U.K News
Russians Left Ukraine village, Fear And Hardship Remain
KALYNIVSKE, Ukraine – When night falls in Tatiana Trofimenko’s village in southern Ukraine, she fills a jar with sunflower oil donated by aid organizations and seals it with a wick-fitted lid. The make-do candle is lit with a flick of a match.
“This is our power,” Trofimenko, 68, says.
It’s been more than 11 weeks since Ukraine troops freed her village in the province of Kherson from Russian control. But the people of Kalynivske, both those who have returned and those who have never left, are still having a hard time. In the dead of winter, a remote area near an active front line is without power or water. The sounds of war can never be far away.
Russian forces left the western side of the Dnieper River, which ran through the middle of the province, but they kept control of the eastern side. A near-constant barrage of fire from only a few kilometers away, combined with the danger of unexploded mines, has made normalcy a distant dream and put a damper on their military’s strategic victory.
Residents have gradually returned to Kalynivske, preferring to live without basic services, reliant on humanitarian aid, and under constant threat of bombardment rather than as displaced people elsewhere in their country. They say that staying is a way to show that they don’t care about the constant Russian attacks that are meant to make the area unlivable.
Some Fled The Ukraine Village Some Stayed And Hid
“This area has been liberated. “I have a feeling,” Trofimenko says. “There were no people on the streets before. They were both empty. Some people fled, while others hid in their homes.”
“When you walk down the street now, you see happy people,” she says.
On Saturday, the Press followed a United Nations humanitarian aid convoy into the village, where blankets, solar lamps, jerrycans, bed linens, and warm clothes were delivered to a distribution center’s local warehouse.
In the early days of the war, Russian forces captured Kherson province. Most of Kalynivske’s nearly 1,000 residents remained in their homes throughout the occupation. Most were too frail or ill to flee, and others lacked the means to do so.
Gennadiy Shaposhnikov is lying on a sofa in a dark room with plates piled up beside him.
The 83-year-advanced old’s cancer makes it difficult for him to speak. When a mortar hit the back of his house, his neighbors rushed to his aid, patching it up with tarps. They continue to visit daily to ensure that he is fed and cared for.
“Please return soon,” is all he can say to them.
Missles Destroyed The Womens Home, Shrapnel In The Front Yard
When the missiles destroyed her small house near the Ukraine village center, Oleksandra Hryhoryna, 75, moved in with a neighbor. Her frail frame covers the shells and shrapnel that litter her front yard. She struggles up the strewn-together bricks that serve as the stairwell to her front door.
She rode her bike to the aid distribution center and left with a bag full of tinned food, her primary source of nutrition these days.
But, as Hryhoryna explains, the main issue is a lack of electricity. “We survive by using handmade candles with oil,” she says.
The main road leading to her house is littered with war relics, an eerie museum of what once was and what everyone here hopes will never return. Rusted-out Russian tanks rust in the fields. Anti-tank missiles gleam as they are embedded in grassy patches. Occasionally, the tail end of a cluster munitions is discovered lodged in the ground.
Passers-by are warned not to get too close by bright red signs with a skull.
Russians Left Empty Ammo Everywhere
During their quick retreat, the Russians left empty ammunition boxes, trenches, and tarp-covered tents. A jacket and men’s underwear hanging from the bare branches some kilometers away. And because the Russians are still attacking Kherson to get back the land they lost, scared people may find it hard to believe that the occupying forces ever left.
“I’m terrified,” Trofimenko says. “I’m even screaming at times. I’m scared to death. And I’m concerned that we’ll be shelled again, and the fighting will resume. This is the worst thing that exists.”
The Ukraine village’s deprivation is mirrored throughout Kherson, from the provincial capital of the same name to the constellation of villages separated by tracts of farmland surrounding it. After a major counteroffensive led to a Russian troop withdrawal, Ukrainian troops reclaimed territory west of the Dnieper River in November, hailed as one of the greatest Ukrainian victories of the war, which is now in its 12th month.
The United Nations increased its assistance, providing cash assistance to 133,000 people in Kherson and food to 150,000 others. Many Kalynivske villagers claim that food aid is the only reason they have something to eat.
“One of the most difficult challenges is that those who are present are the most vulnerable. “”It’s primarily the elderly, many of whom have disabilities, people who are unable to leave the area and are completely reliant on aid organizations and local authorities working around the clock,” says Saviano Abreu, a UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs spokesperson.
The Shelling Is Continuous.
The Ukraine Defense Ministry says that rocket, artillery, and mortar attacks happen almost every day in Kherson and the nearby villages. Most people live closer to the river banks and the front lines, but that doesn’t make those who live further away feel any safer. On Friday, a missile struck the village of Kochubeivka, north of Kalynivske, killing one person.
“Kherson was able to get most of the essential services back up and running, but the fighting is still making it hard to keep them going,” Abreu says. “It’s been getting worse and worse since December. There is an increase in the number of attacks and hostilities.”
There is only one way to pump piped drinking water with electricity. Residents in Ukraine complain that many people queue to get well water, but many more are required to perform daily tasks.
Many people forage for firewood around the village to stay warm, a dangerous task post-occupation.
Nina Zvarech’s story is well known in Kalynivske. She went to the nearby forest to look for firewood and was killed when she stepped on a mine.
Her body was left there for over a month because her family was too afraid to look for her.
SOURCE – (AP)
World
Azerbaijan And Armenia Agree To Prisoner Swap And To Work Towards Peace Deal
Azerbaijan and Armenia have agreed to exchange prisoners and work toward restoring relations and a peace agreement to end a decades-long conflict, which the US and EU have applauded.
According to a joint statement issued by Azerbaijan’s state news agency, AZERTAC, Azerbaijan will swap 32 prisoners of war for two military personnel.
“The Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan both believe that there is a historical chance for the region to achieve long-awaited peace.” The two countries “reaffirm their intention to normalize relations and reach a peace treaty based on the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity,” according to the statement. The breakthrough resulted from conversations between the offices of Azerbaijan’s president and Armenia’s prime minister.
“An agreement has been reached on taking tangible steps towards building confidence between two countries,” the statement says.
Azerbaijan And Armenia Agree To Prisoner Swap And To Work Towards Peace Deal
According to Matthew Miller, a spokesperson for the US State Department, the prisoner swap was “an important confidence-building measure” as the two countries worked toward a peace agreement.
“We commend Azerbaijani President (Ilham) Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister (Nikol) Pashinyan for their joint efforts to lay the groundwork for a more peaceful and prosperous future for the people of the South Caucasus,” the statement read. “The United States will continue to strongly support efforts to reach a durable and dignified peace.”
“Establishing and deepening the bilateral dialogue between sides has been a key objective of the EU-led Brussels process: today’s progress is a significant step,” said EU Council President Charles Michel on X. “I now encourage the leaders to finalize the … peace deal ASAP.”
The neighboring countries have been at odds for decades over Nagorno-Karabakh, an area in the Caucasus Mountains.
After mounting a quick 24-hour attack, Azerbaijan reclaimed control of Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic-Armenian enclave within its boundaries, in September.
Azerbaijan And Armenia Agree To Prisoner Swap And To Work Towards Peace Deal
Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but has been controlled by Armenian rebels for decades. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two wars over Nagorno-Karabakh, and cease-fire agreements have proven unstable.
Armenia admitted earlier this year that the province was part of Azerbaijan, but there are still disagreements about the future of its administration.
The latest progress on prisoner swaps and repairing relations came as delegates from both countries gathered in Dubai for the COP28 climate conference.
The statement also stated that Armenia would withdraw from consideration to host the annual UN-backed climate meeting next year and that Azerbaijan hoped other nations would support its bid.
Azerbaijan And Armenia Agree To Prisoner Swap And To Work Towards Peace Deal
There is a vacancy for the summit host for COP29 in 2024, which, according to UN standards, should be hosted in Eastern Europe. Before Thursday, the two countries had been obstructing each other’s candidacy in the voting process.
A vote among the region’s nations determines the year’s host country. Russia voted against numerous countries that are members of or allies of the European Union.
Azerbaijan is a big oil and gas producer that has been strengthening ties with Russia. Oil and gas account for about half of the country’s GDP and over 90% of its exports.
SOURCE – (CNN)
U.K News
Ukraine Makes New Push To Defeat Russia’s Electronic Warfare
A drone video that appeared to show a targeted strike blowing up three antennas on the roof of an apartment building surfaced online in early November. The Ukrainian drone commander who shared it claimed to have destroyed a Russian Pole-21 electronic warfare equipment near Donetsk on the eastern front.
Regarding electronic warfare, Ukraine is already catching up to Russia.
This attack also demonstrates Kyiv’s urgency to destroy Moscow’s technology on the battlefield, indicating how critical it may be for the war’s future.
Electronic warfare, or EW, uses electromagnetic weapons or techniques. Both forces deploy it in this battle, primarily through electronic jammers that disrupt GPS-guided targeting systems, leading rockets to miss their objectives.
After nearly six months of Ukraine’s sluggish and grinding counteroffensive, it is evident that Russia has created not only great physical barriers but also formidable electronic defenses, and Ukrainian forces on the front lines must react rapidly.
Ukraine Makes New Push To Defeat Russia’s Electronic Warfare
The drone commander with Ukraine’s 59th Motorized Brigade, which carried out the early November strike, Pavlo Petrychenko, believes that successfully destroying these systems is crucial if Ukraine is to take more land. Since the summer, there has been an increase in the frequency of Ukrainian military and media claims of successful strikes against Pole-21 systems.
“At the beginning of the conflict, they used electronic warfare to interfere with our communication, our walkie-talkies, radiocommunications, telephones, and drones,” he told CNN via video chat from near Avdiivka on the war’s eastern front, which is currently the scene of some of the bloodiest fighting.
“However, as we began to receive foreign equipment, they began to use these systems to suppress our weapons.”
“Since (the both US-provided) HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) and Excalibur 155 (an extended range artillery projectile) are guided by satellites, electronic warfare is actively used by (Russia) as one element of the defense against us,” Petrychenko said in a statement.
A flaw in Ukraine’s NATO-supplied armor
And this is the issue for Ukraine. Russian jammers have exploited the technological advantage of Ukraine’s Western-supplied arsenal of “smart” – guided – weapons.
Precision-guided missiles and guided multiple-launch rocket systems, such as HIMARS, are more vulnerable to electronic warfare than unguided weapons due to their reliance on GPS to hit their targets. Unguided weapons, which were common in both Russia and Ukraine’s Soviet-era stocks before 2022, do not.
Ukraine Makes New Push To Defeat Russia’s Electronic Warfare
The Pole-21 device, designed to jam GPS signals to defend Russian assets from approaching drones or missiles, is only one component of Moscow’s expanding electronic arsenal.
The Kremlin’s playbook includes jamming, as well as “spoofing” GPS – a method that effectively fools an adversary drone or missile into thinking it is somewhere else – which also impairs radar, radio, and even cell connections.
According to state news agency TASS, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin told a government meeting in September that production of major types of military equipment, including EW, had more than doubled in the first eight months of the year.
According to experts and Ukrainian officials, Russia has now fully incorporated electronic warfare into its forces.
In a recent essay, Ukraine’s commander-in-chief, Valery Zaluzhny, stated that Russia is now mass producing what he refers to as “trench electronic warfare.”
“The tactical level of Russian troops is saturated with (this equipment),” Zaluzhny said, adding that despite equipment losses, Moscow maintains “significant electronic warfare superiority.”
Zaluzhny also singled out American-made Excalibur shells, adding that their “capability has been significantly reduced, because the targeting system (using GPS) is very sensitive to the influence of enemy electronic warfare.”
Maj. Charlie Dietz, a Pentagon spokesperson, stated that “while the impact of Russian jamming has been observed” in certain US-supplied systems, including HIMARS rocket launchers, “it has not rendered these systems ineffective.”
Ukraine Makes New Push To Defeat Russia’s Electronic Warfare
According to Dietz, the agency has mitigated those vulnerabilities, including “substantial efforts to re-engineer and update these systems.” Updates are “being implemented as quickly as possible to counteract the effects of EW jamming,” he added.
Right now, the best hope they have is that videos of his early November drone strike go viral, according to Petrychenko. With so many Ukrainian troops on social media, any viral clip like this would serve as a manual, assisting them in identifying Russian antennas on the battlefield.
This is shifting the game outside of Ukraine.
“I think what you’re seeing play out in Ukraine is very much a glimpse into what modern warfare looks like today,” said Kari Bingen, director of the Aerospace Security Project at the think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former Pentagon principal deputy undersecretary for defense. She envisions a future where “electronic warfare capabilities and tactics are integrated into conventional force operations.”
Ukraine Makes New Push To Defeat Russia’s Electronic Warfare
According to Dietz, a Pentagon spokesperson, the United States is “actively evaluating and adapting its strategies” in electronic warfare, which he sees as a “fundamental aspect of contemporary and future military engagements.”
Fedorov stated that Ukraine is actively investing in electronic warfare while also following in the footsteps of his drone program by promoting indigenous production.
And he is open about the fact that Ukraine requires assistance from its Western partners in terms of both equipment and knowledge.
“We have all the technology we need in the West.” The question may be how to use it, which is important. We must consider the next technological level of the conflict.”
SOURCE – (CNN)
U.K News
Italy Quits Belt And Road Plan As Europe Rethinks China Relations
Italy, the only G7 country to join China’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative, will abandon the global infrastructure program when its contract expires next year, marking the latest symptom of Europe’s growing hostility against Beijing and its worldwide ambitions.
Giorgia Meloni, the prime minister, acknowledged the much-anticipated action on Thursday. She made the promise during her election campaign last year in response to complaints that the agreement with China that a previous administration had negotiated in 2019 had not been particularly beneficial to Italy’s economy.
On the other hand, Meloni emphasized that Rome could maintain excellent relations with Beijing outside of the program, which has increased China’s worldwide power while raising concerns that it has burdened some nations with unmanageable debt.
Italy Quits Belt And Road Plan As Europe Rethinks China Relations
“I believe we should… improve our cooperation with China on trade and the economy,” Meloni told reporters, according to Reuters, in her first public comments on the matter following rumors that Italy had informed China of its decision not to renew the treaty when it ends in March 2024.
“The tool of the (BRI) … has not produced the results that were expected,” she said in a statement.
Italy’s decision coincides with the European Union’s campaign to “de-risk” its supply chains from China and secure critical technologies after the bloc’s designation of Beijing as a “systemic rival” in 2019.
These tensions were on display Thursday during a conference in Beijing between EU leaders and Chinese leader Xi Jinping, as the two sides grappled with issues ranging from trade to Russia’s war in Ukraine – with little progress made.
When asked about the Italian pullout during a normal news briefing on Thursday, China’s Foreign Ministry maintained a cautious tone, citing the “enormous appeal and global influence of Belt and Road cooperation.”
“China vehemently opposes attempts to smear and sabotage Belt and Road cooperation, or to incite bloc confrontation and division,” said spokesperson Wang Wenbin, without mentioning Italy specifically.
Italy Quits Belt And Road Plan As Europe Rethinks China Relations
China has signed collaboration agreements with what it claims are more than 140 countries for the initiative, which has invested hundreds of billions of dollars in roads, ports, airports, and bridges, mostly in the Global South over the last decade.
Italy’s decision to join the scheme in 2019 was generally interpreted as a diplomatic victory for Beijing, prompting criticism from Washington and Brussels.
This summer, Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto called the 2019 decision “wicked,” citing growing trade disparities between the two countries in an interview with Corriere della Sera newspaper.
Last year, China imported $26.9 billion in Italian goods, up from $21.4 billion in 2019. According to China’s customs data, Chinese exports to Italy increased from $33.5 billion to $50.5 billion during the same time.
Former China-friendly Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, who joined the scheme, blasted the withdrawal in an interview on his Facebook page, saying it was made for “ideological reasons” and risked “scuppering” future Italian export growth.
Italy Quits Belt And Road Plan As Europe Rethinks China Relations
In an interview with the Italian news outlet Fanpage earlier this year, the Chinese Ambassador to Italy, Jia Guide, stated that a “reckless” choice to withdraw from the accord would have a “negative” influence on cooperation.
Italian politicians were eager to tread gently in their withdrawal, with Meloni frequently implying that good relations with China could be maintained outside of the Belt and Road initiative. She has also refuted allegations that the US persuaded her to abandon the scheme.
Rome withdrew as a delegation of top European Union officials arrived in Beijing for the first EU-China meeting in four years.
Chinese leaders saw the summit as a critical opportunity to calm tense relations with Europe, which Beijing sees as a major potential counterweight in its competition with the United States.
“We should not regard each other as rivals simply because our systems are different,” Xi told the visiting leaders, according to China’s official readout. “We should not reduce cooperation because competition exists, or engage in confrontation because there are disagreements.”
Italy Quits Belt And Road Plan As Europe Rethinks China Relations
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Charles Michel challenged Xi and Chinese Premier Li Qiang on their countries’ massive trade deficits and “unfair competition,” while Li urged the EU to be “prudent” in its use of “restrictive” economic policies.
Even though the summit looked to achieve nothing regarding fundamental problems, Von der Leyen stated that both parties agreed “that it is in our mutual interest to have balanced trade relations.”
The EU will seek “concrete progress following these discussions,” according to a statement issued after the meeting.
Source – CNN
-
Celebrity5 months ago
Singer Sinead O’Connor Dead at 56, Family Devastated
-
Entertainment4 months ago
Bella Hadid Shares She’s Nearly 10 Months Sober Amid Health Journey
-
Entertainment4 months ago
Ethan Slater Files for Divorce From Lilly Jay Amid Ariana Grande Romance
-
World4 months ago
Dangerous Fungus Is Becoming More Prevalent in 2023. Scientists Believe Climate Change Could Be To Blame
-
World4 months ago
Nassar Survivors Sue Michigan State, Saying It Made ‘Secret Decisions’ About Releasing Documents
-
Entertainment5 months ago
Robert De Niro’s Girlfriend Tiffany Chen Diagnosed With Bell’s Palsy After Welcoming Baby Girl