RFE/RL's Russian Service cites a Russian media report suggesting there is "practically zero" chance that country will ever repatriate to the "new authorities" in Ukraine ousted president Viktor Yanukovych, his son, or any other former senior Ukrainian officials.
Ukraine's state prosecutor sought an international warrant against Yanukovych early this year for alleged crimes related to the death of Maidan protesters and the alleged embezzlement of tens of billions of dollars' in state assets, some of which was reportedly hauled in trucks to Russia -- where Yanukovych remains in exile.
AFP flash:
German embassy worker expelled from Moscow: diplomatic source
Reuters wraps up several developments we've mentioned earlier today:
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko issued several decrees on Saturday to shut state institutions and banking services in pro-Russian eastern regions, pressing a move to cut links with the rebel-held territory.
Ukraine has cut all state funding to separatist parts of Donetsk and Luhansk regions after separatists held elections in late October which Poroshenko condemned as illegal and in violation of a ceasefire agreement made in September.
The rebels, in turn, say Ukraine violated the deal by moving to revoke a law granting the regions autonomy, putting an already fragile ceasefire in doubt.
A decree posted on the president's website said all state companies, institutions and organisations should end their work within a week and "evacuate workers, with their permission, (and) where possible remove property and documents".
The ruling, which formally asks parliament to revoke the "special status" of the regions, also suggests Ukraine's central bank take measures to close down all banking services in certain parts of separatist-held areas, including card operations.
Here's our latest summary of events in Brisbane, where President Putin had a bruising day at the hands of Western leaders over his actions in Ukraine:
As Criticism Mounts, Putin Camp Floats Early Exit From G20 Summit
"Now I understand that life, as they say, is cheap. It's a really frightening thing. An ordinary person doesn't understand that. I didn't understand it myself. It's like you grow up, finish school, go to university, find work. You have children, build a house, earn a pension. And in reality, a person's life is nothing. Especially when people have machine guns and there's no law behind what they're doing."
You can read the entire interview with 22-year-old Serhiy Halyan and watch the video here: