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‘It’s medieval’ — Mariupol’s signal fades under Russian siege

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Earlier than Vladimir Putin’s troops encircled and besieged the Ukrainian port metropolis of Mariupol, the web site 0629.com.ua used to cowl mundane issues: its principally feminine workers posted tales on the brand new fishing season, youngsters studying the ropes of 3D modelling, and carried a video ballot of residents asking the place they’d their first dates.

This week the location, based in 2006 and named after Mariupol’s dialling code, carried information from the frontline of Europe’s worst warfare in many years, and a lethal city siege that has left folks hungry, thirsty and caught in freezing basements to keep away from indiscriminate Russian shelling. Amid these dire situations, journalists additionally face the problem of working in a metropolis the place the phone service has been almost worn out.

On Tuesday the location reported the story of Tatyana, a six-year-old woman whose physique was discovered within the rubble of a collapsed constructing eight days after the beginning of the blockade. The positioning reported that she had been left alone after her mom’s loss of life and had really perished from dehydration.

As of Friday, Mariupol, which had a inhabitants of greater than 400,000 folks earlier than the warfare, was in its eleventh day with out warmth, gasoline, electrical energy or web service. Intense Russian shelling knocked these out on March 1, then water the next day.

“The previous couple of days have been the very worst,” Anna Romanenko, the location’s editor, informed the FT by telephone from a rented flat in Zaporizhzhia, about 220km north of the besieged metropolis, the place she fled together with her cancer-sufferer mom. “On high of the heavy artillery bombardment, during the last 4 days they’ve additionally been dropping bombs from the air. There are large craters in the midst of city 15 metres huge.” 

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Lifeless our bodies are positioned in a mass grave on the outskirts of Mariupol. © Evgeniy Maloletka/AP

Earlier this week, 0629’s homepage carried a photograph of corpses of individuals killed by Russian assaults on civilian buildings, or by crucial well being situations worsened by the siege, being tipped right into a mass grave.

Mariupol’s mayor Vadym Boichenko on Friday stated that Russian forces have been bombing from the air “each half-hour”, including to the howitzers and Grad land-based rockets with which they’d been pounding the city. These assaults created “hell” for the individuals who lived there, he stated.

Ukraine’s authorities stated Russian forces bombed the maternity unit of a kids’s hospital on Wednesday, killing at the very least three together with a baby. The bombing introduced worldwide condemnation of Putin’s authorities, which has alleged the place had been used as a base for “Nazi” fighters.

With Russian forces encircling the town, meals is working low, in accordance with studies from residents. “Individuals are melting snow for water, making ready meals on open fires, and chopping down timber for firewood subsequent to modernist Soviet blocks,” stated Dmytro Gurin, a Ukrainian MP with President Volodymyr Zelensky’s Servant of the Individuals celebration whose mother and father are in Mariupol. “They’re below siege, and it’s medieval.”

Three makes an attempt to evacuate residents through a “humanitarian hall”, brokered with the assistance of the Worldwide Committee of the Crimson Cross, collapsed over the previous week after what Ukrainian officers stated have been assaults on evacuation columns by Russian forces. The ICRC blamed an absence of “belief” between the warring international locations.

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Satellite images showing intact stores and shopping malls in Mariupol before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
© Maxar Applied sciences
Views of the same locations taken this week after the Russian assault.
© Maxar Applied sciences

Satellite images showing intact stores and shopping malls in Mariupol before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Satellite tv for pc photographs displaying intact shops and purchasing malls in Mariupol earlier than Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. © Maxar Applied sciences
Views of the same locations taken this week after the Russian assault.
Views of the identical places taken this week after the Russian assault. © Maxar Applied sciences

Journalists like Romanenko have been left struggling to entry the ability they want. A channel on the social media web site Telegram known as “Mariupol Now” has been publishing photographs of the siege despatched from residents with depleted telephone batteries within the few locations the place they’ll nonetheless discover service.

“In Mariupol, there are some factors the place you may catch a sign, and other people know the place they’re and go there to make brief telephone conversations,” stated Romanenko, who writes below her maiden title. “However there’s nowhere to cost on the town as a result of there isn’t any electrical energy, so you may’t name them your self.”

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A residential area of Mariupol seen from above before the Russian invasion.
A residential space of Mariupol seen from above earlier than the Russian invasion. © Maxar Applied sciences
The same area during the siege of the Ukrainian port city.
The identical space throughout the siege of the Ukrainian port metropolis. © Maxar Applied sciences

Romanenko’s web site this week shared some photographs that did make it by means of: our bodies mendacity on metropolis streets as a result of residents have been afraid to exit and decide them up; the ruins of the kids’s hospital struck by Putin’s forces; and testimony from an worker of one other hospital who stated she was taking care of dozens of sufferers together with infants, kids, pregnant ladies and other people fleeing bombed buildings, and stated that child meals and medicines have been working out.

Romanenko is generally posting herself, as her prewar workers of 5 others dispersed when the warfare began: two joined Ukraine’s territorial defence forces and one other two fled west to flee the warfare. She doesn’t know the place the fifth is.

This week, the ICRC, which usually posts dry communiqués to challenge impartiality, took the bizarre step of publishing a recording of a determined name made by satellite tv for pc telephone from one in all its staff working in Mariupol.

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Sasha Volkov informed the Swiss-based NGO that each one the city’s retailers and pharmacies had been looted 4 to 5 days in the past, and that many individuals reported “having no meals for youngsters” and wanted medicines too, particularly for diabetes and most cancers.

A pregnant Mariana Vishegirskaya escapes down the steps of a maternity hospital broken by shelling in Mariupol on Wednesday March 9 © Evgeniy Maloletka/AP
Vishegirskaya in mattress in one other hospital on Friday March 11 after the supply of her daughter Veronika © Evgeniy Maloletka/AP

“Individuals begin to assault one another for meals,” stated Volkov, a deputy head of sub-delegation for the worldwide humanitarian group. “Individuals began to smash somebody’s automobile to take the gasoline out. Individuals are getting sick already from the chilly.” 

Volkov stated he was boiling water from a stream for ingesting, and had situated a black marketplace for greens, however meat was unavailable.

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Alongside journalists, human rights fact-finders, together with from the UN, are struggling to piece collectively a full image of the toll of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as a result of most of the battle zones are both inconceivable to go to or too harmful.

Metropolis officers in Mariupol this week stated they’d confirmed the deaths of 1,300 folks.

“These are those they may depend,” Romanenko stated. “Lots of people are buried below destroyed buildings, and so they can’t depend them. There are nonetheless our bodies mendacity round all over the place.”

Gurin, the MP, informed the FT that Russia had determined to resort to “mass homicide” as a result of it had to this point been unable to win the warfare. He stated the world exterior Ukraine ought to now change its response accordingly, together with by bolstering Ukraine’s missile and air defences.

“You reacted to a warfare and we recognize and thanks for that,” Gurin stated “Now all of the world has to react to a mass homicide: that’s what’s happening now. It’s starvation in the midst of Europe.”

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Satellite tv for pc photographs: Maxar Applied sciences

Observe on Twitter: @JohnReedwrites

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Atos crisis deepens as biggest shareholder ditches rescue plan

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Atos crisis deepens as biggest shareholder ditches rescue plan

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A rescue bid for French IT services group Atos led by its largest shareholder has collapsed, casting the future of the troubled group into doubt once again.

Atos said on Wednesday that the consortium led by Onepoint, an IT consultancy founded by David Layani, had withdrawn a proposal that would have converted €2.9bn of Atos debt into equity and injected €250mn of fresh funds into the struggling company.

“The conditions were not met to conclude an agreement paving the way for a lasting solution for financial restructuring,” Onepoint said in a statement on Wednesday.

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The decision by Onepoint comes less than a month after Atos had picked its restructuring proposal over a competing plan from Czech billionaire Daniel Křetínsky. Atos said on Wednesday that Křetínsky had already indicated he wanted to restart talks.

Once a star of France’s tech scene, Atos is racing to strike a restructuring deal by next month as it struggles under its €4.8bn debt burden. It has cycled through multiple chief executives over the past three years and its shares have collapsed. They were down 12 per cent in early trading on Wednesday.

Atos also said it had received a revised restructuring proposal from a group of its bondholders.

“Discussions are continuing with the representative committee of creditors and certain banks on the basis of this proposal with a view to reaching an agreement as soon as possible,” the company said. 

Jean-Pierre Mustier, former chief executive of Italian lender UniCredit, was installed as chair in October 2023 and given the task of putting Atos on a stable footing for the future. Since his appointment, several efforts to stabilise Atos through asset sales have fallen apart.

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If talks with Křetínsky do restart, it will mark the Czech businessman’s third attempt to do a deal with Atos after an earlier plan to buy its lossmaking legacy business unravelled.

One of the people close to the talks said creditors had not necessarily become more receptive to Kretinsky’s plan given it cutting a larger chunk of the group’s debt.

The crisis at Atos has prompted the French government to intervene. It is currently seeking to acquire three parts of Atos that are deemed of importance to national security for up to €1bn.

Atos said on Wednesday it had concluded a deal with the French state that would give it so-called “golden shares” in a key Atos subsidiary, Bull SA. The agreement also gives the government the right to acquire “sensitive sovereign activities” in the event a third party acquired 10 per cent of the shares — or a multiple thereof — in either Atos or Bull.

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New Jersey gamer flew to Florida and beat fellow player with hammer, say police

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New Jersey gamer flew to Florida and beat fellow player with hammer, say police

An online gamer from New Jersey recently flew to Florida, broke into the home of a fellow player with whom he had feuded digitally but never met in person, and tried to beat him to death with a hammer, according to authorities.

The allegations leveled by the Nassau county, Florida, sheriff’s office against 20-year-old Edward Kang constitute an extreme example of a phenomenon that academics call “internet banging” – which involves online arguments, often between young people, that escalate into physical violence.

As Bill Leeper, the local sheriff, told it, Kang and the man he is suspected of attacking became familiar with each other playing the massively multiplayer online role-playing game ArcheAge.

The Korean game is supposed to no longer be available beginning Thursday, its publisher announced in April, citing a “declining number of active players”, as ABC News reported. But prior to the cancellation, Kang and the other player became locked in some sort of “online altercation”, Leeper said at a news briefing Monday.

Kang then informed his family that he was headed out of town to meet a friend he had made through gaming, Leeper recounted. The sheriff said Kang flew from Newark, New Jersey, to Jacksonville, Florida, and booked himself into a hotel near his fellow gamer’s home early Friday morning.

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He had allegedly bought a hammer and a flashlight at a local hardware store, receipts for which deputies later found in Kang’s hotel room.

By early Sunday, Kang purportedly had put on black clothes, gloves and a mask, and he went into his target’s home through an unlocked door. He waited for the victim to get up to take a bathroom break from gaming – and then battered him with the hammer, Leeper said.

The alleged victim managed to wrestle Kang to the ground while screaming for help. The victim’s stepfather woke up after hearing the screams, rushed to his stepson’s side, helped take Kang’s hammer away and restrained him until deputies were called and they arrived, according to Leeper.

Deputies found blood at the home’s entrance and in the bedroom of the victim, Leeper added. The sheriff said the victim was brought to a hospital to be treated for “severe” head wounds while deputies jailed Kang on counts of attempted second-degree murder and armed burglary.

Leeper accused Kang of telling deputies that he carried out the violent home invasion because he believed the target to be “a bad person online”. Kang also allegedly asked investigators how much prison time was associated with breaking and entering as well as assault.

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Attempted second-degree murder alone can carry up to 15 years. Leeper quipped that his only answer to Kang was: “It will be a long time before you play video games.”

Striking a more serious tone, Leeper urged people to be vigilant about and report to authorities any suspicious online behavior aimed at them. He also mentioned the importance of locking one’s home.

“This … serves as a stark reminder of the potential real-world consequences of online interaction,” Leeper said.

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Central banks urged to keep pace with ‘game changer’ AI

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Central banks urged to keep pace with ‘game changer’ AI

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