Tag: Russia -Ukraine Crisis

  • EU plans new sanctions on Russia for anniversary of Ukraine war

    EU plans new sanctions on Russia for anniversary of Ukraine war

    The European Union say that it is preparing to impose a new package of sanctions on Russia for the second anniversary of the war in Ukraine later this month.

    According to information obtained on Monday, the sanctions are to be significantly expanded to include more people and organisations whose EU assets will be frozen.

    In addition, further companies that contributed to Russia’s military and technology development or to the advancement of its defence and security sector will be targeted for sanctions.

    The EU would then no longer be allowed to sell goods and technologies with military connections to Russia.

    The EU recently used this tactic to target companies based in China, Uzbekistan, Iran and the United Arab Emirates, for example, which are allegedly involved in circumventing the EU’s punitive measures.

    The concrete proposals for what is now the 13th sanctions package were presented to representatives of the EU member states by top officials of the European Commission over the weekend.

    The next step will be to draft a sanctions resolution, which will then have to be formally approved by all 27 EU countries.

    According to the sanctions proposals, well over 200 people and companies could be affected.

    The last EU sanctions package on Moscow included a ban on importing diamonds and jewelry from Russia.

    A far-reaching ban on imports of crude oil, coal, steel, gold and luxury goods, as well as measures aimed at banks and financial institutions had been in place for some time.

    The long-planned absorption of proceeds from frozen Russian Central Bank funds could also be decided at the same time as the upcoming sanctions package.

  • 10 people die in Eastern Ukraine towns after hit in overnight strikes

    10 people die in Eastern Ukraine towns after hit in overnight strikes

    At least 10 people died on Saturday night and into the early hours of Sunday after missiles rained down on Pokrovsk as part of a barrage of attacks on towns in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region.

     

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the missiles came as Ukraine pressed forward with a counteroffensive just to the north in the Kharkiv region, pushing Russian forces into a retreat from key areas.

     

    Six of the dead were in Pokrovsk, mayor Ruslan Trebushkin said in a message posted on Telegram.

     

    The industrial town about 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the front line had been hit twice before by missiles, in May and July, but never before by so many in one night.

     

    A flash illuminated the night sky as a detonation sounded out across the town in the second of six explosions. An ambulance raced through the darkened streets, and flames rose from a fire triggered by the missile strikes.

     

    At least three of those who died were killed when one of the missiles struck between a row of small houses and nearby train tracks, collapsing part of a nearby abandoned building, leaving one home burnt to the ground and severely damaging several more.

     

    Oleksandr Zaitsev, 67, stood quietly outside his friend’s house as the police arrived. His friend’s wife had been calling her husband nonstop since the strike, he said, but nobody was picking up.

     

    The house’s windows were shattered, the walls were pockmarked from shrapnel, and the front door was blown off its hinges. Inside, the police gently rolled Zaitsev’s friend into a black body bag.

     

    Next door, Yevhenia Butkova, 47, stood stunned in the center of her living room, trying to calm her two agitated pet dogs. Blood stained the sofa where she and her husband had been watching television when the first missile struck. On Sunday morning, he was recovering in a hospital after doctors removed shards of glass from his wounds, she said.

     

    Chunks of debris from the ceiling littered the floor throughout the house, whose entrance was reduced to a jumble of splintered wood, plaster, glass and brick. One of the plywood boards the couple had put over their windows for protection had been blown clean across the garden. But a combination of that and the plastic they had put over the glass probably saved their lives, Butkova said.

     

    “It was all quiet in Pokrovsk, this was very unexpected,” she said. “It was horrible.”

     

    Further down the row of single-story houses, an elderly couple swept rubble and glass from their small porch, dried blood still streaking their faces.

     

    Mariia Trutko, 85, and her husband Oleksii Maksymenko, 75, had been sleeping when they were jolted awake by the blast.

     

    “I can’t hear anything without my hearing aid, and then it hit so hard that I heard,” said Maksymenko, a retired coal miner. “Everything flew. … I started bleeding, so we got up to see what that was, and then there was another one: boom!”

     

    Their bed was littered with jagged shards of glass and plaster from the roof that covered them both, Trutko said. A large, square piece of glass lay on the pillow, and spots of blood stained the floor.

     

    “Oh my God, we could never imagine going through something like this at this old age,” Maksymenko said.

  • Why we’re avoiding direct war with Russia  -NATO

    Why we’re avoiding direct war with Russia -NATO

    Despite calls by president of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky to establish a no-fly zone, NATO has responded that the enforcement will lead to escalation of the war.

    NATO nations have all agreed not to carry out any activities that can worsen the War.

    There will be “no deployment of air or ground capabilities in Ukraine and that is the united position of our allies,” said NATO Chief, Jens Stoltenberg,

    Stoltenburg spoke on Wednesday at a news conference in Brussels, after Ministers discussed the issue at a meeting of foreign ministers on Tuesday.

    He added that the alliance are being very careful not to escalate and heat up the international polity.

    “We see destruction, we see human suffering in Ukraine but this can become even worse if NATO took actions that actually turned this into full-fledged war between NATO and Russia,” he said.

    US President, Joe Biden is set to travel to Europe next week to participate in a NATO summit on March 24 and will also join a European Council meeting, White House Press Secretary, Jen Psaki said on Tuesday.

    Ukraine president,Volodymyr Zelensky in a recent report had said that Ukraine was no longer interested to join NATO.

  • WAR: China replies America on military support for Russia

    WAR: China replies America on military support for Russia

    The people’s Rebuplic of China has given its response to the threat issued by America, the Asian country has denied supporting Russia with military aids or planning to do so

    US warned that there will be massive consequences if China assists Russia.

    Liu Pengyu, spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in the US, responding to the claim said he’s not aware of that.

    “I’ve never heard of that,” Pengyu said.

    Pengyu expressed concern for “the Ukraine situation” describing it as “indeed disconcerting”.

    “China has and will continue to provide humanitarian assistance to Ukraine.

    “The high priority now is to prevent the tense situation from escalating or even getting out of control.

    “China calls for exercising utmost restraint and preventing a massive humanitarian crisis.”

  • WAR: America threatens to hit  China over support for Russia

    WAR: America threatens to hit China over support for Russia

    Washington has warned China to desist from assisting Russia in its war against Ukraine, saying the consequences will be severe should China not listen.

    The National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan made this known in a clear statement to director of China’s office of the Foreign Affairs Commission Yang Jiechi during a meeting in Italy on Sunday.

    “We are watching very closely the extent to which the PRC [the People’s Republic of China] or any country in the world provides support – material, economic, financial, rhetorical, otherwise – to this war of choice that President [Vladimir] Putin is waging” against Ukraine, Price said.

    “And we have been very clear – both privately with Beijing, publicly with Beijing – that there would be consequences for any such support.”

    Russia began its onslaught of Ukraine in February and have since invaded some parts of the country with a lot of casualties already recorded in the crisis in a bid to stop Ukraine from teaming up with NATO to form an alliance.

    The war, which prompted a swift sanctions campaign by the US and its allies against Russia, has pushed more than 2.8 million people to flee Ukraine, according to the United Nations, as Russian forces besiege and bombard Ukrainian towns and cities.

    China has urged “restraint” in the conflict and expressed support for talks to end the war, but it has not denounced the invasion.

    Late last month, China abstained from a UN Security Council proposal that aimed to condemn the Russian assault on Ukraine. The measure was vetoed by Russia.

    China’s body language on the on-going crisis appear like that of neutrality but its actions are in the opposite.

    Many US media outlets reported, citing unidentified American officials, that Moscow was seeking military assistance from Beijing.

    China has accused the US of trying to spread rumours about it to the world over the on-going crisis in between Russia and Ukraine. China Foreign minister Zhao Lijian said America is targeting China on the issues with malicious intentions.

     

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  • WAR: Turkey set to host Russia, Ukraine peace talks

    WAR: Turkey set to host Russia, Ukraine peace talks

    Russian and Ukrainian foreign ministers have arrived Turkey for the continuation of the peace talks between the two waring neighbours.

    Officials from Kyiv and Moscow have held several rounds of discussions in Belarus, but the meeting in the southern city of Antalya represents the first time Russia has sent a minister for talks on the crisis.

    The Ukrainaian foreign ministry spokeperson Oleg Nikolenko, made a tweet where he announced that the foreign minister of Ukraine Dmytro Kuleba is already in Antalya for talks on Russia ending its war on Ukraine.

    The Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has also landed in Turkey for same purpose

    Dialogue between Kyiv and Moscow has so far yielded several local ceasefires and humanitarian corridors to evacuate residents, but Russia has been accused of breaching those agreements.

    In a facebook post, Ukrainian foreign minister Kuleba, mentioned that he would be in Turkey for the negotiations but his expectations are very limited.

    He said the success of the talks would depend on “what instructions and directives Lavrov is under” from the Kremlin.

    “I am not pinning any great hopes on them, but we will try and get the most out of” the talks with effective preparation, he said.
    Recall that The Turkish president Tayyip Erdogan has always solicited for Turkey to host the peace talks between Ukraine and Russia.
    The Russian and Ukrainian ministers will be joined at Thursday’s meeting by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, with NATO member Turkey keen to maintain strong relations with both sides despite the conflict.

     

     

  • America, EU consider exile government for Ukraine

    America, EU consider exile government for Ukraine

    The United State of America and its European Allies are putting measures together to escape Ukranian president Volodymyr Zelensky from Kyiv to establish a government in exile.

    It was gathered that discussions are in top gear to establish a government in exile which would be supported by America and its ally nations.

    Other options weighed is to move the president and other governmnet officials to another city Lviv in Western Ukraine.

    Furthermore, an option of escaping them to neighbouring Poland to continue administering Ukraine from there is also brought to the table.

    The Russian invasion of Ukraine has continued unabated and the safey of the president and his aides and officilas is being put on the front burner.

    No decisions have been reached on this at the moment as the discussions are only preliminary

    The top U.S and European officials are said to have been wary of presenting this issue directly before Zelensky, who reportedly wants to stay in Kyiv and defend his country.

     

     

  • Russia announces  partial ceasefire in Ukraine

    Russia announces partial ceasefire in Ukraine

    In an early morning announcement made by Russia defence ministry on Saturday, a partial ceasefire has been agreed to allow humanitarian corridors out of the Ukrainian cities of Mariupol and Volnovakha.

    “Today, March 5, from 10 am Moscow time, the Russian side declares a regime of silence and opens humanitarian corridors for the exit of civilians from Mariupol and Volnovakha,” it said.

    The announcement comes after Mariupol’s mayor Vadim Boychenko said Saturday that the city was under “blockade” by Russian forces after days of “ruthless” attacks.

    While laying siege to Mariupol for days, Russian forces have cut its electricity, food, water, heating and transportation in the depths of winter, prompting comparisons to the Nazi blockade of Leningrad in World War II.

    There is no immediate confirmation from Ukrainian forces, and it is not immediately clear how long the evacuation routes would remain open.

    Russia invasion of Ukraine has left some parts of the country in ruins, Kharkiv,Ukraine’s second former capital was seized by Russia

    Meanwhile peace talks between Russia and Ukraine is still ongoing to forestall the outbreak of a full blown war.

     

  • Russia-Ukraine crisis: Formula 1 terminates contract with Russian Grand prix

    Russia-Ukraine crisis: Formula 1 terminates contract with Russian Grand prix

    The sport’s commercial arm, which controls the calendar, has decided racing in Russia is impossible in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine.The race in Sochi scheduled for September this year has already been cancelled. There will now no longer be a race in St Petersburg, where it was due to move in 2023.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin was key in establishing the event in 2014.

    Putin, who remains closely associated with the race, has a palace in Sochi and St Petersburg is his home town.

     

    “Formula 1 can confirm it has terminated its contract with the Russian Grand Prix promoter meaning Russia will not have a race in the future,” it said in a statement.

    F1 has discussed what action to take next over the days since it decided to cancel this year’s race last week, a day after the invasion. It was concluded that holding a race in Russia was not tenable after what has happened.

    The race is one of the most lucrative on the calendar and had a long-term contract.

    The action by F1’s commercial arm stands in stark contrast to the decision by governing body the FIA this week to allow Russian competitors to take part in global motorsport events.

    It is a rare public split between F1 and the FIA, and an indication of F1’s dismay at the FIA’s stance on Russia.

    The FIA has already faced a backlash from the decision by its world motorsport council on Tuesday. The following day UK motorsport’s governing body banned all Russian licence holders from competing in the UK.

    The FIA justified its decision by saying it was in line with the policy of the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

    The FIA has not answered questions as to the grounds on which it decided this was the case for motorsport, in which most championships have not yet started in 2022.

    Source (BBC)

  • Russia-Ukraine Crisis: UAE imposes visa requirements on Ukrainians

    Russia-Ukraine Crisis: UAE imposes visa requirements on Ukrainians

    Ukrainians planning to enter the Asian country of United Arab Emirates ( UAE) would have to secure its visa before entering the oil rich country.

    The Ukrainian embassy in the United Arab Emirates says the Gulf country is re-imposing visa requirements on Ukrainians.

    The embassy posted on its Facebook page that the measure, which means any Ukrainian passport holders wanting to visit the UAE will now need a visa first, had taken effect from Tuesday.

    The energy-rich UAE, which relies on Russian and Ukrainian wheat exports, is home to some 15,000 Ukrainian residents among its roughly eight million foreign residents and one million Emirati citizens.

    Like other Gulf Arab states, it does not recognize individuals fleeing war and has not permitted refugees from Syria, Iraq and other wars to seek asylum or seek resettlement.

    Last week, it abstained during a UN Security Council vote condemning Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.