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As Mariupol Is Bombed and Besieged, Those Trapped Fight to Survive

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As Mariupol Is Bombed and Besieged, Those Trapped Fight to Survive

LVIV, Ukraine — Eduard Zarubin, a physician, has misplaced all the things. However he does nonetheless have his life.

His road is destroyed, and his metropolis, the southern port of Mariupol, is to date the best horror of Russia’s scorched-earth warfare towards Ukraine. Russian missiles decimated a theater that sheltered greater than 1,000 folks. One other assault hit an artwork college the place youngsters have been hiding within the basement.

Water is so scarce that persons are melting snow. Heating, electrical energy and fuel have disappeared. Individuals are chopping timber for firewood to gas out of doors cooking stoves shared by neighbors. To stroll from one road to a different typically means passing corpses, or recent graves dug in parks or grassy medians.

On Sunday, Russia gave an ultimatum that Ukrainian fighters within the metropolis should surrender, or face annihilation. Ukrainian officers refused. Evacuation buses, together with some carrying youngsters, have been shelled on Monday, in accordance with Ukrainian officers. 1000’s of individuals have escaped the town, together with Dr. Zarubin, however greater than 300,000 others stay, at the same time as combating has moved onto the streets of some neighborhoods.

“If the warfare ends and we win, and eliminate them, then I feel that there will likely be excursions in Mariupol, similar to there are to Chernobyl,” he mentioned of the deserted website of a Soviet-era nuclear calamity. “So that folks perceive what sort of apocalyptic issues can happen.”

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The destruction of Mariupol, one among Ukraine’s largest cities, has been a siege and a relentless bombardment that for the final three weeks has left its inhabitants reduce off from the skin world. What information does arrive comes from grainy cellphone movies taken by folks nonetheless inside the town, from bulletins from Ukrainian officers, or from the accounts of individuals like Dr. Zarubin, who’ve witnessed the destruction of all the things that they had.

Dr. Zarubin, a urologist, lived in a ravishing home on the Left Financial institution, one among Mariupol’s elite neighborhoods. He had a snug life and the expectation that he had labored onerous sufficient to have a safe future. However after the shelling started, he needed to stroll almost eight miles a day along with his son, Viktor, simply to search out water for his or her household. Later, as desperation set in, Dr. Zarubin mentioned that folks started looting outlets and strolling away with home equipment, or medicine from pharmacies.

“Day-after-day there was one thing new,” Mr. Zarubin mentioned of the destruction. “The adjustments got here so quick, and have been so dynamic, as if we have been in a movie. You exit, and also you don’t acknowledge the town. You exit once more the subsequent morning and once more you don’t acknowledge it.”

Albertas Tamashauskas, 29, labored in Mariupol’s metropolis planning workplace. On Feb. 23, the day earlier than Russia invaded, he had a closing planning assembly about putting in bike lanes throughout the town. However when the siege started, time started to blur and he misplaced observe of what day or week it was. As a substitute, he spent his days obsessing about discovering water or amassing and slicing wooden for cooking.

“On the road there was a park,” mentioned Mr. Tamashauskas, 29. “We reduce down the timber and chopped firewood. And within the night, we needed to take it to the basement, as a result of, after all, there was a lot looting. Folks took gas from the vehicles.”

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“In fact,” he added, “warfare is frightening. However the worst factor is that you simply should not have a way of tomorrow. That’s, you go to mattress, and also you have no idea what’s going to occur subsequent.”

He and his pregnant spouse lastly packed one backpack every and walked out of the town, headed west. They’re now secure within the area of Zaporizhzhia, northwest of Mariupol.

At the same time as a lot of Ukraine nonetheless has web entry, and cellphone service, Mariupol is with out both.

“You’re sitting in an data vacuum,” mentioned Irina Peredey, a 29-year-old municipal employee. “You don’t perceive what is occurring, or whether or not there may be any assist coming into the town or not,” she mentioned. Moscow has refused to permit any humanitarian help to succeed in the town.

“I typically noticed folks carry water that was yellow and brown, however there have been no choices,” Ms. Peredey recalled. She herself started amassing snow and rain water to prepare dinner. “It’s actually very troublesome while you don’t perceive how lengthy it would final or what’s going to occur subsequent, so you utilize each alternative to in some way gather one thing.”

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The foundations and establishments that had ruled their group had damaged down so quick. The police had stopped working, as had emergency companies, even the ambulances, which had an excessive amount of work and couldn’t navigate the enormous holes within the street created by missiles and bombs. A put up workplace was repurposed as a morgue.

Sergey Sinelnikov, a 58-year-old pharmaceutical entrepreneur, moved to the town middle after the shelling started, believing like many others that it could be spared intensive bombing. As a substitute, the district got here below heavy assault, too. He watched as a burning curtain fell from the highest flooring of a nine-story constructing throughout the road, the place his dad and mom had as soon as lived.

Firefighters arrived on the scene however did nothing. Mr. Sinelnikov puzzled in the event that they have been missing water. The hearth raged for 3 days, destroying all 144 flats.

A routine would set in, Mr. Sinelnikov mentioned. From his window, he watched as folks cooked on improvised brick stoves within the courtyards of their residence blocks — after which, straight away, they’d scatter to hunt shelter after they heard the roar of Russian jets.

“Then the airplane flew over, dropped its rockets and bombs, after which folks went again to their stoves, to what they have been cooking,” he mentioned. “It appeared like some type of youngsters’s recreation.”

Mr. Sinelnikov and Mr. Zarubin each left on March 16, the identical day that Russian forces bombed the theater, one of many metropolis’s largest public shelters. The world “youngsters” was written in giant Cyrillic letters exterior the positioning to make it seen for pilots flying over.

At the same time as residents have been determined to flee to the west, Russian troopers have taken “between 4,000 and 4,500 Mariupol residents forcibly throughout the border to Taganrog,” a metropolis in southwestern Russia, in accordance with Pyotr Andryuschenko, an assistant to Mariupol’s mayor.

Different former Mariupol residents additionally informed The New York Instances comparable tales of mates who had been taken into Russia. Mr. Sinelnikov, whose father was from Russia, mentioned that when the warfare began his Russian kin invited him to remain in Bryansk, about 250 miles southwest of Moscow. He refused.

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“If I am going to Russia, I’ll really feel ache and humiliation,” he mentioned. He has fled as an alternative to western Ukraine. “Right here, there may be solely ache that can go. There will likely be no humiliation.”

Ms. Peredey, the municipal employee, mentioned her escape took greater than 11 hours as she handed via 15 Russian military checkpoints. For 2 or three days afterward, she didn’t wish to eat, though meals had been rationed when she was in Mariupol. Then, she mentioned, she started to really feel hungry each hour.

Mr. Zarubin, the physician, mentioned nothing would ever be the identical. In the future when he was nonetheless in Mariupol, he mentioned he walked 20 miles to verify on their home on the Left Financial institution. He handed corpses left on the facet of the street. When he reached his home, it was one of many few buildings nonetheless standing. Every little thing else was rubble.

“I used to be born on this road,” he mentioned. “I knew all these neighbors after they have been younger, how they sorted their homes, how they pruned their timber.

“It was all destroyed in two weeks.”

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Musk-Backed PAC Under Investigation for Potential Violations of Michigan Laws

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Musk-Backed PAC Under Investigation for Potential Violations of Michigan Laws
(Reuters) – A political action committee backed by billionaire Elon Musk is under investigation in Michigan for possible violations of state laws, a spokesperson for the Michigan secretary of state’s office said in a statement on Sunday. Tesla CEO Musk has previously said he did create a PAC focused …
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Biden to meet with national security team ahead of anticipated Iranian attack against Israel

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Biden to meet with national security team ahead of anticipated Iranian attack against Israel

President Biden will meet with his national security team in the Situation Room Monday ahead of an anticipated Iranian attack against Israel. 

Vice President Kamala Harris, the presumptive Democratic nominee, will also attend the meeting, the White House said.

The meeting came a day after Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III spoke with his counterpart in Israel Sunday to reiterate U.S. support for the Jewish state as tensions escalate with Iran and its proxies, threatening a wider regional war after 10 months of fighting Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.  

Austin and Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant discussed U.S. force posture moves that the Defense Department is taking to bolster protection for U.S. forces in the region, support the defense of Israel, and deter and de-escalate broader tensions in the region, according to readout from the Pentagon. 

A map depicting U.S. Navy assets stationed in the Middle East.  (Fox News)

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That meeting came as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a Cabinet meeting Sunday that Israel is already in a “multi-front war” with Iran and its proxies.

Tensions in the region are already at all-time highs after last week’s killing of a senior Hezbollah commander in Lebanon and Hamas’ top political leader in Iran. Iran and its allies have blamed Israel and threatened retaliation. Hamas said it has begun discussions on choosing a new leader.

ISRAEL PREPARES FOR IRAN ATTACK AMID WARNINGS THAT REGIME IS CLOSE TO HAVING NUCLEAR WEAPON: ‘UNNERVING’

Netanyahu said Israel was ready for any scenario. Jordan’s foreign minister was making a rare trip to Iran as part of diplomatic efforts — “We want the escalation to end,” Ayman Safadi said.

Meanwhile, Secretary of State Antony Blinken reportedly told his counterparts on Sunday that Iran and Hezbollah could attack Israel as early as Monday, per Axios. 

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Lebanon after Israeli air strikes.

Smoke rises after a strike in an area in Lebanon next to the Israeli-Lebanese border at the Galilee region, as seen from the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2024.  (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

Gen. Michael Erik Kurilla, head of the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) is expected to arrive in Israel Monday to coordinate preparations for the anticipated attack, according to the Times of Israel. 

Israeli airstrike in Lebanon

A worker walks by debris as a backhoe removes rubble from a building that was damaged by an Israeli airstrike on Tuesday evening in a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. (AP/Hussein Malla)

In Israel, some prepared bomb shelters and recalled Iran’s unprecedented direct military assault in April following a suspected Israeli strike that killed two Iranian generals. Israel said almost all the drones and ballistic and cruise missiles were intercepted.

“For years, Iran has been arming and financing terrorist organizations across the Middle East, including smuggling explosives into Israeli territory for terror attacks against civilians,” IDF Spokesperson, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said in a statement. “The IDF and ISA have already thwarted numerous attacks in which Claymore type explosives were smuggled into the country’s territory. We are determined to continue acting against Iranian terrorism wherever it may be.”

The war in Gaza was triggered by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel that killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took around 250 people hostage. Israel’s brutal retaliation has led to the deaths of nearly 40,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

Heavy airstrikes and ground operations have caused widespread destruction and displaced the vast majority of Gaza’s 2.3 million people.

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The militant group Hezbollah and Israel have continued to trade fire along the Lebanon border since the war began, with the severity growing in recent months. Hezbollah said it’s aimed at relieving pressure on fellow Iran-backed ally Hamas.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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EU Commissioner and RAI top management: A sticky August for Meloni

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EU Commissioner and RAI top management: A sticky August for Meloni
This article was originally published in Italian

The Italian Prime Minister is wrestling with choices over who to nominate as the next EU Commissioner, and the new Board of Directors of the public media network RAI. Both choices involve wrangling within her coalition, and were complicated by the recent EU rule of law report.

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It will not be an August of holidays and relaxation for Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. By 30 August the Italian prime minister must submit nominations to the European Commission for the European executive: a crucial appointment for Meloni. For months she has been aiming for a position of weight for Italy, preferably an economic portfolio, but the match is not a foregone conclusion since her influence and that of her European Conservatives and Reformists group has been reduced in Brussels.

Before that decision, theoretically by Friday, when parliamentary work closes for the summer holidays, the premier must appoint the new top management to public broadcaster RAI. This decision has now become urgent following the announcement on 24 July of RAI president Marinella Soldi’s resignation.

The two apparently discrete decisions are more intertwined than they appear. Firstly by the publication in late July of the European Commission’s report on the rule of law, which put the management of RAI by Italian politics under the magnifying glass. And secondly by the delicate relationship of Meloni with her coalition allies in the government majority, united in Italy but aligned in three different groups in Europe.

The (bumpy) race for the economic portfolio in the EU Commission

Although Italy has not yet formally presented its candidatures in Brussels, the most cited name is that of the current Minister for European Affairs, Raffaele Fitto, former vice-president of the European Conservatives and Reformists group in the European Parliament.

For him – or whoever she chooses – Meloni would like the Cohesion portfolio, the commissioner who will manage one third of the Union’s budget, oversee the Recovery fund and manage the plan to reduce administrative burdens.

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But regardless of the candidate, Meloni’s ambitions could founder over recent frictions with Brussels and, in particular, with re-elected European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

The Italian premier first challenged the six recommendations to Italy in a letter and then, in a press conference from Beijing, contained in the Commission’s report on the development of the rule of law in the member states.

‘Dear Ursula’: Meloni’s letter on political interference at RAI

What ired Meloni enough to address a letter personally to von der Leyen from China, where she was on an official visit from 28 to 31 July, was the section on freedom of the press and freedom of expression in Italy, in which Brussels said it was concerned about cases of intimidation of journalists by politicians, the lack of protection of professional secrecy and journalistic sources, the delay in reforming the law on defamation, as well as interference by politicians in RAI.

In her ‘dear Ursula’ letter, Meloni claimed that “the recommendations to Italy do not particularly differ from those of previous years,** however for the first time the content of this document has been distorted for political use by some in an attempt to attack the Italian government”, she wrote, in a thinly veiled reference to the opposition and the newspapers most critical of the right-wing executive.

Then she dwelt on the three points she considered most critical, all concerning RAI and the interference of the political class in the management and editorial line of the public broadcast network, denying bias on the part of her government.

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“We have received Meloni’s letter and we are evaluating it,” spokeswoman Anitta Hipper said on 30 July, stressing that the report is the “result” of consultations with the member states themselves and thus individual national governments. Meloni, returning to the issue in the first press point from Beijing on the same day, was keen to specify that the letter was nothing more than a ‘common reflection’ and that relations with the European Commission are not deteriorating.

Meloni’s rise and fall in Brussels

Perhaps so, but the episode certainly does not come at a rosy moment. In less than two months, the President of the Council has seen her newly gained influence in Brussels decline, and there is no doubt that she has had to take a few blows.

In the run-up to the European elections Meloni was courted by both the extreme right and von der Leyen – who had even said she was willing to welcome Fratelli d’Italia into the EPP – and was now considered the post-vote kingmaker. She who, thanks to the success in the polls of the ultra-conservatives, could have moved the Union to the right, and demanded for the members of her group some high office.

But then the extreme right did not break through, the traditional groups in the European parliament were able to re-establish and decide on new appointments. Meloni protested, tried unsuccessfully to influence the decision-making process, and then found herself forced by circumstances to oppose von der Leyen’s re-election, taking Italy out of the European majority for the first time.

According to the premier, all this will have no repercussions on appointments to the European executive: “I am talking to von der Leyen,” Meloni assured from China. But the Financial Times has ascribed recent events as showing ‘signs of subsidence’ in the relationship between Rome and Brussels, saying the choice of commissioner will be a ‘key test’ of Meloni’s reputation in the EU.

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Meloni’s problems do not end there, however. Complicating the political game in Brussels – and in Rome – is the relationship with her government allies, with Lega’s Matteo Salvini trying to corner her in order to steal votes from her on the right. It is also because of these internal tensions within the Italian majority that Meloni could not support her ‘friend Ursula’.

Now she will need the approval of her Lega and Forza Italia coalition partners to propose candidates for the Commission, a situation in which mediation is necessary and, perhaps, also concessions on other dossiers, such as those Rai appointments.

The stalemate on RAI top appointments

The RAI dossier has been on the Prime Minister’s calendar for weeks, but the game has been accelerated by Soldi’s resignation, which came at the worst possible moment. RAI has never been so much in the spotlight since the time of the second Berlusconi government, in Italy and in Europe. Because of the fuss raised by the Brussels rule of law report and the numerous accusations of interference in the editorial line of the public network – now dubbed “TeleMeloni” by opposition and critics.

Several members of the Democratic Party, the 5-Star Movement and the Green Left Alliance criticised the Prime Minister’s ‘irritating’ and ‘victimising’ remarks in her letter to von der Leyen, asking Meloni to appear before the RAI supervisory commission to give explanations. They are now questioning the possible connection of the affair with the appointments of the new board of directors, taking the opportunity to call for a reform of RAI governance.

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Others considered that the letter indicated the prime minister’s desire to speed up the appointments: addressed more to domestic public opinion than to a European institutional interlocutor, an attempt to counter opposition narrative on bias within RAI and to overcome the stalemate affecting those imminent board appointments.

In fact the coalition remains far off even agreeing on the day to vote on the members of the board of directors, the first of several steps required to arrive at the new command structure of the network.

The League is pushing for a prominent position and may be satisfied

The Chamber of Deputies and the Senate must choose two board members each, two others are appointed by the Council of Ministers on the proposal of the Minister of the Economy and one by RAI employees. After the vote, the new board of directors meets to elect the CEO and indicate the president, which must then be submitted to the Parliamentary Supervisory Commission for a vote.

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Meloni’s Fratelli d’Italia would like to close the issue before the summer break, but many in the coalition’s governing majority, especially the League, would like to postpone everything until September. A meeting of the parliamentary group leaders is scheduled for today to set a date for the vote, and according to Ansa, citing internal sources, a centre-right summit is also set to be held to take stock of the dossier.

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The thorny issue remains the appointment of the new RAI president. According to ANSA, the Italian press agency, Meloni will try to close the circle on the names, starting with the president, who must have the endorsement of two-thirds of the Supervisory Commission with the necessary help, therefore, of part of the opposition.

According to this thesis, Fratelli would accept Simona Agnes (nominated by Forza Italia) as president and Giampaolo Rossi (its own nominee) as managing director, while the League would have a councillor.

Salvini, however, is pushing to nominate the director general and others are convinced that in the end one of the current production directors will take the leadership.

The RAI nomination game is an internal one, but one that could end up weighing on the European front if there is no agreement between the majority parties and the decision-making drags on.

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