MUKACHEVO, Ukraine — The leader of Ukrainian pressures’ last garrison in the southerly port city of Mariupol, bordered by Russians and also based on a consistent battery of fire, claimed Tuesday that his soldiers will certainly not give up.
Washington
Surrounded by Russians, commander describes life inside Mariupol plant
“We will certainly not put down our tools,” Volyna claimed.
Talking over a crackling link implemented by satellite, he claimed his pressures would certainly not duplicate the error made by others of relying on Russian assurances of risk-free flow, just to see the Russians damage their word and also open fire.
“No person thinks the Russians,” he claimed.
Volyna made an enthusiastic appeal to globe leaders, particularly Head of state Biden, to carry out an “removal” in which a 3rd nation would certainly guarantee the protection of soldiers and also private citizens leaving Mariupol.
Russia’s Ministry of Protection provided a target date previously Tuesday for the Ukrainians to quit their arms and also leave the iron and also steel plant.
Volyna, that has actually combated in Mariupol considering that the beginning of the Russian intrusion, provided an uncommon glance right into the lives of the soldiers and also thousands of private citizens, consisting of ladies and also youngsters, safeguarding inside the steel plant that has actually captured the globe’s interest as the autumn of the city impends.
Catching Mariupol would certainly be a considerable triumph for Russia, which has actually taken out from numerous communities around the funding, Kyiv, and also experienced the sinking of among its crucial battleships, the Moskva.
It would certainly likewise supply Russia with a land bridge in between the Russian-controlled area of Crimea and also the Donbas area in the eastern, where Moscow is currently concentrating its offensive.
Volyna claimed the Russians “continuously utilize air travel, weapons and also marine weapons of numerous systems” and also “attempt to carry out attack activities with the cover of containers and also infantry battling lorries” to appear the Ukrainians’ defenses.
He claimed the plant held a minimum of 500 individuals injured, consisting of private citizens.
“It’s in the cellar where individuals simply rot. There is no medicine,” he claimed. The competitors and also private citizens occupy a below ground system of passages that permits them to secure damaged private citizens and also supply very little treatment.
He decreased to reveal the variety of competitors in the plant, which likewise consists of participants of the Azov routine, a component of Ukraine’s nationwide guard and also police officers and also boundary guards.
He called the scenario “heartbreaking” and also “crucial,” and also “appealed really highly” to Biden to conserve the soldiers and also private citizens that had actually “come under this catch.”
He claimed this might be with an armed forces procedure “with all needed army ways,” or a political contract, with one more nation or a “nonmilitary company” assuring the Ukrainians’ risk-free flow.
“We quite hope that Head of state Biden will certainly hear us and also assist settle our scenario,” Volyna claimed. “Our company believe that this is among minority individuals that can truly affect and also address this scenario quickly.”
The Soviet-era iron and also steel plant, among the biggest metallurgic manufacturing facilities in Europe, extends over 4 square miles along the city’s beachfront. It currently acts as a fortresslike sanctuary. Prior to ending up being an essential battlefield, it played a leading duty in the city’s economic situation, supplying resources to 10s of hundreds of individuals.
Without any support and also remove from the outdoors, the soldiers and also private citizens are relying upon each various other to make it through. Volyna is resting 2 to 3 hrs an evening in a damp cellar along with his associates.
“We conserve water with each other, we sustain each various other, attempt to assist each various other as high as feasible,” he claimed. “Everybody prepares to proceed as one.”
He claimed spirits amongst the soldiers continues to be high: “We understand whatever, and also we recognize whatever steadly and also we remain to execute fight goals.”
The shelling, he claimed, is “’continuous.”
Ukrainian authorities consisting of Head of state Volodymyr Zelensky and also Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boichenko have claimed the Russian hostility in Mariupol has actually caused as much as 20,000 private citizens eliminated considering that the start of the intrusion. They have actually claimed Russian soldiers have actually targeted unarmed homeowners and also obstructed altruistic help initiatives.
On Tuesday, Volyna explained a city “destroyed from the face of the planet.” Ratings of individuals lay under the debris of burnt residences and also bombed-out structures. Crosses have actually grown in yards and also on wall surfaces, and also makeshift tombs have actually pocked the city, traumatic tips of the loss of human life.
“What is occurring right here is past standard human understanding,” he claimed.
Washington
Nearly half of older Americans can’t afford basic needs • Washington State Standard
I worked hard my whole career and retired feeling secure. Then I lost every last dime in a scam. I was left with $1,300 a month in Social Security benefits to live on in an area where monthly expenses run about $3,700.
I’m a smart woman, but scams against older Americans are increasing in number and sophistication. Whether through scams, strained savings, or costs of living going up, half of older Americans — that’s 27 million households — can’t afford their basic needs.
And suddenly I became one of them. The experience has taught me a lot about the value of a strong social safety net — and why we’ll need to protect it from the coming administration.
I was ashamed and frightened after what happened, but I scraped myself up off the floor and tried to make the best of it.
I’d worked with aging people earlier in my career, so I was familiar with at least some of the groups who could help. I reached out to a local nonprofit and they came through with flying colors, connecting me to life-saving federal assistance programs.
I was assigned a caseworker, who guided me through applying for public programs like the Medical Savings Plan (MSP), the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), subsidized housing, Medicare Part D, and Medicaid.
It’s hard to describe my relief at getting this help.
Before receiving the MSP, I’d been paying for medications and health insurance — which cost about $200 — out of my monthly Social Security check. With MSP, that cost is covered. I also found an apartment I liked through subsidized housing, and I have more money for groceries through SNAP. Now it’s easier to afford other necessities, like hearing aid batteries and my asthma inhaler.
But I’m worried about the incoming administration’s plans to cut programs like these, which have helped me so much. They’re proposing slashing funding and imposing overly burdensome work and reporting requirements. Studies show that requirements like these can cause millions of otherwise eligible people to lose critical assistance.
President-elect Trump has also indicated that he favors increased privatization of Medicare, which would result in higher costs and less care. And his tax promises are projected to move up the insolvency date of Social Security.
All told, the federal budget cuts the incoming Republican majority in Congress has put forward would slash health care, food, and housing by trillions over the next 10 years, resulting in at least a 50 percent reduction in these services. And they plan to divert those investments in us into more tax cuts for the nation’s very wealthiest.
I want lawmakers of each party to know how important these social investments are for seniors and families. Older Americans — who’ve worked hard all our lives — shouldn’t be pushed out onto the streets, forced to go without sufficient food or health care due to unfortunate circumstances.
We have the tax dollars — the question is whether we have the political will to invest in seniors, workers, and families, or only for tax cuts for the very rich. If we do the latter, that’s the real scam.
Washington
Potential Washington Nationals Target Jack Flaherty Sees Value Rise
The Washington Nationals are finally starting to make some noise in the offseason, but there is still plenty of work to be done.
For quite some time this winter, the Nationals were a very quiet team in free agency. However, that recently changed as the they signed pitcher Michael Soroka to a one-year, $9 million deal.
The right-hander was an All-Star back in 2019, but has missed a ton of time because of injuries while bouncing back and forth between the starting rotation and the bullpen. Washington appears like they will be giving him a chance to be a starter in 2025, but it’s hard to expect anything from him after the last number of years.
While the Nationals do have five starters under contract now and projected to be in the rotation to start the season, they are really lacking a reliable veteran to help lead this rotation. The starting pitching market has been wild, but if Washington is hoping to compete, they should be thinking about adding another arm, even after signing Soroka.
Recently, Jeff Passan of ESPN.com wrote about the starting pitcher market and highlighted Jack Flaherty’s value on the rise, which could affect the Nationals. Passan pointed out that the “exorbitant” price of pitching helps Flaherty. And it’s not just deals for pitchers like Blake Snell and Max Fried.
He noted examples like Luis Severino’s $67 million, three-year deal and Frankie Montas’ $34 million, two-year deal, as examples. All of those, he wrote, lifts Flaherty’s potential value.
“However long Flaherty’s free agency takes to flesh out, he’s still bound to do well because every team needs starting pitching, and all it takes is one suitor to step up,” Passan wrote.
After seeing some of the other deals starters have received so far this offseason, it’s easy to understand why Flaherty’s value has gone up. While the right-hander isn’t an ace, he had a strong season in 2024 for both the Detroit Tigers and Los Angeles Dodgers. Also, he won a World Series, which never hurts a resume.
The right-hander showed top-end of the rotation production with the Tigers in 2024, as he totaled a 7-5 record and 2.95 ERA before being traded.
For Washington, they have to be thinking about adding a more established starter than Soroka this offseason. Besides MacKenzie Gore and Jake Irvin, there are a lot of question marks in this rotation.
Even though the price tag might be on the rise, the 29-year-old right-hander could be exactly what the Nationals need in their starting rotation to take a step forward in 2025 and beyond.
Washington
Veteran faces extradition to Philippines over unfounded allegations, lawyer says
A 66-year-old American citizen has been in the DC jail for almost 10 months awaiting extradition to the Philippines for a crime her attorneys say there’s no evidence she committed.
Air Force veteran Grace Lourenco earned commendations for her service. In 1981, she was part of the flight crew aboard the Air Force plane that returned 53 U.S. diplomats and citizens who had been held hostage in Iran, her family said – a moment seen around the world.
She went on to earn a business degree, get married and have a daughter.
Court filings from a 2023 divorce proceeding between Lourenco and her husband, Hans Brunner, show a D.C. judge believed her statements that she had suffered physical abuse in the marriage.
The decree of divorce also contains the judge’s assessment of the alleged crime for which Lourenco was arrested at her Georgetown home earlier this year. It describes an incident in October 2018 at a home the couple owned in the Philippines, where Brunner worked.
“After lunch, on the ride back to their Manila home, Mr. Brunner told Ms. Lourenco he wanted to have an open relationship with [a German woman he’d met] and that he wanted to open a trust fund for her.”
“[Lourenco] remembers waking up in a hospital a couple days later,” said her attorney, William Zapf. “She had been unconscious, and it is believed that she had taken some medication that made her unconscious.”
The judge’s conclusions went on to say: “Later … while standing on the balcony, Mr. Brunner was attacked from behind. The perpetrator hit Mr. Brunner on the back of the head with a sharp, hard weapon. He did not see who attacked him.
“He was in a coma for two days.
“He asserts Ms. Lourenco was the perpetrator. Not only did Mr. Brunner fail to present evidence that Ms. Lourenco was the perpetrator, but he also failed to present evidence that (she) had wanted to kill him to get his pension.”
The judge concluded: “Both parties have committed intrafamily offenses against the other, but Mr. Brunner committed more offenses against Ms. Lourenco, and the Court finds (him) to have been the primary aggressor.”
Lourenco’s attorneys say her future is in the hands of the U.S. State Department.
“In cases like this where there are very serious humanitarian concerns about our client, Grace, this is the type of case where the Secretary of State can say no and should say no,” Zapf said.
Several people she served with in the Air Force have written letters supporting Lourenco.
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