The Kremlin is increasing pressure on the Baltic states. The Russian police have issued a wanted notice against Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas, according to a notice visible Tuesday February 13 on the website of the Ministry of the Interior, a new illustration of tensions with the Baltic countries since the Russian attack in Ukraine.

Kaja Kallas is being prosecuted in Russia in a “criminal case”, indicates this notice, which does not specify what crime or offense the leader is accused of.

Other officials are in Moscow's crosshairs. The Estonian Secretary of State, Taimar Peterkop, is also the target of a wanted notice, as is the Minister of Culture of Lithuania, Simonas Kairys.

“Insult to History”

A Russian security source, quoted anonymously by the state news agency Tass, said that the two Estonian officials and the Lithuanian minister were being prosecuted for "destruction and damage to monuments (tribute) to Soviet soldiers" of the Second World War.

“These people are responsible for decisions which are de facto an insult to History, they are people who carry out hostile actions against historical memory, against our country,” said the spokesperson for the Russian presidency, Dmitri Peskov .

In recent years, several of these monuments inherited by the USSR after the Second World War have been dismantled in the Baltic countries, as a sign of rejection of the Soviet period, these states considering themselves to have been occupied by the USSR.

A Russian minority resides in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, three former Soviet republics now members of the EU and NATO which have tense relations with Moscow.

Also read: The Suwalki corridor, a strategic issue for the Baltic countries and NATO

These relations have further deteriorated with the conflict in Ukraine. The Baltic countries, which consider the threat of a Russian invasion to be real, actively support kyiv in its fight against the Russian army.

Last week, Russia summoned the charges d'affaires of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, accusing them of "sabotage" the Russian presidential election in March by refusing to ensure the security of polling stations in Russian embassies on their soil. .

In mid-January, Latvia and Estonia decided to end their legal assistance agreements with Russia, with officials from these two countries citing Moscow's attack on Ukraine as the reason.

Earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky toured the Baltics in January.

In January, Estonia also refused to extend the residence permit of the head of the Estonian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate, a Russian citizen, believing that he represented a risk to national security.

With AFP

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