Connect with us

News

India seeks return of citizens from Russian front line in Ukraine

Published

on

India seeks return of citizens from Russian front line in Ukraine

India is working to bring back about 20 of its citizens who ended up on the Russian side of the front line in Ukraine, after their families said they were lured there under false pretences.

The men’s plight has made national headlines in India, discomfiting a government that has good relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin but says it has “strongly taken up” the issue of the men unwittingly conscripted into Moscow’s army. 

“We have got some of them out and are working on getting the rest out now,” the ministry of external affairs told the Financial Times.

In a statement last week, the ministry said it was “actively pursuing” all the relevant cases involving Indian nationals for an early discharge from the Russian army. 

In interviews, relatives of some of the men said they had been lured to Russia by promises of work with the army away from the war’s front line and of permanent residence in Russia on the borders of the EU, which is a coveted destination for job-seeking Indians.

Advertisement

In September, a social media influencer started posting about jobs in Russia on his Hindi-language YouTube channel Baba’s Vlogs. In one video he posted about demand for food delivery boys in Russia; in another he spoke about jobs for “helpers” for the Russian army.

Russian military near a damaged building described as being in Ukraine, in a social media post released by the Russian defence ministry last month © Russian Defence Ministry/Reuters

Strolling on the streets of St Petersburg, the YouTuber spoke about the wonderful climate in Russia, the prospects of a Rs100,000 ($1,206) a month job with the Russian army, and free food and accommodation after three months of training. 

Mohammed Imran, from Hyderabad in south India, said his 30-year-old brother Mohammed Asfan “got trapped” after watching a Baba’s Vlogs video which claimed he would be able to work for the Russian army in Moscow, and become eligible for permanent Russian residency in less than a year. 

The missing man’s brother said he planned to travel to Russia this week to search for him. “The boy became trapped,” said Mohammed Imran. He said his brother reached Moscow in November, and was given an agreement to sign in Russian, then taken to the front line in Ukraine in December, after which he lost track of him. 

Mohammed Imran said that in January, one of his brother’s colleagues who was also working for the army told him that Asfan had been injured by bullets in the leg. 

Advertisement

Separately, a group of young men from India’s northern Punjab and Haryana states who went to Russia around the new year sent a video to relatives on Sunday appealing to authorities for urgent help. In the video, one of the men claimed they were misled by a man who offered to show them around and that they ended up in Belarus, where they were “handed to the Russian army” for entering the country without a visa.

“They are about to send us to the front line, please help us return to India urgently,” one of the men, Gurpreet Singh, told his cousin Balraj Singh Sandhu, who spoke to the FT.  

“The government of India has good relations with Russia and we are very hopeful that they will do whatever they can,” he said. “But we want the boys to be evacuated out of there quickly.” 

The prospect of foreign mercenaries for Russia’s army was first raised shortly after the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, when the Russian defence ministry claimed some 16,000 Syrians would join Russia in the fight.

This did not materialise, but groups of individuals from several developing countries have been spotted in the Russian ranks, according to the Conflict Intelligence Team, an independent group which closely monitors Russian military recruitment. 

Advertisement

Most are enticed to Russia by local recruiters who promise salaries equal to what Russian contract soldiers earn, or around $2,000 a month, CIT estimated. This figure is substantial compared to the average wages in countries such as Cuba and Nepal from where foreign recruits have hailed, though CIT questioned how much was actually paid out. 

The total numbers of foreign recruits are not large, however. “It may be a few thousand from all countries. It doesn’t hugely affect the size of the Russian fighting force,” CIT said. 

Using funeral announcements and social media posts, journalists and volunteers tracking Russian casualties have counted just over 250 foreign nationals killed fighting in Ukraine with Russian forces as of December 2023. 

They included citizens of Nepal, Iraq and Zambia, but the vast majority came from countries of the former Soviet bloc. 

For comparison, around 100-200 Russian soldiers are killed per day, according to CIT, across the entire front line. 

Advertisement

Many people from central Asia travel to Russia as migrant workers, and a scattering of reports have appeared of men from these countries being coerced into signing contracts with the Russian army.

Russia has also sought to entice foreigners to join its military by offering a simplified path to citizenship for anyone who signs a one-year contract with the army — a law introduced in September 2022, six months into the full-scale Ukraine war. 

News

Mark Carney and Xi Jinping meet to mend ties as Donald Trump disrupts global order

Published

on

Mark Carney and Xi Jinping meet to mend ties as Donald Trump disrupts global order

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney has told China’s leader Xi Jinping the two countries should build a relationship “adapted to new global realities” as they seek to restore strained ties against the backdrop of US disruption to the world order.

Carney, the first Canadian prime minister to visit Beijing in almost a decade, is turning to the world’s second-largest economy as part of an effort to double exports to non-US partners over the next decade.

For Xi, the trip offers a chance to take advantage of President Donald Trump’s erratic policies towards Canada and bring an important US economic partner and Nato ally closer into its orbit.

Advertisement

“Together, we can build on the best of what this relationship has been in the past, to create a new one, adapted to new global realities that will deliver stability, security and prosperity to peoples of both sides of the Pacific,” Carney said on Friday, as the sides began talks in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

Xi told his Canadian counterpart they needed to build “a new type of China-Canada strategic partnership” to “better benefit the peoples of the two countries” and “world peace”.

“China is willing to strengthen communication and co-ordination with Canada within frameworks such as the United Nations, the Group of 20, and Apec to jointly respond to global challenges,” Xi said.

Carney’s visit to Beijing is the first by a Canadian leader since Justin Trudeau in late 2017.

Relations between the two countries deteriorated in 2018 when China detained two Canadians in response to Canada’s arrest of Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Chinese telecommunications equipment group Huawei, following a US extradition request.

Advertisement

Ties began to improve in June when Carney and premier Li Qiang, China’s second-ranked leader, agreed to “regularise channels of communication”. Carney then met Xi during a summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in October.

Chinese officials and state media were enthusiastic about this week’s visit.

Carney’s trip “is of pivotal and symbolic significance for bilateral relations”, state news agency Xinhua quoted China’s foreign minister Wang Yi as telling his Canadian counterpart on Thursday.

China wanted to “strengthen communication with Canada, enhance trust, eliminate interference, deepen co-operation”, Wang added.

Carney on Thursday also met Li and Zhao Leji, the head of China’s rubber-stamp parliament, the National People’s Congress.

Advertisement

“Our countries align in many areas, such as clean energy, agriculture and finance,” Carney wrote in a post on social media site X after meeting Li.

Ottawa’s official Indo-Pacific strategy released in November 2022, described China as “an increasingly disruptive global power” but added its “economy offers significant opportunities for Canadian exporters”.

On the eve of the trip, Carnet said that Canada was “forging new partnerships around the world to transform our economy from one that has been reliant on a single trade partner to one that is stronger and more resilient to global shocks”.

Zhao Minghao, professor at the Institute of International Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said: “Most US allies are doing some de-risking from the US, so this is a very important opportunity for China to warm up its ties with Canada.”

Despite the show of friendship, restoring genuine goodwill between Ottawa and Beijing would be difficult, analysts said.

Advertisement

Canada’s security services accuse China of meddling in its elections, threatening members of the Chinese diaspora — in particular Hong Kong activists — and of being its top cyber security threat.

Carney is also under pressure from canola farmers, the lobster industry and fishermen to persuade Beijing to lift devastating tariffs it imposed last year on their produce.

Ottawa has since October 2024 imposed tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles and steel, closed Chinese-owned social media app TikTok’s offices in Canada and banned Chinese surveillance camera manufacturer Hikvision.

Continue Reading

News

Venezuela’s Machado gave Trump her Nobel prize. In return she received a swag bag but no promise of support | CNN

Published

on

Venezuela’s Machado gave Trump her Nobel prize. In return she received a swag bag but no promise of support | CNN

When Venezuela’s opposition leader María Corina Machado walked into the White House on Thursday, she came bearing the gift US President Donald Trump has long coveted: a Nobel Peace Prize.

Machado, a fierce critic of Venezuela’s former strongman Nicolás Maduro, won the award last year for her campaign for greater democracy. Now she was leaving the medal in the White House, hoping the gesture might buy her something far more valuable: US backing in the fight to lead Venezuela’s post-Maduro future.

But, if she thought the gift might nudge the president toward providing a clearer endorsement, it appears she may be left waiting, at least for now.

She was later photographed holding a Trump-branded swag bag as she left the White House – with little clarity on her political future.

Machado is one of two figures vying for the leadership of a post-Maduro Venezuela. Trump has placed Maduro’s ex-Vice President Delcy Rodriguez as acting president, even though she was a longtime regime insider.

Advertisement

A photo released by the White House shows Trump beside Machado, holding a large gold-framed plaque that appeared wall-ready, containing the medal and the dedication: “Presented as a personal symbol of gratitude on behalf of the Venezuelan people in recognition of President Trump’s principled and decisive action to secure a free Venezuela.”

“Maria presented me with her Nobel Peace Prize for the work I have done. Such a wonderful gesture of mutual respect,” Trump posted on Truth Social.

The Oslo-based Nobel Peace Center promptly reiterated that the medals cannot be shared or transferred.

“A medal can change owners, but the title of a Nobel Peace Prize laureate cannot,” the committee said on X.

Machado, meanwhile, gave an optimistic view of her meeting, calling it “historic” and “extraordinary.”

Advertisement

She added the Trump administration understood the need to rebuild institutions and protect human rights and free speech, and for a “new, genuine electoral process” to encourage Venezuelans to return to their country.

She also insisted Venezuela already has a president-elect: Edmundo González, the opposition candidate the US previously recognized after the country’s disputed 2024 election.

Government-appointed electoral authorities had named Maduro the winner, allowing him to cling to power until his abrupt capture by US special forces. But at the time, opposition leaders, as well as the US and international watchdogs, voiced concern about allegations of foul play.

But despite Washington’s earlier support for Machado and González, Trump did not rally behind the opposition after Maduro’s capture. Instead, he threw his support behind Rodriguez – a move that stunned many anti-Maduro figures.

Despite Machado’s upbeat tone, it remains unclear what, if anything, she secured beyond a photo-op and an official gift bag embossed with Trump’s signature.

Advertisement

The Trump administration has indicated several times that it views Rodriguez as a stable, pragmatic choice that the US can work with.

And on Thursday as their meeting kicked off, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump’s assessment of Machado had not budged.

“I know the president was looking forward to this meeting, and he was expecting it to be a good and positive discussion with Ms. Machado, who is really a remarkable and brave voice for many of the people of Venezuela,” Leavitt said.

But she added Trump stands by his previous assertion that Machado lacks the necessary support to lead Venezuela. “At this moment in time, his opinion on that matter has not changed,” she said.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Video: Runaway Emu Leads Sheriff’s Corporal on 45-Minute Chase

Published

on

Video: Runaway Emu Leads Sheriff’s Corporal on 45-Minute Chase

new video loaded: Runaway Emu Leads Sheriff’s Corporal on 45-Minute Chase

transcript

transcript

Runaway Emu Leads Sheriff’s Corporal on 45-Minute Chase

An emu named Tina escaped from a farm in Florida last Friday. Body camera footage captured a sheriff’s office corporal chasing the large bird and eventually putting it in handcuffs.

I’ll be honest with you, I’ve never handcuffed an emu before, but they’ll fit around his legs and that’ll keep him from kicking. In you go. There you go. Oh, look — look who’s got you now. Don’t move, don’t move. Not yet, not yet, not yet. Don’t look at me that way — hey, hey, don’t bite me. Don’t even think about it. Don’t do it. Are you done resisting? I don’t want to have to charge you. Don’t talk back to me. Now you’re behaving, aren’t you? Secured.

Advertisement
An emu named Tina escaped from a farm in Florida last Friday. Body camera footage captured a sheriff’s office corporal chasing the large bird and eventually putting it in handcuffs.

By Jorge Mitssunaga

January 15, 2026

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending