Officials announced on Monday that the European Union (EU) has imposed sanctions on the news website Voice of Europe and two businessmen associated with it. The sanctions extend penalties initially imposed by the Czech Republic, which claims the outlet disseminates Russian propaganda.
The EU-wide measures will affect Viktor Medvedchuk and Artem Marchevskyi, as well as the Prague-based company operating the website. The sanctions include asset freezes and travel bans.
In March, the Czech Republic accused Medvedchuk of financing the website. Medvedchuk is a pro-Kremlin businessman and former Ukrainian lawmaker exiled to Russia in 2022 as part of a prisoner exchange deal. He has since been stripped of Ukrainian citizenship.
The Czech Foreign Ministry indicated that Ukrainian and Israeli citizen Artem Marchevskyi led Voice of Europe’s operations under Medvedchuk’s direction.
“Viktor Volodymyrovych Medvedchuk uses the Voice of Europe media platform for a Russian influence operation aimed at undermining the territorial integrity, sovereignty, and freedom of Ukraine,” the ministry claimed.
In its March sanctions, the Czech Republic targeted the Prague-based company managing the news website. The country alleged it was being used to propagate Russian influence ahead of June’s EU parliamentary elections.
The Council of the EU accused Voice of Europe and its social media accounts of disseminating disinformation on Ukraine and promoting “pro-Kremlin false narratives.”
In an unsigned article, Voice of Europe “categorically rejected” the EU’s actions. It argued that European authorities were attempting to stifle free speech and obscure the real situation in Europe.
The EU has become increasingly hostile to free speech. The bloc mobilized a mass online censorship scheme ahead of the June elections and recently revealed plans for the mass surveillance of private online chats.