Tag: War

  • Ukrainians are not prepared for ultimatums – Zelenskyy

    Ukrainians are not prepared for ultimatums – Zelenskyy

    As the invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops enter its day 12, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine on Monday said the Ukrainians are not prepared for ultimatums.

     

    He noted that the path to peace is “more difficult than simply acknowledging” another ultimatum from Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    The Ukraine President asserted that he would stay in his country for the duration of the war.

    Zelenskyy responded, “It is more difficult than simply acknowledging them (3 conditions to end the war), this is another ultimatum and we are not prepared for ultimatums.

    “But we have the possible solution resolution for these three items, key items, what needs to be done is for President Putin to start talking. Start the dialogue instead of living in the information bubble without oxygen.

    “I think that’s where he is. He is in this bubble. He’s getting this information and you don’t know how realistic that information is that he’s getting.”

    3 CONDITIONS TO END RUSSIA/UKRAINE WAR

    • Ukraine must give up on joining NATO.

    • Recognize Crimea as part of Russia.

    • Recognize the independence of two separatist regions in the east.

  • 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.

  • Ukraine, Russia prepare for 3rd round of peace talks

    Ukraine, Russia prepare for 3rd round of peace talks

    Ukraine and Russia are expected to meet for third round of negotiations, which both sides had said could take place on Monday.

    The location and exact time of the talks is not mentioned yet.

    The two delegations last met in the Brest region in western Belarus for two rounds of peace talks and agreed to have humanitarian corridors in place in the embattled cities of Mariupol and Volnovakha to facilitate the evacuation of civilians.

    However, the attempt to evacuate Mariupol failed on Sunday, according to the Kremlin and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

    Russia and Ukraine traded blame for failing to adhere to the agreed ceasefire.

    The head of the Ukrainian delegation for talks with Russia, David Arachamija, rejected Russia’s core demands as “not acceptable” in an interview with Fox News.

    “I would not say we are moving fast because we have a lot of people killed every day, especially civilians,” he said when asked about the progress of the negotiations.

    “It’s tough, honestly, but we are still demonstrating some progress.

    “At least, two groups are listening to each other and actively discussing different things.”

    Arachamija added that the only parts which are almost impossible to agree on are Crimea and so-called republics that Russia insists that we recognise as independent.

    “This is not acceptable within Ukrainian society.”

    He said Russia demands that the Crimean Peninsula, which it annexed in 2014, be recognised as Russian territory.

    In addition, he said it wants the regions of Luhansk and Donetsk, controlled by pro-Russian separatists, recognised as independent states.
    Moscow also calls for a complete “demilitarization” of Ukraine.

  • Ukraine denies admitting foreigners to wage war against Russia

    Ukraine denies admitting foreigners to wage war against Russia

    Ukraine has denied admitting foreign volunteers to wage war against Russia after Vladimir Putin ordered invasion of the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Ukraine also clarified requesting $1,000 from Nigerian volunteers for air ticket and visa, denying the claim as well.

    This was contained in a statement released on Monday by the Spokesperson to Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Francisca K. Omayuli (Mrs).

    According to the statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs contacted the Ukrainian Embassy in Nigeria following reports of ongoing registration of Nigerian volunteers into the fighting force of Ukraine at the Embassy in Abuja, Nigeria’s federal capital.

    The Ukrainian Embassy refuted the allegation, but confirmed that a number of Nigerians had approached the Embassy indicating their willingness to fight on the side of Ukraine in its ongoing conflict with Russia.

    The Ministry in the statement argued that Nigeria discourages the use of mercenaries anywhere in the world and will not tolerate the recruitment, in Nigeria, of Nigerians as mercenaries to fight in Ukraine or anywhere else in the world.

    The statement reads: “The attention of the Federal Government of Nigeria has been drawn to an alleged ongoing registration of Nigerian volunteers into the fighting force of Ukraine at the Ukrainian Embassy in Abuja.

    “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs contacted the Embassy to verify the speculation. The Ukrainian Embassy refuted the allegation, but confirmed that a number of Nigerians had approached the Embassy indicating their willingness to fight on the side of Ukraine in its ongoing conflict with Russia.

    “Furthermore, the Embassy clarified that the Ukrainian government is not admitting foreign volunteer fighters and as such dissociated itself from the claim that it is requesting $1,000 from each Nigerian volunteer for air ticket and visa.

    “As a responsible member of the international community and consistent with our obligations under international law, Nigeria discourages the use of mercenaries anywhere in the world and will not tolerate the recruitment, in Nigeria, of Nigerians as mercenaries to fight in Ukraine or anywhere else in the world.

    “The Federal Government will continue to engage with the Embassy of Ukraine in Nigeria and other relevant authorities to prevent this possibility”.

  • US Secretary of State Blinken reveals Ukraine’s plan in war with Russia

    US Secretary of State Blinken reveals Ukraine’s plan in war with Russia

    United States Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, has revealed Ukraine’s plan amid Russia’s invasion of their country.

    Blinken said Ukrainians have a plan for “continuity of government one way or another” should anything happen to their President Volodymyr Zelensky amid war with Russia.

    He said this during an interview with CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

    “The Ukrainians have plans in place that I am not going to talk about or get into any detail about to make sure that there is continuity of government one way or another, and I am going to leave it at that,” Blinken said.

    Blinken also praised Zelensky for his “leadership” through this crisis.

    He said, “The leadership that President Zelensky has shown, the entire government has shown is remarkable, they have been the embodiment of these incredibly brave Ukrainian people.”

  • What if Putin Flips? – By Chidi Amuta

    Before our very eyes and at an unexpected moment, a horror movie may be unfolding. Last Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, warned that a Third World War between Russia and NATO is possible and that it would be a nuclear war. On the same day, Russian artillery fire set off a blaze at a Ukrainian nuclear facility, the largest in Europe. Luckily, before dawn on Friday, Ukrainian fire fighters had put out the fire. Still on the same day, French President Emmanuel Macron after a telephone conversation with Putin cautioned that : ”the worst is yet to come.” Later in the day, it was a visibly jittery and troubled Putin that addressed Russians and the world to affirm that the invasion of Ukraine was going well according to his plan. Instructively, the broadcast was interrupted twice as Putin stood up in front of global television to adjust his ill-fitting jacket, all the time shying from eye contact with the audience in spite of a teleprompter ahead of him.

    The fog of the Ukrainian war could produce a more frightening outcome than the familiar tragedies of war. Vladimir Putin may mutate into a real dangerous foe not only for Ukraine but for the rest of humanity. Russia is being incrementally isolated. Crippling sanctions on all fronts threaten to strangulate Russia’s enclave economy. More directly, for the first time, Putin’s personal wealth and those of his support cast of oligarchs spread all over the world has been targeted by sanctions by Europe and the United States.

    Under the impact of the volley of sanctions, Russia’s economy is likely to begin to tank in less than 90 days. Financial services are beginning to feel the impact. The Russian Central Bank has adjusted interest rates up from 9% to over 20%. Key Russian banks have been excluded from the strategic international SWIFT network. That literally locks them out of the international banking and transactional super market. Putin has prohibited Russians from making international transfers. It is predicted that life could become quite hard for ordinary Russians in the next couple of weeks.

    Already anti war protests in Russia have been on the increase since the beginning of hostilities with Ukraine, leading to the arrest and detention of over 6000 Russians. If you add this number to the multitude being held in various detention centres for previous protests, it becomes hard to fathom how much repressive capacity Vladimir Putin possesses. Meanwhile, elite dissent is growing as a large group of Russian intellectuals last week issued a forceful statement against the Ukraine invasion. From anti war protests, Russia’s already bulging political opposition could swell into hardship riots as product shortages hit shop shelves. The pressure on Putin’s hold on power could swell to breaking point. Unfortunately, Russia’s democratic institutions are fragile and revolve around Mr. Putin’s stranglehold on power. In the event of increased popular domestic pressure, the threat on Putin’s hold on power could unravel and plunge Russia into something too frightening to name.

    Meanwhile, the advance of Russian columns into the Ukrainian capital and other cities is being frustrated and stalled by the patriotic resistance of ordinary Ukrainians. After over one week of an invasion originally programmed to last no more than a few days, the world ought to be concerned about the cumulative effects of these frustrations on the psychology of Mr. Putin, an unrepentant autocrat and repressive tyrant. Intelligence investigations into the state of Mr. Putin’s present state of mind may be closer to what the moment demands.

    There are enough reasons why Mr. Putin could become more dangerous to us all. An unpredictable autocrat presiding over a nuclear super power is not exactly a pleasant playmate. An autocrat who is easily the richest man in the world can acquire the mindset of a God figure with the power of life and death over the rest of humanity. An ex- KGB officer with an inscrutable face and shadowy family life may not worry much about the familiar moral qualms of regular mortals about human lives and ultimate tragedy. Worse still, a man with a permanent nostalgia for the defunct great USSR and the days of Cold War sabre rattling can pursue his obsession at the expense of others if events keep pushing him to the brinks of sanity.

    When such a man is encircled, his country isolated, his military rendered ineffectual and his private fortunes threatened, it is uncertain how far he can go in seeking revenge against those he sees as his traducers. Throughout history, the mind of a typical autocratic demagogue has been an area of darkness, full of uncanny possibilities. On hindsight, I shudder to think of what could have become of the world if Hitler had access to the codes of a nuclear weapons system. In the isolated seclusion of his bunker, he ordered some of the most massive military assaults that humanity has known during the Second World War. The body count meant nothing to him.

    But here we are today with Mr. Putin, a real autocrat with a record of serial murders of his opponents. He is in control of the world’s second largest arsenal of lethal and nuclear weapons. How far could he go to hurt the rest of the world just to assuage his injured ego? How far will Putin go just to prove to the world that he is not necessarily weak and will not go down in humiliation? Could Vladimir become demented by frustrations of his territorial ambitions in Ukraine and beyond as to do the kind of irrational things that similar figures have done in history?

    Russia as an isolated rogue state is not the best prospect in a world dominated by aspiring democracies. Over 85% of the nations of the world are now democracies or aspiring democracies. In that world, an illiberal democracy or fringe autocracy such as Russia is not your favourite next door neighbor. Worse still, a nuclear super power presided over by an unstable dictator with an injured ego and threatened financial fortunes is a nightmare that could blow up in our faces. Already, Mr. Putin has placed his most strategic military units including his nuclear command, at alert and in an active disposition. Lethal weapons banned by the Geneva Convention have already been reportedly put to use in only a few days of the Ukraine invasion.

    The best way out of this possible nightmare is to show Mr. Putin clearly marked exit points to escape from the consequences of his disastrous judgment. Clearly, he miscalculated his chances in the Ukraine mission. He probably underestimated the extent to which Ukrainians detest and even hate the Russians. You cannot sustain a massive military campaign in a terrain where the occupying force is so despised. Also, Mr. Putin never estimated the groundswell of international opposition that his invasion of Ukraine would attract. More tragically, he probably did not calculate the character of Russia’s post war relations with the European states and former Soviet republics that Russia has to live with in perpetuaity.

    Every war ends in peace. The best prosecutors of wars are also the most creative seekers of peace. Peace talks between Russia and Ukraine are an encouraging sign. But Mr. Putin would rather negotiate with Ukraine as a conqueror hence his armoured columns are proceeding into central Ukraine just as his peace delegation meets with Ukrainian officials. It is doubtful if the two parallel lines will meet somewhere in a bombed out Ukraine. Putin would probably find more satisfaction if the West is an open guarantor of the dubious peace he is seeking through the backdoor.

    The West can help Mr.Putin find a convenient exit point out of the cage he has built around himself. But the interest of a more enduring world peace is not served by the present attitude and rhetoric of the US and the West. It is a good thing to marshal a global coalition against a menacing adversary of the international rule- based order. It is also in order to contain a belligerent autocrat who tramples on the sovereignty of less powerful nations. It is quite understandable to pile up crushing sanctions to bend such a determined aggressor. Adversarial propaganda and guided lies such as we are witnessing from both sides on all media platforms is a legitimate part of the tradition of warfare. The Ukrainians who are at the receiving end of this assault know where the truth of this war really lies.

    But the premature triumphalism of Washington and the West is wrongheaded and could produce a more dangerous Putin. We must not forget; the object of this war is not the humiliation of Russia or Putin even though Mr. Putin provoked it. The object of the war is the protection of the sovereign integrity of independent states from the aggression and deliberate belligerence of more powerful nations. It is of course in the enlightened self -interest of the US and the West to contain Russian influence and Putin’s territorial ambitions. But in the end, the world still needs a powerful stable Russia as a bulwark against the excesses of the West just as much as we need a wealthy Europe and the US to demonstrate the relative advantages of liberal democracy and the power of the free market.

    For those who are desirous or anxious about how this war will end, there are a few certainties. First, Russia can neither crush nor annihilate Ukraine. Second, Russia will not be able to prevail against a coalition of the US, NATO and the rest of the free world. Third, the coalition of pro-Ukrainian forces will not be able to defeat Russia and exclude it from the international system. A humiliated Russia is an unlikely historical oddity.

    The risk that Mr. Putin could flip on the side of ultimate evil and catastrophe is not the only unintended consequence of this war. Other more foreseen and anticipated outcomes of war have come out in full display in less than a week of the invasion. Civilian deaths have topped 700 and still counting. Russian combatant deaths are climbing by the day. Infrastructure is being systematically destroyed. Psychologically, Ukrainians have become united more than ever under a banner of patriotic national resistance and defense. Russia is the unsavoury aggressor while Putin is the irredeemable villain.

    An unplanned refugee crisis and humanitarian disaster is in the making. Close to a million Ukrainians and others have streamed across the borders into neighbouring states. Foreign nationals resident in Ukraine have also been affected too.

    Between Putin and Zelensky, a familiar paradigm of good versus evil has emerged. A former comedy star who once acted a comic president and then became an actual president has in his heroic stance against Russian aggression turned out a real national hero and war time president. Irrespective of how this war ends, president Zelensky has secured his place in world history as a Ukrainian hero and wartime leader of global stature.

    Making a villain out of Putin requires little effort. Mr. Putin has not surprised anyone. A fierce autocrat with an insensitive bearing and inscrutable visage is the material out of which history moulds villains. Hitler, Stalin, Mussolin etc. But in acting out his predictable role, Mr. Putin may be on the way to destroying whatever legacy he may have created in three decades of power and leadership over Russia.

    On the diplomatic front, the world has united against Russia’s aggression. A barrage of United Nations resolutions in condemnation of Russia has lined up two thirds of the member states behind Ukraine. It is significant that votes against Russia’s role in Ukraine have cut across familiar boundaries. All Third World countries especially African countries that used to take a more sympathetic view of Russia have voted to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Communist era ideological solidarity is dead; long live the ideology of the market place and liberal democracy. Hungary and Turkey, known allies of Russia, have also broken ranks. The prospects of a more isolated Russia have become real, clear and present.

    Worse still, Europe and the United States have slammed a quick avalanche of punishing and crushing sanctions on Russia, Putin and his support cast of oligarchs both at home and in diaspora. An estimated $650 billion in Russia’s external reserves has been sterilized. The Moscow Stock Exchange was closed for most of last week. For the first time, sanctions have targeted Mr. Putin and his top Kremlin crew. Cash, choice real estate, luxury private jets, yachts and other assets of Russian oligarchs, friends and associates of Mr. Putin are being confiscated all over the West.

    Before we are all carried away in the nasty exchange of sanctions and reprisals, we must not forget the cardinal rules of international relations that lie at the root of this conflict. They are the principles of the sanctity of the sovereign territorial integrity of nations no matter how weak or strong, big or small. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is a flagrant violation of this principle. Its deliberate carving up of Ukrainian territory by recognizing the breakaway regions as sovereign republics is a deepening of this annoying original violation.

    On the other hand, there is the countervailing principle of Spheres of Influence. Under that convention, Russia has a right to see Ukraine as part of its sphere of influence for historical and strategic reeasons. Recognotion of that sphere of influence does not permit Russia to invade Ukraine; it only allows it to act in a manner to protect that sphere. While Ukraine may have a sovereign right to join or associate with the European Union, its right to join NATO, which is a military alliance, is hindered by the convention of spheres of influence. Everything in the history of Russia and the independence of Ukraine dictates that matters of military alliance and security between the two states ought to be negotiated and agreed upon without the necessity of war. Russia’s recourse to invasion and a shooting war is a reckless endangerment of both principles. The full consequences are Russia’s to bear ultimately.

    Vladimir Putin must be ready to carry those consequences which now include international isolation, crushing sanctions and Ruussia’s inevitable encirclement by states that are bound to be hostile and perennially suspicious neighbours and at best uneasy allies. No rational leader can wish his nation such catastrophe.

  • War is hell, not a blockbuster – By Owei Lakemfa

    War is hell, not a blockbuster – By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    THE domineering media is presenting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as a war hero who has confidently stood up to Russian forces and is recording stunning victories. Yes, Russian troops are dying, but so are Ukrainian troops. Worst still, Ukrainian civilians are dying not necessarily because they are targeted or bombed, but that is the logic of war as there would be shortages of basic needs from food to medicines and some too weak to flee.

    The most tragic thing is that the war is being fought on Ukrainian soil; in their towns and cities, alleys and highways with infrastructure being destroyed and economic activities and education grounded. The motivational speakers giving Zelensky the impression that he is a super hero who can, in fact, win the war would not themselves agree to be used as cannon fodders like the Ukrainians.

    They concentrate their efforts and energy on debates and propaganda and how to supply more weapons when what the Ukrainians need is a ceasefire, a negotiated settlement, food and medicines, drink and safe shelter. Already, as at yesterday, the United Nations reports that 870,000 Ukrainians have fled the borders to become refugees. The European Union says the figure can rise to as high as four million!

    War is hell. It is death, extreme suffering, devastation, sorrow, hunger and families torn apart. Sometimes in war, the victim wails for death and is ignored. It is not the heroes you watch in blockbuster films. The famous Nigerian poet, John Pepper Clark in his 1966-68 anti-war poem: ‘The Casualties’ wrote that:

    “The casualties are not only those who are dead. Though they await burial by installment.

    … The casualties are not only those who started a fire and now cannot put it out.

    Thousands are burning that have no say in the matter…Because whether we know or Do not know the extent of wrongs on all sides,

    We are characters now other than before

    The war began…We are all casualties.”

    Wars also have their own logic which is paralogical. Would Ukrainians have ever thought that the United Kingdom which shouts on the rooftops and is offering lethal weapons to them, would deny them entry into that country unless they have valid visa?

    In what embassy would Ukrainians who are fleeing for their lives obtain British visa? Would they have thought that reliable Israel would reject their entry as refugees?

    In all the confusion and race for their lives, would Africans fleeing Ukraine have imagined that they would have guns trained at them at the Polish border as if they are enemy Russian troops? Would Middle Easterners have imagined that they would be discriminated against in evacuations when no life is more precious than the other?

    I think countries which prefer a negotiated resolution of the crises rather than be part of the Western chorus against the ‘Devil Putin’ do humanity more good. That is the common sense exhibited by other trusted allies of the United States like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

    European countries like other peoples in history have been involved in various wars like the English-French One Hundred Years War, 1337-1453. When they seized colonies and exploited the colonised, there were near-war situations which they handled with their American allies by holding a conference in Berlin in 1884/85 at which they agreed on peaceful means of chopping up Africa and dividing it like spoils of war.

    However, Europeans have a tendency of making their differences the problem of the entire humanity. For instance, with their different alliances, imperialist goals and self-interests a single spark; the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinard of Austria on June 28, 1914 by a Serbian led to the 1914-18 All-European War christened the First World War. That war claimed 9.7 million soldiers, 10 million civilians, while 21 million were wounded.

    When as a result of the mishandling of the post-war victory, especially with punitive sanctions against Germany and the theft of its colonies, the Europeans resumed their war, it claimed 70-85 million lives or about three per-cent of the 1940 world population. That European War was called the Second World War.

    Apart from the Europeans pillaging our resources in Africa, turning schools like the Kings College into war camps, many youths in the continent were seized and conscripted into the colonial armies. Many of these our fathers and grandfathers never returned home.

    They were killed in faraway lands they had never been to, and buried in unmarked graves. So many Nigerian youths were thrown into the battle fields of Burma that some Nigerians called it the Burma War. Those who returned were called Burma Boys, a name subsequently adopted by street toughies.

    Today, the same European countries and their American allies are stacked on either side of the war in Ukraine; once again threatening to transform an European war into a world war.

    Yet, Europe that so troubles the world is quite small; it has a population of 748,390,705 or 9.78 per cent of the world population and inhabits two per cent of the earth’s surface spread over 44 countries.

    When Russian President Vladimir Putin told the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, NATO, members that if they militarily intervene in the Ukrainian war against his country, they would face “such consequences that you have never encountered in your history”, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian retorted: “Yes, I think that Vladimir Putin must also understand that the Atlantic alliance is a nuclear alliance.”

    The implication is that for the Europeans, nuclear war is not off the table. NATO, a racist club, is falsely being presented as an effective multilateral institution and a democratic bulwark. In truth, it is a mere military alliance by Europe and North America to perpetuate their interests. It is an unconscionable, militarist institution. Yes, many Europeans can feel safe under NATO, but it will be foolish for Africans, Asians, Latinos and Arabs to feel the same; the sheep may want peace but that cannot be guaranteed by a pack of wolves.

    NATO was established in Washington on April 4, 1949 by 12 Western countries primarily to check the spread of the communism. To counter it, six years later, seven socialist countries established the Warsaw Pact. With the collapse of the Socialist Bloc, the Warsaw alliance collapsed, but rather than NATO folding up since the reason for its establishment was no longer there, it decided to expand East by absorbing 13 former Warsaw Pact countries. It is its attempt to further expand by bringing in Ukraine that has partly led to the on-going war.

    When NATO turned 70 in 2019, I wrote a column titled: ‘Setting the world free by resting NATO’ in which I argued that its “continued existence is inimical to global peace”.

  • Ukraine crisis: Second, third batches of stranded Nigerians arrive in Abuja

    Ukraine crisis: Second, third batches of stranded Nigerians arrive in Abuja

    The second and third batches of Nigerians stranded as a result of the Russia-Ukraine war have arrived in Nigeria, via the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the second batch arrived in Abuja through Poland and the third batch arrived through Hungary.

    The second batch of Nigerians arrived at 6:30 pm local time from Warsaw, while the third batch of Nigerians arrived at about 11:50 pm local time from Budapest on Friday.

    Many Nigerians had fled to neighbouring countries following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine which began on February 24.

    Earlier on Friday, the first batch of stranded Nigerians arrived in Abuja from Ukraine through Romania with a Max Air plane.

    The latest evacuation flight makes it the third to have delivered Nigerians back to the country since the evacuation operation began.

    See photos below:

  • Ending the Russia-Ukraine war – By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    Ending the Russia-Ukraine war – By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    This is the zero hour. This is the time. We are in a time of war. Russia invades Ukraine in 2022 (The first was in 2014). Could this current war spill over to a long term war? Is World War 111 on the horizon? These are the most feared questions on the lips of many people across the world today that are begging for an answer. Don’t forget that war, every war is unpredictable. In any war everybody is a loser. Nobody triumphs in any war. For instance, the 1st World War negatively changed Europe and the rest of the world beyond recognition. Ditto for the 2nd World War. Although Adolf Hitler died many years ago, he lives today: He lived in so many ideological contraptions tearing the world apart. He lives in the war mongers of the 21st Century. Coming nearer home, since the end of the Nigeria-Biafra War in 1970, Nigeria has known no peace. The ghost of Biafra is still hovering and haunting everybody in Nigeria. So, the conduct and cost of war cannot always be controlled or anticipated. The words of General Sherman must not be forgotten: “It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of war of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation. War is hell”.

    I agree with Sherman. War is hell. The Russia-Ukraine war is only one and half weeks old yet we have witnessed more human casualties, more vengeance and more desolation as if the war had lasted for many years. At the time of writing, not less than three million Ukrainians were already in need of humanitarian assistance. Even though FIFA had refused to yield to pressure to ban Russia from participating in the next World Cup, the world highest football body had ruled that no FIFA sporting event would be held in Russia under the Russian flag. Meanwhile Poland, Sweden and Czech Republic had sworn not to play Russia in the 2022 World Cup play-off matches. Nearly 300 people including civilians and children had been killed in the Russia-Ukraine war. More than 100,000 Ukrainians had fled their country in search of escape at the Polish-Ukrainian borders, metro and bus stations. People of other nationalities including Nigerian students studying in Ukraine had similarly fled Ukraine for their safety. The war propaganda machinery of the two countries was very strong. While Russia claimed that it had completely decapitated Ukraine, Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zalensky had claimed that his army had crushed the Russian soldiers. Meanwhile a Nigerian mother in Lagos cries inconsolably for her son who is one of the 5,600 Nigerian students studying in Ukraine. She wants to know the fate of her son. Is her son dead or among the uncountable Nigerians heading for the borders in order to try to escape to Poland?

    Those who think they are doing their duty in waging a war may be oblivious of the reasons that justify going to war or how a just war may be conducted. In his speech, Vladimir Putin explains that amid the danger posed to Russian territory by the advancement of the U.S. led-North Atlantic Alliance “pumped up with the most modern weapons”; Russia had no other option but to invade Ukraine. It is obvious that the recent invasion of Ukraine by Russia is another way devised by Putin to get at the U.S., the perennial enemy of Russia. In other words, what is at play in the Russia-Ukraine war is the miscalculation of personal pride and ego which was one of the causes of the 1st and 2nd World Wars.

    But according to the Editors of the First Things Magazine, there are two criteria for a just war. The first is the doctrine of ius ad bellum which deals with the cause of war. And the second ius in bello deals with conduct of war. The first one says that a just war must be defensive, aimed at protecting the innocent against unjust aggressors. War must be a last resort. It must have been initiated with the right intention, and a reasonable expectation that the means employed in prosecuting the war must be proportionate to the ends sought. Ius in bello dictates that no unnecessary force should be used in prosecuting the war and there should be no intentional killing of civilians.

    Now, in the light of the foregoing, is President Vladimir Putin justified in invading Ukraine? I do not think so.? Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is a violation of the doctrines of ius ad bellum and ius in bello. Above all, Russia’s invasion of territorial integrity of Ukraine is a fragrant violation of article 2(4) of the UN Charter which has been recognized as customary international law. The said article prohibits Russia from using force to assault the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine. Agreed, the Russia-Ukraine affairs that led to the present war are intrinsically super-complicated. Since 2014 Russia has been controlling the eastern part of Ukraine. For more than 10 years Ukraine had been complaining about the danger of the unipolar world order wherein the U.S. feels that it can do whatever it likes with NATO allies and even unilaterally change governments. Besides, for about 8 years Russia had been enmeshed in a civil war in eastern Ukraine trying to destroy the blockage of the Kiev-controlled government. People were starving and groaning to death. There were mass casualties from the bombings from the Ukraine army and western-funded rogue militia. Even the Pope at that time was raising funds to alleviate the suffering of the eastern Ukrainians. Eventually Russia and other countries notably France and Germany tried to broker a peace deal/ceasefire which culminated in drawing up the Minsk agreement in 2014. This agreement was aimed at giving regional autonomy to the regions of Luhansk and Donetz. But unfortunately the Kiev government not only reneged from the Minsk accord or agreement but allowed the CIA-backed militia to continue fighting in eastern Ukraine.

    Having said this, the latest invasion of Ukraine by Russia is completely uncalled for. There was no immediate provocation or aggression from Ukraine justifying the invasion. Putin boasts that even though the U.S. and other NATO allies could have great financial, scientific, technological and military capabilities surpassing that of Russia, modern Russia ruled by Putin is one of “the most powerful nuclear powers in the world and, moreover, has certain advantages in a number of the latest types of weapon. So, Putin is convinced that Russia is invincible on land, air and sea and therefore no direct attack on Russia will lead to its defeat. But as I said earlier, war can be unpredictable. Right now things are not working in the way Putin had planned. Receiving sophisticated weapons from the U.S, United Kingdom, Germany and other NATO allies, Ukraine is putting up stiffer resistance than envisaged and contemplated by Putin. This is why Putin has ordered his nuclear forces on his alert which has tensions of the possibility of nuclear weapons being used in the on-going war and the dangers such action portends for mankind. Putin probably took this line action to further intimidate Ukraine into submission or surrender. But the Ukraine foreign Minister has said that Ukraine will not surrender or retreat to give up a single inch of its territory.

    President Putin should humbly accede to the efforts towards the amicable resolution of the Russia-Ukraine crisis in order to bring the on-going war to an end. He should bury his thought of using a nuclear weapon in the war. The whole world is against the use of nuclear weapons in any war. Therefore Putin should bow to the collective voices calling for a peaceful resolution of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Nothing is gained in spilling innocent human blood. There is a popular adage that goes like this: one person cannot be greater or wiser than everybody. You cannot clap with one hand. Nobody is a single verse. So Putin should re-think. If the comity of nations is openly sending weapons to Ukraine for its successful prosecution of the war it means that equity is on the side of Ukraine. Putin must understand that war has become unpopular in this age. Many nations want to give peace a chance. In any case, unlike the Ukraine army whose morale is so high, the Russian soldiers are not so enthusiastic about violating the territorial sovereignty of an independent nation. Besides, in Russia thousands upon thousands of Russians are protesting against the invasion. This is a subtle way of telling Putin that his invasion of Ukraine is uncalled for. More importantly, the people of Russia and Ukraine have the same cultural and historical affinity. Ukraine used to be a part of Russia. There are many Russians in Ukraine and vice-versa. The people from both countries see themselves as brothers and sisters. They even inter-marry among themselves. They share common religious and cultural beliefs.

    Therefore world leaders and men and women of goodwill should broker peace between the two warring countries in order to bring the war to an end. Pope Francis has called for an immediate end to the Russia-Ukraine war. Russia invaded Ukraine on Thursday February 2022. The Next day, Friday February 25 2022, Pope Francis broke all diplomatic protocols in order to visit the Russian Embassy being and situate on Via della Conciliazione in Rome to express his personal concern about the outbreak of the war. The Pope has appealed for a ceasefire in Ukraine. Pope Francis said: I have great pain in my heart because of the worsening of the situation in Ukraine….I appeal to all sides to abstain from any action that could provoke more suffering to the populations, destabilising coexistence among nations and discrediting international law…Jesus taught us that the diabolical senselessness of violence is answered with God’s weapons, with prayer and fasting. I invite everyone to make next 2 March, Ash Wednesday, a Day of Fasting for Peace. I encourage believers in a special way to dedicate themselves intensely to prayer and fasting on that day”, the Pontiff said,

    Other heads of nations are urged to join Pope Francis in brokering peace between Russia and Ukraine. Humanity needs now more than ever to rediscover the part of true concord. Peace and international law are closely linked to each other. Law favours peace. Peace thrives in the crannies of law and justice.

  • Ukraine gives conditions for Nigerians willing to fight Russia in war

    Ukraine gives conditions for Nigerians willing to fight Russia in war

    The Embassy of Ukraine in Nigeria says Nigerians who are willing to travel to Ukraine to fight Russian forces must be willing to provide $1,000 for ticket and visa.

    The embassy stated this when scores of Nigerian men converged on its premises in Abuja on Thursday to express their readiness to join the Ukrainian side.

    In an interview, the Second Secretary at the Ukrainian Embassy to Nigeria, Bohdan Soltys, confirmed that $1,000 would be needed by Nigerian volunteers.

    The announcement did not go down well with the Nigerians who lamented that the price was too high.

    “The $1,000 requirement is too high,” said Monday Adikwu, with number 96NA/41/2808, who was dismissed from the Nigerian Army for leaving his duty post to visit his pregnant wife without permission.

    “They said we should provide evidence of military experience, passports, and $1,000 for tickets and others. When I asked what the salary is, the guy first said $7,000 and later changed it to $3,300 per month. I showed him my military and training certificates.”

    When asked why he wants to go to Ukraine, Adikwu said he needed money to take care of his family including six children

    He said, “I want to go to Ukraine because I am a military man. I fought in Liberia. I fought in Sierra Leone. I was part of the 33 Battalion. I was trained by Ukrainian soldiers when I was in the United Nations in Kosovo on how to shoot and drive APC tanks. I can drive it very well.

    “So, when I heard about Ukraine and the way people are trooping in… I am a farmer. I don’t have anything. I am a fighter. They said they will pay us so I am ready to fight so that I can get paid and take care of my family. I will also bring glory to the name of Nigeria as a worthy ambassador.”

    Adikwu, who was accompanied by other dismissed soldiers, said they were not afraid of Russian forces.

    “We are not scared. It was David that killed Goliath with only a tool. So, I believe my going to Ukraine will give them victory.