World
Fighting for Her Life, Far From Ukraine
A 5-year-old Ukrainian woman with a mind tumor was one in all a number of kids introduced for remedy in america after their nation was invaded by Russia.
MEMPHIS — When Russia invaded Ukraine, Marija Pyzhyk was nonetheless nervous primarily about her 5-year-old daughter, Khrystyna, who was being handled for a mind tumor. The household lived in Lviv, the western metropolis close to Poland, removed from the rockets raining down within the east.
Quickly, nevertheless, Ms. Pyzhyk was knowledgeable that the hospital was about to expire of the treatment to deal with her daughter; she must be evacuated instantly for care in a foreign country, the physician advised her.
“I had actually believed we might proceed our medical remedy in Ukraine,” Ms. Pyzhyk recalled.
Khrystyna’s situation, optic glioma, a most cancers commonest in younger kids, may cause blindness and even dying with out constant remedy to shrink or stabilize the tumor. Khrystyna requires each day oral chemotherapy.
On March 16, Ms. Pyzhyk, Khrystyna and her son, Sergei, 10, bid farewell to her husband, Volodymyr, and boarded a bus to Poland, the place they joined a number of different evacuated households with ailing kids. Whereas different households had been directed to hospitals throughout Europe, Ms. Pyzhyk and her kids had been advised they might be flown to america.
“We’re so removed from household and associates and our homeland,” Ms. Pyzhyk mentioned this week at a hospital in Memphis, the place her daughter is now a affected person. She didn’t hesitate, she mentioned, as a result of Khrystyna’s life relied on it.
Among the many hundreds of thousands of displaced Ukrainians are 1000’s of sick kids who might not be handled there. Greater than 400 Ukrainian pediatric most cancers sufferers have handed via Poland en path to medical facilities in different nations.
Khrystyna was amongst eight Ukrainian kids who arrived in late March at St. Jude Youngsters’s Analysis Hospital, an establishment specializing in childhood most cancers that’s funded by personal donors. The hospital had arrange a triage clinic in Poland to determine kids in want of care and place them with partnering hospitals, primarily in Europe.
“If all these kids stayed in Ukraine, they had been going to die of their illness, complication of the remedy of their illness, or battle,” Dr. James Downing, the chief government of St. Jude, mentioned in an interview.
Pediatric most cancers remedy requires a fast succession of medication with excessive depth, he mentioned. “Any interruption of remedy considerably will increase threat for failure, relapse and in the end dying from the illness. It’s a timing difficulty.”
Six days after that they had left Ukraine, the Pyzhyks checked right into a two-bedroom condominium at Goal Home, the Memphis hospital’s residential facility, with two suitcases and two small luggage.
After a go to to the hospital, throughout which Khrystyna acquired vaccinations required earlier than commencing her oral remedy, Dr. Ibrahim Qaddoumi requested his little Ukrainian affected person what the Barbie doll she acquired on the hospital was cooking. “Ukrainian borscht,” an interpreter replied.
On an outing later to a world market with two different households, Ms. Pyzhyk looked for buckwheat and bitter yogurt. As they ready to take a look at, the proprietor of the market mentioned they didn’t have to pay. “I’ve been via battle. Two of them,” he mentioned.
At their subsequent cease, an American-style grocery store, they had been dazzled by the big selection of produce. On the deli counter, staff provided them samples of salami. “Take your time,” one attendant mentioned.
Ms. Pyzhyk has been commonly getting ready Ukrainian dishes at their condominium. However Khrystyna and Sergei most get pleasure from consuming on the hospital cafe, the place they will order cheeseburgers, macaroni and cheese and even fried catfish, a Southern traditional. Their favourite is hen strips and fries.
Khrystyna is conscious that Ukraine is at battle, mentioned her mom. “It’s not possible for her to not know what’s going on. She was uncovered to air raid warnings,” she mentioned. “However I don’t suppose she is aware of what which means.”
Again house in Lviv, her husband has fretted about what is going on to his household on the opposite aspect of the world, however he mentioned in a cellphone name that his daughter has been courageous all through her yearslong remedy. “My daughter is a powerful persona,” he mentioned. “She is a real Ukrainian.”
Khrystyna and Sergei have a detailed and tender bond. He’s his sister’s protector, holding her hand once they enter the hospital, stroll to the physician’s workplace or sit down for English classes.
Sergei mentioned he beloved his sister from delivery. “I felt I had a brand new buddy for all times,” he mentioned. “I deal with her, however generally we argue like regular individuals. It by no means takes too lengthy for us to be associates once more.”
Russia-Ukraine Battle: Key Developments
He’s keenly conscious of his sister’s vulnerability. Glioma can have an effect on the attention, and Khrystyna’s left eyelid is half closed; the realm above her eye bulges barely.
Not lengthy after they arrived, Ms. Pyzhyk took her kids and Marya, one other Ukrainian youngster, on their first journey to a zoo. They lingered close to the giraffes, lions and zebras, in awe.
However by the top of the second week, the fact that they weren’t on a trip, and that house was very distant, began to set in.
“Will we fly house immediately?” Khrystyna requested her mom at dinner, solely to burst into tears when she heard the response. Sergei tried to consolation his sister, gently massaging her again.
World
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World
China reportedly building 'D-Day'-style barges as fears of Taiwan invasion rise
China is reportedly building a series of “D-Day style” barges that could be used to aid an invasion of Taiwan, according to media reports.
At least three of the new craft have been observed at Guangzhou Shipyard in southern China, according to Naval News.
The barges are inspired by the World War II “Mulberry harbours,” which were portable harbors built for the Allied campaign in Normandy, France, in 1944, The Telegraph reported.
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Tensions between China and Taiwan, a key U.S. partner in the Indo-Pacific region, have remained heightened over Beijing’s refusal to recognize the independence of the island nation.
In its report last week, Naval News said at least three but likely five or more barges were seen in China’s Guangzhou Shipyard. The barges, at over 390 feet, can be used to reach a coastal road or hard surface beyond a beach, the report said.
In his New Year’s message, Chinese leader Xi Jinping said “reunification” with Taiwan is inevitable.
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“The people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are one family. No one can sever our family bonds, and no one can stop the historical trend of national reunification,” he said on CCTV, China’s state broadcaster.
Using barges, Chinese forces could land in areas previously considered unsuitable, including rocky or soft terrain, and beaches where tanks and other heavy equipment can be delivered to firmer ground or a coastal road, the report said.
“Any invasion of Taiwan from the mainland would require a large number of ships to transport personnel and equipment across the strait quickly, particularly land assets like armored vehicles,” Emma Salisbury, a sea power research fellow at the Council on Geostrategy, told Naval News. “As preparation for an invasion, or at least to give China the option as leverage, I would expect to see a build-up of construction of ships that could accomplish this transportation.”
Fox News Digital has reached out to the Department of Defense, the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office, also in Washington.
World
Hunter Biden prosecutor chastises president for maligning justice system
Special Counsel David Weiss says president’s claims that his son was selectively prosecuted undermine rule of law.
The special counsel who indicted United States President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden has accused the outgoing president of undermining the justice system by claiming the prosecution was selective and unfair.
In his final report on the case released on Monday, Special Counsel David Weiss said the president’s claim that his son had been singled out for prosecution was “gratuitous and wrong”.
“Other presidents have pardoned family members, but in doing so, none have taken the occasion as an opportunity to malign the public servants at the Department of Justice based solely on false accusations,” Weiss said in the 280-page report.
Weiss, who was appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland to investigate the younger Biden, said the decisions to prosecute the president’s son were the result of impartial investigations and calling them into question undermined the “very foundation of what makes America’s justice system fair and equitable”.
“It erodes public confidence in an institution that is essential to preserving the rule of law,” Weiss said.
Weiss said that the prosecutions, far from being selective, were the “embodiment of the equal application of justice — no matter who you are, or what your last name is, you are subject to the same laws as everyone else in the United States”.
Under Justice Department regulations, special counsels submit a final report at the end of their probe.
The elder Biden issued a pardon for his son for firearms and tax convictions last month after previously pledging not to use his presidential authority to intervene.
The president said that any reasonable person looking at the facts of the cases would conclude that his son had been “selectively, and unfairly” prosecuted due to his family name.
“There has been an effort to break Hunter – who has been five and a half years sober, even in the face of unrelenting attacks and selective prosecution,” Biden said at the time.
Hunter Biden was in June found guilty of gun charges related to lying about his drug use on a background check form. In September, Biden pleaded guilty to evading $1.4m in taxes in a separate case.
He had been awaiting sentencing in the two cases when his father announced the pardon.
Hunter Biden’s lawyer criticised Weiss’s report, saying the special counsel had failed to explain why prosecutors “pursued wild — and debunked – conspiracies” about the president’s son.
“What is clear from this report is that the investigation into Hunter Biden is a cautionary tale of the abuse of prosecutorial power,” Abbe Lowell said in a statement.
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