Podcasts about sievierodonetsk

  • 48PODCASTS
  • 89EPISODES
  • 17mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Feb 23, 2023LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about sievierodonetsk

Latest podcast episodes about sievierodonetsk

AJC Passport
The Jewish Experience in Ukraine Amidst Russia's Invasion

AJC Passport

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 30:28


One year after Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine, Vladislav Davidzon, European culture correspondent for Tablet Magazine, shares what he's witnessed as a war correspondent on the frontlines, and predicts the future for his beloved country and the Jewish community he's proud to call home.  We last spoke to Davidzon hours before the Russia-Ukraine war began, when he was on the ground in Kyiv – listen now to his dispatch a year on, as he joins us live from our New York studio. *The views and opinions expressed by guests do not necessarily reflect the views or position of AJC. ___ Episode Lineup:  (0:40) Vladislav Davidzon ____ Show Notes:   Read: What You Need to Know About the Wagner Group's Role in Russia's War Against Ukraine Preorder: Jewish-Ukrainian Relations and the Birth of a Political Nation    Watch: Kiyv Jewish Forum: Ted Deutch, AJC CEO, Addresses Kyiv Jewish Forum 2023 Panel: Ukraine as the Israel of Europe with Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, Managing Director of AJC Europe, Bernard Henry Levi, philosopher, and Josef Joffe, Stanford University   Listen:  Podcast episode with Vladislav Davidzon, recorded February 23, 2022:  Live from Kyiv: The Future of Ukraine and its Large Jewish Community Our most recent podcast episode: How Rising Antisemitism Impacts Jews on College Campuses   Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod   You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org   If you've enjoyed this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, tag us on social media with #PeopleofthePod, and hop onto Apple Podcasts to rate us and write a review, to help more listeners find us. ______ Transcript of Interview with Vladislav Davidzon: Manya: On February 24th, 2022, just hours before the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, Vladislav Davidzon, founding editor of The Odessa Review and contributor to Tablet Magazine, joined us live from Kiyv to share the mood on the ground as Russian forces were closing in. Now, one year later, Vladislav joins us again, this time in person, in our studio to share what he has seen, heard, and experienced this past year since the Russian invasion of his home. Vladislav, it is so good to see you alive and well and in person. Vladislav: Thank you so much. This is so surreal. I'm so grateful, first of all, for your interest, for your affection, for your graciousness, for your respect. But I'm grateful to be here exactly one year later. It was the last thing that I did in the workday before the war began, before the old world ended. And I went off to dinner with my friend, now of blessed memory, Dan Rappaport, who was an American Latvian born Jewish financier. It was also the last time I saw him. He died under very suspicious circumstances. He died falling out of a window in Washington, DC, or of a roof, on the seventh floor, three months later. I just have extremely intense emotions about that six hour period because…I was talking to my wife, my wife's French Ukrainian, she was back in Paris. I said, if anything happens tonight, I'll call you in the morning. Things are gonna go down tonight. And then I did this podcast with you. And so, it's really amazing to be back with you a year later. Manya: Yes. I mean, I  am so grateful to see you because I really was very worried. I worried that that was going to be our last conversation, and that I would not get a chance to meet you in person after that. And in addition to everything, you've been working on a book, The Birth of a Political Nation, which we'll talk a little bit more about shortly. But, first tell me, tell our listeners how you have managed to survive and tell the stories that need to be told. Vladislav: It's not pretty. I mean, it's just, it's not elegant. I'm a Ukrainian Russian Jew, so I kind of went into primordial, bestial mode, like Russian Ukrainian, Jewish survival mode, like my grandfathers and great-grandfathers during World War II. I just, you know, something clicked and your your training and your skillset and your deep cultural characteristics click in and you just go full on Hemingway, Lord Byron, and then you just go to war. Like a lot of other people, I went to war. I burned out after about six months and I needed some months off. I was just rnning around like a madman, reporting, getting my own relatives out, helping whatever way I could, helping my family close down their businesses, helping run guns, going on t radio, you know, just collecting money, going to the front, just, going off on an adrenaline rush. And it's admixture of rage, testosterone. Adrenaline, survival, rage,  all the cocktail of horrific, let's say toxic masculine character [laughs]. I know you can't, I I know. I'm ironic about that. I live in Eastern Europe, so you can, you can still make fun of all that stuff in Eastern Europe. I don't know if you can here, but, you know, jokes aside. I just went into this deeply primordial state of Ukrainian Russian civilizational structures of brutal survival and fighting. And that went on for about six months, at which point I just crashed and collapsed and needed some off time. Manya: How much of your journalistic instincts also fueled your push on, your forging ahead and surviving just to tell the story, or was it more a familial connection? Vladislav: I have skin in the game. I'm from there. I mean, my ancestors are from there, two of my grandparents were born there. My family lived there for hundreds of years. I'm married to a Ukrainian Jewish girl. I have family there. My friends are, these are my people. I'm deeply tribal. Obviously you take the opportunity as a journalist reporting on a country for 10 years and almost no one cares about it. And you're an expert on it. You know all the politicians and you know all the, all the stories and you know all the storylines. And you, you have contacts everywhere. You know, of a country like the back of your hand. And suddenly it becomes the focal point of the world's attention and it becomes the greatest story in the entire world. And of course, you're prepared in a way that all, all these other people who paratroop in are not prepared, and you have to make the best of it. And you have to tell stories from people who wouldn't otherwise have access to the media. And you have to explain, there's so much bad stuff in terms of quality of reporting coming out of Ukraine because so many amateurs went in. In any given situation, there are lots of people who come to a war zone. You know, in wars, people, they make their bones, they become rich, they become famous, they get good looking lovers. Everyone gets paid in the currency that they want. Right? But this is my country. I've been at this for 10, 12 years. I don't begrudge anyone coming to want to tell the story. Some people are opportunists in life and some people are extraordinarily generous and gracious. And it almost doesn't matter what people's motivations are. I don't care about why you came here. I care about the quality of the work. And a lot of the work was pretty bad because people didn't have local political context, didn't have language skills. And a lot of that reporting was so-so. I made the most of it, being an area expert. And also being a local, I did what I had to do. I wish I'd done more. I wish I went 500% as opposed to 250%. But everyone has their limits. Manya: What got lost? With the poor reporting, what do you think with the stories that you captured, or what do you wish you had captured, giving that additional 250%? Vladislav: Yeah. It's a great question. I wish that I had known now what I know a year ago, but that's life in general. About where the battles would be and what kinds of people and what kinds of frontline pounds would have particular problems getting out to particular places. For example, I know now a lot more about the evacuation of certain ethnic communities. The Gagauz, the Greeks. Ukraine is full of different kinds of people. It's a mosaic. I know now a lot about the way that things happened in March and April. Particular communities went in to help their own people. Which is great. It's fine. a lot of very interesting characters wound up in different places. Much of Ukrainian intelligentsia, they wound up outside the country. A lot stayed, but a lot did wind up in different places like Berlin and the Baltics. Uh, amazing stories from, uh, the volunteers like the Chechens and the Georgians and the Lithuanians and the Belarus who came to fight for Ukraine. Just, you know, I wish I'd kept up with the guys that I was drinking with the night before. I was drinking with like six officers the night before, and two of 'em are alive. Mm or three alive now. I was with the head of a Georgian Legion two nights before the war. Hang out with some American CIA guys and people from the guys from the American, actually a couple of girls, also hardcore American girls from the US Army who were operatives and people at our embassy in Kyiv who didn't get pulled out. These are our hardcore people who after the embassy left, told whoever wanted to stay on the ground to stay. I met some very interesting people. I wish I'd kept up with them. I don't, I don't know what happened with them or what, what their war experiences were like. So, you know. Yeah. Life is full of regrets. Manya: You talked a little bit about the ethnic communities coming in to save people and to get them out. How did the Jewish communities efforts to save Ukrainian Jews compare to those efforts? Did you keep tabs on that? Movement as well. Vladislav: Oh, yeah. Oh, in fact, I worked on that actually,  to certainly to a smaller extent than other people or whatever. I certainly helped whatever I could. It was such a mad scramble and it was so chaotic in the beginning of a war. The first two weeks I would be getting calls from all over the world. They would call me and they would say this and this and this person, I know this person needs to get out. There were signal groups of volunteers, exfiltration organizations, special services people, my people in the Ukrainian Jewish community who were all doing different things to get Jews out. Tens of thousands of people were on these lists. And I would figure out to the extent possible with about 50 people, 40 to 50 people,  what their risk level was. And I would give 'em advice. I have a gay friend, one of my wife's business partners, who was the head of a major television station. And he would, he would've been on the Kill list because he was in part of intelligentsia and he was gay. I gave him particular advice on where to go.  I said, go to this village–and men aren't allowed of the country, and he wasn't the kind of guy who was gonna fight. I said, go to a particular place. I told him, go to this village and sit here and don't go anywhere for two months. And he did this. Other people needed to be gotten out. Holocaust survivors, especially. We have horrific incidents of people who survived Stalin's war and Hitler's war and who died of heart attacks under their beds, hiding from Russian missiles. There were many stories of Holocaust survivors. Typically, it's old women by this point. It's not it's not gentleman. Women do live longer. Older women in their nineties expiring in a bunker, in an underground metro station or under their bed hiding from missiles, you know. Horrific stories. but people who survived Auschwitz did get killed by the missiles. We have stories like that. And so to continue, there were many people working on getting elderly Jews out. Getting Jewish women out. Jewish kids out. There were, in fact, there were people working on getting all sorts of people out. And that's still going on. And I met a Jewish member of the Ukrainian parliament last night who did this for two months. Uh, I saw, I saw my acquaintance who I hadn't seen in two years. Yeah. There are a lot of people I haven't seen in a year, obviously, for the obvious reasons. I saw an acquaintance who's an Israeli educated Ukrainian member of parliament. He spent the first three months just evacuating Jews, driving convoys of special forces guys, former Mossad guys, special operatives into cities like Mariupol, Chernigev to get Jews out. Literally driving through minefields at a certain point with buses full of elderly Jews. And he told me last night that they got 26,000 Jews out. Just in his organization, which was Special Forces guys, Ukrainian police volunteers, Ukrainian Jewish guys who came back from Israel with IDF training, a motley collection of people. But they set up an organization and they went in, and they got people out. Manya: That's amazing. So I know before, when we spoke before you were splitting your time between Ukraine  and France, because your wife is of French descent as well. For your most recent piece for Tablet, the most recent one that I've read, you were in Tel Aviv doing an interview. So where have you spent most of your time, in this past year? Vladislav: In my head. Manya: Yeah. Understandable. Vladislav: I've spent, if I had to count up the dates of my passport, 40 to 50% of my time in Ukraine, over the last, less than the last three months for various family reasons and, you know, working on my book But half the time in Ukraine, in and out. I've been all over, spent a lot of time on the front. That was intense. That was really intense. Manya: You mean as a war correspondent on the front lines? Vladislav: Yeah,I was in Sievierodonetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, Lysychansk, Mykolaiv. I was all over the front. I was with the commanding general of the Southern front in a car, driving back from the battle of  Kherson, and we got stripped by a Russian sniper three times and they hit our car. They just missed by like a couple of centimeters, side of a thing. And the guy actually usually drove around in an armored Hummer. But the armored Hummer was actually in the shop getting repaired that day and was the one day he had an unarmored Hummer. And we were just in an unarmed car, in an unarmed command car, black Mercedes, leaving the war zone a couple of kilometers out, just a Russian reconnaissance sniper advanced group just, you know, ambushed us. They were waiting for us to, maybe they were just taking pot shots at a command car, but they were waiting for us as we were leaving. Took three shots at us and the car behind us with our bodyguards radioed, they're shooting, they're shooting. I heard three whooshes and three pings behind it. Ping, ping, ping. And we all thought in the car that it was just rocks popping off the the wheels. But actually it was a sniper. So, you know, there, there was a lot of that. It was very intense. Manya: Did you wear flak jackets? Vladislav: Yeah, well, we took 'em off in the car. When, when you're on the front line, you wear everything, but when you get out of the front line, and you're just driving back, you don't wanna drive around with it, so you just take it off in the car. And that's exactly when they started shooting us. Yeah. They would've gotten us, if they'd been a little bit luckier. Manya: Well, you moderated a panel at the Kiev Jewish Forum last week. Our CEO, Ted Deutch and AJC Europe Director Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, were also there. Your panel focused on the new Ukraine. What does that mean, the new Ukraine? What does that look like? Vladislav: Thank you for asking about that. Let me start with talking a little bit about that conference. Along with Mr. Boris Lozhkin, the head of Ukrainian Jewish Confederation. I put together with Tablet where I'm the European culture correspondent, wonderful, wonderful conference. It is the fourth annual Kiyv Jewish Forum. It took place in Kiyv for the last three years, but today, obviously this year, it won't be for the obvious reason and we put together a conference so that people understand the issues at stake, understand the position of Ukrainian Jewish community, understand the myriad issues involved with this war. Just a wonderful, wonderful conference that I really enjoyed working on with remarkable speakers. Running the gamut from Leon Panetta, Boris Johnson. Your own Mr. Deutch. Just wonderful, wonderful speakers. And, six really great panels, and 20 wonderful one-on-one interviews with really interesting people. So please go to the website of the Kiev Jewish Forum or Tablet Magazine and/or YouTube, and you'll find some really interesting content, some really interesting conversations, dialogues about the state of war, the state of Ukrainian Jewry, the state of Ukrainian political identity and the new Ukraine. Manya: I should tell our listeners, we'll put a link to the Kiyv Jewish Forum in our show notes so that they can easily access it. But yeah, if you don't mind just kinda elaborating a little bit about what, what does the new Ukraine look like? Vladislav: Well, we're gonna see what the new Ukraine will look like after the Russians are driven out of the country. It's gonna look completely different. The demographic changes, the political changes, the cultural changes will play out for decades and maybe a hundred years. These are historical events, which will have created traumatic changes to the country and to Eastern Europe, not just to Ukraine, but all of eastern Europe. From along the entire crescent, from Baltics to Poland, down to Hungary, through Moldova, Belarus. Everything will be changed by this war. This is a world historical situation that will have radically, radically changed everything. And so Ukraine as a political nation has changed dramatically over the last seven years since the Maidan revolution. And it's obviously changed a lot since the start of the war a year ago. It's a completely different country in many ways. Now, the seeds of that change were put into place by the political process of the last couple of years, by civil society, by a deep desire of the resilient Ukrainian political nation to change, to become better, to transform the country. But for the most part, the war is the thing that will change everything. And that means creating a new political nation. What that will look like at the end of this, that's hard to say. A lot of these values are deeply embedded. I know it's unfashionably essentialist to talk about national character traits, but you know, again, I'm an Eastern European, so I can get away with a lot of things that people can't here. And there are such things as national character traits. A nation is a collection of people who live together in a particular way and have particular ways of life and particular values. Different countries live in different ways and different nations, different people have different traits. Just like every person has a different trait and some are good and some are bad, and some are good in certain situations, bad in other situations. And everyone has positive traits and negative traits. And you know, Ukraine like everyone else, every other nation has positive traits. Those traits of: loving freedom, being resilient, wanting to survive, coming together in the times of war are incredibly generative in the middle of this conflict. One of the interesting things about this conflict that is shown, the way that all the different minorities in the country, and it's a country full of all kinds of people, all sorts of minorities. Not just Jews, but Greeks and Crimean Tatars, Muslims, Gagauz, Turkish speaking Christians in my own Odessa region, Poles on the Polish border, Lithuanian Belarus speakers on the Belarusian border. People who are of German descent, though there are a lot fewer of them since World War II. All sorts of different people live in Ukraine and they've come together as a political nation in order to fight together, in a liberal and democratic way. Whereas Russia's also an empire of many different kinds of people, And it's also been brought together through autocratic violence and authoritarian, centralized control. This is a war of minorities in many ways, and so a lot of the men dying from the Russian side are taken from the minority regions like Dagestan, Borodyanka, Chechnya. Disproportionate number of the men dying from the Russian side are also minorities, disproportionate to their share of the Russian Federation's population. In some circles it's a well known fact, one of the military hospitals on the Russian side, at a certain point, the most popular name amongst wounded soldiers, was Mohammed. They were Muslim minorities, from Dagestan, other places. There are a lot of Muslims in Russia. Manya: That is truly a heartbreaking detail. Vladislav: And they're the ones that are the poorest and they're the ones who are being mobilized to fight Ukrainians. Manya: So you're saying that literally the face of Ukraine, and the personality, the priorities of the nation have been changed by this war. Ukrainians have become, what, more patriotic, more militant? Militant sounds … I'm afraid that has a bad connotation. Vladislav: No, militant's great. You know, Marshall virtues. . . that's good. Militant is, you know, that's an aggressive word. Marshall virtues is a good word. Surviving virtues. It's amazing the way Ukrainian flags have encapsulated a kind of patriotism in the western world, which was in many ways unthinkable for large swaths of the advanced population. I mean, you see people who would never in a million years wave an American or British or French flag in Paris, London, and New York and Washington, wave around Ukrainian flags. Patriotism, nationalism have very bad connotations now in our decadent post-industrial West, and, Ukrainians have somehow threaded that needle of standing up for remarkable values, for our civilization, for our security alliances after the war, for the democratic world order that we, that we as Americans and Western Europeans have brought large swaths of the world, while also not becoming really unpleasantly, jingoistic. While not going into,  racism for the most part, while not going into, for the most part into unnecessary prejudices. They fight and they have the best of traditional conservative values, but they're also quite liberal in a way that no one else in eastern Europe is. It's very attractive. Manya: They really are unified for one cause.  You mentioned being shot at on the front lines of this war. This war has not only changed the nation, it has changed you. You've become a war correspondent in addition to the arts and culture correspondent you've been for so many years. And you've continued to report on the arts throughout this horrific year.  How has this war shaped Ukrainian artists, its literary community, its performing arts, sports?   Vladislav: First of all, unlike in the west, in, in Eastern Europe. I mean, these are broad statements, but for the most part, in advanced western democracies, the ruling classes have developed different lifestyles and value systems from much of the population. We're not gonna get into why that is the case, but I, as a insider-outsider, I see that. It's not the case in Eastern Europe yet, and certainly not in Ukraine. The people who rule the country and are its elites, they are the same culturally, identity wise as the people that they rule over. So the entire, let's say ruling elite and intelligentsia, artistic class. They have kids or sons or husbands or nephews at war. If we went to war now in America, much of the urban population would not have a relative who died. If a hundred thousand Americans died right now would not be, you would probably not know 10 people who died, or 15 people who died. Manya: It's not the same class system. Vladislav: Correct. America and the western world, let's say western European world from Canada down to the old, let's say Soviet borders or Polish borders, they have developed a class system, a caste system that we don't have. You could be a billionaire, and still hang out with your best friend from high school who was a worker or a bus driver. That doesn't happen here so often, for various reasons. And so a larger proportion of the intelligentsia and the artistic classes went to fight than you would expect. I know so many writers and artists and painters, filmmakers who have gone off to fight. A lot, in fact, I'd say swabs of the artist elite went off to fight. And that's very different from here. And this will shape the arts when they come back. Already you have some really remarkable, interesting things happening in, in painting. Not cinema because cinema's expensive and they're not really making movies in the middle of a war. Certain minor exceptions. There's going to be a lot, a lot of influence on the arts for a very long time. A lot of very interesting art will come out of it and the intelligentsia will be strengthened in some ways, but the country's losing some of its best people. Some of its very, very, very best people across the professions are being killed. You know, dozens of athletes who would've been competing next year in the ‘24 Olympics in Paris are dead on the front lines. Every week I open up my Twitter on my Facebook or my social media and I see another athlete, you know, pro skater or a skier or  Cross Country runner or someone who is this brilliant 19, 20 year old athlete who's supposed to compete next year, has just been killed outside of Bakhmut or just been killed outside of Kherson or just been killed outside of Sloviansk or something like this. You read continuously and there's a picture of this beautiful, lovely, young person. who will never compete next year for a gold medal at the Olympics. You see continuously people with economics degrees, people who went to art school being killed at the front. So just as the army, as the Ukrainian army has lost a lot of its best men, a lot of its most experienced soldiers have been killed recently in Bakhmut and in other places, the intelligentsia is taking a wide scale hit. Imagine like 20-30% of America's writers, artists, people who went to art school getting killed at the front or something like that. I don't have statistics, but 10 to 15, 20%. Can you imagine that? What would that do to the society over the long term, If some of its best writers, people who won Pulitzer prizes, people who won national book awards wound up going to the army and getting killed? Manya: When this war ends… Vladislav: When we win, when we win. Manya: When you win, will there be a Ukrainian Jewish community like there was before? What do you see as the future of the Ukrainian Jewish community and how do you think the trauma of this conflict will impact that community? Vladislav: There will be a Jewish Ukrainian community, whether there will be a Russian Jewish community remains to be seen. There will be survivors of the community. A lot of people will go back, we'll rebuild. We will get our demographics back. A lot of people in Ukraine will have already stayed where they're going. There are already a lot of people who have left and after a year their kids got into a school somewhere in the Czech Republic or France or Germany. They're not coming back. There will be a lot of people who will have roots somewhere else. Within the community, certain cities, Jewish life will die out. What was left of the Lugansk, Donetsk Jewish communities is gone now. What was left of Donetsk Jewry is gone. There were a lot of Jews in Mariupol, thousands of Jews. Many of them who survived World War II. Certainly the Mariupol Jewish community has no future. None. Absolutely none. For the obvious reasons. The demographics of the Jewish communities have all changed and we're gonna see over time how all this plays out and sorts itself out. A lot of Jews from Odessa went into Moldova and they will come back. A lot of Jews from Dnipro have been displaced, although the city has not been touched. And they had the biggest Jewish community of like 65-70,000 Jews in Dnipro, and the wealthiest Jewish community and the best financed, the most synagogues. I actually went, before the battle of Sievierodonetsk, I went and I asked the rabbi of Dnipro for his blessing, cause I knew it was going to be a bloodbath. I didn't really want to die, so, you know, I'll try anything once. and it worked. Proofs in the pudding. I'm still here. He's done tremendous work in order to help Jewish communities there. One of the interesting parts of this is that little Jewish communities that had been ethnically cleansed by the Holocaust, which were on their way to dying, which did not have enough Jews in order to reproduce on a long timeline in Western Ukraine. Now because of the influx of Jews from other parts of the country, from the south especially and from the east, now have enough Jews in order for them to continue on. I don't know if anyone knows the numbers and it's too early to say. Places like Lviv had a couple of hundred Jews. They now have several thousand. There are at least three or four minor towns that I can think of in Western Ukraine, which were historically Jewish towns. which did not after the Holocaust, after, Soviet and Post-soviet immigration have enough of a Jewish population in order to have a robust community a hundred years from now, they now do. Now that is a mixed blessing. But the demographics of Jews inside Ukraine have changed tremendously. Just that the demographics of everything in Ukraine has changed tremendously when 40% of a population have moved from one place to another. 8 million refugees, something like 25- 40% of the country are IDPs. Lots of Jews from my part of Ukraine, from the South, have moved to West Ukraine. And those communities, now they're temporary, but nothing is permanent as a temporary solution, as the saying goes. I think Chernowitz, which never had the opportunity, I really love their Jewish community and they're great. And the rabbi and the head of community is a wonderful man. It did not seem to me, the three or four times that I'd visited before the war, Chernowitz, where my family's from, that this is a city that has enough Jews or Jewish institutional life to continue in 50 years. It does now. Is that a good thing, I don't know. That's a different question, but it's certainly changed some things, for those cities. Manya: Vladislav, thank you. Thank you for your moving reports and for joining us here in the studio. It has been such a privilege to speak with you. Please stay safe. Vladislav: Thank you so much for having me. I really appreciate it. It's really great to check in with you again one year after the last time we spoke. 

Newshour
Russia claims it controls Ukraine's eastern Luhansk region

Newshour

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2022 47:55


Russia claims it controls Ukraine's eastern Luhansk region, a senior Ukrainian politician gives his reaction; thousands of Australians made homeless by heavy torrential rain and a giant of British modern theatre Peter Brook has died, his friend the actor Kathryn Hunter remembers him.(Photo shows a destroyed apartment bloc in the city of Sievierodonetsk in the Luhansk Region. Credit: Alexander Ermochenko via REUTERS)

Nuus
Generaal sê Rusland sal nie wen nie

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 0:39


Die Britse afgetrede generaal, Richard Barrons, sê dat in die korttermyn, sal Rusland voel hy wen die oorlog in die Oekraïne. Die land het redelike vordering gemaak in die ooste van die Oekraïne en het reeds die stad Sievierodonetsk oorgeneem. Maar Barrons meen Rusland sal nie die oorlog wen nie. Hy verduidelik.

rusland hy oekra sievierodonetsk
Truyền hình vệ tinh VOA Express - VOA
Việt Nam, Ukraine và những câu hỏi day dứt của một bạn trẻ gốc Việt | Truyền hình VOA 25/6/22 - Tháng Sáu 25, 2022

Truyền hình vệ tinh VOA Express - VOA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2022 29:58


Khi bạn gái hỏi vì sao Việt Nam lại bỏ phiếu trắng đối với nghị quyết của Liên Hợp Quốc lên án Nga xâm lược Ukraine, Hoàng chợt cảm thấy xấu hổ. Sinh ra ở Việt Nam và lớn lên ở Ukraine, anh gắn bó với ‘hai tổ quốc.' Nhưng lập trường của Việt Nam về cuộc chiến tranh xâm lược mà Nga phát động nhắm vào quê hương thứ hai của anh để lại cho anh nỗi thất vọng sâu sắc. Khi cuộc chiến kéo dài, anh đặt câu hỏi về những giá trị đạo đức mà anh từng được dạy. Tin tức đáng chú ý khác: Một người lãnh án tù vì ‘tung tin giả về phòng, chống dịch COVID'. Vụ khai thác quặng apatit: Hai phó chủ tịch Lào Cai bị bắt. Việt Nam, Campuchia không cho dùng lãnh thổ của mình gây phương hại nước kia. Ukraine sắp rút lui ở Sievierodonetsk. Video cho thấy hệ thống rốc-két tầm xa của Mỹ được sử dụng ở Ukraine. Cuộc chiến Ukraine có thể gây nạn đói, thế giới họp bàn an ninh lương thực. Đức, Mỹ bắt tay chống ‘cuộc chiến tranh lương thực bất chấp đạo lý' của Nga. Tòa tối cao Mỹ đảo ngược quyền phá thai.

Truyền hình vệ tinh - VOA
Việt Nam, Ukraine và những câu hỏi day dứt của một bạn trẻ gốc Việt | Truyền hình VOA 25/6/22 - Tháng Sáu 25, 2022

Truyền hình vệ tinh - VOA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2022 29:58


Khi bạn gái hỏi vì sao Việt Nam lại bỏ phiếu trắng đối với nghị quyết của Liên Hợp Quốc lên án Nga xâm lược Ukraine, Hoàng chợt cảm thấy xấu hổ. Sinh ra ở Việt Nam và lớn lên ở Ukraine, anh gắn bó với ‘hai tổ quốc.' Nhưng lập trường của Việt Nam về cuộc chiến tranh xâm lược mà Nga phát động nhắm vào quê hương thứ hai của anh để lại cho anh nỗi thất vọng sâu sắc. Khi cuộc chiến kéo dài, anh đặt câu hỏi về những giá trị đạo đức mà anh từng được dạy. Tin tức đáng chú ý khác: Một người lãnh án tù vì ‘tung tin giả về phòng, chống dịch COVID'. Vụ khai thác quặng apatit: Hai phó chủ tịch Lào Cai bị bắt. Việt Nam, Campuchia không cho dùng lãnh thổ của mình gây phương hại nước kia. Ukraine sắp rút lui ở Sievierodonetsk. Video cho thấy hệ thống rốc-két tầm xa của Mỹ được sử dụng ở Ukraine. Cuộc chiến Ukraine có thể gây nạn đói, thế giới họp bàn an ninh lương thực. Đức, Mỹ bắt tay chống ‘cuộc chiến tranh lương thực bất chấp đạo lý' của Nga. Tòa tối cao Mỹ đảo ngược quyền phá thai.

Thời sự quốc tế - VOA
Binh sĩ Ukraine ‘gần như rời khỏi' Sievierodonetsk, Nga đang thắng thế - Bản tin VOA - Tháng Sáu 26, 2022

Thời sự quốc tế - VOA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2022 30:00


Binh sĩ Ukraine ‘gần như rời khỏi' Sievierodonetsk, Nga đang thắng thế; Nga nói tư cách ứng viên EU của Ukraine, Moldova sẽ có hậu quả tiêu cực; Quân đội TQ nói máy bay Mỹ ở Eo biển Đài Loan gây nguy hại cho hòa bình.

Nuus
Politieke kenner sê oorlog gaan nog lank duur

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2022 0:40


Oekraïnse troepe is opdrag gegee om uit die stad Sievierodonetsk te onttrek ná weke van intense bom-aanvalle en skermutselings. Intussen is die Russiese amptenaar, Dmitry Savluchenko van in die beheerde Cherson-streek in die Oekraïne, na bewering in ‘n sluipmoordaanval dood. Volgens Russiese nuusagentskappe het ‘n motor ontplof toe Savluchenko daarin geklim het. Die VSA gaan ‘n bykomende 450 miljoen Amerikaanse dollar se militêre hulp verleen in hul stryd teen Rusland se inval. Oekraïnse soldate word reeds opgelei in die gebruik van wapens, onder meer hipermoderne vuurpyl-stelsels. Suid-Afrikaanse politieke kenner, professor Andre Duvenhage sê aan Kosmos 94.1 Nuus die oorlog gaan nog lank duur.

The Update with Brandon Julien
The Update- June 23rd

The Update with Brandon Julien

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2022 60:55


On #TheUpdate this Thursday, Ukrainian authorities say that Russia's millitary captured two villages in eastern Ukraine and were vying for control of a key highway in a continued offensive on the frontline. The capture of two villages in the embattled Donbas region came as part of blistering offense in recent weeks vin and around the pivotal city of Sievierodonetsk.

PBS NewsHour - Politics
News Wrap: Congress passes bipartisan gun control measures

PBS NewsHour - Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2022 4:20


In our news wrap Friday, the House of Representatives gave final approval to a $15 billion gun violence bill, the first of its kind in nearly three decades. The measure curbs gun sales to people convicted of domestic violence, and helps fund state laws to take guns away from people who are deemed dangerous. Also, Ukrainian forces conceded control of the city of Sievierodonetsk to Russia. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - World
News Wrap: Congress passes bipartisan gun control measures

PBS NewsHour - World

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2022 4:20


In our news wrap Friday, the House of Representatives gave final approval to a $15 billion gun violence bill, the first of its kind in nearly three decades. The measure curbs gun sales to people convicted of domestic violence, and helps fund state laws to take guns away from people who are deemed dangerous. Also, Ukrainian forces conceded control of the city of Sievierodonetsk to Russia. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - Segments
News Wrap: Congress passes bipartisan gun control measures

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2022 4:20


In our news wrap Friday, the House of Representatives gave final approval to a $15 billion gun violence bill, the first of its kind in nearly three decades. The measure curbs gun sales to people convicted of domestic violence, and helps fund state laws to take guns away from people who are deemed dangerous. Also, Ukrainian forces conceded control of the city of Sievierodonetsk to Russia. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

DW Brasil Notícias
Boletim de Notícias (23/06/22)

DW Brasil Notícias

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 5:47


Batalha pelo Donbass atinge "ápice assustador", afirma Kiev. Scholz diz que Alemanha está pronta para defender a si própria e aos aliados. Noruega pode reativar Fundo Amazônia em caso de derrota de Bolsonaro. Ouça esse e outros destaques desta quinta-feira, na primeira edição do Boletim de Notícias da DW Brasil.

Hot Off The Wire
Senate passes gun violence bill; Jan. 6 hearings continue; Supreme Court strikes down gun law; Duke standout goes first in NBA draft | Top headlines for June 23 & 24, 2022

Hot Off The Wire

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 11:13


UPDATED FRIDAY MORNING: Congress is on the verge of approving a $13 billion bipartisan gun violence bill that seemed unimaginable a month ago. House approval is expected Friday on legislation that would be lawmakers' most sweeping answer in decades to mass shootings that have come to shock yet not surprise Americans. The Senate approved the measure Thursday, with 15 Republicans joining Democrats in backing passage. The election year vote comes just weeks after a gunman massacred 19 elementary school students and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, and a white man motivated by racism allegedly killed 10 Black grocery shoppers in Buffalo, New York. Governors, lawmakers and attorneys general in states with strict gun-permitting laws are strategizing over how to shore up their restrictions after Thursday's U.S. Supreme Court decision expanded gun rights in a New York case. The head of the United Nations has warned the world faces “catastrophe” because of the growing shortage of food around the globe. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says the war in Ukraine has fueled an “unprecedented global hunger crisis” already affecting hundreds of millions of people. Guterres said U.N. negotiators have been working on a deal that would enable Ukraine to export food and let Russia bring food and fertilizer to world markets without restrictions. A regional governor in eastern Ukraine says that the country's troops will retreat from a besieged city to avoid encirclement. The city of Sievierodonetsk, the administrative center of the Luhansk region, has faced relentless Russian bombardment. Toyota is recalling 2,700 of its bZ4X crossover vehicles globally for wheel bolts that could become loose, in a major setback for the Japanese automaker's ambitions to roll out electric cars. The House panel investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol revealed Thursday that several Republican loyalists in Congress who trumpeted the president's claims later sought pardons from the White House after the effort failed. In sports, a Duke player goes No. 1 in the NBA draft, the Yankees stun the Astros, the Braves beat the Giants, a Pro Football Hall of Famer dies and another Manning will be heading to the SEC. EARIER REPORTS FIRST PUBLISHED THURSDAY: Federal agents have searched the Virginia home of a Trump-era Justice Department official who championed efforts by Trump to overturn the results of the 2020 election. That's according to a person familiar with the matter.  The Supreme Court has ruled that Americans have a right to carry firearms in public for self-defense, a major expansion of gun rights. The court struck down a New York gun law in a ruling expected to directly impact half a dozen other populous states. Thursday's decision came with recent mass shootings fresh in the nation's mind and Americans emotionally divided on the issue. Across the street from the court, the Senate sped toward passage of its own national legislation, a gun law modest in scope but still the most far-reaching in decades. Authorities say a knife-wielding psychiatric patient has fatally stabbed one man and wounded another inside a Las Vegas hospital. Metro Police say the stabbings occurred early Thursday in the psychiatric ward of University Medical Center. A judge has given final approval to a settlement of more than $1 billion for victims of the collapse of a Florida beachfront condominium. Ninety-eight people died when the 12-story Champlain Towers South suddenly collapsed. It was one of the deadliest building failures in U.S. history. Michigan has agreed to destroy more than 3 million dried blood spots taken from babies and kept in storage. It's all part of a partial settlement in an ongoing lawsuit over consent and privacy in the digital age. Hospitals routinely prick the heels of newborns to draw blood to check for more than 50 rare diseases. That practice isn't being challenged. The dispute in Michigan is over leftover samples. Health officials have ordered vaping company Juul to pull its electronic cigarettes from the U.S. market. It's the biggest blow yet to the embattled company that is widely blamed for sparking a surge in teen vaping. The announcement Thursday by the Food and Drug Administration is part of a sweeping regulatory review of e-cigarettes, which faced little regulation until recently. Average long-term U.S. mortgage rates inched up this week following last week's mammoth jump, the biggest in 35 years. Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac reported Thursday that the 30-year rate ticked up to 5.81% this week, from last week's 5.78%. Andrea Fuentes prevented a tragedy at the swimming world championships in Budapest, Hungary, with her quick reaction. The United States coach knew something was wrong when she saw artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez sink motionless to the bottom of the pool during a solo free routine on Wednesday. —The Associated Press See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts
20220621_IRISH_suil_le_dlus_faoi_ionradh_na_ruise_ar_an_ucrain

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 11:55


jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/24jypl5j Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com Expect acceleration under Russian invasion of Ukraine. Súil le dlús faoi ionradh na Rúise ar an Úcráin. Ukrainian President Zelensky has said that he expects the Russian invasion to intensify, given the progress made by Ukraine in achieving membership of the European Union. Tá sé ráite ag Uachtarán Zelensky na hÚcráine go bhfuil sé ag súil go dtiocfaidh dlús faoi ionradh na Rúise, i bhfianaise an dul chun cinn atá déanta ag an Úcráin ó thaobh ballraíocht a bhaint amach san Aontas Eorpach. Russia has today taken control of a town of strategic importance in eastern Ukraine. Tá smacht glactha inniu ag an Rúis ar bhaile a bhfuil tábhacht stráitéiseach ag baint leis in oirthear na hÚcráine. Meanwhile, the most senior diplomat in the European Union has said today that Russia 's blockade of food exports from Ukraine is a "war crime". Idir an dá linn, tá sé ráite ag an taidhleoir is sinsearaí san Aontas Eorpach inniu gur "coir cogaidh" é an bac atá curtha ag an Rúis ar easportáil bia ón Úcráin. Josep Borrel is the European Union Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. Is é Josep Borrel Ionadaí an Aontais Eorpaigh ar Ghnóthai Eachtracha agus ar Pholasaí Slándála. He urged Russia today to release the ships stranded in Ukrainian ports, in order to export the grain on board worldwide. D'impigh sé ar an Rúis inniu na longa atá sáinnithe i gcalafoirt na hÚcráine a scaoileadh saor, chun an an grán atá ar bord acu a easportáil ar fud an domhain. He said Russia's obstruction of the export of food supplies from Ukraine is a serious war crime, especially in the face of millions around the world who are hungry. Dúirt sé gur coir thromchúiseach cogaidh é an bac atá curtha ag an Rúis ar easportáil soláthairtí bia ón hÚcráin, go háirithe i bhfianaise na milliún ar fud an domhain a bhfuil ocras orthu. And if what NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said today is true - that this war could continue for years to come - it would be a very serious story for developing countries, or those in food shortages. before. Agus más fíor don mhéid a dúirt Ard-Rúnaí NATO, Jens Stoltenberg, inniu - go bhféadfadh an cogadh seo leanúint ar aghaidh go ceann blianta - scéal fíorthromchúiseach a bheadh ann do na tíortha atá i mbéal forbartha, nó a bhfuil ganntanas bia i gceist iontu cheana féin. Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Zelensky has said that he expects Russian forces to step up their invasion now, given the progress made by Kiev in gaining membership in the European Union. Idir an dá linn, tá sé ráite ag Uachtarán Zelensky na hÚcráine go bhfuil sé ag súil go gcuirfidh fórsaí na Rúise dlús faoina n-ionradh anois, i bhfianaise an dul chun cinn atá déanta ag Cív ballraíocht san Aontas Eorpach a bhaint amach. It was announced on Friday that candidate status has been approved for Ukraine. Fógraíodh dé hAoine go bhfuil stádas iarrthóra ceadaithe don Úcráin. It is another sign for Russia that Ukraine is moving towards Europe. Léiriú eile atá ann don Rúis go bhfuil an Úcráin ag bogadh i dtreo na hEorpa. And Russia today attacked with fierce attacks on a town called Toshkivka, which is south of Sievierodonetsk. Agus d'fheagair An Rúis inniu le hionsaithe fíochmhara ar bhaile darb ainm dó Toshkivka, atá ó dheas ó Sievierodonetsk. Toshkivka is strategically important, as it has been under Ukrainian control, in the Donbas region, which has been under heavy siege for over a month. Tá Toshkivka tábhachtach ó thaobh straitéise de, mar bhí sé faoi smacht na hÚcráine, i réigiun an Donbas, atá go mór faoi léigear le breis agus mí anuas.

Policy and Rights
World Refugee Day, Ukraine, Syria, & other topics

Policy and Rights

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 36:27


WORLD REFUGEE DAY Today is World Refugee Day, and this year's theme is “Whoever. Wherever. Whenever. Everyone has the right to seek safety.” In a message for the Day, the Secretary-General notes that today, the global refugee population is at a record high, and that the war in Ukraine has triggered the largest and fastest displacement in Europe since World War II. The Secretary-General points out that together with the women, children, and men fleeing conflict elsewhere in the world, the total number of forcibly displaced people has reached 100 million – a grim indictment of our times. He stressed that the right to seek asylum is a fundamental human right and that people escaping violence or persecution must be able to cross borders safely. And as you have seen, this weekend, ahead of World Refugee Day, the Secretary-General visited refugee families from Iraq and Afghanistan who are now living in the New York area. His first stop was in Brooklyn and then he went to Queens. The Secretary-General recalled that when he led the UN Refugee Agency, there were twice as many resettlement opportunities available for refugees. He urged more States to open their borders to asylum seekers. He called on all to stand together in solidarity and defend the integrity of the international protection regime. For his part, Filippo Grandi, the High Commissioner for Refugees, emphasized that the world has a choice: either come together to reverse the trend of persecution, violence, and war, or accept that the legacy of the 21st century is one of continued forced displacement. We all know which is the right – and smart – thing to do, Mr. Grandi said.UKRAINE From Ukraine, our humanitarian colleagues are telling us that intense hostilities were reported over the weekend, across Government and non-Government-controlled areas of the Donetska and Luhanska oblasts. In Donetska, hostilities and shelling were particularly intense since Friday, and while we could not verify the numbers, our partners on the ground and authorities from both sides indicate that dozens of houses and schools were destroyed in many settlements on both sides of the contact line. As parties to the conflict intensify military operations across Donetska, they are leaving behind dozens of dead or injured civilians, including in areas that had not previously experienced fighting. The situation is similar in Luhanska oblasts, where shelling, airstrikes and fighting are reportedly continuing to make life extremely difficult for people in Sievierodonetsk, Lysychansk and other places in both Government and non-Government controlled areas. Our humanitarian colleagues tell us that people caught up in the fighting are facing urgent needs with access to basic services - particularly water and healthcare – and that those basic services are limited, especially in Sievierodonetsk and Lysuchansk. Airstrikes and hostilities have also been reported this past weekend in northern and southern regions as well. As I said last week, the parties to the conflict have an obligation to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure. We call on them to make sure that civilians in Ukraine, who have already gone through immense suffering, are not only spared but have the opportunity to receive assistance. We, along with our humanitarian partners, are ready to expand our presence even further, but we need the parties to do their part. SECURITY COUNCIL Also in the Security Council this morning Nicholas Haysom, the Head of our peacekeeping Mission in South Sudan, will brief you at the Security Council stakeout – they're in consultations right now after an open meeting, so we will give you an announcement but he will stop by and take your question which I hope you will ask. And this morning as you may have hears he said that in the coming months, South Sudan will need national leadership, resources and a visible commitment by the country's leaders to fulfil their responsibilities under the peace agreement and to take the necessary steps for the country to exit the transitional period. We have shared his full remarks with you – and he will answer your questions at the stakeout.Also briefing was Ghada Eltahir Mudawi, OCHA's Director of Operations and Advocacy, who briefed on South Sudan. She said that against a backdrop of profound economic challenges, the drivers of conflict and climate shocks have resulted in a dire humanitarian situation. When it gets as bad as in South Sudan, she said, the spectre of severe hunger and even famine results.

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America
FLASHPOINT UKRAINE: Nobel Sale Earns Record Amount for Ukrainian Charity - June 21, 2022

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 25:00


Ukraine's eastern city of Sievierodonetsk continues under heavy attack. Plus, as the conflict continues, does the war in Ukraine mirror other world events? And the sale of a Nobel prize for a Ukrainian charity brings home a staggering amount.

RNZ: Nine To Noon
40 days under siege: Reporting in Sievierodonetsk

RNZ: Nine To Noon

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 17:29


Russia is tightening its grip on the strategically significant city of Sievierodonetsk, located in the fiercely contested Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. Capturing Sievierodonetsk has been a top military goal for Moscow, and Russian forces now control most, but not all, of the city, and have it three-quarters encircled. After weeks of heavy shelling, Russia is now amassing a large number of troops to the city in an attempt to gain full control of Sievierodonestsk. Meanwhile, the city is quickly running out of essential supplies, with thousands of civilians trapped in the city, some sheltering in bunkers beneath the Azot chemical plant. The city has been largely off-limits for reporters since May given the dangers of the sustained Russian bombardment. Independent journalist Billy Nessen was the only reporter to remain in Sievierodonetsk for more than a day during the protracted siege - he ended up spending forty days there. He decided to leave when shelling escalated and Russian troops entered the city and is now in Dnipro, where he speaks to Kathryn.

Reportage International
Guerre en Ukraine: à Lyssytchansk, la police mobilisée pour distribuer l'aide humanitaire

Reportage International

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2022 2:32


Dans le Donbass, les combats font toujours rage pour le contrôle de la grande ville de Sievierodonetsk. La région est constamment bombardée. À Lyssytchansk, la police est venue apporter un peu d'aide humanitaire. De nos envoyés spéciaux à Lyssytchansk, Leurs coffres pleins de bouteilles d'eau, de conserves ou encore d'huile, les policiers de Lyssytchansk sont accueillis en héros par les habitants de ce hameau vivant reclus dans leurs maisons. « C'est terrible de voir mes concitoyens vivre comme ça, cachés, essayant de survivre comme ils peuvent », se désole Sergei, chef adjoint de la police du district. « À n'importe quel moment, une bombe peut tomber et détruire leur maison. Cette guerre est horrible. Donc, on doit prendre soin de ces gens. » ► À lire aussi : Ukraine: à Lyssytchansk, la crainte de subir le même sort que Sievierodonetsk « On espère qu'on aura assez pour survivre » Ces maisons se trouvent au bout de la région de Louhansk, dans la dernière poche encore contrôlée par l'Ukraine. Une seule route relie à l'extérieur. Une voie de poussière encerclée par l'armée russe qui bombarde constamment la zone. Ces quelques familles vivent dans un quotidien de bombes, de tirs, de stress et de peur, comme l'explique Raïssa Maichaleva. Nous ne pouvons pas aller en ville. C'est trop loin et nous n'avons pas de voiture. Nous puisons l'eau dans un petit lac près d'ici, quand ça ne bombarde pas. Pour la nourriture, nous n'avons que l'aide humanitaire. Nous avons pu en accumuler un petit stock. Pendant l'hiver, nous avons aussi gardé des conserves. Enfin, on a un petit potager pour produire nos propres légumes. On espère qu'on aura assez pour survivre. Plusieurs maisons aux alentours ont été détruites par des obus. Celle d'Irina Makarenka tient encore debout, mais jusqu'à quand ? Pour autant, cette Ukrainienne de 45 ans refuse toujours de partir. « Nous essayons juste de survivre. Si les Russes arrivent, nous continuerons notre vie ici », affirme Irina Makarenka, qui poursuit : « Je suis née ici, c'est mon pays, je ne partirai pas. Je dirai aux Russes de partir, de rentrer chez eux. C'est tout. Nous voulons vivre comme nous le faisions avant la guerre. Aller à l'école, travailler, trouver du bois pour allumer un feu et manger. Tout simplement. En espérant que la paix arrive aussi vite que possible. » ► À lire aussi : Ukraine: les habitants de Lyssytchansk sous pression avec l'avancée des troupes pro-russes « Sans l'aide des autres, je serais déjà morte » Une personne n'a pas la force de venir remercier les policiers en personne. Cette grand-mère vit terrée dans la cave depuis des jours. Bouleversée, elle prie Dieu de lui venir en aide. « Dieu, aide-nous, aide-nous à reconstruire ma maison détruite, à recevoir l'argent de ma retraite », souhaite-t-elle. « Nous n'avons plus rien. Je ne peux aller nulle part parce que je n'ai plus d'argent. C'est très dur, j'ai un problème de cœur et de pression sanguine. Sans l'aide des autres, je serais déjà morte », dit la grand-mère. À quelques kilomètres, les combats font rage à Sievierodonetsk. Si les Russes s'emparent de la ville et traversent la rivière, ils pourraient vite fondre sur le hameau et ses alentours.

The Power Vertical Podcast by Brian Whitmore

The battle for the Donbas rages in Ukraine's east with Russian forces on the verge of capturing the strategically vital city of Sievierodonetsk. And with Ukrainian cities facing a merciless onslaught of Russian artillery and missile attacks, Kyiv calls on the West to send more long-range weapons to push back the offensive.

SBS Greek - SBS Ελληνικά
Ukraine rejects Russian ultimatum to surrender eastern city as US sends more weapons to Kyiv - Οι Ηνωμένες Πολιτείες ανακοίνωσαν πρόσθετα όπλα αξίας 1 δις για την Ουκρανία

SBS Greek - SBS Ελληνικά

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 6:13


Sievierodonetsk remains the focus of fighting in eastern Ukraine as US President Joe Biden announced $1 billion worth of additional arms and $225 million in humanitarian aid. - Η Ουκρανία αγνόησε το ρωσικό τελεσίγραφο για την παράδοση της ανατολικής πόλης Σεβεροντονέτσκ, την ώρα που οι Ηνωμένες Πολιτείες ανακοίνωσαν περισσότερα όπλα για το Κίεβο.

ThePrint
Cut The Clutter: At great cost, Russia turns tide just a bit in Ukraine & why Sievierodonetsk's viciously contested

ThePrint

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 26:29


As Putin's forces make their way through the town of Sievierodonetsk, In episode 1022 of Cut The Clutter, Shekhar Gupta gives us an update on the Ukraine war that has turned more vicious. Where are the Russian forces and how is Ukraine tackling them in Kharkiv & Kherson.

The Update with Brandon Julien
The Update- June 15th

The Update with Brandon Julien

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 69:58


On #TheUpdate this Wednesday, the Russian military says that they used long-range missiles to destroy a depot in the western Lviv region of Ukraine where ammunition for NATO-supplied weapons was being stored. Those strikes came as the fighting raged on today for the city of Sievierodonetsk in the eastern Donbas area, the key focus of Russia's offensive in recent weeks.

Truyền hình vệ tinh - VOA
Đại sứ quán Việt Nam ‘giải trình' về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia | Truyền hình VOA 15/6/22 - Tháng Sáu 15, 2022

Truyền hình vệ tinh - VOA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 29:58


Đại sứ quán Việt Nam tại Malaysia vừa lên tiếng phản hồi về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia chỉ 13.000 đồng, tức chưa tới 1/2 giá xăng tại Việt Nam, là thông tin ‘không chính xác'. Xem thêm: https://bit.ly/3wSHe49 Tin tức đáng chú ý khác: Mỹ tài trợ hệ thống ôxy lỏng mới tại Bệnh viện Bạch Mai. Mỹ đưa Việt Nam vào danh sách theo dõi về chính sách ngoại hối. Đại biểu quốc hội: Nếu công khai, minh bạch đã tránh được vụ Việt Á. Nga phá hết cầu vào Sievierodonetsk, Ukraine nói vẫn cầm cự trong thành phố. Nga ca ngợi các nước châu Á tham dự Diễn đàn Kinh tế St Petersburg. Campuchia bỏ tù 60 người vì tội ‘phản quốc'. Miền bắc Ấn Độ chống chọi với nắng nóng kỷ lục. WHO sắp đánh giá xem đậu mùa khỉ có là tình trạng khẩn cấp y tế. Nếu không vào được VOA, xin hãy dùng đường link https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet1 hoặc https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet2 để vượt tường lửa

Ukraine Daily Brief
June 15, 2022

Ukraine Daily Brief

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 8:25


The seventy-eighth episode of the DSR Daily Brief. Stories cited in the podcast:Ukraine fights on in Sievierodonetsk as Russia's 'surrender' ultimatum passesBiden: U.S. to build silos on Poland border to export Ukrainian grainRussia Turns to Old Tanks as It Burns Through Weapons in UkraineStatement by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on President Biden's Travel to Israel, the West Bank, and Saudi ArabiaUN cuts food aid to 1.7 million hungry people in South SudanPakistanis told to drink less tea as nation grapples with economic crisisDom Phillips and Bruno Pereira: Police arrest second suspectCanada and Denmark settle ‘Whisky War' with a bottle exchangeNetflix plans real-life Squid Game reality TV show with $4.56m prize See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Truyền hình vệ tinh - VOA
Đại sứ quán Việt Nam ‘giải trình' về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia | Truyền hình VOA 15/6/22 - Tháng Sáu 15, 2022

Truyền hình vệ tinh - VOA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 29:58


Đại sứ quán Việt Nam tại Malaysia vừa lên tiếng phản hồi về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia chỉ 13.000 đồng, tức chưa tới 1/2 giá xăng tại Việt Nam, là thông tin ‘không chính xác'. Xem thêm: https://bit.ly/3wSHe49 Tin tức đáng chú ý khác: Mỹ tài trợ hệ thống ôxy lỏng mới tại Bệnh viện Bạch Mai. Mỹ đưa Việt Nam vào danh sách theo dõi về chính sách ngoại hối. Đại biểu quốc hội: Nếu công khai, minh bạch đã tránh được vụ Việt Á. Nga phá hết cầu vào Sievierodonetsk, Ukraine nói vẫn cầm cự trong thành phố. Nga ca ngợi các nước châu Á tham dự Diễn đàn Kinh tế St Petersburg. Campuchia bỏ tù 60 người vì tội ‘phản quốc'. Miền bắc Ấn Độ chống chọi với nắng nóng kỷ lục. WHO sắp đánh giá xem đậu mùa khỉ có là tình trạng khẩn cấp y tế. Nếu không vào được VOA, xin hãy dùng đường link https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet1 hoặc https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet2 để vượt tường lửa

The Update with Brandon Julien
The Update (Flag Day

The Update with Brandon Julien

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 61:12


On #TheUpdate this Tuesday, Sievierodonetsk, the main focus of the war in eastern Ukraine in recent weeks, is not yet blocked off by Russian troops even though they control about 80% of the city and have destroyed all three bridges leading out of the city, according to an official. The governor of the Luhansk region said that Ukrainian forces are still able to evacuate their wounded and communicate with their military.

What A Day
The Bear Market Necessities

What A Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 27:45


Inflation is at a four-decade high, and on Monday, stocks fell to their lowest levels since March 2021. We break down what's happening in the economy, why, and what you need to know about what the Federal Reserve might do in response at its meeting today.Russian troops are reportedly in control of as much as 80 percent of the Ukrainian city of Sievierodonetsk. Jack Crosbie, a correspondent for Rolling Stone, joins us to discuss what he saw on the ground when he was in eastern Ukraine last week.And in headlines: the House passed a bill to increase security for Supreme Court justices, BTS is going on an indefinite hiatus, and an appeals court ruled that a 51-year-old Asian elephant named Happy was not a person.Show Notes:Jack Crosbie on Twitter – https://twitter.com/jscrosDonate to Crooked Media's Pride Fund – https://crooked.com/pride/Sign up for Crooked Coffee's launch on June 21st – http://go.crooked.com/coffee-wadFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday

Truyền hình vệ tinh VOA Express - VOA
Đại sứ quán Việt Nam ‘giải trình' về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia | Truyền hình VOA 15/6/22 - Tháng Sáu 15, 2022

Truyền hình vệ tinh VOA Express - VOA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 29:58


Đại sứ quán Việt Nam tại Malaysia vừa lên tiếng phản hồi về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia chỉ 13.000 đồng, tức chưa tới 1/2 giá xăng tại Việt Nam, là thông tin ‘không chính xác'. Xem thêm: https://bit.ly/3wSHe49 Tin tức đáng chú ý khác: Mỹ tài trợ hệ thống ôxy lỏng mới tại Bệnh viện Bạch Mai. Mỹ đưa Việt Nam vào danh sách theo dõi về chính sách ngoại hối. Đại biểu quốc hội: Nếu công khai, minh bạch đã tránh được vụ Việt Á. Nga phá hết cầu vào Sievierodonetsk, Ukraine nói vẫn cầm cự trong thành phố. Nga ca ngợi các nước châu Á tham dự Diễn đàn Kinh tế St Petersburg. Campuchia bỏ tù 60 người vì tội ‘phản quốc'. Miền bắc Ấn Độ chống chọi với nắng nóng kỷ lục. WHO sắp đánh giá xem đậu mùa khỉ có là tình trạng khẩn cấp y tế. Nếu không vào được VOA, xin hãy dùng đường link https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet1 hoặc https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet2 để vượt tường lửa

Truyền hình vệ tinh VOA Express - VOA
Đại sứ quán Việt Nam ‘giải trình' về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia | Truyền hình VOA 15/6/22 - Tháng Sáu 15, 2022

Truyền hình vệ tinh VOA Express - VOA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 29:58


Đại sứ quán Việt Nam tại Malaysia vừa lên tiếng phản hồi về thông tin giá xăng tại Malaysia chỉ 13.000 đồng, tức chưa tới 1/2 giá xăng tại Việt Nam, là thông tin ‘không chính xác'. Xem thêm: https://bit.ly/3wSHe49 Tin tức đáng chú ý khác: Mỹ tài trợ hệ thống ôxy lỏng mới tại Bệnh viện Bạch Mai. Mỹ đưa Việt Nam vào danh sách theo dõi về chính sách ngoại hối. Đại biểu quốc hội: Nếu công khai, minh bạch đã tránh được vụ Việt Á. Nga phá hết cầu vào Sievierodonetsk, Ukraine nói vẫn cầm cự trong thành phố. Nga ca ngợi các nước châu Á tham dự Diễn đàn Kinh tế St Petersburg. Campuchia bỏ tù 60 người vì tội ‘phản quốc'. Miền bắc Ấn Độ chống chọi với nắng nóng kỷ lục. WHO sắp đánh giá xem đậu mùa khỉ có là tình trạng khẩn cấp y tế. Nếu không vào được VOA, xin hãy dùng đường link https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet1 hoặc https://bit.ly/VOATiengViet2 để vượt tường lửa

Le débat d'Europe Matin
La politique de la terre brûlée, version ukrainienne

Le débat d'Europe Matin

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 3:42


Chaque matin, Vincent Hervouet nous livre son regard sur l'actualité internationale. Ce mardi, il revient sur les forces ukrainiennes se sont repliées du centre ville de Sievierodonetsk qu'elles abandonnent aux Russes. Les soldats font une guerre de partisans qui s'enterrent et défendent leurs positions. Pour les déloger, les Russes doivent mobiliser des troupes nombreuses et pendant longtemps. C'est le but recherché. Les défenseurs se battent et meurent pour faire perdre son temps à l'assaillant. Ils fixent l'ennemi qui est entravé dans sa conquête.

Flash info
Bientôt la fin de la vaccination obligatoire pour les voyageurs au Canada

Flash info

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 2:16


Les voyageurs non vaccinés contre la COVID-19 pourront bientôt recommencer à voyager en train et en avion au Canada. Le gouvernement Trudeau va déposer un projet de loi sur la cybersécurité. Moscou demande aux civils réfugiés dans une usine de Sievierodonetsk de se rendre. | Mathieu Belhumeur (journaliste-présentateur)

Le regard international - Vincent Hervouët
La politique de la terre brûlée, version ukrainienne

Le regard international - Vincent Hervouët

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 3:42


Chaque matin, Vincent Hervouet nous livre son regard sur l'actualité internationale. Ce mardi, il revient sur les forces ukrainiennes se sont repliées du centre ville de Sievierodonetsk qu'elles abandonnent aux Russes. Les soldats font une guerre de partisans qui s'enterrent et défendent leurs positions. Pour les déloger, les Russes doivent mobiliser des troupes nombreuses et pendant longtemps. C'est le but recherché. Les défenseurs se battent et meurent pour faire perdre son temps à l'assaillant. Ils fixent l'ennemi qui est entravé dans sa conquête.

PBS NewsHour - World
News Wrap: FDA advisory panel recommends Moderna's vaccine for children ages 6 to 17

PBS NewsHour - World

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 5:23


In our news wrap Tuesday, an FDA advisory panel voted to recommend that the CDC approve Moderna's vaccine for kids 6 to 17 years old, the Labor Department says wholesale prices were up 10.8 percent from a year ago, the House approved expanding Supreme Court security, Ukraine suffers heavy losses in Sievierodonetsk, and Britain pressed ahead with plan to deport asylum-seekers to Rwanda. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ
ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ (၀၆-၁၄-၂၀၂၂) - ဇြန္ ၁၄, ၂၀၂၂

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 29:27


ယူကရိန္း အေရွ႕ပိုင္း Sievierodonetsk ၿမိဳ႕အလယ္ထိ ႐ုရွားတပ္ေတြ ထိုးေဖာက္လာေနတဲ့အေၾကာင္းယူကရိန္းေျပာ၊ အေမရိကန္ျပည္ေထာင္စုမွာ ၿပီးခဲ့တဲ့ႏွစ္ ဇန္ဝါရီလ ၆ ရက္ လႊတ္ေတာ္ စီးနင္းခံရမႈအေပၚ စုံစမ္းစစ္ေဆးတဲ့ ၾကားနာပြဲေတြ မွာ ေရွ႕ေနခ်ဳပ္ေဟာင္း William Barr ဗြီဒီယိုကေန သက္ေသထြက္၊ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံမွာ အာဏာသိမ္းအုပ္ခ်ဳပ္ေနတဲ့ စစ္ေကာင္စီအေနနဲ႔ ညႇိဳႏႈိင္းလိုတဲ့ ဆႏၵတစုံတရာ မျပတဲ့အျပင္ သူတို႔အာဏာခိုင္ၿမဲေအာင္ဆက္လုပ္ေနတဲ့အတြက္ ျမန္မာျပည္သူေတြ ေပးဆပ္ေနၾကရတယ္လို႔ အေမရိကန္ေျပာ

william barr sievierodonetsk
Astro Awani
385: Daily Dose @ 5: IRB traces more than 31,000 tax evaders, Russian forces destroy last route out of Ukraine's key city

Astro Awani

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 3:00


AMONG the headlines for Tuesday, June 14, 2022, tax losses suffered by the government due to tax evaders were estimated at more than RM665 million. Earlier today, the Inland Revenue Board (or IRB) said it has discovered around 31,598 entities comprising individuals, businesses, companies and others who have yet to declare their incomes. Also, Russian forces cut off the last routes for evacuating citizens from the eastern Ukrainian city of Sievierodonetsk. The regional governor Sergei Gaidai said all bridges to the embattled Ukrainian key city have now been destroyed. Listen to the top stories of the day, reporting from Astro AWANI newsroom — all in 3-minutes. We bring you the headlines, weekdays at 5 pm. Stay informed on astroawani.com for these news and more.

PBS NewsHour - Segments
News Wrap: FDA advisory panel recommends Moderna's vaccine for children ages 6 to 17

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 5:23


In our news wrap Tuesday, an FDA advisory panel voted to recommend that the CDC approve Moderna's vaccine for kids 6 to 17 years old, the Labor Department says wholesale prices were up 10.8 percent from a year ago, the House approved expanding Supreme Court security, Ukraine suffers heavy losses in Sievierodonetsk, and Britain pressed ahead with plan to deport asylum-seekers to Rwanda. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

Daily News Brief by TRT World

*) Fierce fighting in Ukraine's Donbass region President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says the battle for the eastern Donbass will go down as one of the most brutal in European history. The region, comprising the provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk, is claimed by Russian separatists. Zelenskyy said "for us, the price of this battle is very high. It is just scary," adding, "we draw the attention of our partners daily to the fact that only a sufficient number of modern artillery for Ukraine will ensure our advantage." *) Sievierodonetsk under siege Russian forces have laid siege to the eastern city of Sievierodonetsk, destroying the last bridges into the industrial hub. The cities of Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk have been targeted for weeks as the last areas in the eastern Donbass region of Luhansk still under Ukrainian control. Ukraine's forces had been pushed back from Sievierodonetsk's centre after a weeks-long Russian offensive, said regional governor Sergei Gaidai. *) Türkiye to start transferring gas from Black Sea in early 2023 Türkiye will start transferring 10 million cubic metres of natural gas daily from the Sakarya Gas Field in the Black Sea to the national transmission system in the first quarter of 2023, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said. First gas transmission is planned to be delivered through a 150-kilometre-long subsea pipeline that Türkiye will construct to run from the field to onshore where it will be connected to the national gas grid. Türkiye sees energy as "the key to regional cooperation, and not an area of tension and conflict," Erdogan said. *) UK to send first refugees to Rwanda The British government is preparing to send a first plane carrying failed asylum seekers to Rwanda despite legal bids and protests against the controversial policy. A chartered plane was to leave one of London's airports overnight and land in Kigali on Tuesday, campaigners said on Monday, after UK judges rejected an appeal against the deportations. Claimants had argued that a decision on the policy should have waited until a full hearing on the legality of the policy next month. And finally… *) Hollywood stars seek responsible on-screen gun depictions Hollywood stars including Amy Schumer, Julianne Moore and Mark Ruffalo have signed a letter, calling for movies and television shows to depict responsible gun ownership and to limit scenes involving children with firearms. The open letter penned in response to recent US mass shootings in Uvalde and Buffalo, was also signed by top producers J.J. Abrams ("Lost"), Shonda Rhimes ("Bridgerton") and Lucasfilm head Kathleen Kennedy.

SBS Assyrian
Severe shelling in Sievierodonetsk as Russia re-opens former McDonald's restaurants

SBS Assyrian

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 9:06


 Ukraine's President says Russia's shelling in Sievierodonetsk is severe as he waits to hear from the European Union on whether his nation will be accepted into the bloc.This comes as global food prices rise and new Russian versions of McDonald's restaurants open in Moscow.

Simple English News Daily
Tuesday 14th June 2022. World News. Today: Sievierodonetsk access. Wikipedia appeal. Sweden NATO action. UK NI rules. Bulgaria resignations.

Simple English News Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 7:21


World News in 7 minutes. Tuesday 14th June 2022.Transcripts at send7.org/transcriptsToday: Sievierodonetsk access. Wikipedia appeal. Sweden NATO action. UK NI rules. Bulgaria resignations. Congo violence. Pope Africa visit. China Covid-19 outbreak. India opposition leader. South Korea strike. Cuba sanctions. US visa restrictions. SpaceX approval.Please leave a rating on Apple podcasts or Spotify.With Juliet MartinContact us at podcast@send7.org or send an audio message at speakpipe.com/send7SEND7 (Simple English News Daily in 7 minutes) tells the most important world news stories in intermediate English. Every day, listen to the most important stories from every part of the world in slow, clear English. Whether you are an intermediate learner trying to improve your advanced, technical and business English, or if you are a native speaker who just wants to hear a summary of world news as fast as possible, join Stephen Devincenzi and Juliet Martin every morning. Transcripts can be found at send7.org/transcripts. Simple English News Daily is the perfect way to start your day, by practising your listening skills and understanding complicated stories in a simple way. It is also highly valuable for IELTS and TOEFL students. Students, teachers, and people with English as a second language, tell us that they listen to SEND7 because they can learn English through hard topics, but simple grammar. We believe that the best way to improve your spoken English is to immerse yourself in real-life content, such as what our podcast provides. SEND7 covers all news including politics, business, natural events and human rights. Whether it is happening in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas or Oceania, you will hear it on SEND7, and you will understand it. For more information visit send7.org/contact

SBS World News Radio
Severe shelling in Sievierodonetsk as Russia re-opens former McDonald's restaurants

SBS World News Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 6:02


Ukraine is waiting to hear from the European Union on whether it will be accepted into the bloc, as the war exacerbates global food insecurity.

SBS Ukrainian - SBS УКРАЇНСЬКОЮ МОВОЮ
Ukraine today - 14/06/2022 - Україна сьогодні - 14/06/2022

SBS Ukrainian - SBS УКРАЇНСЬКОЮ МОВОЮ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 18:21


14/06/2022. The latest news from Ukraine. It is another day of Russia's ruthless war against Ukraine. Ukraine is under attack. Russian forces once again pushed Ukrainian units away from the city center of Sievierodonetsk, Luhansk Oblast, as the fiercest battles rage in the area. In Donetsk oblast, Ukraine not only repelled multiple Russian attacks but also liberated three villages. Ukraine Army chief calls on the US to provide more 155 mm artillery. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says that 200-300 Ukrainian soldiers die every day.  - 14/06/2022.  Добірка новин із героїчної України. Війна - фронт простягнувся на понад 2500 кілометрів. Ситуація там важка. Бої за Сіверодонецьк також складні, людей не вдається еваюкувати. Російські війська далі використовують заборонені касетні бомби.  Міжнародні розслідувачі ООН прибули в Ірпінь для фіксації та виявленя злочинів російськими військами. Про це і більше на веб-сторінці SBS Ukrainian...  

Ukraine Daily Brief
June 13, 2022

Ukraine Daily Brief

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 8:39


The seventy-sixth episode of the DSR Daily Brief. Stories cited in the podcast:Russian artillery destroying Sievierodonetsk, hundreds shelter in chemical plantNATO chief: Turkey has ‘legitimate concerns' over terrorismIndia, China growing markets for shunned Russian oilNupur Sharma: Uttar Pradesh destroys houses of Muslims after protestsFrench far-left firebrand puts Macron's majority on the line in parliamentary voteBelongings of missing men found tied underwater in AmazonEthiopia says willing to resume dam talks with Egypt, SudanVenezuelan leader, Iranian president sign 20-year agreementTasty name but no Big Mac: Russia opens rebranded McDonald's restaurants See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Daily News Brief by TRT World

*) Ukrainian, Russian forces fight for 'every metre' in Sievierodonetsk Ukrainian and Russian forces are fighting for "literally every metre" in Sievierodonetsk, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says, as fighting intensified in an eastern region where the country's top commander said the land "is covered in blood". Sievierodonetsk and nearby Lysychansk have been targeted for weeks as the last areas in the Luhansk region still under Ukrainian control. Russia's massed artillery in that region gave it a tenfold advantage, said Valeriy Zaluzhny, commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian military. But, "despite everything, we continue to hold positions", he said. *) Amnesty alleges Russia killed hundreds in Kharkiv 'war crimes' Amnesty International has accused Russia of "war crimes" in Ukraine, saying attacks on Kharkiv, many using banned cluster bombs, had killed hundreds of civilians. The rights group said in a report on Ukraine's second biggest city: “The repeated bombardments of residential neighbourhoods in Kharkiv are indiscriminate, which killed and injured hundreds of civilians, and as such constitute war crimes." *) US Senators announce tentative deal on gun control A bipartisan group of US Senators has announced the outline of a deal on gun control. The plan for legislation includes support for tougher criminal background checks for gun buyers -- but only those younger than 21 -- and a crackdown on illegal gun purchases. Senators also want to see more funding for mental health care and school security. Calls for stricter gun control have grown after a recent string of mass shootings. *) Macron party neck and neck with leftists in parliamentary vote French President Emmanuel Macron's centrist alliance appears to be slightly ahead in the first round of parliamentary elections. The Left has been gaining on him, throwing into serious doubt whether Macron will be able to secure a majority in parliament. If not, that would make it virtually impossible to drive through his reform agenda. And, voter abstention in this round was at an all-time high, nearly 53 percent. And, finally… *) Justin Bieber suffering from partial facial paralysis Justin Bieber says a rare disorder that paralysed half of the superstar performer's face is the reason behind his tour postponement. The multi-Grammy winner is suffering from Ramsay Hunt syndrome, he said in video he posted on Friday on Instagram. The syndrome causes facial paralysis and affects nerves in the face through a shingles outbreak.

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ
ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗြီသတင္းလႊာ (၀၆-၁၃-၂၀၂၂) - ဇြန္ ၁၃, ၂၀၂၂

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 29:27


႐ုရွား ထိုးစစ္ျပင္းထန္ေနတဲ့ ယူကရိန္း အေရွ႕ပိုင္းၿမိဳ႕ Sievierodonetsk မွာ ေခတ္မီ ဒုံးက်ည္ ကာကြယ္ေရး စနစ္ လိုအပ္ေနတယ္ လို႔ ယူကရိန္း သမၼတေျပာ၊ အေမရိကန္ျပည္ေထာင္စုမွာ ၿပီးခဲ့တဲ့ႏွစ္ ဇန္နဝါရီလ ၆ ရက္ လႊတ္ေတာ္ဝင္စီးတဲ့ ျဖစ္ရပ္အေပၚဒုတိယအႀကိမ္ အမ်ားျပည္သူ႔ေရွ႕ေမွာက္ ၾကားနာမည္၊ ၈၈ မ်ိဳးဆက္ေခါင္းေဆာင္ ကိုဂ်င္မီနဲ႔ လႊတ္ေတာ္အမတ္ေဟာင္း ကိုၿဖိဳးေဇယ်ာေသာ္အပါအဝင္ (၄) ဦးကို ေသဒဏ္အတည္ျပဳထားနဲ႔ ပတ္သက္လို႔ အာဆီယံ အလွည့္က် ဥကၠ႒ဆီကို ျမန္မာစစ္ေကာင္စီရွင္းလင္း

sievierodonetsk
MEDUZA/EN/VHF
‘Gnarled and stunted and wrong': hey can' Donbas residents describe life in three cities where Russia is slowly wresting control

MEDUZA/EN/VHF

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2022 14:35


As the battle for the Donbas rages on, Russian forces continue to make gains. They've seized Lyman, destroyed much of Sievierodonetsk, and are currently advancing on Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, and Lysychansk, which are currently still under Ukrainian control. Meduza spoke to residents of these cities about what life looks like right now -- and how they're preparing for the Russian army's invasion. Original Article: https://meduza.io/en/feature/2022/06/01/people-are-surviving-however-they-can

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America
FLASHPOINT UKRAINE: Ukrainian Forces Take to The Streets to Counter Russian Artillery - June 10, 2022

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2022 25:00


The Ukrainian commander in Sievierodonetsk says his forces are taking to the street to counter Russia's artillery advantage. US Officials say they're helping move Ukrainian grain to Africa, but is that enough to stop the continent from purchasing Russian grains?

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ
ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ (၀၆-၁၀-၂၀၂၂) - ဇြန္ ၁၀, ၂၀၂၂

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2022 29:27


အေမရိကန္ မွာ ၂၀၂၁ ခုႏွစ္ ဇန္နဝါရီလ ၆ ရက္က လႊတ္ေတာ္အေဆာက္အအုံကို ဆႏၵျပသူေတြ စီးနင္းတိုက္ခိုက္ခဲ့တဲ့ကိစၥ လႊတ္ေတာ္ စုံစမ္းေရးေကာ္မတီက အမ်ားျပည္သူ ၾကားနာပြဲ က်င္းပ၊ ယူကရိန္း အေရွ႕ပိုင္း Sievierodonetsk မွာ ယူကရိန္းတပ္ဖြဲ႕ေတြနဲ႔ တိုက္ပြဲျပင္းထန္ေနတယ္လို႔ ႐ုရွား ေျပာ၊ လက္တင္အေမရိကား နဲ႔ ကာေရဗီယန္ကြၽန္းႏိုင္ငံက ေခါင္းေဆာင္ေတြကို ဒီသီတင္းပတ္အတြင္း အေမရိကန္သမၼတ Biden ေတြ႕

joe biden sievierodonetsk
PBS NewsHour - Segments
News Wrap: Michigan police officer charged with murder for killing Black man

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 4:21


In our news wrap Thursday, a Grand Rapids, Michigan, policeman faces trial for second-degree murder for killing a Black man during a traffic stop, a GOP candidate for Michigan governor was arrested for his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, the House debates a bill to provide security for families of Supreme Court justices, and Ukraine forces claim gains in the eastern city of Sievierodonetsk. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ
ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ (၀၆-၀၉-၂၀၂၂) - ဇြန္ ၀၉, ၂၀၂၂

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 29:27


အေမရိကတိုက္ႏိုင္ငံမ်ား ထိပ္သီးစည္းေဝးပြဲဖြင့္ပြဲမွာ ကမာၻ႔စိန္ေခၚမႈေတြကို ေဒသတြင္း မိတ္ဖက္ႏိုင္ငံေတြနဲ႔ အတူေျဖရွင္းသြားမယ္လို႔ အေမရိကန္သမၼတ Joe Biden က ကတိျပဳ၊ ယူကရိန္းအေရွ႕ပိုင္း Donbas ေဒသရဲ႕ အနာဂတ္က Sievierodonetsk ၿမိဳ႕တိုက္ပြဲမွာ မူတည္ေနေၾကာင္း ယူကရိန္းသမၼတေျပာ၊ ယူကရိန္းနဲ႔ ႐ုရွားကထုတ္တဲ့ ဂ်ဳံ၊ ေျပာင္း တန္ သန္းနဲ႔ခ်ီ တင္ပို႔ခြင့္သေဘာတူညီခ်က္တခုရႏိုင္ဖို႔ တကမာၻလုံး ဝိုင္းဝန္းႀကိဳးပမ္းေနၾကေၾကာင္း ကုလသမဂၢအတြင္းေရးမႉးခ်ဳပ္ေျပာ

joe biden donbas sievierodonetsk
PBS NewsHour - Health
News Wrap: Michigan police officer charged with murder for killing Black man

PBS NewsHour - Health

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 4:21


In our news wrap Thursday, a Grand Rapids, Michigan, policeman faces trial for second-degree murder for killing a Black man during a traffic stop, a GOP candidate for Michigan governor was arrested for his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, the House debates a bill to provide security for families of Supreme Court justices, and Ukraine forces claim gains in the eastern city of Sievierodonetsk. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - Politics
News Wrap: Michigan police officer charged with murder for killing Black man

PBS NewsHour - Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 4:21


In our news wrap Thursday, a Grand Rapids, Michigan, policeman faces trial for second-degree murder for killing a Black man during a traffic stop, a GOP candidate for Michigan governor was arrested for his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, the House debates a bill to provide security for families of Supreme Court justices, and Ukraine forces claim gains in the eastern city of Sievierodonetsk. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - Supreme Court
News Wrap: Michigan police officer charged with murder for killing Black man

PBS NewsHour - Supreme Court

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 4:21


In our news wrap Thursday, a Grand Rapids, Michigan, policeman faces trial for second-degree murder for killing a Black man during a traffic stop, a GOP candidate for Michigan governor was arrested for his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, the House debates a bill to provide security for families of Supreme Court justices, and Ukraine forces claim gains in the eastern city of Sievierodonetsk. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - World
News Wrap: Michigan police officer charged with murder for killing Black man

PBS NewsHour - World

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 4:21


In our news wrap Thursday, a Grand Rapids, Michigan, policeman faces trial for second-degree murder for killing a Black man during a traffic stop, a GOP candidate for Michigan governor was arrested for his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, the House debates a bill to provide security for families of Supreme Court justices, and Ukraine forces claim gains in the eastern city of Sievierodonetsk. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

Flash info
Justin Trudeau participe au Sommet des Amériques

Flash info

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2022 2:06


Le premier ministre Justin Trudeau participe au Sommet des Amériques, à Los Angeles. Les combats se poursuivent toujours pour la prise de contrôle de Sievierodonetsk, dans l'Est de l'Ukraine. Des réfugiés ukrainiens s'installent au Nouveau-Brunswick. | Mathieu Belhumeur (journaliste-présentateur)

News Headlines in Morse Code at 20 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Migrant caravan heads to US as key summit begins Matthew McConaughey tells the story of those killed in Uvalde in emotional plea for action on guns Ukraine war Angela Merkel defends her record on Putin Top Gun maker Paramount sued over copyright breach 2nd suspect wanted in Philadelphia mass shooting arrested by US Marshals 6abc Philadelphia Primary Elections Live Updates California and New Jersey News Mariupol Azovstal defenders bodies arrive in Kyiv families Half of Republicans support stricter gun laws, a double digit jump in a year, USA TODAY Ipsos poll says Kansas Woman Who Joined ISIS Left a Trail of Betrayal Yellen says inflation to stay high, Biden likely to up forecast Arizona police placed on leave after watching man drown Zelenskyy says Ukraine troops not capable of advancing without more long range weapons US seizes superyacht Live updates US midterms Would be AOC vows recount in tight Texas race Arizona police officers on leave after watching man drown in lake USA TODAY USA TODAY Boris Johnson will know his opponents are thwarted, not defeated San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin Faces Recall Election Matthew McConaughey Guns a nonpartisan issue Brad Pitt says Angelina Jolie sought to inflict harm with vineyard sale Ukraine retakes parts of Sievierodonetsk amid brutal street fighting World Bank slashes global growth forecast Kansas woman admits to training all female IS battalion in Syria

News Headlines in Morse Code at 25 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Brad Pitt says Angelina Jolie sought to inflict harm with vineyard sale Kansas woman admits to training all female IS battalion in Syria San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin Faces Recall Election Ukraine retakes parts of Sievierodonetsk amid brutal street fighting World Bank slashes global growth forecast Boris Johnson will know his opponents are thwarted, not defeated Matthew McConaughey tells the story of those killed in Uvalde in emotional plea for action on guns Migrant caravan heads to US as key summit begins Zelenskyy says Ukraine troops not capable of advancing without more long range weapons US seizes superyacht Live updates Arizona police officers on leave after watching man drown in lake USA TODAY USA TODAY Top Gun maker Paramount sued over copyright breach Matthew McConaughey Guns a nonpartisan issue 2nd suspect wanted in Philadelphia mass shooting arrested by US Marshals 6abc Philadelphia US midterms Would be AOC vows recount in tight Texas race Half of Republicans support stricter gun laws, a double digit jump in a year, USA TODAY Ipsos poll says Mariupol Azovstal defenders bodies arrive in Kyiv families Yellen says inflation to stay high, Biden likely to up forecast Ukraine war Angela Merkel defends her record on Putin Kansas Woman Who Joined ISIS Left a Trail of Betrayal Arizona police placed on leave after watching man drown Primary Elections Live Updates California and New Jersey News

News Headlines in Morse Code at 15 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Brad Pitt says Angelina Jolie sought to inflict harm with vineyard sale Migrant caravan heads to US as key summit begins Boris Johnson will know his opponents are thwarted, not defeated San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin Faces Recall Election 2nd suspect wanted in Philadelphia mass shooting arrested by US Marshals 6abc Philadelphia Half of Republicans support stricter gun laws, a double digit jump in a year, USA TODAY Ipsos poll says Matthew McConaughey Guns a nonpartisan issue Mariupol Azovstal defenders bodies arrive in Kyiv families Matthew McConaughey tells the story of those killed in Uvalde in emotional plea for action on guns Kansas Woman Who Joined ISIS Left a Trail of Betrayal Top Gun maker Paramount sued over copyright breach Zelenskyy says Ukraine troops not capable of advancing without more long range weapons US seizes superyacht Live updates Ukraine retakes parts of Sievierodonetsk amid brutal street fighting World Bank slashes global growth forecast Kansas woman admits to training all female IS battalion in Syria Primary Elections Live Updates California and New Jersey News Arizona police placed on leave after watching man drown Arizona police officers on leave after watching man drown in lake USA TODAY USA TODAY US midterms Would be AOC vows recount in tight Texas race Ukraine war Angela Merkel defends her record on Putin Yellen says inflation to stay high, Biden likely to up forecast

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ
ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ (၀၆-၀၇-၂၀၂၂) - ဇြန္ ၀၇, ၂၀၂၂

ေန႔စဥ္ တီဗီြသတင္းလႊာ - ဗီြအိုေအ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 29:27


ယူကရိန္းႏိုင္ငံ အေရွ႕ဘက္ Sievierodonetsk ၿမိဳ႕ လမ္းမေတြေပၚမွာ ႐ုရွားနဲ႔ ယူကရိန္း တပ္ဖြဲ႕ေတြအျပင္းအထန္တိုက္ခိုက္၊ အေမရိကန္ နဲ႔ ေတာင္ကိုရီးယား က တိုက္ေလယာဥ္ ၂၀ နဲ႔ ေလေၾကာင္း အင္အားျပ၊ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံမွာ အင္တာနက္သုံးစြဲမႈကို ကန႔္သတ္တာ၊ ျဖတ္ေတာက္တာ၊ အြန္လိုင္းဆင္ဆာလုပ္တာ၊ ေထာက္လွမ္းတာေတြလုပ္ေနတဲ့အေပၚ ကုလသမဂၢလူ႔အခြင့္အေရးဆိုင္ရာ အထူးကိုယ္စားလွယ္ေတြေဝဖန္

sievierodonetsk
40 de minute
Actualitatea de luni, 6 iunie 2022

40 de minute

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022


Armata rusa loveste din nou capitala Ucrainei, Kievul a fost tintit de rachete in timp ce lupte grele continua in Sievierodonetsk, in estul țării. Pe de alta parte Kremlinul a calificat drept o „acțiune ostilă" decizia a trei... citiţi mai departe

pe luni armata iunie sievierodonetsk emisiunile rfi ro ucrainei
News Headlines in Morse Code at 20 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Could toxic Depp Heard case have chilling effect on accusers Gov. Ron DeSantis to veto 35 Million Tampa Bay Rays facility amid polarization of shootings Two workers found dead after being trapped under coal at Pueblo power plant Tiananmen Hong Kong students hide tiny democracy goddesses on campus Madhya Pradesh Viral video shows India woman risking life for water Russian TV 100 days of the war on Ukraine Oklahoma hospital shooting Five dead after gunman targets physician Ukraine war latest Russias war in Ukraine enters 100th day Tulsa shooting live Gunman bought AR 15 hours before killings as Biden calls for assault rifle ban Pride month Kuwait criticises US embassy over pro LGBT tweets The rise of the AR 15 Why America is defending a weapon of war In pictures Who is at Queens Thanksgiving service Biden Will Urge Lawmakers to Pass Gun Laws in Speech on Mass Shootings Ukrainian forces have had some success in Sievierodonetsk, says Zelenskiy Biden urges ban on assault style weapons and gun age limits Tropical storm watch issued for southern Florida Queens Platinum Jubilee Royals to attend thanksgiving service as Queen rests Russia Ukraine war what we know on day 100 of the invasion Uvalde state senator raises questions on whether 911 call information was relayed to shooting incident commander Escaped inmate Gonzalo Lopez shot, killed moments after allegedly killing family of 5 in Leon County FOX 26 Houston

News Headlines in Morse Code at 15 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Gov. Ron DeSantis to veto 35 Million Tampa Bay Rays facility amid polarization of shootings Biden Will Urge Lawmakers to Pass Gun Laws in Speech on Mass Shootings Oklahoma hospital shooting Five dead after gunman targets physician Queens Platinum Jubilee Royals to attend thanksgiving service as Queen rests Tulsa shooting live Gunman bought AR 15 hours before killings as Biden calls for assault rifle ban Uvalde state senator raises questions on whether 911 call information was relayed to shooting incident commander Russian TV 100 days of the war on Ukraine The rise of the AR 15 Why America is defending a weapon of war Tropical storm watch issued for southern Florida Russia Ukraine war what we know on day 100 of the invasion Two workers found dead after being trapped under coal at Pueblo power plant Tiananmen Hong Kong students hide tiny democracy goddesses on campus Escaped inmate Gonzalo Lopez shot, killed moments after allegedly killing family of 5 in Leon County FOX 26 Houston Ukraine war latest Russias war in Ukraine enters 100th day Biden urges ban on assault style weapons and gun age limits Madhya Pradesh Viral video shows India woman risking life for water In pictures Who is at Queens Thanksgiving service Could toxic Depp Heard case have chilling effect on accusers Ukrainian forces have had some success in Sievierodonetsk, says Zelenskiy Pride month Kuwait criticises US embassy over pro LGBT tweets

News Headlines in Morse Code at 25 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Russian TV 100 days of the war on Ukraine Uvalde state senator raises questions on whether 911 call information was relayed to shooting incident commander Biden Will Urge Lawmakers to Pass Gun Laws in Speech on Mass Shootings Biden urges ban on assault style weapons and gun age limits Pride month Kuwait criticises US embassy over pro LGBT tweets Tropical storm watch issued for southern Florida Russia Ukraine war what we know on day 100 of the invasion The rise of the AR 15 Why America is defending a weapon of war Escaped inmate Gonzalo Lopez shot, killed moments after allegedly killing family of 5 in Leon County FOX 26 Houston Ukraine war latest Russias war in Ukraine enters 100th day Tiananmen Hong Kong students hide tiny democracy goddesses on campus Gov. Ron DeSantis to veto 35 Million Tampa Bay Rays facility amid polarization of shootings Madhya Pradesh Viral video shows India woman risking life for water Tulsa shooting live Gunman bought AR 15 hours before killings as Biden calls for assault rifle ban Queens Platinum Jubilee Royals to attend thanksgiving service as Queen rests Could toxic Depp Heard case have chilling effect on accusers Oklahoma hospital shooting Five dead after gunman targets physician Two workers found dead after being trapped under coal at Pueblo power plant In pictures Who is at Queens Thanksgiving service Ukrainian forces have had some success in Sievierodonetsk, says Zelenskiy

Grand angle
La ville de Sieverodonetsk vidée de ses habitants et pilonnée par les Russes

Grand angle

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 2:23


durée : 00:02:23 - Grand angle - Les Russes avancent encore, inexorablement dans le Donbass. Le dernier bastion ukrainien de la ville de Sievierodonetsk est désormais occupé à 70% par les troupes du Kremlin selon Serhi Gaïdaï, le gouverneur de la région.

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America
FLASHPOINT UKRAINE: As Russia makes gains in Ukraine, Washington approves more military aid - June 01, 2022

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 25:00


The United States says its authorized shipment of medium range missiles to Ukraine to aid in its defense. It comes as Russia secures more of Sievierodonetsk. But what does Moscow's effort to take this strategic town say about Russia's war effort?

Daily 5 Minute Headlines
Russia Takes Most Of Sievierodonetsk City In Eastern Ukraine & More

Daily 5 Minute Headlines

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022


Listen to the June 1st, 2022 daily headline round-up and find all the top news that you need to know.

russia eastern ukraine sievierodonetsk
Hot Off The Wire
Funerals and questions following Texas school shooting; regulators tie hepatitis cases to strawberries | Top headlines for May 31, 2022

Hot Off The Wire

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 15:31


It should have been the first day of a joyous week for Robb Elementary School students — the start of summer break. Instead on Monday, the first two of 19 children slain inside a classroom were being remembered at funeral visitations. The gathering for 10-year-old Amerie Jo Garza was at Hillcrest Memorial Funeral Home in Uvalde, Texas, directly across from the grade school where the children, along with two teachers, were shot to death last week before the gunman himself was killed. Visitation for another 10-year-old, Maite Rodriguez, was at another funeral home. More visitations, funerals and burials will follow over the next two-and-a-half weeks, one after another, after another. The blame for an excruciating delay in killing the gunman — even as parents outside begged police to rush in and panicked children called 911 from inside — has been placed with the school district's homegrown police chief. It's left residents in small city of Uvalde struggling to reconcile what they know of the well-liked local lawman after the director of state police said that Pete Arredondo — as the commander at the scene — made the “wrong decision” last week not to breach a classroom at Robb Elementary School sooner. Russian forces in a “frenzied push” have seized half of the eastern Ukrainian city of Sievierodonetsk that is key to Moscow's efforts to quickly complete the capture of the industrial Donbas region. The city's mayor also told The Associated Press on Tuesday that Sievierodonetsk "is essentially being destroyed ruthlessly block by block." He says heavy street fighting continues and artillery bombardments threaten the lives of the estimated 13,000 civilians still sheltering in the ruined city that once was home to more than 100,000. President Joe Biden is set to meet with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell as soaring inflation takes a bite out of Americans' pocketbooks. Tuesday's meeting will be the first since Biden renominated Powell to lead the central bank and comes weeks after his confirmation for a second term by the Senate. Witnesses say a 9-year-old girl survived a cougar attack after wandering up a trail with two friends while camping in northwest Washington state. It happened Saturday morning near Fruitland, Washington. The girl fought back while her friends ran for their lives. Adults rushed to help and found the girl covered in blood. She was soon airlifted to a hospital, where she's recovering after surgery for multiple wounds to her head and upper body. Shanghai authorities say they will take some major steps Wednesday toward reopening China's largest city after a two-month COVID-19 lockdown that has throttled the national economy and largely bottled up millions of people in their homes. U.S. and Canadian regulators are investigating a hepatitis outbreak that may be linked to fresh organic strawberries. In a joint weekend statement, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Public Health Agency of Canada say at least 27 illnesses in Minnesota, California and Canada occurred after people ate FreshKampo and H-E-B brand strawberries. The strawberries were purchased between March 5 and April 25 at various U.S. retailers, including Aldi, Kroger and Walmart and at Co-op stores in Canada. The strawberries are past their shelf life, but the FDA says consumers who froze them to eat later should throw them away. Police say someone busted into the altar at a New York City church, stole a $2 million gold relic and removed the head from a statue of an angel. The incident happened between Thursday and Saturday at St. Augustine's Roman Catholic Church, known as the “Notre Dame” of Brooklyn's Park Slope neighborhood. The church was closed for construction at the time. The church's pastor said that camera recordings from the security system were also stolen. The Diocese of Brooklyn called it “a brazen crime of disrespect and hate.” Standing at attention under a cloudless sky in the late-May heat, President Joe Biden saluted as taps played, after laying the wreath of multi-colored flowers wrapped in red, white and blue ribbon in front of the tomb. Delivering remarks honoring fallen servicemembers, he said “Memorial Day is always a day where pain and pride are mixed together.” “Today we are free because they were brave,” the president said. Authorities say a fire was raging through a chemical company just southwest of downtown Omaha, Nebraska, forcing some nearby residents to evacuate and leaving thousands without power. Hurricane Agatha has made history as the strongest hurricane ever recorded to come ashore in May during the eastern Pacific hurricane season. It made landfall Monday afternoon on a sparsely populated stretch of small beach towns and fishing villages in southern Mexico's Oaxaca state. It was a strong Category 2 hurricane, with maximum sustained winds of 105 mph, but it quickly lost power moving inland over the mountainous interior. Agatha was downgraded to a tropical depression Tuesday morning with sustained winds down to 35 mph. The Rangers reach the NHL's Eastern Conference finals, the Cardinals' first baseman stays hot, the Brewers take two from the Cubs and the Astros get a rare complete game. Indianapolis 500 champion Marcus Ericsson earned an unprecedented $3.1 million check for his victory. Ericsson is the second Swedish driver to win the race. Tom Cruise got his first $100 million opening weekend with “Top Gun: Maverick.” Paramount Pictures said Sunday that in its first three days in North American theaters, “Top Gun: Maverick” earned an estimated $124 million in ticket sales. When the jury in Johnny Depp's libel suit against ex-wife Amber Heard resumes deliberations after the Memorial Day weekend, its focus will be on issues much removed from the public debate that has engulfed the proceedings. For six weeks, testimony focused on details of alleged abuse that Heard suffered. Public debate also focused on whether Heard is telling the truth about what she experienced. But the jury has been tasked not with determining who was abused, but whether Heard defamed Depp when she wrote a newspaper piece about domestic violence. Depp says he was defamed, even though the article doesn't mention him. The jury verdict form spells out multiple hurdles Depp must clear to prevail. La Nina, the flip side of the better known El Nino weather condition, keeps popping up. La Nina is the natural but temporary cooling of parts of the Pacific that changes weather worldwide. The world is in year two, almost year three, of one that set a record in April for strength. For the U.S., La Nina is connected to more drought and fires out West, more Atlantic hurricanes and agricultural losses. They are happening more often. In the late 20th century, La Nina hit 28% of the time. Now it's nearly half the time. Hundreds of flights worldwide were canceled by mid-afternoon Sunday, adding to the mounting number of scrubbed flights during the busy Memorial Day holiday weekend. Authorities say the weekend arrest of Paul Pelosi, the husband of U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, on suspicion of DUI came after a minor two-vehicle crash with no injuries in California's wine country. Records show Paul Pelosi was taken into custody late Saturday in Napa County and released early Sunday on $5,000 bail. A federal judge has ruled that former Proud Boys national chairman Henry “Enrique” Tarrio must remain jailed while awaiting trial on charges that he conspired with other members of the far-right extremist group to attack the U.S. Capitol. U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly said in an order issued late Friday that Tarrio poses a danger to the public. The judge refused to release Tarrio on bond. An indictment in March charged Tarrio and others with plotting to storm the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and interfere with the congressional certification of the Electoral College vote, which Democrat Joe Biden won over Republican President Donald Trump. In the most significant effort yet to punish Russia for its war in Ukraine, the European Union agreed to ban the overwhelming majority of Russian oil imports. The move came late Monday after tense negotiations that tested how far the bloc is willing to go to ostracize Moscow. From the moment Russia invaded on Feb. 24, the West has sought to make Russia pay economically for its war. But targeting the lucrative energy sector was seen as a last resort in Europe and has proved hardest since the bloc relies on the country for 25% of its oil and 40% of its natural gas. EU leaders agreed to cut around 90% of all Russian oil imports over the next six months. A senior Russian official said the move would hurt ordinary Russians. A man seemingly disguised as an old woman in a wheelchair threw a piece of cake at the glass protecting the Mona Lisa at the Louvre Museum and shouted at people to “Think of the Earth.” Authorities have since transferred the 36-year-old to a police psychiatric unit and opened an investigation into the damage of cultural artifacts. Videos posted on social media seem to show a young man in a wig and lipstick who had arrived in a wheelchair. The man's identity wasn't known. He was also seen throwing roses in the museum gallery. The cake attack left a conspicuous white creamy smear on the glass but the famous work by Leonardo da Vinci wasn't damaged. Guards cleaned the smear off. —The Associated Press See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

PBS NewsHour - Segments
EU leaders agree to Russian oil ban amid relentless assault in eastern Ukraine

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 3:35


Russian forces kept up a relentless onslaught Tuesday in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian officials said Russians now control half the city of Sievierodonetsk. Meanwhile, Moscow embargoed a European Union agreement to ban 90 percent of Russian oil imports. Nick Schifrin reports. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

News Headlines in Morse Code at 15 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv EU struggles to resolve Russian oil ban proposal differences Johnny Depp performs second night in UK as Amber Heard verdict looms North Carolina man who won 10 million lottery prize sentenced to life behind bars Biden vows to continue to push for gun laws after visiting Uvalde Strategic Donbas city split down the middle as fighting rages EU to cut most Russian oil imports Hard to believe its actually happening Shanghai to lift COVID lockdown Handguns Canada proposes complete freeze on ownership Irreplaceable 2 million gold tabernacle stolen from Brooklyn church Team Coverage Update on massive fire reported at facility south of downtown Omaha Canada plans complete freeze on handgun ownership Mexicos Maya train project stalls as legal battle drags Timed Teaser What happened to the Eurovision trophy Ukraine war latest news Russian troops control part of key Ukraine city governor Sidhu Moose Wala Murdered India singer was hit by 24 bullets, says report Best exercise time differs for men and women, says US study Ukraine troops hold out as Russia assaults Sievierodonetsk wasteland 7 wounded in Vegas biker gangs freeway shooting, police say Iran building collapse Protesters turn on government over disaster She was going to be someone. Families and friends remember the victims of the Uvalde school massacre as the first funerals are held China sends 30 warplanes into Taiwan air defence zone

SBS Ukrainian - SBS УКРАЇНСЬКОЮ МОВОЮ
Ukraine Today - 31/05/2022 - Вістки із рідних земель наших - 31/05/2022

SBS Ukrainian - SBS УКРАЇНСЬКОЮ МОВОЮ

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 16:30


31/05/2022. The latest news from Ukraine. Heavy fighting continues in eastern Ukraine, where Russian forces have entered the outskirts of Sievierodonetsk. The head of Reporters Without Borders says a French journalist killed in Ukraine had "very likely" been "targeted by Russian forces". General Director of Reporters Without Borders, Christophe Deloire, made the comments following the death of 32-year-old BFM TV journalistFrederic Leclerc-Imhoff. Leclerc-Imhoff was fatally hit by shell shrapnel while covering a Ukrainian evacuation operation. Mr Deloire says the journalist was inside an identified humanitarian aid vehicle. - 31/05/2022. Добірка новин із героїчної України. Війна і закінчення навчального року в школах України.  Звернення Президента України. Важкі бої української армії на Донбасі. Російські війська знищують усю цивільну інфраструктуру в східних і південних реґіонах України. Про це і більше на веб-сторінці SBS Ukrainian...

french ukraine russian ukrainian general director bfmtv reporters without borders sievierodonetsk christophe deloire leclerc imhoff ukraine today
News Headlines in Morse Code at 20 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Sidhu Moose Wala Murdered India singer was hit by 24 bullets, says report Ukraine war latest news Russian troops control part of key Ukraine city governor 7 wounded in Vegas biker gangs freeway shooting, police say Irreplaceable 2 million gold tabernacle stolen from Brooklyn church She was going to be someone. Families and friends remember the victims of the Uvalde school massacre as the first funerals are held Canada plans complete freeze on handgun ownership North Carolina man who won 10 million lottery prize sentenced to life behind bars China sends 30 warplanes into Taiwan air defence zone Biden vows to continue to push for gun laws after visiting Uvalde Strategic Donbas city split down the middle as fighting rages EU to cut most Russian oil imports Handguns Canada proposes complete freeze on ownership Best exercise time differs for men and women, says US study Timed Teaser What happened to the Eurovision trophy Hard to believe its actually happening Shanghai to lift COVID lockdown Johnny Depp performs second night in UK as Amber Heard verdict looms Ukraine troops hold out as Russia assaults Sievierodonetsk wasteland Mexicos Maya train project stalls as legal battle drags Iran building collapse Protesters turn on government over disaster Team Coverage Update on massive fire reported at facility south of downtown Omaha EU struggles to resolve Russian oil ban proposal differences

News Headlines in Morse Code at 25 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Iran building collapse Protesters turn on government over disaster Hard to believe its actually happening Shanghai to lift COVID lockdown Strategic Donbas city split down the middle as fighting rages EU to cut most Russian oil imports EU struggles to resolve Russian oil ban proposal differences Team Coverage Update on massive fire reported at facility south of downtown Omaha She was going to be someone. Families and friends remember the victims of the Uvalde school massacre as the first funerals are held China sends 30 warplanes into Taiwan air defence zone Timed Teaser What happened to the Eurovision trophy Johnny Depp performs second night in UK as Amber Heard verdict looms Canada plans complete freeze on handgun ownership North Carolina man who won 10 million lottery prize sentenced to life behind bars 7 wounded in Vegas biker gangs freeway shooting, police say Sidhu Moose Wala Murdered India singer was hit by 24 bullets, says report Mexicos Maya train project stalls as legal battle drags Irreplaceable 2 million gold tabernacle stolen from Brooklyn church Ukraine troops hold out as Russia assaults Sievierodonetsk wasteland Best exercise time differs for men and women, says US study Ukraine war latest news Russian troops control part of key Ukraine city governor Handguns Canada proposes complete freeze on ownership Biden vows to continue to push for gun laws after visiting Uvalde

Daily News Brief by TRT World

*) Russian forces face stiff resistance in Ukraine's Donbass A Moscow-backed separatist leader has said that Russian forces had not advanced as rapidly as they had hoped in the battle for Sievierodonetsk. Russia has been seeking to seize the entire Donbass region, consisting of Luhansk and Donetsk, which Moscow claims on behalf of separatist proxies. Capturing the easternmost city of Sievierodonetsk would give Moscow effective control of Luhansk and allow the Kremlin to declare some form of victory after more than three months of the conflict. *) EU agrees ban on 'more than 2/3' of Russian oil imports European Union leaders have reached a compromise to impose a partial oil embargo on Russia at a summit focused on helping Ukraine with a delayed package of sanctions that was blocked by Hungary. The watered-down embargo covers only Russian oil brought in by sea, allowing a temporary exemption for imports delivered by pipeline. EU Council President Charles Michel said on Twitter the agreement covers more than two-thirds of oil imports from Russia, "cutting a huge source of financing for its war machine…” *) Nepal recovers all bodies from site of plane crash Civil aviation authorities in Nepal have said they recovered the last body from the wreckage site of a small passenger plane carrying 22 people that went missing over the weekend. "We have found the last missing body," Deo Chandra Lal, a spokesperson for Nepal's Civil Aviation Authority said. Lal also said preliminary investigations have found that the cause of the crash could be "adverse weather conditions." *) Biden to meet Fed chair as inflation bites pocketbooks President Joe Biden is set to meet with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell as soaring inflation takes a bite out of Americans' pocketbooks. The meeting will be the first since Biden renominated Powell to lead the central bank and comes weeks after his confirmation for a second term by the Senate. The White House said the pair would discuss the state of the US and global economy and especially inflation, described as Biden's “top economic priority." And, finally… *) 3,400-year-old city discovered in northern Iraq Archaeologists have uncovered an ancient city dating back to the Mittani Empire around 3,400 years ago in the Tigris River in Duhok province, Iraq. Bekes Birifkani, director of historical artifacts and culture in the province explained that the area was inhabited until 1985, before the Mosul Dam was built in 1990, leaving the area submerged under water. Noting that more than 2,000 historical sites have been discovered in the city so far, Birifkani said this year's excavations also yielded important results.

AP Audio Stories
Sievierodonetsk mayor says Russian forces seize half of city

AP Audio Stories

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 0:38


Russia Ukraine War Developments Intro and Voicer

RNZ: Morning Report
Russian control of Sievierodonetsk expands

RNZ: Morning Report

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 5:12


Russian forces now control around half of the east Ukrainian city of Sievierodonetsk, according to city officials. About 15,000 civilians are believed to be stuck in the city, unable to evacuate due to the active fighting. BBC Ukraine correspondent James Waterhouse spoke to Corin Dann.

world war russian ukrainian expands sievierodonetsk james waterhouse corin dann
PBS NewsHour - World
EU leaders agree to Russian oil ban amid relentless assault in eastern Ukraine

PBS NewsHour - World

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 3:35


Russian forces kept up a relentless onslaught Tuesday in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian officials said Russians now control half the city of Sievierodonetsk. Meanwhile, Moscow embargoed a European Union agreement to ban 90 percent of Russian oil imports. Nick Schifrin reports. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

Les journaux de France Culture
Des combats de rue se dérouleraient dans la ville de Sievierodonetsk, pilonnée depuis plusieurs semaines

Les journaux de France Culture

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 25:27


durée : 00:25:27 - Journal de 12h30 - À presque 100 jours du début de la guerre en Ukraine, les forces russes continuent de progresser dans l'Est du pays, même si les forces ukrainiennes affirment elles aussi reprendre du terrain. - invités : François Rebsamen Homme politique

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America
FLASHPOINT UKRAINE: Anti-Corruption campaigners see no signs of misused aid - May 30, 2022

Flashpoint Ukraine - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 25:00


Russian forces increased their efforts to take the Ukrainian city of Sievierodonetsk. Authorities in Ukraine say they've not registered any cases of corruption since the war began... but is that view shared by all looking into the issue?

Le journal de 12h30
Des combats de rue se dérouleraient dans la ville de Sievierodonetsk, pilonnée depuis plusieurs semaines

Le journal de 12h30

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 25:27


durée : 00:25:27 - Journal de 12h30 - À presque 100 jours du début de la guerre en Ukraine, les forces russes continuent de progresser dans l'Est du pays, même si les forces ukrainiennes affirment elles aussi reprendre du terrain. - invités : François Rebsamen Homme politique

News Headlines in Morse Code at 15 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Uvalde shooting US to review police response to school shooting 2 people were killed and at least 19 injured when vehicles crashed into pedestrians in Lincoln, Nebraska Ukraine war Eurovision trophy sold to buy drones for Ukraine Rescue operations underway at Lake Pueblo Ukraine war latest news Very fierce fighting in key Ukrainian city governor Top Gun Maverick gives Tom Cruise first 100m opening weekend The remnants of the Pacifics Hurricane Agatha could become the Atlantics first named storm Activist confronts Ted Cruz at Houston restaurant following his appearance at NRA convention Russian troops entering Sievierodonetsk in eastern Ukraine 9 year old describes escaping out a window during the Uvalde school shooting as anger mounts over law enforcements response Biden grieves with Texas town as anger mounts over school shooting Nepal Rescuers recover 14 bodies from plane wreck Indian rapper turned politician Sidhu Moose Wala shot dead Ukraine may soon get US long range MLRS rocket system Champions League final Fake tickets triggered Paris final chaos France Sidhu Moose Wala Murder of popular Indian singer sparks anger Abbott announces donor to cover funeral expenses for Uvalde victims Liverpool fan hit with pepper spray It was really scary Nancy Pelosis husband, Paul Pelosi, arrested for alleged drunk driving Colombia election Surprise election run off beckons

News Headlines in Morse Code at 20 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Nepal Rescuers recover 14 bodies from plane wreck Indian rapper turned politician Sidhu Moose Wala shot dead 2 people were killed and at least 19 injured when vehicles crashed into pedestrians in Lincoln, Nebraska Abbott announces donor to cover funeral expenses for Uvalde victims Champions League final Fake tickets triggered Paris final chaos France Sidhu Moose Wala Murder of popular Indian singer sparks anger Top Gun Maverick gives Tom Cruise first 100m opening weekend Rescue operations underway at Lake Pueblo Ukraine war latest news Very fierce fighting in key Ukrainian city governor Nancy Pelosis husband, Paul Pelosi, arrested for alleged drunk driving The remnants of the Pacifics Hurricane Agatha could become the Atlantics first named storm Russian troops entering Sievierodonetsk in eastern Ukraine Colombia election Surprise election run off beckons Liverpool fan hit with pepper spray It was really scary Uvalde shooting US to review police response to school shooting Ukraine may soon get US long range MLRS rocket system Activist confronts Ted Cruz at Houston restaurant following his appearance at NRA convention Biden grieves with Texas town as anger mounts over school shooting Ukraine war Eurovision trophy sold to buy drones for Ukraine 9 year old describes escaping out a window during the Uvalde school shooting as anger mounts over law enforcements response

News Headlines in Morse Code at 25 WPM

Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Nancy Pelosis husband, Paul Pelosi, arrested for alleged drunk driving Nepal Rescuers recover 14 bodies from plane wreck Russian troops entering Sievierodonetsk in eastern Ukraine The remnants of the Pacifics Hurricane Agatha could become the Atlantics first named storm Liverpool fan hit with pepper spray It was really scary Abbott announces donor to cover funeral expenses for Uvalde victims Sidhu Moose Wala Murder of popular Indian singer sparks anger Rescue operations underway at Lake Pueblo 2 people were killed and at least 19 injured when vehicles crashed into pedestrians in Lincoln, Nebraska Champions League final Fake tickets triggered Paris final chaos France Ukraine war latest news Very fierce fighting in key Ukrainian city governor Colombia election Surprise election run off beckons Biden grieves with Texas town as anger mounts over school shooting Top Gun Maverick gives Tom Cruise first 100m opening weekend Ukraine may soon get US long range MLRS rocket system Uvalde shooting US to review police response to school shooting 9 year old describes escaping out a window during the Uvalde school shooting as anger mounts over law enforcements response Indian rapper turned politician Sidhu Moose Wala shot dead Ukraine war Eurovision trophy sold to buy drones for Ukraine Activist confronts Ted Cruz at Houston restaurant following his appearance at NRA convention

RTÉ - Adhmhaidin
Seosamh Mac Donnacha, Iar-Choirnéal Airm agus Saineolaí ar chúrsaí míleata

RTÉ - Adhmhaidin

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 6:35


Bhí fórsaí na hÚcráine faoi ionsaí géar ag airm na Rúise i cathair Sievierodonetsk thar an deireadh seachtaine.

bh agus donnacha sievierodonetsk seosamh
Daily News Brief by TRT World

*) Russia damaged 1997 Founding Act by attacking Ukraine – NATO NATO is no longer bound by past commitments to hold back from deploying its forces in eastern Europe, the US-led alliance's deputy secretary general has said. Moscow itself has "voided of any content" the NATO-Russia Founding Act, by attacking Ukraine and halting dialogue with the alliance, Mircea Geoana said. "Now we have no restrictions to have robust posture in the eastern flank and to ensure that every square inch of NATO's territory is protected by Article 5 and our allies,” Geoana said. *) European Union leaders to reiterate support for Ukraine European Union leaders will meet to reiterate support for Ukraine as Russian forces intensified attacks to capture Sievierodonetsk, a key city in the Donbass region that Moscow has prioritised taking full control over. Incessant shelling has left Ukrainian forces defending ruins in the city, but their refusal to withdraw is stalling a massive Russian offensive across the Donbass. "Some 90 percent of buildings are damaged. More than two-thirds of the city's housing stock has been completely destroyed. There is no telecommunication," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a televised speech. *) 14 bodies retrieved from Nepal plane crash site: aviation authority Fourteen bodies have been recovered so far from the wreckage of a plane that crashed into a mountainside in Nepal with 22 people on board, the country's Civil Aviation Authority has said. "...Search continues for the remaining. The weather is very bad but we were able to take a team to the crash site…." the Authortity's spokesperson told reporters. *) China looks for security pact in Pacific Island summit Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi holds talks with leaders and top officials from ten Pacific Island nations, stirring deep Western concern. The virtual summit is expected to discuss proposals for China to increase its involvement in the security, economy and politics of the South Pacific. Wang is in the Fijian capital Suva, where he will co-host a virtual meeting with regional foreign ministers. And, finally... *) Thousands celebrate Real Madrid's Champions League win in Spain About 400,000 Real Madrid fans flocked to the Spanish capital to join the players for a celebration of their record-extending 14th European Cup triumph. Traffic restrictions had been in place all over Madrid since the weekend as supporters started celebrations for the team's fifth Champions League crown in nine years. The winning team paid their traditional visit to the Almudena Cathedral to offer the trophy to the Virgin of Almudena, patroness of Madrid.

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts
20220527_IRISH_ruisigh_ag_breith_bua_ar_chosantoiri_in_oirthear_na_hucraine

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2022 11:57


jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/2lnr9cek Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com "Russians defeat defenders in eastern Ukraine". "Rúisigh ag breith bua ar chosantóirí in oirthear na hÚcráine". It is reported that Russian troops have not trapped Ukrainian defense forces near two strategic cities in eastern Ukraine today but that the invaders have finally been routed, yet not at all. Tuairiscítear gur dhóbair nár sháinnigh saighdiúirí Rúiseacha fórsaí cosanta Úcránacha in aice le dhá chathair straitéiseacha in oirthear na hÚcráine inniu ach gur cuireadh an ruaig ar na hionróirí ar deireadh, go fóill ar aon chor. The Russians apparently carried out a tripartite attack on the Ukrainians and for a time seized possession of plots of land along the motorway that passes through the cities of Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk. De réir dealraimh, rinne na Rúisigh ionsaí tríbheannach ar na hÚcránaigh agus ghabh siad seilbh ar feadh scaithimh ar gheadáin talún taobh leis an mótarbhealach a théann trí chathracha Sievierodonetsk agus Lysychansk. If the Russians ran away and took possession of those two cities, they would control most of the Luhansk area. Dá rithfeadh leis na Rúisigh agus dá ngabhfaidís seilbh ar an dá chathair sin, bheadh bunáite limistéar Luhansk faoina smacht acu. If it's true for General Oleksiy Gromov of the Ukrainian Army, only a small company of Russians - about fifty soldiers - managed to get as far as the motorway. Más fíor don Ghinearál Oleksiy Gromov ó Arm na hÚcráine, níor éirigh ach le complacht beag Rúiseach - thart ar leathchéad saighdiúir - dul chomh fada leis an mótarbhealach. Although they set up a checkpoint on the road, he said, they were not long there as they fled before the defenders. Cé gur bhunaigh siad pointe seiceála ar an mbóthar, a dúirt sé, níorbh fhada ann iad mar gur theith siad roimh na cosantóirí. He acknowledged, however, that the Russians have always had the upper hand in the area and have been firing artillery at places along the motorway since their flight. D'admhaigh sé, áfach, go bhfuil an lámh in uachtar ag na Rúisigh sa cheantar i gcónaí agus go bhfuil siad ag scaoileadh airtléire le háiteanna feadh an mhótarbhealaigh ó theith siad. He did indeed suggest that Ukrainian soldiers could withdraw further, saying that a good run was better than a bad stand. Thug sé leid go deimhin go bhféadfadh saighdiúirí Úcránacha tarraingt siar tuilleadh, á rá gurbh fhearr rith maith ná drochsheasamh. Reuters reporters also reported today that Ukrainian forces have fled the Svitlodarsk town of Donetsk Oblast and are now occupied by a group loyal to Russia. Thuairiscigh nuachtóirí Reuters inniu chomh maith gur theith fórsaí Úcránacha as baile Svitlodarsk in Oblast Donetsk agus go bhfuil an áit ina seilbh anois ag dream atá dílis don Rúis. All of this is in line with Western countries' understanding of the intentions of the Russians since their failure at the beginning of the war to seize Kiev and decapitate the Ukrainian government. Tagann sé seo ar fad leis an tuiscint atá ag tíortha an Iarthair ar a bhfuil ar intinn ag na Rúisigh ó chlis orthu i dtús an chogaidh seilbh a ghabháil ar Chív agus Rialtas na hÚcráine a dhícheannadh. The domination of the Donbass region has been the biggest concern for the Russians since then and, despite Ukrainian counter - attacks, it seems that they will not stop or live or achieve that goal. Forlámhas a ghlacadh ar réigiún an Donbass is mó is cás leis na Rúisigh ó shin agus, ainneoin fhrithionsaithe na nÚcránach, dealraíonn sé nach ndéanfaidh siad stad mara ná cónaí nó go mbainfidh siad an cuspóir sin amach.

Les journaux de France Culture
Sievierodonetsk, dans l'ombre de la défaite sanglante de la ville martyr de Marioupol

Les journaux de France Culture

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 25:58


durée : 00:25:58 - Journal de 12h30 - L'armée russe redouble d'efforts et continue, inexorablement, de progresser dans l'est de l'Ukraine. Les combats se concentrent notamment sur la ville de Sievierodonetsk, où Kiev concède une situation à présent « extrêmement difficile ». - invités : Jean-Yves Mano

Le journal de 12h30
Sievierodonetsk, dans l'ombre de la défaite sanglante de la ville martyr de Marioupol

Le journal de 12h30

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 25:58


durée : 00:25:58 - Journal de 12h30 - L'armée russe redouble d'efforts et continue, inexorablement, de progresser dans l'est de l'Ukraine. Les combats se concentrent notamment sur la ville de Sievierodonetsk, où Kiev concède une situation à présent « extrêmement difficile ». - invités : Jean-Yves Mano

The Economist Morning Briefing
Texas gunman shared plans on Facebook, deteriorating conditions in Sievierodonetsk, and more

The Economist Morning Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 3:50


Texas gunman shared plans on Facebook, deteriorating conditions in Sievierodonetsk, and more  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Ukraine Without Hype
Episode 20: Russian Imperial Antisemitism

Ukraine Without Hype

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 66:58


The Russian offensive in Donbas becomes bogged down outside of Izyum and Sievierodonetsk, with only minor forward progress since our last update. Meanwhile, Ukrainian forces take the initiative around Kharkiv and score more hits against the Russian Navy and its positions on occupied Snake Island in the Black Sea. Russia's effort to rope Transnistria into a suicidal war is subsiding, but still something to watch. The US lend-lease bill begins to show results in getting much-needed equipment to Ukrainian defenders. (32:20) For our main segment, we focus on the incredibly antisemitic remarks made by Russian FM Sergei Lavrov and the Russian media who picked up on them. We do a bit of a deeper dive into the history and nature of Russian antisemitism, and how it is an integral part of the Russian imperial project. Twitter Anthony: @Bartaway Romeo: @VagrantJourno Ukraine Without Hype: @HypeUkraine Patreon https://www.patreon.com/UkraineWithoutHype Music זאָג ניט קיין מאָל (Never Say) by Hirsch Glick, Performed by Leon Lishner and Friends

Reportage International
Ukraine: à Sievierodonetsk, la population se prépare à l'arrivée de l'armée russe

Reportage International

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2022 2:34


La Russie a annoncé la semaine dernière avoir débuté la seconde phase de son offensive dans l'est de l'Ukraine, entamant, selon Kiev, « la bataille pour le Donbass » crainte depuis des semaines. Dans la région de Louhansk, l'armée russe n'est plus qu'à quelques kilomètres de la ville de Sievierodonetsk, constamment sous le feu des bombardements. De nos envoyés spéciaux,  Les habitants de Sievierodonetsk qui ont décidé de rester vivent reclus dans des bunkers. Dans l'un d'eux, Tatiana est en train de préparer à manger pour une centaine de personnes. « Certains prennent des sédatifs, on essaye de rester occupés. Qu'est-ce qu'on peut faire d'autre ? Nous ferons de notre mieux pour protéger nos familles. Bien sûr que tout le monde a peur. Nous prenons des risques à rester ici et peut-être que nous regretterons d'avoir pris cette décision. Dieu merci, aujourd'hui, nous sommes en vie. » « Il faut parfois manger des choses périmées » Vladimir vit dans ce bunker depuis dix jours. Il a décidé de venir ici, car les frappes devenaient de plus en plus fréquentes : « C'est très dangereux, mais j'espère vraiment que les forces ukrainiennes repousseront les soldats en Russie. Notre ville est encerclée à présent, et on pourrait ne plus recevoir quoi que ce soit. Nous n'avons pas encore eu de manque de nourriture, mais parfois il faut manger des choses périmées. Mais nous recevons de l'aide humanitaire avec la police, les pompiers et on ne se plaint pas ». Oleksander Panin, le chef de la brigade de pompiers de la région, explique qu'il a dû endosser de nouveaux rôles : « Maintenant, nous ne faisons plus qu'éteindre des feux. Nous sauvons des gens dont les maisons ont été détruites par les bombardements. Nous avons dû aller chercher les corps de ceux tués par les frappes russes. Tout le monde mérite d'être correctement enterré. Maintenant, ils utilisent de l'artillerie lourde, donc de plus en plus souvent il n'y a plus personne à sauver. Tous les immeubles touchés sont des bâtiments civils. Jamais ça n'a été des cibles militaires. Cette atmosphère sinistre, ça pèse lourdement sur nous ». « Démilitariser complètement la Russie » Serguiy Gaidai, le gouverneur régional et militaire de la région de Louhansk, s'est installé dans la ville pour mener ses opérations. Selon lui, les Russes ne gagneront pas cette guerre. « Ce sont des barbares qui détruisent tout sur leur passage. La Russie est un pays riche et pourtant 50 % de sa population n'a pas de toilettes à l'intérieur de sa maison. Ce sont les statistiques officielles. Les Russes ont besoin de la guerre pour cacher leur incapacité à faire quoi que ce soit pour leur peuple. Il est temps de les vaincre. Puis nous devrions complètement démilitariser la Russie et lui interdire d'utiliser des armes pour des décennies. Ce que nous attendons des Nations unies ? D'agir immédiatement, pas de simplement dire qu'elles sont inquiètes. Des milliers de personnes sont en train de mourir. » Ceux qui restent à Sievierodonetsk craignent l'arrivée imminente des Russes, mais ils gardent pourtant espoir de rester Ukrainiens.