Forwarded from Russian MFA 🇷🇺
🎙 Comment by Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova on the 80th anniversary of the establishment of the United Nations (October 24, 2025)
💬 On October 24, the international community marks the 80th anniversary of the UN.
Its establishment was one of the key outcomes of the Victory in the Second World War. It was the defeat of Nazism – to which our country made a fundamental contribution – that created the conditions for forming a new system of international relations.
❗️ Having endured the unspeakable horrors of war, the international community set itself the noble goal of never again allowing such a destructive tragedy to occur.
The architects of the UN-centred world order were the leaders of the great victorious powers, who were able to rise above their disagreements for the sake of establishing lasting peace and security for all nations and peoples.
However, almost immediately, representatives of the Western “camp” set a course toward weakening the World Organization, preventing it from fully realizing its potential. Nevertheless, the UN has achieved many historically significant results, laying the foundation for the modern multipolar world order. A vivid example is the 1960 Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, adopted on the initiative of the Soviet Union, which led to the emergence of dozens of sovereign states across the world.
Recently, criticism of the UN has intensified. Some even claim it has fulfilled its historical mission and is no longer needed.
Indeed, the UN’s work faces many challenges – including the Secretariat’s bias, low efficiency, excessive bureaucracy, and irrational spending.
However, the root cause lies not in structural flaws but in how member states approach the Organization’s work and use the opportunities it offers. The UN merely reflects the political will and ability of its members to reach agreements.
All this, however, cannot call into question the indisputable fact that the UN is the most successful international organization in human history – its strength lies in its unprecedented representativeness and broad mandate.
#TheUNCharterIsOurRules
The UN Charter remains fully relevant and continues to provide optimal answers to the challenges of the multipolar era. The fundamental principles of inter-state relations enshrined in it have stood the test of time and must be strictly observed in their entirety, interconnection, and consistency.
Of course, the UN must adapt to today’s polycentric realities.
☝️ At the same time, any changes must be rational and carefully balanced – aimed at strengthening the institutional foundations of the Organization, preserving the “division of labour” among its principal organs, and enhancing the UN’s effectiveness and operational capacity.
It is equally important that such reforms remain under the strict control of member states and lead to an increased role for the countries of the Global Majority.
🇷🇺 Russia, as a founding member of the UN and a permanent member of its Security Council, is fully aware of its responsibility for the Organization’s future.
The Russian Side stands ready, together with numerous like-minded partners, to continue working vigorously to ensure the full restoration of the UN’s central coordinating role in world affairs – as envisaged by Russia’s Foreign Policy Concept – and to seek the strict observance of the principles enshrined in its Charter.
💬 On October 24, the international community marks the 80th anniversary of the UN.
Its establishment was one of the key outcomes of the Victory in the Second World War. It was the defeat of Nazism – to which our country made a fundamental contribution – that created the conditions for forming a new system of international relations.
❗️ Having endured the unspeakable horrors of war, the international community set itself the noble goal of never again allowing such a destructive tragedy to occur.
The architects of the UN-centred world order were the leaders of the great victorious powers, who were able to rise above their disagreements for the sake of establishing lasting peace and security for all nations and peoples.
However, almost immediately, representatives of the Western “camp” set a course toward weakening the World Organization, preventing it from fully realizing its potential. Nevertheless, the UN has achieved many historically significant results, laying the foundation for the modern multipolar world order. A vivid example is the 1960 Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, adopted on the initiative of the Soviet Union, which led to the emergence of dozens of sovereign states across the world.
Recently, criticism of the UN has intensified. Some even claim it has fulfilled its historical mission and is no longer needed.
Indeed, the UN’s work faces many challenges – including the Secretariat’s bias, low efficiency, excessive bureaucracy, and irrational spending.
However, the root cause lies not in structural flaws but in how member states approach the Organization’s work and use the opportunities it offers. The UN merely reflects the political will and ability of its members to reach agreements.
All this, however, cannot call into question the indisputable fact that the UN is the most successful international organization in human history – its strength lies in its unprecedented representativeness and broad mandate.
#TheUNCharterIsOurRules
The UN Charter remains fully relevant and continues to provide optimal answers to the challenges of the multipolar era. The fundamental principles of inter-state relations enshrined in it have stood the test of time and must be strictly observed in their entirety, interconnection, and consistency.
Of course, the UN must adapt to today’s polycentric realities.
☝️ At the same time, any changes must be rational and carefully balanced – aimed at strengthening the institutional foundations of the Organization, preserving the “division of labour” among its principal organs, and enhancing the UN’s effectiveness and operational capacity.
It is equally important that such reforms remain under the strict control of member states and lead to an increased role for the countries of the Global Majority.
🇷🇺 Russia, as a founding member of the UN and a permanent member of its Security Council, is fully aware of its responsibility for the Organization’s future.
The Russian Side stands ready, together with numerous like-minded partners, to continue working vigorously to ensure the full restoration of the UN’s central coordinating role in world affairs – as envisaged by Russia’s Foreign Policy Concept – and to seek the strict observance of the principles enshrined in its Charter.
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Forwarded from Russian MFA 🇷🇺
✍️ Prosecutor General of Russia Alexander Gutsan signed the UN Convention against Cybercrime on behalf of the Russian Federation
📍 Hanoi, October 25, 2025
The document was drafted at the initiative of the Russian Side, i.e. Prosecutor General’s Office under the coordinating role of the Russian Foreign Ministry and is 👉 the world’s first international treaty dedicated to information security.
📍 Hanoi, October 25, 2025
The document was drafted at the initiative of the Russian Side, i.e. Prosecutor General’s Office under the coordinating role of the Russian Foreign Ministry and is 👉 the world’s first international treaty dedicated to information security.
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Forwarded from Русский дом
26 октября в Национальном центре «Россия» открылось пленарное заседание Международного форума сотрудничества, посвященного 100-летию народной дипломатии. Масштабное событие собрало более 2000 участников из свыше 100 стран мира — государственных деятелей, дипломатов, журналистов, историков и представителей творческих объединений.
Владимир Путин в своем приветствии указал на устойчивость народной дипломатии:
«Несмотря на нынешнюю весьма непростую внешнеполитическую обстановку, Россотрудничеству удается не только сохранять, но и развивать конструктивные связи с неправительственными структурами многих стран».
Глава государства подчеркнул, что важно формировать «объективный образ нашей страны за рубежом, популяризовать русский язык, достижения отечественной науки и культуры». Он также отметил, что народная дипломатия помогает «укреплять наше взаимодействие с единомышленниками и союзниками в целях построения справедливого и демократического многополярного миропорядка».
Форум организован Россотрудничеством, Фондом Росконгресс, Российским обществом «Знание» и Национальным центром «Россия» при поддержке Совета при Президенте Российской Федерации по развитию гражданского общества и правам человека. Генеральный партнер — ПАО «Банк ПСБ». Мероприятие транслировалось в Русских домах с синхронным переводом на основные языки ООН.
#Россотрудничество #РусскийДом #RussianHouse #Rossotrudnichestvo #100ЛетНароднойДипломатии
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Forwarded from Russian MFA 🇷🇺
🎙 Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s statement following a high-level Plenary Session of the 3rd Minsk International Conference on Eurasian Security (Minsk, October 28, 2025)
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💬 Sergey Lavrov: The conference is steadily moving towards becoming a promising discussion and expert platform to develop concrete recommendations. From my standpoint, the fact that delegates from public authorities, as well as experts, political scientists, and civil society figures have come together for this event is important and makes it possible to leverage ideas coming from civil society that genuinely resonate with the people.
An increasing number of people across the Eurasian continent recognise the importance of removing obstacles that are being artificially put up on the way towards sustainable, independent, and effective economic growth, improvements in the social sphere, and logistical infrastructure of this vast and resource-rich continent.
President Lukashenko’s speech was followed by speeches delivered by foreign ministers of Hungary, Myanmar, and the DPRK, as well as the Special Representative of China for Eurasian Affairs. Still to come are speeches by ranking representatives from India, Iran, the UAE, Cambodia, and secretaries general of the #SCO, the #CSTO, and the #CICA. Over time, these integration groups will, through the natural process of restoring connections and developing joint projects, eventually become part of Eurasian architecture relying on an economic foundation and a logistical dimension, which is a solid basis for building security architecture.
Forty-eight delegations are represented here. The participants will use various panels to discuss every angle of the pressing goals of Eurasian development.
We are doing our best to promote President Putin’s initiative to create Eurasian security architecture within the context of our efforts to create the Greater Eurasian Partnership. We are using this tentative term to make sure the continent has platforms it can use to freely discuss, examine and bounce ideas off one another.
You may have heard our statement. Many in the West recognise the importance of Eurasia, but the problem is that Western countries, primarily, NATO members are not ready to engage on an equal footing or to seek forms of pan-continental cooperation based on equality and indivisible security across our common geopolitical space.
On the contrary, they want NATO bodies to spread across the entire continent, including the Pacific, where NATO seeks to create military-political alliance-like closed blocs with a limited number of participants, thus eroding the universal and open architecture that it took the ASEAN countries decades to build. All interested countries were welcome to be part of that architecture and use its various mechanisms.
Efforts are being deployed to reverse this process and to subordinate ongoing developments in Eurasia to the interests of the North Atlantic Alliance. These interests are, above all, about containing China, Russia, and the DPRK and, in the long run, any other country that may wish to assert its right to pursue an independent policy based on national interests.
In closing, I would like to point out that our Belarusian friends have put forward an initiative to draft a Eurasian Charter of Diversity and Multipolarity in the 21st Century. We strongly support this idea. Several countries said they were willing to participate in drafting this document. This process will take time, but the goal has been set, and a growing number of countries share it. We will keep moving towards this goal.
Read in full
💬 Sergey Lavrov: The conference is steadily moving towards becoming a promising discussion and expert platform to develop concrete recommendations. From my standpoint, the fact that delegates from public authorities, as well as experts, political scientists, and civil society figures have come together for this event is important and makes it possible to leverage ideas coming from civil society that genuinely resonate with the people.
An increasing number of people across the Eurasian continent recognise the importance of removing obstacles that are being artificially put up on the way towards sustainable, independent, and effective economic growth, improvements in the social sphere, and logistical infrastructure of this vast and resource-rich continent.
President Lukashenko’s speech was followed by speeches delivered by foreign ministers of Hungary, Myanmar, and the DPRK, as well as the Special Representative of China for Eurasian Affairs. Still to come are speeches by ranking representatives from India, Iran, the UAE, Cambodia, and secretaries general of the #SCO, the #CSTO, and the #CICA. Over time, these integration groups will, through the natural process of restoring connections and developing joint projects, eventually become part of Eurasian architecture relying on an economic foundation and a logistical dimension, which is a solid basis for building security architecture.
Forty-eight delegations are represented here. The participants will use various panels to discuss every angle of the pressing goals of Eurasian development.
We are doing our best to promote President Putin’s initiative to create Eurasian security architecture within the context of our efforts to create the Greater Eurasian Partnership. We are using this tentative term to make sure the continent has platforms it can use to freely discuss, examine and bounce ideas off one another.
You may have heard our statement. Many in the West recognise the importance of Eurasia, but the problem is that Western countries, primarily, NATO members are not ready to engage on an equal footing or to seek forms of pan-continental cooperation based on equality and indivisible security across our common geopolitical space.
On the contrary, they want NATO bodies to spread across the entire continent, including the Pacific, where NATO seeks to create military-political alliance-like closed blocs with a limited number of participants, thus eroding the universal and open architecture that it took the ASEAN countries decades to build. All interested countries were welcome to be part of that architecture and use its various mechanisms.
Efforts are being deployed to reverse this process and to subordinate ongoing developments in Eurasia to the interests of the North Atlantic Alliance. These interests are, above all, about containing China, Russia, and the DPRK and, in the long run, any other country that may wish to assert its right to pursue an independent policy based on national interests.
In closing, I would like to point out that our Belarusian friends have put forward an initiative to draft a Eurasian Charter of Diversity and Multipolarity in the 21st Century. We strongly support this idea. Several countries said they were willing to participate in drafting this document. This process will take time, but the goal has been set, and a growing number of countries share it. We will keep moving towards this goal.
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On October 28, the Embassy of Russia in Bangladesh held a reception on the occasion of the National Unity Day.
Ambassador Alexander Khozin congratulated the audience on the national holiday. He also read a message from Sattar Mia, Chairman of the Russian Friendship Society with Bangladesh.
The reception featured a concert of Russian classical music performed by Sergei Gladyshev (baritone) and Evgenia Ermakova (piano). The musicians captivated the audience with a vibrant and emotional performance that spoke to the heart of everyone. The concert program included pieces by Mikhail Glinka, Sergey Rachmaninoff, Alexander Dragomyzhsky, Modest Mussorgsky, and other composers.
The reception brought together representatives of diplomatic missions in Dhaka, political community and civil society.
Ambassador Alexander Khozin congratulated the audience on the national holiday. He also read a message from Sattar Mia, Chairman of the Russian Friendship Society with Bangladesh.
The reception featured a concert of Russian classical music performed by Sergei Gladyshev (baritone) and Evgenia Ermakova (piano). The musicians captivated the audience with a vibrant and emotional performance that spoke to the heart of everyone. The concert program included pieces by Mikhail Glinka, Sergey Rachmaninoff, Alexander Dragomyzhsky, Modest Mussorgsky, and other composers.
The reception brought together representatives of diplomatic missions in Dhaka, political community and civil society.
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28 октября, в преддверии Дня народного единства в Посольстве России в Бангладеш состоялся приём.
Посол А.Г. Хозин поздравил сотрудников российской дипломатической миссии с национальным праздником. Он также зачитал поздравительное послание председателя Общества дружбы России и Бангладеш Саттара Миа.
Прием ознаменовался концертом русской классической музыки в исполнении Сергея Гладышева (баритон) и Евгении Ермаковой (фортепьяно). Музыканты поразили публику ярким и эмоциональным выступлением, которое никого не оставило равнодушным. В концертную программу вошли произведения М.И. Глинки, С.В. Рахманинова, А.С. Драгомыжского, М.П. Мусоргского и других композиторов.
На приеме присутствовали представители дипкорпуса и общественно-политических кругов Бангладеш.
Посол А.Г. Хозин поздравил сотрудников российской дипломатической миссии с национальным праздником. Он также зачитал поздравительное послание председателя Общества дружбы России и Бангладеш Саттара Миа.
Прием ознаменовался концертом русской классической музыки в исполнении Сергея Гладышева (баритон) и Евгении Ермаковой (фортепьяно). Музыканты поразили публику ярким и эмоциональным выступлением, которое никого не оставило равнодушным. В концертную программу вошли произведения М.И. Глинки, С.В. Рахманинова, А.С. Драгомыжского, М.П. Мусоргского и других композиторов.
На приеме присутствовали представители дипкорпуса и общественно-политических кругов Бангладеш.
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Forwarded from Kremlin. News
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On National Unity Day, Vladimir Putin laid flowers at the monument to Kuzma Minin and Dmitry Pozharsky in Moscow's Red Square
The traditional ceremony brought together representatives of religious denominations and members of public and youth organisations.
Celebrated on November 4, National Unity Day marks the liberation of Moscow from foreign invaders by the people's volunteer army led by Kuzma Minin and Dmitry Pozharsky in 1612.
The traditional ceremony brought together representatives of religious denominations and members of public and youth organisations.
Celebrated on November 4, National Unity Day marks the liberation of Moscow from foreign invaders by the people's volunteer army led by Kuzma Minin and Dmitry Pozharsky in 1612.
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Forwarded from Russian MFA 🇷🇺
☦️ Russia's National #UnityDay: The holiday of November 4 is rooted in the immortal feat of the Second People’s Militia under the leadership of Kuzma Minin and Prince Dmitry Pozharsky, who saved the Motherland from mortal danger. Born in Nizhny Novgorod, this movement stirred the very fabric of history – at a moment of national peril it united the people, defended the country, and drove the Polish-Lithuanian invaders from Moscow. Learn more about those events in our detailed historical article.
The Kazan Icon of the Mother of God, a copy of which accompanied the Russian army throughout its liberation campaign, became a symbol of that victory. The clergy and the soldiers prayed before the image of the Kazan Mother of God, including on the eve of Moscow’s liberation from the foreign occupiers. Contemporaries saw the triumph of the militia as a clear sign of the intercession of the Mother of God.
In Orthodox tradition, the Feast of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God is celebrated twice each year – on July 21, the day of its miraculous appearance, and on November 4, the day when the will of the people and Divine Providence saved the Motherland.
The day of Moscow’s liberation – November 4 – was established by decree of Tsar Mikhail Fyodorovich Romanov as the feast of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God. At first it was marked only in Moscow, but beginning in 1649, by order of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich Romanov – throughout the entire country.
***
The story of the Kazan Icon dates back to 1579. According to tradition, after a great fire destroyed part of Kazan, the Mother of God appeared three times in a dream to a nine-year-old girl named Matrona, showing her the place under the ashes where Her image lay hidden. The miraculous discovery of the icon deeply moved the townspeople and was perceived as a sign of the special protection of the Most Holy Theotokos over the Russian land.
Soon afterward, the Theotokos Monastery was built on the site of the discovery, with the icon enshrined at its centre. From that time, copies of the image began to spread across Russia and beyond, bringing comfort and hope to believers. The Kazan Icon was carried into battle, used to bless new churches, and strengthened the people’s faith during the most difficult trials.
In 2023, on the Feast of the Kazan Icon, at the Patriarchal Cathedral of the Dormition in the Moscow Kremlin, the very holy image before which Minin and Pozharsky prayed during the decisive battles for Moscow was rediscovered and publicly revealed to the faithful.
💬 According to His Holiness Patriarch Kirill, a thorough expert study confirmed the authenticity and antiquity of the icon, dated to the late 16th century:
Today, the Feast of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God is celebrated on November 4, together with Russia’s National Unity Day, reminding us of the enduring link between spiritual and national heroism, faith and love for the Motherland.
The Kazan Icon of the Mother of God, a copy of which accompanied the Russian army throughout its liberation campaign, became a symbol of that victory. The clergy and the soldiers prayed before the image of the Kazan Mother of God, including on the eve of Moscow’s liberation from the foreign occupiers. Contemporaries saw the triumph of the militia as a clear sign of the intercession of the Mother of God.
In Orthodox tradition, the Feast of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God is celebrated twice each year – on July 21, the day of its miraculous appearance, and on November 4, the day when the will of the people and Divine Providence saved the Motherland.
The day of Moscow’s liberation – November 4 – was established by decree of Tsar Mikhail Fyodorovich Romanov as the feast of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God. At first it was marked only in Moscow, but beginning in 1649, by order of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich Romanov – throughout the entire country.
***
The story of the Kazan Icon dates back to 1579. According to tradition, after a great fire destroyed part of Kazan, the Mother of God appeared three times in a dream to a nine-year-old girl named Matrona, showing her the place under the ashes where Her image lay hidden. The miraculous discovery of the icon deeply moved the townspeople and was perceived as a sign of the special protection of the Most Holy Theotokos over the Russian land.
Soon afterward, the Theotokos Monastery was built on the site of the discovery, with the icon enshrined at its centre. From that time, copies of the image began to spread across Russia and beyond, bringing comfort and hope to believers. The Kazan Icon was carried into battle, used to bless new churches, and strengthened the people’s faith during the most difficult trials.
In 2023, on the Feast of the Kazan Icon, at the Patriarchal Cathedral of the Dormition in the Moscow Kremlin, the very holy image before which Minin and Pozharsky prayed during the decisive battles for Moscow was rediscovered and publicly revealed to the faithful.
💬 According to His Holiness Patriarch Kirill, a thorough expert study confirmed the authenticity and antiquity of the icon, dated to the late 16th century:
We know that before this image Prince Pozharsky prayed prior to launching his assault on the Kremlin. We also know that he prayed before it when preparing to attack the Novodevichy Convent, which at that time had been turned into a Polish fortress.
In other words, he prayed before this icon every time he entered a decisive battle with the Polish invaders. And we know that these prayers were heard. The Queen of Heaven spread Her protecting veil, the Russian land was liberated, and in memory of this great event Prince Pozharsky built at his own expense a church on the Red Square dedicated to the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God. <…>
Thanks to careful scholarly examination, it has been established that this is the very image carried by Minin and Pozharsky when they liberated Kitay-Gorod and the Kremlin, driving the Poles from our Motherland. In other words, we stand before a historic shrine – one of the most sacred treasures of the Russian Orthodox Church.
Today, the Feast of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God is celebrated on November 4, together with Russia’s National Unity Day, reminding us of the enduring link between spiritual and national heroism, faith and love for the Motherland.
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