-
'Avatar: Fire and Ash' at number one in N.America for fifth straight week
-
Limited internet returns in Iran after protest blackout
-
Syria's leader agrees truce deal with Kurds after govt troops advance
-
Smith's penalty sees Quins eliminate La Rochelle, Bordeaux secure top seeding
-
Atletico edge Alaves to strengthen Liga top-four hold
-
Uganda president says opposition 'terrorists' in victory speech
-
New Zealand register first ODI series win in India despite Kohli ton
-
Elvira wins Dubai Invitational after Lowry's last hole meltdown
-
Jeong snatches Union late draw at Stuttgart in Bundesliga
-
Man Utd's Martinez hits back at Scholes after height jibes
-
Frank on the brink as Romero calls for unity amid Spurs 'disaster'
-
Chile declares emergency as wildfires kill at least 15
-
Europe hits back at Trump tariff threat over Greenland
-
Men's Fashion Week in Paris: what to watch
-
McGrath goes top of slalom standings with Wengen win
-
No Venus fairytale as Alcaraz, Sabalenka win Melbourne openers
-
Iran considers 'gradually' restoring internet after shutdown
-
Mitchell, Phillips tons guide New Zealand to 337-8 in ODI decider
-
Flailing Frankfurt sack coach Toppmoeller
-
Kurdish forces withdraw from Syria's largest oil field as govt forces advance
-
'Proud' Venus Williams, 45, exits Australian Open after epic battle
-
Vonn in Olympic form with another World Cup podium in Tarvisio super-G
-
Alcaraz kicks off career Grand Slam bid with tough Australian Open test
-
Hosts Morocco face Mane's Senegal for AFCON glory
-
Europe scrambles to respond to Trump tariff threat
-
Venus Williams, 45, exits Australian Open after epic battle
-
Taiwan's Lin wins India Open marred by 'dirty' conditions
-
Indonesia rescuers find body from plane crash
-
Kurdish-led forces withdraw from Syria's largest oil field: monitor
-
Ball girl collapses in Australian Open heat as players rush to help
-
France's Moutet booed for underarm match point serve in Melbourne
-
Zverev happy with response after wobble in opening Melbourne win
-
'Bring it on': UK's Labour readies for EU reset fight
-
New Zealand's Wollaston wins again to lead Tour Down Under
-
Zverev wobbles but wins at Australian Open as Alcaraz enters fray
-
British qualifier upsets 20th seed Cobolli to make mum proud
-
Zverev drops set on way to Australian Open second round
-
Indonesian rescuers find debris from missing plane
-
Wembanyama scores 39 as Spurs overcome Edwards, Wolves in thriller
-
Heartbreak for Allen as Broncos beat Bills in playoff thriller
-
British qualifier upsets 20th seed Cobolli in Melbourne
-
Paolini races into round two to kickstart Australian Open
-
Portugal presidential vote wide open as far-right surge expected
-
Lutz kicks Broncos to overtime thriller as Bills, Allen fall short
-
Marchand closes Austin Pro Swim with 200m breaststroke win
-
Raducanu says Australian Open schedule 'does not make sense'
-
Australia great Martyn says he was given '50/50 chance' of survival
-
Top-ranked Alcaraz, Sabalenka headline Australian Open day one
-
Haiti security forces commence major anti-gang operation
-
NFL's Giants ink John Harbaugh as new head coach
1,327 days: Families pine for OSCE employees detained in Russia
They have been accused of crimes including treason and espionage, some deported to Siberian penal colonies, their health deteriorating, their families counting the days in anguish.
Moscow says the matter is closed. But the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) says three of its workers arrested in Russian-occupied Ukraine in 2022 are being held on trumped up charges, and is demanding them back.
Dmytro Shabanov, Maxim Petrov and Vadym Golda were part of an OSCE mission sent to Ukraine's Donetsk and Lugansk regions in 2014, after fighting erupted there between Kyiv and pro-Russian separatists.
They were arrested shortly after Moscow invaded Ukraine in 2022 and sentenced by courts in the separatist regions to lengthy prison sentences.
"The waiting, not knowing, the endless hope slowly turning into quiet despair -- it is a kind of suffering no family should endure," Shabanov's wife Margaryta Shabanova told AFP, adding that 1,327 days have passed since her husband's arrest on April 15, 2022.
The 36-year-old travelled to Vienna this week to remind delegates gathering for the OSCE's annual ministerial meeting on Thursday and Friday that her husband and his colleagues are still not home.
But neither Russia nor the United States is sending top diplomats to this year's meeting, reducing the spotlight on it.
- 'Illegal detention' -
Founded in 1975 to ease tensions between the East and the West during the Cold War, the OSCE counts 57 members from Turkey to Mongolia, the UK and Canada, as well as the United States, Ukraine and Russia.
The mission that Shabanov, Petrov and Golda were part of withdrew following Russia's invasion, and Moscow has since blocked the renewal of its mandate at the OSCE.
But the withdrawal was abrupt, and local staff including the three stayed behind.
Shabanov, a security assistant, and Petrov, a translator, were sentenced in September 2022 to 13 years in prison on treason charges after closed-doors trials in the self-proclaimed Lugansk People's Republic, one of the Ukrainian separatist regions.
In July 2024, a court in the similarly self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic sentenced Golda, another security assistant to the mission, to 14 years in a strict-regime penal colony for "espionage".
Prosecutors said Golda "carried out reconnaissance activities in the interests of foreign intelligence", gathering "data on industrial facilities that were subsequently hit with missile strikes".
The OSCE has repeatedly called for the men's release from "illegal detention".
"Our colleagues remain OSCE staff members and had been performing official duties as mandated by all 57 participating states," OSCE Secretary General Helga Maria Schmid has said.
The Russian foreign ministry did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment.
Russia's permanent representative at the UN, Vasily Nebenzya, has accused the OSCE's monitoring mission of "illegal actions".
"Some of its staff, instead of monitoring, were involved in reviewing and passing intelligence data to Kyiv," he said last year.
"They faced Russian justice on serious criminal charges... And this matter is closed."
- 'Urgent' -
Golda's son, Egor Golda, told AFP that "Ukraine, the West and the OSCE must all contribute to his release or to having him exchanged", even if it means "negotiating with Russia".
Lawyer Eugenia Kapalkina, who travelled with Shabanova to Vienna and also represents relatives of Petrov, warned that the health of the three men -- in isolation under severe conditions -- is deteriorating.
Shabanov, now 38 years old, was deported to the Omsk penal colony in Siberia in March this year, while Petrov, now 45, was deported to Chelyabinsk in Siberia at the end of July 2025. He was recently hospitalised.
Lawyer Kapalkina has demanded "urgent and decisive action", adding that the release of the three must become "a condition for any ceasefire or peace agreement" between Russia and Ukraine.
She said the men's lengthy detention sets a dangerous precedent that "those working for international organisations, even under official mandates, are no longer shielded".
An OSCE employee, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, noted that "whatever action the organisation has taken, the OSCE employees ... are not home".
The OSCE insists securing the men's release remains an "absolute priority".
"We are working tirelessly to ensure they can return to their loved ones as soon as possible," an OSCE spokesperson told AFP.
F.Stadler--VB