Russian propaganda media Sputnik shuts down operations in Azerbaijan amid tensions
Russian state-funded propaganda media outlet Sputnik will cease operations in Azerbaijan, Russia Today media group CEO Dmitry Kiselyov said on July 3, according to the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.
“We regret to say that, as of today, the conditions for Sputnik Azerbaijan to continue its activities in this country are not in place,” Kiselyov said.
The move comes amid a major deterioration in Russian-Azerbaijani relations.
Kiselyov’s comments followed the detention of several Sputnik Azerbaijan employees by Azerbaijani police on June 30. Authorities said two of the detainees were operatives of Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB), prompting a formal protest from Moscow.
Kiselyov called the charges “far-fetched,” saying the staff had worked to “develop cooperation between Azerbaijan and Russia.” He added that legal action would be taken to defend them.
Sputnik, a key pillar of the Kremlin’s global propaganda network, has long been accused by Western governments and media watchdogs of spreading disinformation and pro-Russian narratives.
These developments follow a deadly June 27 operation in Russia’s Yekaterinburg, where Russian security forces killed two Azerbaijani nationals and injured several others in a raid linked to a 2001 murder case.
On June 28, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry issued a rare public rebuke, calling the operation “ethnically motivated” and part of a “systematic pattern” of unlawful treatment of Azerbaijani nationals in Russia.
The diplomatic rupture deepened further after Azerbaijani authorities arrested eight Russian citizens the next day, presenting them in court handcuffed and visibly injured. They were accused of participating in organized crime, cyberattacks, and drug smuggling from Iran.
The closure of Sputnik’s bureau marks a new low in relations between the two former Soviet states, which have seen escalating tensions despite longstanding ties.
