodies have said
Published 11 May, 2026 19:34 | Updated 11 May, 2026 21:27
Vladimir Zelensky's then chief of staff, Andrey Yermak meets US Special Envoy Keith Kellog in Kiev, Ukraine, on February 19, 2025.











Andrey Yermak, a former influential chief of staff to Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky, has been named a suspect in a new criminal case, according to a statement posted on Telegram by the country’s Western-backed anti-corruption agencies.

The former official is accused of being part of a criminal group that laundered 460 million hryvnias ($10 million) through an elite residential construction project.

Often described as the grey cardinal behind Zelensky, Yermak was forced out in November 2025 after the anti-corruption agencies raided his properties as part of a high-profile corruption probe. The investigation was focused on a $100 million graft scheme linked to Zelensky’s inner circle and his former business partner and close associate, Timur Mindich.

Yermak himself denied ties to corruption at the time and claimed he stepped down to avoid “creating problems” for Zelensky.

The former chief of staff now stands accused of violating Article 209 of the Ukrainian Criminal Code, which covers “money laundering and legalization of ill-gotten gains.” Earlier on Monday, the Ukrainian media reported that Yermak was subjected to some “investigative procedures” by the Ukrainian National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO).

According to a video published by the anti-corruption agencies on YouTube, the criminal group might have also involved the former national unity minister, Aleksey Chernyshov, who headed the community and territorial development ministry at the time the group was active. Chernyshov’s wife was allegedly a co-owner of the construction company used in the scheme.

In December, the Ukrainian media reported that Yermak had retained influence following his resignation and was talking to Zelensky daily by phone and meeting him most evenings at his residence despite holding no formal government position.

The news comes amid another corruption scandal. Last month, Ukrainskaya Pravda released what it called leaked transcripts from surveillance recordings of Mindich and his business partners, as well as Ukrainian government officials. The files that have since become known as ‘Mindich tapes’ included a conversation Mindich had with a woman identified as Natalia, who reportedly oversaw a luxury construction project for him and Yermak. The leaks are yet to be officially verified.

In a brief statement to journalists on Monday evening, Yermak denied any involvement in the Dinastia (Dynasty) development project outside Kiev. He also denied being featured in conversations involving Mindich that were recorded by law enforcement.

Read RT's curated coverage of the ongoing investigations into allegations of corruption and graft by Zelensky's inner circle here.






Politics in Europe > 70 Labour MP demand Starmer step down; Change in Denmark means no change; Slovak PM asks a dumb question; US drops below Russia in democracy ratings by citizens

 

At least 70 Labour MPs demand Starmer resign – media

The UK Prime Minister has acknowledged catastrophic losses in last week’s local election, but vowed to stay in office

Published 11 May, 2026 21:01 | Updated 11 May, 2026 21:08

At least 70 Labour MPs demand Starmer resign – media











At least 70 Labour MPs are demanding that Prime Minister Keir Starmer resign, Sky News reported on Monday. This comes after the party came out as the biggest loser in last week’s local elections, relinquishing more than 1,300 council seats across the country.

In addition to dozens of lawmakers calling for Starmer to go, at least three junior members of his government have so far resigned from their positions, Sky News reported.

Under Labour rules, a formal leadership challenge would require backing by at least 81 party MPs, a fifth of the party’s total roster in the House of Commons. Former foreign secretary and Labour MP Catherine West announced that she’s gathering support to kickstart the process and elect a new leader by September.

“The results last Thursday show that the PM has failed to inspire hope,” she wrote on X. “What is best for the party and country now is for an orderly transition.”

In a speech earlier on Monday, Starmer admitted that there was “no sugarcoating” the scale of the defeat suffered by Labour but vowed to stay in office and claw back support. He promised to rebuild the UK’s relationship with the EU and to make Britain “fairer.”

Starmer has sunk in the approval polls since his party’s landslide victory in the 2024 general election. The decline followed deeply unpopular austerity measures, the resurfacing of the historical Pakistani rape gang scandal, and government response to the 2024 anti-immigration protests and riots – which sparked allegations of “two-tier” justice after hundreds of British citizens were arrested for social media posts.

The Labour government has also lost left-wing voters by designating the pro-Palestinian protest group ‘Palestine Action’ a terrorist organization.

Half of Britons want Starmer to step down, while only 29% want him to remain in office, according to a YouGov poll published on Monday that surveyed 4,904 UK adults.

Euroskeptic, anti-immigrant Reform UK has emerged as the biggest winner in the local elections, taking more than 1,200 local council seats across the country. 

“Betrayed voters have left Labour for good,” party leader Nigel Farage said on X on Monday.

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Denmark’s pro-Ukraine PM is on the way out – who will replace her?

A right-wing government won’t change the status quo in Copenhagen

Published 11 May, 2026 21:33

Troels Lund Poulsen(L), Mette Frederiksen (C), and Lars Lokke Rasmussen hold a press conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, March 2, 2026











Denmark’s government has collapsed after a record poor election showing for Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen. King Frederik X has now asked Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen to form a right-wing government, but little will change: every major Danish party is preparing for war with Russia.

In a statement on Friday night, Denmark’s monarch announced that he had tasked Poulsen with forming a government “that does not involve the participation” of Frederiksen’s center-left Social Democrats or Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen’s Moderates. The announcement came after Frederiksen tried and failed to build a government after winning a plurality – but not a majority – in general elections in March.

Frederiksen’s party won just under 22% of the vote in March, the worst result for the Social Democrats since 1903.

The election was dominated by two issues: the rising cost of living, and immigration. Poulsen’s center-right Venstre party, Frederiksen’s Social Democrats, and Rasmussen’s Moderates are all in favor of restricting inward migration, but the right-wing Danish People’s Party (DF - 9.1%) wants citizenships revoked, migrants deported, and “measures that will lead to Muslim net emigration from Denmark.”

The results of the Danish general election, March 24, 2026

Two issues that went undiscussed in the runup to the vote were Denmark’s support for Ukraine, and its historic rearmament program. Unlike in recent elections in Hungary and Bulgaria, where the frontrunners had dramatically different views on relations with Kiev and Moscow, blind support for Ukraine is apparently baked into the Danish system.

Denmark’s uniparty

During Denmark’s last general elections in 2022, Frederiksen focused her entire campaign around defense and security issues. On these, her views were indistinguishable from those of her rivals. Six months before the election, Denmark’s five main parties had signed a ‘National Compromise on Danish Security Policy’ in which they agreed to hike defense budgets, inject an additional 7 billion DKK ($1.1 billion) in emergency funding into the country’s armed forces, and end Russian energy imports.

Frederiksen went on to form a government with Venstre and the Moderates, both of which supported these policies. Together, the PM and her traditional rivals on the right have announced planned increases in military spending from 2.4% to 3.5% of GDP, purchased hundreds of new armored cars and dozens of fighter jets, given Ukrainian arms manufacturers grants to produce weapons components on Danish soil, and in an historic first, introduced compulsory military service for women.

Frederiksen and Poulsen both explicitly blamed Russia for a series of drone sightings at Danish airports and military sites in late 2025, despite months of investigation concluding that there was no credible evidence the drones ever existed. Frederiksen used the drone panic to push her rearmament program, telling the public in September that “there is primarily one country that poses a threat to Europe's security – and that is Russia… and that is why we are embarking on a historic buildup here in Denmark.”

Under Frederiksen, Denmark has given Ukraine just over €11 billion in bilateral military and economic aid. At 3.27% of its GDP, Denmark has proportionately handed Ukraine more money than any other Western country. After meeting Frederiksen in Cyprus in April, Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky “noted the cross-party consensus on supporting Ukraine” in Denmark, according to a Ukrainian government statement.

More of the same

A government led by Poulsen will in all likelihood deliver more of the same. Poulsen warned in 2024 that Russia could attack NATO territory “within a three- to five-year period.” To prepare for this eventuality – which Russia has outright dismissed as “ridiculous” and a ploy by European leaders to extract more tax money from their citizenry – Poulsen has called for Denmark to increase military spending yet again, to 4% of GDP. Such an increase would put the country’s per-capita defense expenditure higher than that of the US. 

Poulsen’s potential coalition partners include the Danish People’s Party, Liberal Alliance, and Conservatives. Of these, the Danish People’s Party is the only voice of moderation on Ukraine. Party leader Morten Messerschmidt has called for an end date to military aid to Kiev, has urged Ukraine to make territorial concessions for peace, and opposes its accession to NATO.

“Every time we spend a billion in Ukraine, that money goes from Denmark, from welfare, from whatever it is we want here,” he told Danish state broadcaster DR in 2024. Messerschmidt added that he intends to pressure whoever is in power in Copenhagen to “conduct a Ukraine policy that is based on the world of reality and not on a fantasy world.”

However, despite the party tripling its vote share to 9% in March, its leadership has told King Frederik that their only demand from Poulsen is that he enact policies that will reduce Denmark’s Muslim population.

Will Russia’s relations with Denmark change?

It is highly unlikely that the transfer of power from Frederiksen to Poulsen will alter Moscow’s sub-zero relations with Copenhagen. Denmark currently has no ambassador to Russia, and is considered an “unfriendly” nation by the Kremlin.

“If anyone wishes to talk, we will never refuse dialogue, even though we fully realize… that reaching an agreement with the current generation of European leaders will most likely be impossible,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told reporters in January. “They have entrenched themselves too deeply in a posture of hatred towards Russia.”





‘Are we idiots?’: Fico on EU pivot away from Russian fuel

Do you really want me to answer that?

The phaseout would deepen the bloc’s dependence on more expensive US gas, the Slovak prime minister has warned

Published 10 May, 2026 19:00 | Updated 10 May, 2026 20:05

‘Are we idiots?’: Fico on EU pivot away from Russian fuel (VIDEO)










The EU plan to phase out Russia as an energy supplier will end in the US reselling Russian oil and gas to Europe at far higher prices, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has warned.

Speaking in Bratislava on Sunday, Fico said Washington has “a huge interest in buying all transit infrastructures” across the European continent.

“So the Russians will supply the Americans with gas and oil at standard prices, and the Americans will sell it to us with an American high-margin surcharge. Are we such idiots already?” he said.

Already, “the share of Russian liquefied gas in Europe is increasing,” Fico added, pointing out the hypocrisy of Brussels singling out countries like Slovakia to pressure over Russian fuel supplies. “So we can’t, but France can buy liquefied gas from Russia.”

Contrary to the EU, Bratislava’s position is to “diversify the supply options for all fuels,” he said.

In February, the European Commission doubled down on long-standing plans to phase out Russian fossil fuel imports by 2027.

While the US-Israeli war on Iran and the subsequent fuel crisis have pushed Brussels to prepare for “the worst-case scenarios,” the EU will not abandon its pivot away from Russian liquefied natural gas, the bloc’s energy chief, Dan Jorgensen, told the Financial Times last month. Brussels will instead rely on more expensive supplies from the US and other partners, he said.

Just last week, Washington launched a multi-billion dollar push to invest in and build a major US pipeline project in Central and Eastern Europe, which still imports Russian gas via the TurkStream pipeline and its extension – Balkan Stream.

According to Moscow, such US projects, as well as sanctions against Russian oil companies, are part of a sweeping strategy to capture the energy market.

Washington is aiming to monopolize all international energy supply routes in an attempt to attain global economic dominance, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told TV BRICS earlier this year.




Global reputation of US sinks below Russia’s rating – survey

America’s reputation has been deteriorating for two years straight, according to a globalist pro-NATO nonprofit

Published 8 May, 2026 17:03

Global reputation of US sinks below Russia’s rating – survey











America’s reputation has been worsening under US President Donald Trump and the country now lags behind China and Russia, an annual study commissioned by the Alliance of Democracies Foundation indicates.

The Denmark-based nonprofit was founded by former NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen in 2017 in response to the purported retreat of Washington from the global stage amid Trump’s first tenure. Over the past six years, the foundation has released Democracy Perception Index reports, which assess “the state of democracy” in countries across the globe.

The return of Trump to office has seen the US plummet in the rating, which ranges between +100% and -100%, with the country currently dropping to -16% from +22% two years ago. The current indicator is less than China (+7%) and Russia (-11%), according to the survey.

The Nordic countries, Sweden, Norway, and the host nation of the non-profit, Denmark, were listed as the top three nations in the latest index. Ukraine was among the bottom five, taking 95th place in the rating and measuring -23%.

The survey was conducted by Nira Data polling company between March 19 and April 21, reaching more than 94,000 respondents across 98 nations. The study, however, does not provide much detail on what exact criteria were used to compile the index.

The poor performance of the US is “saddening but not shocking,” Rasmussen stated when the report was released. The ex-NATO chief squarely blamed Trump for the situation, citing the US administration’s actions, including repeated run-ins with Washington’s European allies over various issues ranging from aggressive trade policies to the openly proclaimed intent to seize Greenland from Denmark. 

“US foreign policy over the past 18 months has, among other things, called into question the transatlantic relationship, imposed widespread tariffs, and threatened to invade a NATO ally’s territory,” Rasmussen said.

The strained transatlantic ties have been further aggravated by the US-Israeli war against Iran, which has been unpopular among many European NATO allies. The conflict has led to global oil shortages, with Europe emerging as one of the worst-affected regions.

Not to mention America's hostile takeover ambitions for Canada, and it's assaults on the Canadian economy.

Canada generally finishes near the top tier but for issues like the lack of transparency in the government.

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