Tag: Russia

  • FIFA kick Russia out of 2022 World Cup qualifiers

    FIFA kick Russia out of 2022 World Cup qualifiers

    Russia have been kicked out from the 2022 World Cup qualifying play-off, which allows scheduled opponent Poland to automatically advance to the Path B final, where they will play either Sweden or Czech Republic.

    The action comes in response to Russia’s recent military invasion of Ukraine, which has been condemned around Europe and led Poland to say they would refuse to play Russia.

    Also related to the invasion, Ukraine’s play-off with Scotland has been postponed until June.

    A statement from FIFA read: “Subsequent to the decision of 28 February 2022 taken jointly with the UEFA Executive Committee to suspend all Russian teams from participation in both FIFA and UEFA competitions until further notice, the Bureau of the FIFA Organising Committee decided that Poland will receive a bye to the final of Path B due to take place on 29 March 2022, in which they will face the winners of the match between Sweden and the Czech Republic.”

  • Biden bans Russian oil imports to U.S.

    Biden bans Russian oil imports to U.S.

    U.S President Joe Biden on Tuesday announced that the United States would no longer allow for the importation of Russian oil, the latest sanction to punish Russia following the invasion of Ukraine.

    Biden who announced the sanction from the White House said Russian oil would no longer be accepted at U.S. ports.

    The oil embargo, Biden said, would target the main artery of Russia’s economy.

    “The ban on Russian oil and gas has strong bipartisan support in the Congress and in the country.

    “Americans have rallied to support the people of Ukraine and made it clear we will not be part of subsidizing Putin’s war.

    “This decision today is not without costs here at home. Putin’s war is already hurting American families at the pump — and this will drive up costs further.

    “So, I will take every step we can to minimise Putin’s price hike here at home,’’ he said.

    The U.S. leader said in coordination with our partners, we had already announced a collective release of 60 million barrels of oil from our Strategic Petroleum Reserves— half of that from the United States.

    “We’re taking steps to ensure a reliable supply of global energy. And we’re going to keep working with every tool at our disposal to protect American families and businesses.

    “Let me say to the oil and gas companies and finance firms that back them: We understand that Putin’s war against the people of Ukraine is causing prices to rise.

    “But that is no excuse for excess price increases, or padding profits, or any kind of effort to exploit this situation,’’ he said.

  • Sense and nonsense in Nigeria voting against Russia – By Owei Lakemfa

    Sense and nonsense in Nigeria voting against Russia – By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    The unfolding tragedy in the Ukraine’s war with Russia deserves the universal attention it is receiving. Where better to discuss it than the United Nations, UN? Where best in the UN than the Security Council which has all the powers of the world body, has teeth and can bite. But when the matter was discussed at the Security Council, it suffered defeat because that exclusive club of five permanent members that dictates to the rest of humanity, runs on veto power. That group comprising the United States, US; China and three European countries: Russia, France and the United Kingdom, UK, decide what is best for the rest of the world irrespective of the opinion of the rest of humanity.

    The war is a matter in which the members of the big boys club had differing interests and the rule is that if any of them objects, no binding decision can be taken.

    So, calling a meeting of the castrated UN General Assembly on the issue became more a motion without movement; an academic exercise or more of moral suasion.

    Also, the motive of calling the Assembly was more of the West showing that there are more countries that supports it than its rival Russia. A more meaningful objective would have been how the world can pressure both sides of the conflict to accept immediate ceasefire, a negotiated settlement and return of peace, more so when an escalation may have negative consequences on the world.

    A non-legal or non-binding vote was taken of the 193-member assembly with 141 states voting against Russia, five in favour, 35 abstentions, while 12 did not vote. In a world supposedly wedded to democracy, this Assembly would have been an opportunity for the world to insist on changing the power relations in the UN to allow the equality of votes or the will of the majority to prevail rather than a world where the vote of a single country overrides that of the entire world. That was why the manifest evil called Apartheid in South Africa endured until 1994; because the US and UK would not allow the world take decisive steps at the UN against that Evil Empire.

    When in 1976, Africa boycotted the Montreal Olympic Games because the International Olympics Committee refused to disqualify New Zealand that was making rugby tours in Apartheid South Africa, some Western countries denounced us for allegedly mixing sports with politics. Interestingly, the US boycotted the 1984 Moscow Olympic Games because the Soviet Union intervened in Afghanistan; the same country America was to invade 17 years later. Today, Russian sportsmen and women are being barred from international competitions; is this not mixing sports and politics? The point I am making is not to justify any attacks or invasion, including the war in Ukraine. Rather, it is to make the point that countries play international politics primarily based on the promotion and defence of their national interests. So in Nigeria voting against Russia at the UN Assembly, what interest was being served? National interest or a mindless casting of vote?

    First, in taking sides in the intra-European squabble, we have lost the opportunity to play the needed mediatory role and lost relevance in the resolution of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict. Secondly, we lost sight of the fact that unlike the West, Russia has never constituted a threat to Nigeria or Africa. Thirdly, the Buhari administration displayed a lack of historical knowledge. The defunct Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, USSR, which was inherited by Russia, was in the forefront of the global struggles against colonialism. It applied pressure that colonies like Nigeria must be freed. Even while being colonised, the Soviets and their allies provided thousands of Nigerians scholarship to ensure an independent Nigeria has the trained manpower required to run a new country.

    Moscow also provided African colonies fighting for liberation with funds, military training, arms, scholarship and vital international support. This it did in the bloody liberation wars in Algeria, Angola, Mozambique, Guinea Bissau, Cape Verde, Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa. The Soviets did not mind that the colonialists they armed us against were their fellow Europeans!

    In the specific case of Nigeria, when the civil war broke out and countries like France and Israel equipped the then rebels with military hardware and training to secede, the UK refused to supply Nigeria needed air force equipment as it did not want the federal side to have air superiority, and the US declared itself neutral. It was Moscow that came to Nigeria’s aid. On August 2, 1967, then Information and Labour Minister, Chief Anthony Enahoro, was in Moscow to sign an arms deal, including the supply of aircraft. Soviet ally, Czechoslovakia followed six days later, agreeing to supply the federal side military aircraft and training.

    The Soviet Union did not mind that Nigeria was opposed to socialism; its position according to Premier Alex Kosygin, was based on the Soviets desire to “prevent the country from being dismembered”.

    Nigerian Ambassador to the Soviet Union, Brigadier George Kurubo, declared that Russian support was “responsible for the federal victory more than any other single thing, more than all other things put together”.

    In November 1968, while the war was on, Moscow came to Nigeria’s aid by agreeing to provide the funds to build the crucial Kainji Dam.

    Also, when in Nigeria’s quest for development it decided to build an iron and steel complex, the West refused on the basis that we did not need this mother of all industries. It was Moscow that came to our rescue by providing funds and building the Ajaokuta Iron and Steel complex.

    Nigeria as the giant of Africa forgets that in the event of a conflict between a NATO member and an African country, like the one brewing between Mali and neo-colonial France, the Europeans will collectively fight against the African country. It forgets that with the shortage of gas from Russia, desperate European countries will turn on countries like Nigeria for gas they will want virtually for free even if it means subverting us or removing a non-compliant government. This is our experience.

    The basis of Buhari’s foreign policy is truly amazing: from supporting the military coup in Chad to abstaining on December 31, 2020 in the UN Resolution on: “A global call for concrete action for the elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance…” In other words, it refused to vote for the universal elimination of discrimination and racism! At the UN General Assembly, Nigeria should either have abstained or not voted like its more sensible brothers such as Cameroun, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Morocco, Togo, Mali, Burundi, Equatorial Guinea and South Africa. Like we say in Nigeria: Common sense is not common.

  • War has no respect for telecoms or broadcasting – By Okoh Aihe

    War has no respect for telecoms or broadcasting – By Okoh Aihe

    By Okoh Aihe

    War is no war game. It is not reality TV or the world of make-believe. It is no time for make-up, pyrotechnics or stunting. What you see is what it is. Reality. Death. Disaster. And destruction in the extreme and very extensive.

    The weapons of death find a grotesque means of expression. And the after-effects and the body counts can be inaccurate because some are interred in the debris for eternity.

    War is not a good thing. It destroys life. Destroys civilization. And takes humanity back to the age of barbarism. At least what is left of humanity. Life carries no meaning and hopelessness becomes even more nourishing than summarised finality.

    War is worse when there is a little bit of psychotic mix, some dolorous hubris wrapped in phantasy. Those who instigate wars become villains forever and history reserves for them a foretaste of damning hell. Condemnation for them is in perpetuity.

    As I watch live television of the Russian army raining down bombs on Ukrainian cities, I am pained to observe that this is not reality TV; this is a comprehensive disaster unfolding before humanity. The immediate and after-effects will be very overwhelming and may serve as a lasting condemnable hold on the conscience of those who, in their powerful positions, prevaricated or totally refused to do something when daring actions were exigent.

    So innocence and helplessness are traumatised when not completely mangled, and those who thought they had earned a right to peaceful life have been bombed out of their homes and into a life that may remain strange to them forever.

    War is not good. In Ukraine, telecommunications and broadcast facilities were targeted and bombed. TV and phones have become a luxury to people on the run who are now unable to connect with their loved ones trapped in the country because of martial law declaration and may not be able to connect with them ever again. War is not good.

    War is not good. President Putin of Russia is becoming increasingly insular. For declaring a war on another country, businesses including communications and broadcast companies are taking a bolt out of Russia by way of protest. And the government is doing even more by making it impossible for their people to connect to the rest of the world. The world is against Russia, they say. What an irreverent myopia.

    Ordinarily, the country lives in a world of its own, some kind of bubble that is very surreal. It’s worse even now. Last week Putin signed the ‘fake news’ law which criminalises the ventilation of news in dissonance with the authorities of Russia and could send journalists to prison for up to ten years. For instance, it may be fake news to even suggest that Russia is losing soldiers in the war with Ukraine or that some of her fighter jets have been shot down. No. You must have the permission of the authorities to ever traverse that route. These are desperate times and more desperate measures may be on the way.

    Fake news is not strange to us in this part of the world. Methinks fake news provides a lot of blanket cover for any government that is failing in its responsibilities to its people. Otherwise, why would one be afraid of alternative views and suggestions or even of any information that is discomforting to the few but salubrious to the majority in the main.

    When people were shot at the Lekki Toll Gate during the #EndSARS protest on October 20, 2020, they said it was fake news. When the power generating authorities in Nigeria cannot give power to the people and businesses, they say it is fake news, when bad fuel is imported into the country and helpless motorists have to spend days and nights at the filling stations, they say it is fake news. In fact, the reality of the pain we carry in Nigeria is fake news. Everything is on a roll, and el dorado is the smallest of realities that we enjoy.

    Watching Russia and Ukraine brings my attention to my country. Just another look at the two countries, I realise how much damage politicians can cause without ever pausing to think that Armageddon which their actions instigate most of the time spares nobody. Why will they not ever moderate their greed, excesses and lousiness?

    The Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy and the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) have fought assiduously to make telecommunications facilities critical infrastructure, thus making it an offence for anybody to go on a wilful damage of such infrastructure.

    Oftentimes, the actions of politicians lay no expediency to such critical thinking. They make appointments without thinking of the consequences. They make laws and boast they can do anything and nothing will happen. So, they threw away every suggestion to comfort the Nigerian woman in the just amended constitution. Oh, nothing will happen. And the cauldron boils within, with some fragments of discontents, waiting to find an expression one day. Perhaps, a very violent one.

    I look at Russia and Ukraine fighting each other, one powerful nation against an easy-going one. I also look at our nation and the contradictions within, the crevices that are getting wider every day, soaking in a lot of blood. And the politicians have hardly taken any serious measures to restore peace and confidence back to the land. But such lethargy and ignoble inaction would always come to an end, not always a pleasant one.

    This is why I make this appeal, for the politicians and our lawmakers to make laws that protect the people, laws that guarantee life and offer tomorrow as a better alternative. Without equivocation, war is war, whether it is between nations or among the nationalities within a nation. In the eventuality of a war, everybody suffers, everything suffers. It doesn’t matter whether telecommunications have been declared critical infrastructure or not, war burns everything, war takes everything down, including telecommunications and broadcasting. Telecoms and broadcasting are the first to be attacked in order to keep the people in the dark. War is not good and can hardly be a preferred alternative for dispute resolution.

  • Moscow offers ceasefire in Ukraine as talks continue

    Moscow offers ceasefire in Ukraine as talks continue

    Russia is offering a fresh Ukraine ceasefire for Tuesday, Moscow’s Ambassador to the United Nations Vasily Nebenzya said, amid efforts to get civilians to safety.

    Speaking at the UN Security Council in New York, Nebenzya read from a statement from the authorities in Moscow.

    It offered a ceasefire from 10 am Moscow time (0700 GMT) on Tuesday to open a humanitarian corridor or corridors to evacuate citizens from Kiev, Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkiv and Mariupol.

    It also included an offer to evacuate Ukrainian cities to the west of Kiev.

    There were small but positive steps in improving logistics for the humanitarian corridors in embattled cities, Ukrainian official, Mykhailo Podolyak said after a third round of negotiations with Moscow.

    Representatives of the two countries met for a new round of peace talks in Belarus on Monday, on the 12th day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Russian negotiator, Vladimir Medinsky said there should be a new attempt on Tuesday to get people to safety via the corridors.

    However, he expressed overall disappointment after the meeting.

    “The expectations were not met,’’ Medinsky told Russian state television.

    The Russian side brought a number of prepared documents to the negotiations.

    The Ukrainians did not want to sign anything, but took the papers for examination.

    According to Medinsky, another round of negotiations is expected soon, during which the agreements can be put in writing.

    The head of the Ukrainian delegation, David Arakhamia, on Sunday had rejected Russia’s central demand for any peace agreement as not acceptable in an interview with Fox News.

    Russia demanded that the Crimean Peninsula, which it annexed in 2014, be formally ceded to Russia.

    In addition, it wanted the regions of Luhansk and Donetsk, controlled by pro-Russian separatists, recognised as independent states by Kiev.

    Moscow was also demanding the complete “demilitarisation’’ of Ukraine and that it became a neutral buffer state.

    Ukraine’s Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba confirmed plans that would meet his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in Turkey this week.

    “Currently the March 10, is planned. Let’s see if he flies to Antalya, then I’ll fly too. Let’s sit down, let’s talk,’’ Kuleba said in a video message.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Cavusoglu had previously said both sides were expected in the Turkish city of Antalya on Thursday.

    The talks were likely to take place with Cavusoglu in a three-way format.

    Meanwhile, the Ukrainian ambassador to Israel said that Jerusalem could be a venue for high-level talks between the two sides to end the war, telling reporters in Tel Aviv that Ukraine saw Israel as a close friend.

    Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelensky vowed to remain in the country’s capital in spite of the ongoing fighting there.

    “I am staying in Kiev,’’ he said in a video message.

    He said he would not hide and wasn’t afraid of anyone.

    “Today is the twelfth night of our struggle, our defence. We are all on site, everyone is working. Everyone where he has to. I’m in Kiev, my team is with me,’’ Zelensky added.

    As the fighting in Ukraine continued, at least 13 civilians were killed during a Russian airstrike to the west of Kiev on Monday.

    Russian troops were stationed to the north-west of Kiev and are trying to advance on the capital from the west.

    Authorities in Ukraine’s second city Kharkiv announced that 133 civilians were known to have died in the city since the start of the war.

    A further 76 Ukrainian military personnel had also died in fighting in the city.

    The total number of civilians killed in the Ukraine had risen to at least 406, according to UN figures announced on Monday.

    In spite of the evidence to the contrary, Russia maintained that no civilian targets in Ukraine were being attacked by its troops.

    Elsewhere in Ukraine, Russian troops took control of the airport in the southern city of Mykolaiv on Monday but was back in Ukrainian hands just a few hours later, according to Mykolaiv Oblast Governor Vitaly Kim.

    Meanwhile, a senior U.S. Defence Department official said Washington would be sending another 500 soldiers to Germany, Greece, Poland and Romania to reinforce its presence in Europe.

    Among other things, their task would be to support efforts to protect NATO airspace.

    In New York, the U.S. ambassador to the UN told an emergency meeting on the humanitarian situation in Ukraine that the United States expected an ongoing conflict in Ukraine.

    “We are concerned that the world needs to be prepared for very long and very difficult road ahead,’’ Linda Thomas-Greenfield said.

    In Washington, the World Bank said it had mobilised some 720 million dollars in loans and aid to help the Kiev government provide critical services to Ukrainian people amid Russia’s war on the country.

    The bank’s board of executive directors on Monday, approved a supplemental budget support package including a supplemental loan for 350 million dollars and 139 million dollars in guarantees.

  • Former Ukrainian president, Yanukovych urges Zelensky to give up

    Former Ukrainian president, Yanukovych urges Zelensky to give up

    Former Ukrainian president, Viktor Yanukovych, has urged head of state Volodymyr Zelensky to give up in the war against Russia.

    “You personally are obliged to stop the bloodshed and reach a peace agreement at any cost,” the pro-Moscow politician wrote in a message circulated by Russian state agency Ria Novosti on Tuesday.

    “This is what Ukraine, the Donbass and Russia expect from you,” he said, adding that Kiev’s partners in the West would also welcome such a move.

    Yanukovych, who is considered extremely corrupt, was toppled by pro-Western demonstrators in 2014.

    Since then, the 71-year-old had been living in exile in Russia.

    In his home country, he was sentenced in absentia to 13 years in prison for treason.

    Ukrainian media recently reported that the Kremlin wanted to reinstate Yanukovych as president.

    Ukrainian President Zelensky vows to remain in Kiev

    Meanwhile, President Volodymyr Zelensky has vowed to remain in the Ukrainian capital Kiev inspite of the ongoing fighting there.

    “I am staying in Kiev,” he said in a video message.

    He said he would not hide and wasn’t afraid of anyone.

    “Today is the 12th night of our struggle, our defence.

    “We are all on site, everyone is working, everyone is where he has to.

    “I’m in Kiev, my team is with me,” Zelensky added.

    According to the presidential office, Zelensky has recalled Ukrainian soldiers serving on foreign missions.

    “The highly professional military would be needed in the fight against Russian aggression,” the statement said.

    According to Ukrainian media, the country is involved in operations in Kosovo, Congo and Ivory Coast.

    Zelensky said talks with Russia would continue.

    “We are realists, that’s why we’re going to talk.

    “We will insist on negotiations until we find a way to say to our people, this is how we come to peace.

    “Every day of fighting creates better conditions for Ukraine,” he said.

  • Russia warns America and European allies over plans to ban  oil imports

    Russia warns America and European allies over plans to ban oil imports

    Russia has issued a stern warning to the West not to ban Russia oil Imports saying the consequences would be very huge on the international community. He added that, it may shoot oil price to $300 per barrel and threatened to stop gas supply to Germany.

    Speaking on state Television Deputy Minister Alexander Novak mentioned that a ban on Russia oil would result into a catastrophic consequences for the international market

    “The surge in prices would be unpredictable,” he said. “It would be $300 per barrel if not more.”

    Recall that Washington and its Allies are considering placing a ban on Russia oil import to further sanction Russia over its continuous invasion of neighbour Ukraine.

    The White House said US President Joe Biden, who is facing growing calls from US lawmakers to cut off Russia from the money it gets from oil and natural gas exports, discussed the issue during a conference call with his counterparts in France, Germany and the United Kingdom on Monday.

    Germany is one of the beneficiaries of Russia oil but has been against the continuous invasion of Russia by Ukraine whilst damning the consequences of its actions.

    Meanwhile, peace talks still continue between Ukraine and Russia with Turkey offering to be the next host.

     

     

     

  • Ukrainian actor, Pasha Lee killed in war

    Ukrainian actor, Pasha Lee killed in war

    Ukrainian actor, Pasha lee has been killed under shelling as Russian forces occupied Irpin.

    Lee, last week joined the Territorial Defense Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine to defend his country from Russian attacks.

    On his Instagram, he shared pictures of himself kitted in uniform.

    The Instagram post translated wrote: “For the last 48hrs there’s an opportunity to sit down and take a picture of how we are being bombed, and we are smiling because we will manage and everything will be UKRAINE WE ARE WORKING!

    However, a Facebook post by Sergiy Tomilenko, President of Ukraine’s National Union of Journalists, confirmed the death of Lee

    “The National Association of Journalists of Ukraine express sincere condolences to Paul’s family and loved ones.

    “Our words of support are the entire team of the DOM channel, which embodies a noble mission of speech for the de-occupation of Donetsk, Luhansk regions and Crimea.”

    Lee rose to fame as the star of the 2019 comedy film, ‘Meeting of Classmates’ and 2017 sport action movie, ‘The Fight Rules’, while he was also a presenter on the DOM channel in Ukraine.

    Lee had also worked as a dubbing artist on The Lion King, Malibu rescuers and Hobbit.

  • How military operations in Ukraine can stop – Russia

    How military operations in Ukraine can stop – Russia

    Russian presidential spokesman, Dmitry Peskov has revealed conditions that must be met before its military operations in Ukraine can stop.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Peskov made the revelation in an interview with Reuters on Monday.

    He said Russia will immediately stop its military operations if the Ukrainian authorities amend their country’s constitution to abandon their ambition to enter “any bloc,” and recognise the Crimean referendum and the independence of the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics (DPR and LPR).

    “They should make amendments to their constitution according to which Ukraine would reject any aims to enter any bloc,” Peskov said.

    He went further to say: “We have also spoken about how they should recognise that Crimea is a Russian territory and that they need to recognise that Donetsk and Lugansk are independent states.

    “And that’s it. Then, Russia’s military operations will stop in a moment”.

    Peskov added that Moscow would finish the demilitarisation of Ukraine and urge Kiev to stop its military action.

    On Feb. 24, Russia began a special operation to demilitarize and “denazify” Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the DPR and LPR in countering the aggression of Ukrainian troops.

    The Russian Defence Ministry said the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only and the civilian population was not in danger.

    Moscow has repeatedly stressed that it has no plans to occupy Ukraine.

  • We’ll stop military operations immediately in Ukraine only if… – Russia

    We’ll stop military operations immediately in Ukraine only if… – Russia

    Russia will immediately stop its military operations if the Ukrainian authorities amend their country’s constitution to abandon their ambition to enter “any bloc,” and recognise the Crimean referendum and the independence of the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics (DPR and LPR).

    The Russian presidential spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told Reuters on Monday.

    “They should make amendments to their constitution according to which Ukraine would reject any aims to enter any bloc,’’ Peskov said.

    “We have also spoken about how they should recognise that Crimea is a Russian territory and that they need to recognise that Donetsk and Lugansk are independent states.

    “And that’s it. Then, Russia’s military operations will stop in a moment.’’

    Peskov added that Moscow would finish the demilitarisation of Ukraine and urge Kiev to stop its military action.

    On Feb. 24, Russia began a special operation to demilitarize and “denazify” Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the DPR and LPR in countering the aggression of Ukrainian troops.

    The Russian Defence Ministry said the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only and the civilian population was not in danger.

    Moscow has repeatedly stressed that it has no plans to occupy Ukraine.