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 Odesa under further missile attacks

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 Odesa under further missile attacks
Folks take away the statue of Ukrainian thinker Hryhoriy Skovoroda from the destroyed Hryhoriy Skovoroda Literary Memorial Museum in Skovorodynivka, Ukraine, on Could 7. (Ricardo Moraes/Reuters)

Final Friday, the historic residence of Ukraine’s treasured poet and thinker Hryhorii Skovoroda was destroyed by a Russian artillery strike, together with a museum of his work.

Skovoroda’s residence was in a tiny village not removed from Kharkiv — nowhere close to any apparent army targets reminiscent of a railway or ammunition depot. The assault seems to have been a deliberate act of cultural vandalism, and never the primary because the Russian invasion started in February.

Skovoroda was a number one determine in Ukraine’s cultural renaissance within the 18th century; this yr is the three hundredth anniversary of his beginning.

In a video handle on Saturday, President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned the assault in opposition to the house of a person “who taught individuals what a real Christian angle to life is and the way an individual can know himself.”

“It appears it is a horrible hazard for contemporary Russia: museums, the Christian angle to life and other people’s self-knowledge,” Zelensky mentioned.

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Burnt books and other items are seen in the Hryhoriy Skovoroda Literary Memorial Museum on May 7.
Burnt books and different gadgets are seen within the Hryhoriy Skovoroda Literary Memorial Museum on Could 7. (Ricardo Moraes/Reuters)

Zelensky reprised the theme when marking Victory Day, quoting Skovoroda’s phrases in one other public message on Monday: “There’s nothing extra harmful than an insidious enemy however there’s nothing extra toxic than a feigned good friend.”

Skovoroda’s legacy has turn out to be symbolic of what Zelensky and different Ukrainians name the wrestle between two world views — these of particular person freedoms and democracy in opposition to a brand new authoritarianism pushed by prejudice.

The governor of Kharkiv, Oleh Synyehubov, mentioned in a put up on Telegram: “The occupiers can destroy the museum the place Hryhoriy Skovoroda labored for the final years of his life and the place he was buried. However they won’t destroy our reminiscence and our values!”

Whereas many volunteers and staff inside Ukraine’s cultural sector rushed to guard establishments and monuments all through the nation through the onset of the battle, church buildings, museums, statues and artwork collections have suffered harm.

Zelensky mentioned in his Saturday handle that Russian forces have destroyed almost 200 heritage websites because the starting of the invasion.

Whether or not most of those have been intentionally focused is open to debate however given Vladimir Putin’s dismissive view of Ukrainian tradition it could hardly be stunning.

There have actually been acts of cultural hooliganism in areas occupied by the Russians. A statue of one other distinguished Ukrainian poet, Taras Shevchenko, within the city of Borodianka outdoors Kyiv, was shot at a number of instances and badly broken. The city was occupied by Russian and Chechen troops for weeks.

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Shevchenko’s poem “The Dream, ” which satirized Russia’s oppression of Ukraine, was thought to be subversive and led him to be banished from Ukraine by Tsar Nicholas I in 1847, “underneath the strictest surveillance, with out the freedom to jot down or paint,” as Nicholas demanded.

Bullet holes are seen all over a bust of Taras Shevchenko in Borodianka, Ukraine, on April 6.
Bullet holes are seen throughout a bust of Taras Shevchenko in Borodianka, Ukraine, on April 6. (Celestino Arce/NurPhoto by way of Getty Photographs)

Shevchenko is extensively thought to be the founding father of the fashionable written Ukrainian language. His outlook would have been at odds with Vladimir Putin’s view — as he put it in Februar — that “trendy Ukraine was fully created by Russia or, to be extra exact, by Bolshevik, communist Russia.”

Not removed from Borodianka, a museum containing two-dozen works of the late Ukrainian people artist Maria Prymachenko was struck and burned down in March. The extent of harm to her artworks stays unclear with a consultant from the Maria Prymachenko Household Basis alleging that the works have been rescued. Prymachenko’s vivid work have been admired by Pablo Picasso who as soon as referred to as her an “inventive miracle,” after visiting a present of her work in Paris in 1936.

A variety of Ukrainian church buildings have been destroyed, too — a lot of them nowhere close to any army goal. Simply outdoors Kyiv an 18th century picket church in Lukyanivka was destroyed — one in every of many properties within the space razed to the bottom as Russian forces withdrew from round Kyiv in April.

Learn extra right here.

CNN’s Olga Voitovych and Kostan Nechyporenko contributed to this report.

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Donation Scams Compound Suffering for Wildfire Victims

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Donation Scams Compound Suffering for Wildfire Victims

Erin Berkowitz lost her rental home in Altadena to the Eaton fire. The blaze destroyed her home art studio, the outdoor kitchen where she created textile dyes and her business inventory, including hundreds of pieces of custom-made clothing and accessories.

To help with her losses, a friend created a fund-raising page for her on GoFundMe. But within hours, she learned that there was another GoFundMe page that looked identical to the one her friend created, except for a slightly different URL.

“Someone has tried to just make their way in and try to profit off of my tragedy,” said Ms. Berkowitz, a 36-year-old artist and educator.

The page appeared to be one of several fake online fund-raisers that Los Angeles officials have warned people to watch out for. Such sites detailing stories of loss and desperation — family homes obliterated, neighborhood schools in ruins, restaurants desperate to rebuild — are now a ubiquitous symbol of the destruction wrought by the fires. But scammers can use them to prey on the generosity of people across the globe.

“We’re concerned, as has been mentioned in previous press conferences, that there’s a number of sites that are fake,” Mayor Karen Bass said Thursday morning.

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Rob Bonta, California’s attorney general, said at a news conference last weekend that scammers can create “fake organizations masquerading as charities,” often targeting elderly people and those whose first language is not English.

“We have people with big hearts who want to help,” he said. “We also see scammers who are taking advantage of that goodness and that generosity.”

GoFundMe said that more than $100 million has been raised on its platform to help victims of the Los Angeles fires.

Ms. Berkowitz was particularly worried that the mere existence of a fake page — which GoFundMe has since taken down — would jeopardize the thousands of dollars that the page her friend made had raised.

“This is now my lifeline to survival. Someone has threatened it,” she said of her thinking when she learned about the fake page.

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Ms. Berkowitz said there was also an Instagram account with a username that was almost identical to hers that was asking her friends and family to donate to the fake GoFundMe page. Ms. Berkowitz said Instagram had initially refused to take the account down, but a Meta spokesman said on Thursday that it had been removed for violating policies.

Consumer protection experts urged people to be vigilant with donation sites and try to verify the account organizing the fund-raiser before sending any money.

Among the red flags to look out for, according to Ally Armeson, executive director of the nonprofit FightCybercrime.org: unsolicited contact for donations; requests for upfront payments in exchange for disaster aid; requests for personal information like a Social Security or bank account number; and aggressive responses to attempts to verify the page.

Ruth Sesswein, the director of consumer protection at the nonprofit Consumer Action, recommended looking up donation organizers on social media and confirming their connection to the beneficiary of the fund-raiser.

To prevent people from falling for scam sites, GoFundMe has set up a page to spotlight verified fund-raisers to help victims of the fires. A team of experts approved all of the fund-raisers on the page.

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A spokeswoman said there are also protections in place to detect fake pages, such as “machine learning to catch higher-risk donations, image and video review to prevent abusive behavior, and partnerships with law enforcement to verify outstanding cases.”

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Far-right minister threatens to quit Israeli government over Gaza ceasefire deal

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Far-right minister threatens to quit Israeli government over Gaza ceasefire deal

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Israel’s far-right national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said on Thursday evening he would pull his Jewish Power party out of Benjamin Netanyahu’s government if it implemented the Gaza ceasefire deal.

Mediators said on Wednesday that Israel and Hamas had agreed a multiphase deal to halt the 15-month-old war and free the 98 hostages still held in Gaza.

However Ben-Gvir and his ultranationalist ally, finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, have repeatedly threatened to leave Netanyahu’s government if it accepts an agreement that ends the war.

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Ben-Gvir repeated that threat on Thursday, but said his party could return to the government if it subsequently resumed the war.

Netanyahu’s cabinet will gather on Friday to discuss approval of the Gaza ceasefire deal, according to an Israeli official, after the premier previously delayed the meeting, accusing Hamas of backtracking on the agreement.

The departure of Jewish Power would leave Netanyahu’s coalition with a two-seat majority in Israel’s parliament.

It would also pile pressure on Smotrich’s Religious Zionism party to pull out of Netanyahu’s government, a move that would be likely to cost the veteran premier his majority.

This is a developing story

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‘Criminal, you belong to ICJ’: Antony Blinken heckled by journalists on Gaza policy during his last conference

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‘Criminal, you belong to ICJ’: Antony Blinken heckled by journalists on Gaza policy during his last conference

Outgoing US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Thursday found himself at the centre of stark criticism from journalists and critics who vehemently slammed the Biden administration’s foreign policy on the Gaza conflict. Blinken was delivering his final press conference.

After Husseini’s outburst, security personnel quickly intervened and took him away from the room.(AP)

“Criminal! You belong in The Hague,” shouted Sam Husseini while condemning Blinken’s handling of the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict, Reuters reported.

Husseini’s outburst referred to The Hague, where lies the International Criminal Court. This is where Israel is facing accusations of genocide and war crimes for its military offensive in Gaza.

After Husseini’s outburst, security personnel quickly intervened and took him away from the room as he continued his protest.

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The extraordinary scene unfolded at the State Department where several journalists were repeatedly interrupting Blinken’s final press conference as he sought to defend his handling of Israel’s 15-month war with Hamas.

“Why did you keep the bombs flowing when we had a deal in May?” Max Blumenthal, editor of the Grayzone, an outlet that strongly criticized many aspects of US foreign policy, called out to Blinken before he was escorted out.

Antony Blinken’s reaction

Blinken, who is set to leave office on January 20 after Trump’s inauguration has been under tight scrutiny for providing Israel with weapons and diplomatic support since the onset of the Hamas conflict.

Blinken has been frequently heckled at appearances in Washington since the Gaza conflict began. Demonstrators camped outside his Virginia home for months and repeatedly threw red paint – resembling blood – on cars carrying Blinken and his family.

Today, he calmly asked for quiet while he delivered his remarks, and later took questions from reporters.

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“I’d also point out that in Israel itself, there are hundreds of cases being investigated,” Blinken added, referring to internal Israeli inquiries into potential violations of international law.

“They have a process, they have procedures, they have rule of law… That’s the hallmark of any democracy.”

Asked during the press conference if he would change anything about his dealings with Israel, Blinken said the Israeli government had carried out policies that “were supported by an overwhelming majority of Israelis after the trauma of October 7” and said that had to be factored into the US response.

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