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A Town on Ukraine’s Edge, Determined to Escape Its Past

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PRZEMYSL, Poland — Because the battle broke out in Ukraine, the elegant little metropolis of Przemysl, lower than 10 miles from the Polish-Ukrainian border, has been remodeled into an enormous help machine.

Eating places are feeding refugees as an alternative of standard prospects. Faculty gyms are internet hosting Ukrainians as an alternative of soccer video games. The native newspaper is elevating cash for psychological help for Ukrainian and Polish kids traumatized by the battle.

This city has thought-about nearly each attainable want of these fleeing Russian bombs — even taking of their pets.

“We now have to assist,” stated Radek Fedaczynski, a neighborhood veterinarian who has been working day and evening to spirit out as many Ukrainian canine and cats as he can (and a stork and child goat). “It’s our future.”

This beneficiant perspective may appear stunning, given Przemysl’s sophisticated and violent historical past. This a part of Poland endured horrible bloodletting all through the twentieth century, together with by the hands of Ukrainian nationalists.

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However after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, this city appears to have made an instinctive and collective resolution to place the dangerous blood behind it. Like a lot of Poland itself, Przemysl (pronounced PSHEH-mihsh-ul)) sees the combat in Ukraine virtually as its personal combat, and it has welcomed the Ukrainian refugees with an outpouring of help, marking a poignant reset within the lengthy and complicated Polish-Ukrainian relationship.

Throughout World Conflict II, which is now on the minds of a lot of Przemysl’s 60,000 residents, Nazis and Soviets took turns invading the town, wiping out civilians. Przemysl’s Jewish neighborhood, as soon as a 3rd of the inhabitants, was lowered to some households. Because the battle was lastly ending, bloodshed exploded between Ukrainians and Poles, with Ukrainian nationalists massacring Poles in massive numbers and Poles placing again in revenge.

Przemysl has as soon as once more placed on its battle paint. Its trains are taking Ukrainian fighters into the battle; its bridges are carrying weapons and materials to the entrance; and overseas troops are stomping down its charming, windy, cobbled streets. However this time they’re People, a part of the NATO drive primarily based in Poland.

The largest focus has been serving to the five hundred,000 Ukrainian refugees who’ve handed by the city, principally ladies and youngsters, stated the mayor, Wojciech Bakun.

Mr. Bakun co-founded a nationalist political celebration that had been accused of spreading anti-Ukrainian views earlier than Russia’s invasion. However he has exchanged his enterprise swimsuit for a khaki navy jacket and his workplace in a Sixteenth-century yellow townhouse for the city’s prepare station, a significant refugee transit level, to steer the rising help efforts.

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“I’m not going to elucidate historical past to a three-year outdated who simply crossed the border,” he stated about his change of perspective.

Many residents stated the identical factor: Occasions have modified, and with greater than 1,000,000 Ukrainian staff already in Poland earlier than Russia’s invasion, that sense of otherness between Ukrainians and Poles has progressively worn down.

The help efforts are having a therapeutic worth as properly. Serving to others, a number of residents stated, has helped take their minds off the battle.

An excellent chunk of the inhabitants, particularly older residents, are preoccupied with the concept the Russians may storm throughout the border. Every time the Russians bomb deeper into western Ukraine, generally just some miles from Polish territory, this worry grows.

“Something is feasible,” stated Jan Jarosz, the top of the Nationwide Museum of Przemysl.

As he gazed out of his workplace home windows, which look over the city and the San River, he stated: “If I have been Putin, I’d bomb these two bridges. Every thing goes by these bridges.”

He was referring to Przemysl’s important railway bridge (which many fighters going again into Ukraine have used) and a freeway bridge throughout the San River that serves as one of many busiest conduits of provides and matériel into western Ukraine.

Beneath a secret pact throughout World Conflict II, Nazis and Soviets divided Poland, and Przemysl, between themselves. The San River that snakes by city was the border. It separated the Nazi-occupied half, the place the Jews have been put in a ghetto, from the jap aspect of city, which was integrated into the Soviet Union as a part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, the place all indicators of Polishness have been brutally repressed.

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Divided households stood on reverse river banks and shouted information to one another. Throughout them, Russian and German troops hunkered down, generally in outdated fortifications constructed by generations of invaders to manage this space.

In the present day the brand new troopers on the town are from the 82nd Airborne Division. The opposite night, a busload of People, wearing camouflage and fight boots, marched as much as Przemysl’s hottest doughnut store, which serves hunky rectangular pastries (with out a gap) filled with Nutella or rose jam. The USA has doubled the variety of troops it normally stations in Poland, a member of the NATO alliance, to roughly 9,000. When requested what they have been doing right here, one soldier responded, “To guarantee and deter.”

Regardless of all of the battle it has weathered, Przemysl continues to be a wonderful little metropolis with a Thirteenth- century fortified citadel, ornamented Baroque church buildings, bumpy stone streets and vintage attraction at each flip. The city even performs a centuries-old bugle name 3 times a day from its clock tower to mark time passing by.

For hundreds of years, Ukrainians have performed an necessary position in shaping the town’s multicultural heritage. A large neighborhood of ethnic Ukrainians, has lived right here for many years and numbers round 2,000 in the present day. Relations between them and ethnic Poles have steadily improved. However when there’s bother in Ukraine, bother can bubble up right here, too.

Just a few years in the past, not lengthy after Russia invaded the Crimean Peninsula and wrested it away from Ukraine, nationalists in Przemysl attacked a Ukrainian church procession. The police shortly arrested the culprits. However ethnic Ukrainians suspected that a few of Przemysl’s municipal officers had stoked the thugs and that Russia was utilizing Fb and different social media to sow hatred between Poles and ethnic Ukrainians.

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“So long as Russia and Ukraine are at battle, Russia will preserve doing this,” stated Kasia Komar-Macynska, a younger ethnic Ukrainian neighborhood chief.

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For Dr. Fedaczynski, the veterinarian, and his four-legged sufferers, little of this issues. His heart, the ADA Animal Hospital, is the closest animal hospital to the border, and the primary logical cease for any dwelling factor needing shelter from the battle.

Almost day-after-day he sends a pet rescue squad into Ukraine or receives a truckload of anxious animals popping out of the battle.

His hospital has been coordinating intently with animal shelters in Ukraine to rescue animals from massive shelters, non-public homes and almost abandoned residence blocs, even navy airports. Some Ukrainian pet house owners have despatched their animals out of besieged cities whereas they themselves stay behind, with the hope that they are going to be reunited one higher day.

After the animals arrive at Dr. Fedaczynski’s clinic, his workers examines, vaccinates and places chips in them. They’ve rescued greater than 600 up to now — Chihuahuas, German shepherds, one Egyptian cat, a whole bunch of different cats, a mutt named Rocky Balboa, the stork with a damaged beak and a 10-day-old goat named Sasha.

The animals are sometimes too traumatized to maneuver. To ease their struggling, the hospital workers takes them for walks, lets the canine romp round collectively on particular playgrounds and performs classical music to a room stuffed with caged cats to allow them to go to sleep extra simply.

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Dr. Fedaczynski stated it actually helped the Ukrainians who stayed of their war-torn nation to know that their pets have been secure. However it helps him too.

When the battle erupted in Ukraine, he stated, it was like “the worst desires got here true.”

“When you concentrate on it, you possibly can go loopy, so you’ll want to do one thing,” he defined. “It makes you are feeling good.”

Erin Schaff contributed reporting.

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Israeli Official Describes Secret Government Bid to Cement Control of West Bank

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Israeli judges have long ruled that Israel’s control of the territory is a temporary military occupation and complies with international law. A powerful minister’s recent speech, caught on tape, suggested the government is trying to change that.

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Former Hong Kong residents embrace UK politics amid lingering Beijing fears

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Former Hong Kong residents embrace UK politics amid lingering Beijing fears
  • More than 180,000 Hong Kongers have immigrated to Britain under a special visa program, fleeing political crackdowns in their home country since 2021.
  • Unlike many immigrants, Hong Kongers arrive in Britain with the right to vote.
  • Some Hong Kong immigrants remain concerned about Chinese influence and potential repercussions for their families.

For Richard Wong, 25, who moved to Britain from Hong Kong two years ago, it “feels strange” taking part in a free election, exercising exactly those rights that he once fought for, knowing that his friends back home no longer can.

“Back in Hong Kong we tried so hard to get democracy and then lost it. And I moved here, and we are actually practicing democracy, but in a very different context,” said Wong, who has been knocking on doors as a volunteer for an opposition Labour party candidate in next month’s UK general election.

“I still have friends spending their time in prison and I’m … doing this at the other end of the world.”

HONG KONG LAWMAKERS UNANIMOUSLY PASS CONTROVERSIAL SECURITY LAW, GRANTING GOVERNMENT POWER TO CURB DISSENT

Since 2021, more than 180,000 Hong Kongers have moved to Britain under a special visa program set up in response to a crackdown on dissent in their homeland, a former British colony handed back to Beijing in 1997.

The Hong Kong skyline is seen on Dec. 19, 2018. Since 2021, more than 180,000 Hong Kongers have moved to Britain under a special visa program set up in response to a crackdown on dissent in their homeland, a former British colony handed back to Beijing in 1997. (DALE DE LA REY/AFP via Getty Images)

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China says the crackdown was necessary to restore stability after months of sometimes violent protests in 2019.

When Britain left Hong Kong it offered a limited form of British nationality to residents, which means the Hong Kongers, unlike many newcomers from elsewhere, arrive with the right to vote in the UK.

Britain’s national election next month is the first chance they will have to participate in the central ritual of democracy in their adopted home. Many are passionate about the opportunity.

“I know the power of votes. I think if we have that power we should utilise it,” said Carmen Lau, a campaign coordinator for Vote for Hong Kong 2024, a group rallying Hong Kongers in the UK to participate in the British election.

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Before she moved to Britain, Lau was elected a Hong Kong district councillor in 2019, but later disqualified for refusing to take an oath of loyalty to the territory’s mini constitution.

With relations between Britain and China at a low ebb, amid accusations from London that Beijing had intimidated a foreign national on British soil and counter claims of spying activities, some Hong Kongers are still fearful China’s reach.

Lau said at cultural events many attendees wore masks and avoided cameras because they were afraid their family back in Hong Kong would be harassed.

“The right to vote is precious, and more Hong Kong people are moving to the UK and we’re concerned about China’s control and spies, so there is a need to speak out,” said one Hong Konger in the UK, Kate, 33, who declined to give her full name as she was fearful of reprisals.

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Is Israel’s Smotrich fulfilling his dream of annexing the West Bank?

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Is Israel’s Smotrich fulfilling his dream of annexing the West Bank?

About a month ago, a quiet transfer happened.

The Israeli army’s Civil Administration handed more control over the occupied West Bank to the Settlements Administration, led by far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who lives in an illegal settlement himself.

Now Smotrich and his Settlements Administration control more things, like building regulations and the management of farmland, parks and forests.

Since he entered government, Smotrich has pushed openly for more Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank – illegal under international law – as steps towards annexation.

So what does this all mean?

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What’s the Settlements Administration?

It was set up back in February 2023, after lots of political wrangling between Smotrich – who is also a minister within the Ministry of Defense – and Yoav Gallant, the defence minister.

There were a lot of details, but the upshot is that the responsibility for monitoring illegal construction in the occupied West Bank came under Smotrich.

Meaning that illegal settlement or outpost construction would be ignored and eventually approved, while Palestinian construction would be subject to intense scrutiny over permits, and often demolished.

[Al Jazeera]

How did Smotrich swing that?

Smotrich and his fellow member of the extreme right, Itamar Ben-Gvir, head a coalition of hard right and ultra-Orthodox parties that have propped up the rule of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

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Using that far-right heft, Smotrich negotiated to essentially take control of Israeli expansion into occupied land.

So what changed this May 29?

The army’s handover on May 29 means pages of bylaws will now be enforced by the Settlements Administration, making illegal settlement expansion even easier.

Did Israel already control the occupied West Bank?

Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967, as well as Gaza and East Jerusalem – the longest military occupation in modern history.

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But, even occupation has rules.

According to international law, the occupying power cannot move its citizens into occupied land. Israel’s Supreme Court confirmed this in 2005.

That did not stop Israelis from building illegal settlements on stolen land. And it did not stop Israeli settlers – supported by security forces sometimes – from attacking Palestinians to force them off even more land.

A Palestinian man sits near a damaged house and damaged cars after Israeli settlers attacked the village of al-Mughayyer, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, April 13, 2024
Property damaged by Israeli settlers in al-Mughayyer, on April 13, 2024 [Mohammed Torokman/Reuters]

How many Palestinians live in the West Bank?

According to the US government, three million people.

In many cases, families have lived in the same house or on the same farm for centuries.

Traditional farming is a source of pride and identity, with generations dedicating themselves to tending ancestral olive groves and fruit orchards. Some Palestinian tribes are shepherds, traditionally roaming across their lands so their flocks can graze.

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But settler attacks have focused on farmers and shepherds, who tend to live in small, peaceful communities that make easy pickings for armed settlers with the police as their backup.

This pushed many Palestinians to move to towns, working unskilled jobs like construction.

What’s going to happen to them now?

Life will likely get even harder.

On top of sweeping arrest campaigns being stepped up in the occupied West Bank since Israel launched its brutal war on Gaza on October 7, the number of settler attacks to scare families off their land has exploded too.

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More than 500 Palestinians have been killed in attacks in the occupied West Bank.

Restrictions on movement have increased as Israel increased both fixed and mobile checkpoints and settlers have started setting up their own random roadblocks.

This means Palestinians have a much harder time getting to work or keeping their businesses running. Or seeing family, or going for a picnic. Anything, really.

Add to that the increased leniency Smotrich’s Administration is likely to show illegal settlement expansion and the crackdown on any Palestinian construction, the outlook is bleak.

INTERACTIVE -UN-LIST-ILLEGAL-SETTLEMENTS-DEC14-2023-1702556698
[Al Jazeera]

Is this it? Annexation?

Annexing the occupied West Bank to Israel is certainly a dream for Smotrich and his close political ally, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

They see taking over managing the occupation – by essentially commandeering the Civil Administration – as a major step towards that ambition.

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