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Reports

July 1st - July 7th, 2024 by admin

Lithuania Weekly: Belarus sanctions and fringe party reshuffle

During this reporting week, different stories were trending among Kremlin-aligned media.

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June 24th - June 30th, 2024 by Olevs Nikers

Estonia Weekly: EU Parliament and Inequality

This reporting week, they targeted various issues, mainly focusing on Kaya Kallas's acceptance to work in the EU parliament.

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February 12th - February 18th, 2024 by Olevs Nikers

Estonia Weekly: Ukraine and Soviet-era policies

This week, there were many posts which were connected to the Estonian Independence Day, many of which involved people claiming that they hoped that the repression and demonisation of the Russian civilians would end.  There was also a claim that an Estonian attacked a person for being a Russian speaker.  The Russian embassy to Estonia had many posts concerning the Euromaidan protests in Kyiv 10 years ago. It stated that this is when Ukraine fell into Nazism, and the involvement of the West is what caused the war along with Ukraine's bombing of Donbas for several years.  Social and political issues, such as price increases and the budget, were also mentioned in posts, and one poster claimed that the price increases in Estonia today are similar to those seen during the Soviet Union.

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December 18th - December 24th, 2023 by Otto Tabuns

Latvia Weekly: Russian Language, Passports and Threat of Muslim Immigrants

From the findings of the examined week, the main narratives concerned domestic issues such as corruption, life quality level, and Russian language use, remaining similar to the prior examined week. The content regarding the increase in passport prices, Russian language use, or potential migration often refers to the elderly population or children as social groups less protected within society. Moreover, some channels examined try to appeal to both Latvian and Russian-speaking audiences by simultaneously criticizing Russia yet encouraging Russian language use. Similarly, as in the prior weeks, the comment section is becoming more critical of the narratives expressed. However, regarding corruption, the expressed narrative is more highly supported by the audience and often includes hate speech towards leading politicians. The form of the content that reaches the highest engagement remains to be in video format.

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