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How the Czech Republic’s Vietnamese community is rallying for refugees

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“When the battle broke out, we thought we needed to do one thing,” remembers Nga Dao of Lam Cha Me, a Vietnamese neighborhood affiliation in Prague, the Czech capital.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24 sparked spontaneous neighborhood exercise throughout central Europe, to the place virtually 4 million million Ukrainian refugees have now fled.

For the Vietnamese neighborhood within the Czech Republic, who make up round one p.c of the inhabitants, it was no totally different.

“We contacted a number of different organizations to ask if we may assist with some issues,” Nga Dao explains. After amassing a truckload of garments for youngsters and ladies, donated by the Vietnamese neighborhood, they drove it to the gathering level however have been advised it was not accepting any extra donations.

So, as an alternative, they opened their very own distribution level. On Fb, they requested native enterprise homeowners if there was any free area; they got entry to an empty retailer subsequent to a metro station. Happily, it is just one cease away on the subway from the refugee registration level, says Nga Dao.

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When an attraction went out for donations, they have been inundated: meals; drink; child strollers; college luggage; diapers; and bathe gels. “Not solely do Vietnamese individuals usually convey gadgets to contribute, but additionally Czech passersby who see us there additionally come to assist. I really feel very grateful for this,” she provides.

In addition to handing out necessities, the workforce at Lam Cha Me additionally gives free Czech-language courses for Vietnamese kids who had arrived from Ukraine says Nga Dao. “The category has already began a number of classes, and hopefully they may quickly catch up at school.”

Greater than 300,000 Ukrainians have now entered the Czech Republic, the nation’s prime minister, Petr Fiala, advised parliament on March 23. Moreover, greater than 5,000 Vietnamese nationals have additionally left Ukraine for neighboring nations, with round 300 up to now touring to the Czech Republic, Thai Xuan Dung, the Vietnamese ambassador to Prague, advised Euronews final week.

He estimated that 7,000 Vietnamese individuals have been in Ukraine earlier than the battle broke out, with many having now returned to Vietnam due to flights placed on by the Hanoi authorities.

In accordance with Dung, his employees have collected greater than €20,000 in donations from the Vietnamese neighborhood within the Czech Republic because the battle started. Round half has been despatched to the Vietnamese embassies in Poland and Romania, the place a lot of the Vietnamese nationals have fled to from Ukraine, to assist purchase important provides.

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The remaining has been donated to native establishments, equivalent to Prague’s Hearth and Rescue Division, which is aiding Ukrainian refugees.

“This superbly reveals how properly built-in the Vietnamese neighborhood within the Czech Republic is,” says Lucie Pštrosová, a spokesperson for the Czech-Vietnamese Instructional Institute, a non-profit that has additionally supplied help to Ukrainian refugees. “It is nice to observe one minority assist the opposite,” she provides.

In accordance with a 2019 examine, Ukrainians make up the biggest share of the foreign-born inhabitants within the Czech Republic. After the Slovakians, the Vietnamese come third.

Estimates counsel that ethnic Vietnamese account for simply shy of 1 p.c of the nation’s inhabitants. Nguyen, probably the most prevalent Vietnamese surname, is now the eighth commonest within the Czech Republic. Pho, the normal Vietnamese soup, has turn into adopted as a Czech favourite.

Whereas many Vietnamese now dwelling in western Europe, equivalent to in France, fled the nation within the Seventies to flee the communist takeover of South Vietnam, most in central and jap Europe arrived within the Nineteen Eighties due to the friendship offers between Hanoi and the communist Japanese bloc.

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The Soviet Union — which Ukraine was a part of till 1991 — was considered one of Vietnam’s few buddies in the course of the Nineteen Eighties when it was seen as a world pariah. The richest man in Vietnam, Pham Nhat Vuong, the founding father of the sprawling VinGroup conglomerate, began out in enterprise promoting dried noodles in Kyiv.

Neighborhood relations within the Czech Republic improved tremendously in the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. Within the early months, Vietnamese neighborhood teams and associations have been fast to reply, from donating to native charities to stitching the fabric face-masks that have been generally worn within the nation.

In Ústí nad Labem area, within the northwest, the Vietnamese neighborhood raised greater than €30,000 to purchase synthetic ventilators for 3 native hospitals.

The neighborhood teams in Prague who spoke to Euronews didn’t need to discuss geopolitics. Russia is the biggest provider of army arms to Vietnam, and shut bilateral relations date again to the Soviet Union, when Moscow was one of many few buddies of communist Vietnam after the Seventies. At two votes this month within the UN Basic Meeting to reprimand Russia for its invasion, Vietnam abstained.

“The Vietnamese authorities has been attempting to be impartial on the difficulty,” says Le Hong Hiep, a senior fellow on the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, a think-tank in Singapore. But Vietnam’s ruling Communist Celebration has not taken such a strict

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line internally. Vietnam’s state-run media has relative freedom to report on the battle, Hiep famous, and public opinion is split.

“Whereas nearly all of the individuals condemn Russia and Putin for the invasion of Ukraine, some persons are sympathetic with them and blame NATO and the US for ignoring Russia’s safety considerations,” he stated. “Some even blame Zelenskyy and his authorities for being naïve and ignorant, which created this disaster for themselves.”

For Vietnamese nationals dwelling in Europe, with far larger entry to impartial media and nearer to the battle, anecdotal proof suggests there may be way more opposition to Putin’s invasion. However geopolitics and questions of who-is-to-blame are secondary. For a lot of, the response is about widespread humanity.

“I believe the present actions to assist and help refugees are occurring in all places, not simply within the Vietnamese neighborhood within the Czech Republic,” says Nga Dao, of the Lam Cha Me group. “That’s the motion of the individuals within the civilized world.”

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GameStop is becoming a poorly run bank

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GameStop is becoming a poorly run bank
GameStop’s actual business – selling video games and associated paraphernalia – isn’t doing so hot. Its other business – earning interest on cash that was handed over irrationally – is helping. But that makes GameStop more akin to a bank than a retailer. Shareholders would be better off sticking with an actual savings account.
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WikiLeaks’ Assange is free after pleading guilty in deal with Justice Department

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WikiLeaks’ Assange is free after pleading guilty in deal with Justice Department

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WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange pleaded guilty Tuesday in connection with a deal with federal prosecutors to close a drawn-out legal saga related to the leaking of military secrets that raised divisive questions about press freedom, national security and the traditional bounds of journalism.

The plea to a single count of conspiring to obtain and disclose information related to the national defense was entered Wednesday morning in federal court in Saipan, the capital of the Northern Mariana Islands, an American territory in the Pacific.

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WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, second from right, arrives at the United States courthouse where he is expected to enter a plea deal in Saipan, Mariana Islands, Wednesday, June 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko) (AP )

Assange said that he believed that the Espionage Act under which he was charged contradicted his First Amendment rights but that he accepted that encouraging sources to provide classified information for publication can be unlawful.

“I believe the First Amendment and the Espionage Act are in contradiction with each other but I accept that it would be difficult to win such a case given all these circumstances,” he reportedly said in court. 

Under the terms of the deal, Assange is permitted to return to his native Australia without spending any time in an American prison. He had been jailed in the United Kingdom for the last five years, while fighting extradition to the United States.

A conviction could have resulted in a lengthy prison sentence. 

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AUSTRALIAN LAWMAKERS SEND LETTER URGING BIDEN TO DROP CASE AGAINST JULIAN ASSANGE ON WORLD PRESS FREEDOM DAY

Julian Assange after being released from prison

Screen grab taken from the X account of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange following his release from prison on Tuesday June 25, 2024. Assange has arrived in Saipan ahead of an expected guilty plea in a deal with the U.S. Justice Department that will set him free to return home to Australia. (@WikiLeaks, via AP)

WikiLeaks, the secret-spilling website that Assange founded in 2006, applauded the announcement of the deal, saying it was grateful for “all who stood by us, fought for us, and remained utterly committed in the fight for his freedom.”

Federal prosecutors said Assange conspired with Chelsea Manning, then a U.S. Army intelligence analyst, to steal diplomatic cables and military files published in 2010 by WikiLeaks. Prosecutors had accused Assange of damaging national security by publishing documents that harmed the U.S. and its allies and aided its adversaries.

Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison. President Barack Obama commuted the sentence in 2017 in the final days of his presidency.

Assange has been celebrated by free press advocates as a transparency crusader but heavily criticized by national security hawks who say he put lives at risk and operated far beyond the bounds of journalism.  

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SUPPORTERS OF JULIAN ASSANGE RALLY AT JUSTICE DEPT. ON 4-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF DETAINMENT

Julian Assange boarding a plane

Julian Assange seen boarding an airplane. (Getty Images)

Weeks after the 2010 document cache, Swedish prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for Assange for allegedly raping a woman and an allegation of molestation. The case was later dropped. Assange has always maintained his innocence. 

In 2012, he took refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he claimed asylum on the grounds of political persecution, and spent the following seven years in self-exile there. 

The Ecuadorian government in 2019 allowed the British police to arrest Assange and he remained in custody for the next five years while fighting extradition to the U.S. 

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The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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France elections: Germans prepare for seismic change in EU politics

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France elections: Germans prepare for seismic change in EU politics

As France gears up for the shocking snap elections that French President Emmanuel Macron called during the EU elections, Germans are preparing for a seismic change in EU politics.

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With the upcoming French elections just around the corner, Germany is bracing itself for the results, which are expected to swing to the right.

Climate, migration and gender equality policies are likely to be affected on a national level in France if far-right Marine Le Pen’s National Rally party wins. Yet, political scientist Prof Dr Miriam Hartlapp warned the effects could ripple across the European Union.

“Policymaking in Brussels will change because members of this right-wing populist party could sit in the Council of Ministers. This creates a different situation for countries like Germany and other European nations,” Hartlapp said.

“France is not a small member state, but a large and important one. We can expect that European climate policy, asylum and migration policy, and gender equality policy at the European level will then look different,” she added.

Hartlapp said the swing to the right has spread across Europe as the dissatisfaction with current governments is reflected in the political climate.

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Germans are aware of the changes and this “causes concern,” Harlapp said, pointing at German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s recent interview where he said he hopes “that parties that are not [Marine] Le Pen, to put it that way, are successful in the election. But that is for the French people to decide.”

Hartlapp added that the EU can expect immigration-related cases to be brought to the European Court of Justice.

“Some points in the National Rally‘s program clearly contradict the fundamental rights of the European constitution. For example, immigrants in France not having the same rights as French citizens when it comes to housing and social benefits. This directly contradicts EU law,” she said.

Meanwhile, in Germany, individual politicians from the far-right party Alternative for Germany (AfD) and extreme-right Die Heimat announced their plans to form factions in the eastern state of Brandenburg this week, after AfD outperformed all of the parties in the ruling coalition government during the EU elections.

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