The Nordic country is investing 19 billion kroner (€1,65 billion) in the acquisition of the South Korean Chunmoo missile ...
The Aleksey Kosygin is Russia's first domestically-built gas carrier with ice classification Arc7. On February 2, it sailed into the Ura Bay for a transshipment operation at a 400-metre-long ...
The governor of Murmansk came on an unannounced inspection to the Pechenga district where local boiler houses fail to provide ...
Today I will work in Indiga,' governor of the Nenets Autonomous District Irina Gekht reported in a social media video post that showed her helicopter landing in the remote settlement.
More than 70 people from all over Norway entered the mining facility in the early hours on Saturday. They are now blocking both the road to the construction area and the entrance of the tunnel to the ...
The mid-winter visit by France’s Chief of Defence, General Fabien Mandon, to Norrbotten Air Wing (F 21) at Kallax air base in Luleå was overshadowed by Donald Trump's push for Greenland at Donald ...
The boarding of the Grinch, a 22-year-old carrier sailing under a false Comoros flag, took place in western parts of the Mediterranean Sea on January 22. The ship was on its way from the north Russian ...
The Mys Zhelaniya is well known in the Russian North. The 143-metre-long cargo ship has its home port in Arkhangelsk, and it is regularly used for shipments of goods to Russian Arctic ports. This week ...
The two Tu-22M3 planes took off from Olenya air base on the Kola Peninsula in the morning on January 22 and flew south along Russia's border with Finland before continuing out in international air ...
Five of the instructors who work at the VOIN Centre in Murmansk are on the way to occupied Ukrainian land. Photos shared by the centre show the men at the city railway station ahead of departure.
The Barents Observer follows the Code of Ethics of the Norwegian Press and the document Right and Duties of the Editor. We report under full editorial independence and have no external interference.
The Barents Observer follows the Code of Ethics of the Norwegian Press and the document Right and Duties of the Editor. We report under full editorial independence and have no external interference.