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‘My heart is torn’: As war rages on at home, these young disabled Ukrainian swimmers are stranded in Turkey

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‘My heart is torn’: As war rages on at home, these young disabled Ukrainian swimmers are stranded in Turkey

The camp of seven budding athletes arrived with their three coaches within the city of Silivri, simply exterior of Istanbul, to participate in a two-week coaching program.

Whereas one younger swimmer has traveled to Poland along with his mom, they’ve been in Turkey for 2 months now, and plenty of of their relations are nonetheless marooned in Ukraine.

Group member Victoria Kharchenko, who has cerebral palsy, says her mother and father discover consolation in the truth that she is protected.

“They’re blissful … we need not keep within the air raid shelters, and don’t cover,” the 16-year-old athlete tells CNN’s Jomana Karadsheh.

Caught within the crossfire of struggle

Kyrylo Garashchenko is without doubt one of the Ukrainian swimmers caught in Turkey, and he’s struggling to course of what is occurring as struggle rages in his homeland.

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“I simply attempt to (not) give it some thought, as a result of it is a number of details about struggle,” the 24-year-old Paralympian says.

Garashchenko, who’s visually impaired, competed on the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics final summer time, the place he received silver and bronze medals for Ukraine within the males’s 400-meter freestyle occasion, and the blended 4×100-meter freestyle relay occasion respectively.

He hopes so as to add to his medal rely on the upcoming World Para Swimming Championships in Madeira, Portugal in June, however says it is “very tough to remain out of the country and put together when (there’s a) struggle in your nation.”

Garashchenko, who’s the oldest member of the staff, hails from Zaporizhzhia — a southeastern Ukrainian metropolis that has been caught within the crossfire of the struggle amid stalled evacuation makes an attempt and former occupation by Russian forces.
Ilia Sharkov, who has cerebral palsy, tells CNN it is tough to concentrate on his ambition of changing into a Paralympic swimmer when his mother and father dwell within the Russian-occupied metropolis of Melitopol, the place civilians have seen colossal explosions by Russian forces and the detention of their ex-mayor — who Ukrainian officers say was ultimately freed.
Silver medalist Kyrylo Garashchenko of Team Ukraine poses during the men's 400-meter freestyle - S11 medal ceremony on day 3 of the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.

To name and see their son, Sharkov’s mother and father should bike 50 kilometers (31 miles) from their house for web entry.

So 15-year-old Sharkov asks CNN to ship his household a message: “My dearest father and mom, I like you a lot.”

“I want you happiness and well being. Say ‘howdy’ to my grandparents and my aunt.”

Sharkov’s teammates and their households are a part of the roughly 12 million individuals who have been displaced because of the ongoing struggle.

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Of that, there are about 4.9 million refugees and seven.1 million folks internally displaced in Ukraine, Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for UN Secretary Normal Antonio Guterres, mentioned on Monday throughout a information briefing.
Likewise, practically two-thirds of Ukrainian youngsters are additionally displaced because of the struggle, based on figures from UNICEF.

‘We actually grew to become like one household’

The Ukrainian swim team sits down to eat a meal together at Kasımpaşa SK football club.

Coach Iryna Paveleva says that originally, the staff had the chance to bond through the first two weeks of their journey to Turkey as a result of they stayed in a home collectively in Silivri.

“We actually grew to become like one household … cooked meals collectively, rested collectively, spent a while collectively,” she says. “This made us not simply coaches and athletes, however extra like kindred spirits.”

“Each day we thought of our households, about our kids who’re in Ukraine, about our mother and father and it was … that is in all probability such a shock state for us, and the kids supported us a lot. W we couldn’t even imagine that youngsters at such a small age can present us with such ethical help.”

However because the struggle in Ukraine has worsened, so has the younger athletes’ welfare.

Their coaches beforehand sought out the help of kid psychologists, though they’ll not afford their providers.

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Talking concerning the younger swimmers, Paveleva says: “They lack affection. we give them affection, heat, and so they give it to us in all probability much more.

“Within the night they do not allow us to go, and ask to hug and kiss us.”

Almost half 1,000,000 youngsters face critical dangers to their psychological and bodily well being due on account of the battle in jap Ukraine, based on a UNICEF assertion from early February.
“This trauma dangers destroying a technology,” Sima Bahous, government director of the UN gender equality and empowerment company UN Ladies mentioned in a press release in April.
Coach Iryna Paveleva trains with a Ukrainian swim team of young disabled athletes in Istanbul.

As Paveleva juggles the wants of the younger swimmers, she can also be serious about her personal daughter, who lives along with her aged grandparents in Ukraine.

She tells CNN that her thoughts is break up between making the journey again to Ukraine to deal with her household, and honoring her dedication to the younger swim staff in Istanbul.

Even when the staff wished to attempt to reunite with their households in Ukraine, such a journey can be dangerous — particularly with the problem of incapacity.

There are about 2.7 million folks with disabilities in Ukraine, based on the European Incapacity Discussion board, a pan-European NGO.

Figures from Inclusion Europe, one other NGO, estimated that there are round 261,000 folks in Ukraine with mental disabilities that make them extraordinarily susceptible to the battle.

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“Each day my coronary heart is torn two methods, between my household house and these youngsters,” Paveleva says.

A house away from house

Within the meantime the staff has discovered a brief house in Kasimpasa Sports activities Membership, a Turkish skilled soccer membership primarily based in Istanbul.

Ukrainian skeleton star goes from Winter Olympics to war zone in weeks

They’ve entry to free lodging and are served scorching meals on a regular basis, though more and more rely on charity to maintain themselves whereas coaching at an area public pool.

The group had arrived in Turkey with sufficient garments for a brief journey throughout colder months, however because the climate is getting hotter in Istanbul they want lighter garments.

Earlier this month CNN got here throughout a social media submit revealed by an Istanbul resident, serving to acquire help together with garments, sneakers and snacks for the staff.

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After CNN’s report aired on Monday and was shared on social media platforms, a number of Istanbul residents together with Ukrainians, Russians and others have supplied to assist and help the younger athletes.

Some wish to assist ship them garments, snacks, cash and books. Others supplied to deal with the staff to a day trip in Istanbul, or yoga and artwork classes to assist maintain their minds off their ordeal.

Mykyta Dudchenko speaks with his mother, who is in Ukraine, over the phone.
Mykyta Dudchenko is a 15-year-old swimmer who has cerebral palsy. His aunt, Yana Protsenko, began an internet fundraiser in February to generate donations for Dudchenko and his teammates, who’ve been despatched garments and contemporary fruit from benefactors.

“Their spirits are usually not damaged, and so they wish to proceed coaching for his or her psychological well being and their desires,” Protsenko mentioned on her GoFundMe web page, a fundraising web site the place she launched her efforts.

“They’re distant from their households, mates, and their very own nation, and nobody is aware of once they meet once more,” she added.

For Dudchenko, essentially the most difficult a part of the day is talking to his mom, Viktoria Dudchenko, on the telephone.

“Are you sleeping effectively? Are you consuming? You have misplaced weight my son,” she says to him over the telephone. “I fear about you.”

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“We hope the Ukrainian armed forces will throw the enemy out quickly, and you may come again, and we are going to hug you,” she provides.

“I wish to go house a lot,” he tells her.

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Big Oil calls on Kamala Harris to come clean on her energy and climate plans

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Big Oil calls on Kamala Harris to come clean on her energy and climate plans

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The US oil industry and Republicans are demanding Kamala Harris clarify her energy and climate policy, as the Democratic candidate tries to please her progressive base without alienating voters in shale areas like Pennsylvania, a crucial swing state.

On Thursday, the vice-president said she no longer supported a ban on fracking, the technology that unleashed the shale revolution. But Harris’s reversal has not quelled attacks from Donald Trump or US executives that she would damage the country’s oil and gas sector.

The heads of the US’s two biggest oil lobby groups said the Democratic candidate must also say whether she would keep or end a pause on federal approvals for new liquefied natural gas plants, and whether she supported curbs on drilling imposed by the Biden administration.

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“Based on what we know of her past positions, the bills that she has sponsored, and her past statements she’s taken a pretty aggressively anti-energy and anti-oil and gas industry stand,” said Anne Bradbury, head of the American Exploration and Production Council.

“These are significant and major policy questions that impact every American family and business, and which voters deserve to understand better when making their choice in November,” she said.

Mike Sommers, chief executive of the American Petroleum Institute, Big Oil’s most powerful lobby group, said Harris should say whether she would stick with Biden administration policies that had unleashed “a regulatory onslaught the likes of which this industry has never seen”.

Trump, the Republican candidate, has accused Harris of plotting a “war on American energy” and has repeatedly blamed her and President Joe Biden for high fuel costs in recent years.

On Thursday, he vowed to scrap Biden administration policies that “distort energy markets”. The former president has called climate change a hoax and his advisers have said he would gut Biden’s signature climate legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act.

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The debate over Harris’s energy policy comes as she and Trump court blue-collar workers in Pennsylvania, a huge shale gas producer that employs 72,000 workers — a potentially decisive voting group in a state Biden won narrowly in 2020.

Harris said in 2019 that she supported a fracking ban but told CNN on Thursday she had ditched that position and the US could have “a thriving clean energy economy without banning fracking”.

US oil and gas production has reached a record high under Biden, even as clean energy capacity has expanded rapidly.

But gas executives in particular have been alarmed at a federal pause on building new LNG export plants, which supply customers from Europe to Asia, saying the policy will stymie further US shale output.

Toby Rice, chief executive of Pennsylvania-based EQT, the US’s largest natural gas producer, said Harris should lift the restrictions, which he argued would compromise energy security.

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“Ignoring her anti-fracking statement four years ago for a second, can we talk about the recent LNG Pause that was put in place this year?”, he said. “This is a policy that has received massive criticism from all sides — our allies, industry and environmental champions . . . a step backwards for climate and American energy security.”

While Biden put climate at the centre of his and Harris’s 2020 White House campaign, Harris has been largely silent, and made only a passing reference to climate change in her speech at the Democratic convention.

“It looks like the Harris campaign has concluded that it’s safer to avoid antagonising producers or climate activists by skirting these issues entirely,” said Kevin Book, managing director of ClearView Energy Partners.

Climate-focused voters are less vexed than energy executives by the lack of explicit policy from Harris.

“Let’s be clear: the most important climate policy right now is defeating Donald Trump in November,” said Cassidy DiPaola of Fossil Free Media, a non-profit organisation. “All the wonky policy details in the world won’t matter if climate deniers control the White House.”

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Last week the political arms of the League of Conservation Voters, Climate Power and the Environmental Defense Fund unveiled a $55mn advertising campaign backing Harris in swing states, focused on economic rather than climate issues.

In contrast, Trump has courted oil bosses who are backing his pledge to slash regulation and scrap clean energy subsidies. His campaign received nearly $14mn from the industry in June, according to OpenSecrets, almost double his oil haul in May.

Additional reporting by Sam Learner

Climate Capital

Where climate change meets business, markets and politics. Explore the FT’s coverage here.

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Why the U.S. isn't ready for wars of the future, according to experts

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Why the U.S. isn't ready for wars of the future, according to experts

AI and technology will be at the center of modern warfare, experts say.

Anton Petrus


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Anton Petrus

Earlier this month, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, and the former CEO of Google, Eric Schmidt, wrote an article for Foreign Affairs arguing that the future of warfare is here.

They say that the U.S. is not ready for it.

Their article opens with Ukraine and describes warfare that features thousands of drones in the sky, as AI helps soldiers with targeting and robots with clearing mines.

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The authors argue technological developments have changed warfare more in the past several years than the decades — spanning from the introduction of the airplane, radio and mechanization to the battlefield. And while this new tech has been used minimally in current conflicts, it is only the beginning.

“Today, what we’re experiencing is the introduction of drones on the ground and drones at sea, and also driven by artificial intelligence and the extraordinary capability that that’s going to bring,” General Milley told NPR.

“Now, it’s not here in full yet, but what we’re seeing are snippets, some movie trailers, if you will, of future warfare. And you’re seeing that play out in Gaza. You’re seeing it play out in Ukraine. You’re seeing it play out elsewhere around the world.”

You’re reading the Consider This newsletter, which unpacks one major news story each day. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox, and listen to more from the Consider This podcast.

Evolution on the battlefield

Schmidt says that this transition is going to happen much quicker than some may expect.

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“Autonomy and abundance are going to transform wars very, very quickly,” he told NPR.

“The only reason it hasn’t happened is, thank goodness, the U.S. is not at war, [but] others are. If you study Ukraine, you see a glimpse of the future. Much of the Kursk invasion that recently happened was due to their ability to use short and mid-range drones to support combined operations on the ground.”

Now that the human element of physically being on a battlefield can be replaced by remote operations, Schmidt argues that this will set a new, more precise method of fighting that would also be dramatically less expensive than traditional methods.

“I’m worried, of course, that this will ultimately set a new standard and actually lower the cost of war. But if you think about it, this technology is going to get invented one way or the other, and I’d like it to get invented under U.S. terms.”

Feeling underprepared

Both Milley and Schmidt say that even if major efforts are made to address this change, the red tape involved with approvals from the Pentagon make it difficult to take quick, effective action.

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“Not even the president of the United States can fix the procurement process of the Pentagon,” Schmidt said.

“The procurement process is designed for weapon systems that take 15 years. In the Ukraine situation, innovation is occurring on a three to six-week timeline, and we need to find a way to get the Pentagon on that tempo. The only way to do that is with other authorities and other approaches, and with an understanding that you don’t design the product at the beginning and then develop it over five years. You do it incrementally, which is how tech works.”

Milley agrees that in order to keep up, entire systems of operating within the military will need to be revolutionized.

“We are in the midst of really fundamental change here. And then from that, you have to have an operational concept. And then from that, you’ve got to identify the attributes of a future force. And then from that, change the procurement system in order to build the technological capabilities, modify the training, develop the leaders, et cetera. Our procurement systems need to be completely overhauled and updated.”

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Donald Trump says he will vote against abortion rights in Florida

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Donald Trump says he will vote against abortion rights in Florida

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Donald Trump said he would vote against an amendment to Florida’s state constitution guaranteeing abortion rights, raising the stakes on an issue that is mobilising Democrats and threatening his White House bid.

The former Republican president had sent mixed signals and avoided taking a stance on the proposed amendment, which will appear on the state ballot in November’s election.

But on Friday, he told Fox News that he would be voting “no” on the measure, which would protect abortion rights until viability and negate a law signed by Republican governor Ron DeSantis in Trump’s home state that bans abortions after six weeks of gestation.

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Trump said that while he disagreed with a six-week ban because “you need more time”, Democrats had “radical” policies on abortion. “It is just a ridiculous situation where you can do an abortion in the ninth month,” he said.

The former president has been caught between the need to maintain the support of staunchly conservative, religious voters who are opposed to abortion, and the political imperative of winning over moderate and independent voters who favour abortion rights.

Trump and other Republicans have been on the defensive over abortion ever since the conservative majority on the Supreme Court, including three justices he appointed during his presidency, overturned the right to an abortion nationally in 2022. That has prompted Republican-controlled state legislatures across the country to pass increasingly strict abortion laws, including the six-week abortion ban in Florida.

Opinion polls consistently show that the majority of Americans oppose such strict measures, and Democrats, including Trump’s rival in the race for the White House, US vice-president Kamala Harris, have relentlessly pounded Trump on abortion rights — and raised concerns that other reproductive practices, including in vitro fertilisation and contraception, could be at risk if he is re-elected.

Earlier this week, Trump had scrambled to say that he would ensure funding for IVF procedures, and on Thursday he had suggested that in Florida he would vote to make sure that abortion was not limited to the first six weeks of pregnancy.

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But that comment triggered a backlash from the right, forcing him to clarify his position opposing the amendment on Friday.

Harris said in a statement that with his comments on Friday to Fox News, Trump had “just made his position on abortion very clear: he will vote to uphold an abortion ban so extreme it applies before many women even know they are pregnant”.

“I trust women to make their own healthcare decisions and believe the government should never come between a woman and her doctor,” Harris added.

Trump’s struggles to define his positions on reproductive rights come after his campaign attacked Harris for changing stances on a number of issues, including healthcare, energy and immigration, in order to appeal to centrist voters.

Trump’s latest comments on abortion came hours before he was set to address a national conference for Moms for Liberty, a conservative women’s group, in Washington. The Florida-based political organisation was formed to protest Covid-19 pandemic mask and vaccine mandates and now advocates to stop public schools from teaching about LGBT+ identities and structural racism, among other issues.

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Tiffany Justice, a co-founder of the group, told the Financial Times earlier on Friday that Trump “really understands and cares about parents and parental rights” and urged anyone who had “an issue” with his stance on abortion to look at the Democratic party’s positions.

“Just wait until you see what the Harris-[Tim] Walz ticket, how anti-life they are,” Justice said. “People need to understand, we need to move our country forward, we need to unite to do that, and if there is anything that we can come together on, it should be our children and their health and safety and development.”

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