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Kyiv, battered by Russian shelling, to welcome 3 European prime ministers before 35-hour curfew takes effect

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Kyiv, battered by Russian shelling, to welcome 3 European prime ministers before 35-hour curfew takes effect

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Three European leaders are anticipated to journey to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv on Tuesday earlier than a 35-hour curfew for civilians takes impact as Russian forces advance and the town is below sustained shelling.  

The prime ministers of Poland, Slovenia and the Czech Republic – all NATO member international locations – are to fulfill with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Ukraine Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal. 

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki tweeted on Tuesday that he and his deputy prime minister, Jarosław Kaczyński, in addition to Czech Republic Prime Minister Petr Fiala and Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša could be touring to Kyiv as representatives of the European Council. 

PUTIN MOVES TO SEIZE FOREIGN PLANES, ZELENSKYY SAYS FLEEING RUSSIANS ‘SUPPLY’ HIS ARMY: LIVE UPDATES 

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“Europe should assure Ukraine’s independence and be certain that it is able to assist in Ukraine’s reconstruction,” he wrote. 

The Polish authorities additionally introduced the journey in a press release in English on their web site. 

“The go to is organized in session with the President of the European Council Charles Michel and the President of the European Fee Ursula von der Leyen,” the federal government mentioned. 

“The aim of the go to is to verify the unequivocal assist of your complete European Union for the sovereignty and independence of Ukraine,” the assertion continued. “The purpose of this go to can also be to current a broad package deal of assist for the Ukraine and Ukrainians. Worldwide neighborhood has been knowledgeable concerning the go to by worldwide organizations, i.a. the UN.” 

In the meantime, Zelenskyy, showing just about, addressed leaders of the UK Joint Expeditionary Power (JEF). 

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“We will nonetheless cease the killing of individuals and that’s one thing we will do collectively — cease the destruction of democracy and do it now on our land or else they may also come to you,” he mentioned Tuesday throughout the assembly hosted by U.Okay. Prime Minister Boris Johnson. 

Leaders of Denmark, Finland, Estonia, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Sweden and Norway attended in-person on the Lancaster Home in London.   

Zelenskyy is in search of to increase martial legislation till April 24 and to require males ages 18 to 60 to remain within the nation to combat. Ukraine’s parliament is predicted to vote on the measure this week.

The Ukrainian chief appealed for extra weapons to counter Russia’s army. He mentioned Ukraine’s forces are quickly utilizing up weapons and different {hardware} provided by Western nations, and he requested northern European leaders to “assist your self by serving to us.”

This comes earlier than a 35-hour curfew is to enter impact in Kyiv on Tuesday night. 

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When Russia launched the struggle three weeks in the past, worry of an imminent invasion gripped the Ukrainian capital, and residents slept in subway stations or crammed onto trains to flee the town. However because the Russian offensive turned slowed down, Kyiv noticed a relative lull. U.S. officers say Russian forces had been about 9 miles from the middle of the town as of Monday, based on The Related Press. 

However giant explosions thundered throughout Kyiv earlier than daybreak Tuesday from what Ukrainian authorities mentioned had been artillery strikes. Zelenskyy mentioned barrages hit 4 multi-story buildings within the metropolis and induced dozens of deaths. 

The early morning shelling hit the Svyatoshynskyi district of western Kyiv, adjoining to the suburb of Irpin, which has seen a number of the worst battles of the struggle. Flames shot out of the 15-story condo constructing and smoke choked the air as firefighters climbed ladders to rescue folks. The assault blackened a number of flooring of the constructing, ripped a gap within the floor outdoors and blew out home windows in neighboring condo blocks.

In a message posted to Telegram, Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko mentioned the curfew takes impact at 8 p.m. Tuesday and ends at 7 am. Thursday. Asserting army command’s resolution, he warned that motion all through the town with out particular passes was prohibited except persons are headed to bomb shelters.

“At the moment is a tough and harmful second,” he mentioned. 

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He mentioned civilians ought to put together to not go away residence for 2 days, except sirens warning of air raids go off. Then, in that case, residents must be ready to not go away shelters throughout that time-period. 

“The capital – the center of Ukraine – will probably be defended!” Klitschko added. “And Kyiv, which right now is an emblem and outpost of European freedom and safety, we won’t surrender! We won’t be delivered to our knees! At the moment the efforts of each Kyivan are vital.” 

Klitschko appealed to the lads of Kyiv to “come again” and defend their metropolis and mentioned volunteers had been wanted to construct fortifications and put together and ship meals for defenders and susceptible residents. 

“Males of Kiev! Come again! We have to shield our metropolis and our future!” he mentioned. “As an alternative of sitting someplace and sympathizing! Ukrainians have proven the world their braveness and willingness to combat for his or her land. Solely collectively we’ll survive! Glory to Ukraine!” 

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The U.N. has described the flood of individuals crossing into Poland and different neighboring international locations as Europe’s largest refugee disaster since World Battle II.

The Worldwide Group for Migration revealed on Tuesday that greater than 3 million folks have fled Ukraine since Russia invaded, based on The Related Press. 

Russian and Ukrainian negotiators additionally deliberate to carry a second day of talks as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine reached its twentieth day. The Ukrainian authorities mentioned new support and evacuation efforts would happen Tuesday alongside 9 corridors across the nation, together with the Kyiv area. However previous evacuation makes an attempt have repeatedly failed amid continued combating.

The Worldwide Committee of the Purple Cross mentioned an evacuation involving 30 buses was deliberate from Sumy in northeast Ukraine. The group mentioned it nonetheless had not gotten support to Mariupol, an encircled port metropolis of 430,000 the place native officers estimate a deadly siege has killed greater than 2,300 folks and left residents determined for meals, water, warmth and drugs.

The Related Press contributed to this report. 

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Monday’s Vikings-Rams NFL Playoff Game Moved to Arizona Due to L.A. Wildfires

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Monday’s Vikings-Rams NFL Playoff Game Moved to Arizona Due to L.A. Wildfires


Vikings Rams Game Moved to Arizona, NFL Playoffs, L.A. Wildfires



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Details of Venezuelan opposition leader's possible arrest remain unclear amid Maduro inauguration resistance

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Details of Venezuelan opposition leader's possible arrest remain unclear amid Maduro inauguration resistance

Aides to Venezuela opposition leader Maria Corina Machado said she was detained Thursday, followed moments later by official denials, in a confusing episode that capped a day of protests seeking to block President Nicolás Maduro from clinging to power.

It’s not clear exactly what transpired after Machado bid farewell to hundreds of supporters, hopped on a motorcycle and raced with her security convoy through the empty streets of eastern Caracas to an undisclosed location.

At 3:21 p.m. local time, Machado’s press team said in a social media post that security forces “violently intercepted” her convoy. Her aides later confirmed to The Associated Press that the opposition hardliner had been detained, and international condemnation immediately poured from leaders in Latin America and beyond demanding her release.

But about an hour later, a 20-second video of Machado was posted online by a Maduro supporter in which the opposition leader said she was followed after leaving the rally and that she had dropped her purse. “I’m good, I’m safe,” Machado said in a raspy voice, adding “Venezuela will be free.”

THOUSANDS OF VENEZUELAN OPPOSITION SUPPORTERS TAKE TO THE STREETS AHEAD OF MADURO’S THIRD INAUGURATION

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Her aides later said in a social media post that the proof-of-of-life video message had been coerced, and that after recording it she was freed. They said she would provide details of her “kidnapping” later.

Meanwhile, Maduro supporters denied that she was detained and gloated that government opponents were trying to spread fake news to generate an international crisis. “Nobody should be surprised,” Communications Minister Freddy Nanez said. “Especially since it’s coming from the fascists, who were the architects of the dirty trick.”

Earlier Thursday, Machado addressed hundreds of supporters who heeded her call to take to the streets a day before the ruling party-controlled National Assembly was scheduled to swear in Maduro to a third six-year term despite credible evidence that he lost the presidential election.

“They wanted us to fight each other, but Venezuela is united, we are not afraid,” Machado shouted from atop a truck in the capital minutes before she was reported detained.

Machado, 57, is a hardliner former lawmaker who stayed and fought against Maduro even after many of her allies in the opposition leadership fled, joining an exodus of some 7 million Venezuelans who’ve abandoned their homeland in recent years.

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Loyalists who control the country’s judiciary banned her from running against Maduro last year. In a deft move, she backed an unknown outsider — retired diplomat Edmundo González — who crushed Maduro by a more than two-to-one margin, according to voting machine records collected by the opposition and validated by international observers.

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado addresses supporters at a protest against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025, the day before his inauguration for a third term. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

González, invoking the title of president-elect recognized by the U.S. and other countries, was among those who demanded Machado’s release in the immediate aftermath of what was believed to be her shock arrest.

“To the security forces, I warn you: don’t play with fire,” he said in a social media post from the Dominican Republic, where he met with President Luis Abinader and a delegation of former presidents from across Latin America.

There was a relatively small turnout for Thursday’s protests as riot police were deployed in force. Venezuelans who’ve witnessed Maduro’s security forces round up scores of opponents and regular bystanders since the July election were reluctant to mobilize in the same numbers as they have in the past.

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“Of course, there’s fewer people,” said empanada vendor Miguel Contrera as National Guard soldiers carrying riot shields buzzed by on motorcycles. “There’s fear.”

Those demonstrators that did show up blocked a main avenue in one opposition stronghold. Many were senior citizens and dressed in red, yellow and blue, answering Machado’s call to wear the colors of the Venezuelan flag. All repudiated Maduro and said they would recognize González as Venezuela’s legitimate president.

The deployment of security forces as well as pro-government armed groups known as “colectivos” to intimidate opponents betrays a deep insecurity on the part of Maduro, said Javier Corrales, a Latin America expert at Amherst College.

Since the elections, the government has arrested more than 2,000 people — including as many as 10 Americans and other foreigners — who it claims have been plotting to oust Maduro and sow chaos in the oil rich South American nation. This week alone, masked gunmen arrested a former presidential candidate, a prominent free speech activist and even González’s son-in-law as he was taking his young children to school.

“It’s an impressive show of force but it’s also a sign of weakness,” said Corrales, who co-authored this month an article, “How Maduro Stole Venezuela’s Vote,” in the Journal of Democracy.

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“Maduro is safe in office,” said Corrales, “but he and his allies recognize they are moving forward with a big lie and have no other way to justify what they are doing except by relying on the military.”

Venezuela’s National Electoral Council, also stacked with government loyalists, declared Maduro the winner of the election. But unlike in previous contests, authorities did not provide any access to voting records or precinct-level results.

The opposition, however, collected tally sheets from 85% of electronic voting machines and posted them online. They showed that its candidate, González, had thrashed Maduro by a more than two-to-one margin. Experts from the United Nations and the Atlanta-based Carter Center, both invited by Maduro’s government to observe the election, have said the tally sheets published by the opposition are legitimate.

The U.S. and other governments have also recognized González as Venezuela’s president-elect. Even many of Maduro’s former leftist allies in Latin America plan to skip Friday’s swearing-in ceremony.

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President Joe Biden, meeting González at the White House this week, praised the previously unknown retired diplomat for having “inspired millions.”

“The people of Venezuela deserve a peaceful transfer of power to the true winner of their presidential election,” Biden said following the meeting.

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‘Much more persecution’: Venezuela braces for Nicolas Maduro’s inauguration

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‘Much more persecution’: Venezuela braces for Nicolas Maduro’s inauguration

Bogota, Colombia – Jesus Medina Ezaine had already spent 16 months in a Venezuelan military prison, accused of crimes he said were related to his work as a photojournalist.

But another prison stint seemed imminent, particularly after the contested re-election of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

With Maduro set to be sworn in for a third term, Medina, 43, made a difficult decision: to flee his home in Venezuela for the relative safety of Bogota, the capital of neighbouring Colombia.

“Before they could put me back in prison, I decided to escape,” said Medina.

Maduro’s government has long faced criticism for the alleged repression of political rivals. But Friday’s inauguration ceremony is set to bring the recent electoral crisis to a head, with observers warning that the violence may escalate as Maduro strives to hold onto power.

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“The regime  is going to do everything they can to ensure that Maduro can be re-inaugurated and that he can continue with his administration,” said Juan Pappier, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Americas division.

“If they see that possibility challenged in any way, for example through [opposition-led] demonstrations, they are going to repress them brutally.”

Jesus Medina Ezaine spent 16 months in a Venezuelan military prison from 2018 to 2020 [Christina Noriega/Al Jazeera]

A climate of fear

Medina remembers his final months in Venezuela as being drenched in fear.

In the lead-up to the controversial election, he had joined the campaign of opposition leader Maria Corina Machado as a photographer, documenting her efforts to galvanise support for presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez.

But that work once again made him a target.

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Medina was not unknown to the Maduro government: In 2018, he was arrested on charges of money laundering, criminal association and inciting hate, all of which he denies.

Instead, he maintains his arrest was in retaliation for his reporting on human rights abuses. He was held without trial in the Ramo Verde military prison until January 2020.

“The Venezuelan regime does not tolerate any comments or information against them,” he said.

“The media is scared,” Medina added. “Freedom of expression in Venezuela has been completely lost because journalists inside Venezuela are doing what they can to avoid imprisonment.”

But the presidential election on July 28, 2024, brought political repression worse than any Medina had witnessed before.

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Hours after polls closed, the National Electoral Council named Maduro the winner, without offering its usual breakdown of voting tallies.

Meanwhile, the opposition published receipts of the votes that instead suggested Gonzalez had won the election with nearly 70 percent of the vote. As protests erupted over the alleged electoral fraud, a government crackdown ensued.

As state forces swept the streets for protesters, seizing dissidents from their homes, Medina said he was tipped off that he would be jailed — again.

He quickly went into hiding. Medina spent two months holed up in different locations in the capital Caracas, trying to avoid arrest. He said the country’s intelligence forces had already knocked at the door of his home in the city.

Feeling cornered, Medina decided to flee on September 15 to Bogota, where he has stayed ever since.

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Jesus Medina crosses his arms, two tattoos stretching on the outside of his forearms: "Rebelde" and "Legion"
Jesus Medina Ezaine has said he hid from Venezuelan authorities for months before seeking refuge abroad [Christina Noriega/Al Jazeera]

A wave of repression

As many as 2,500 people were ultimately detained in the post-election protests, according to government statistics.

Another 25 people were killed, in what independent investigators for the United Nations called “unprecedented levels of violence”.

A UN fact-finding mission announced earlier this month that at least 56 political opposition activists, 10 journalists and one human rights defender were among the arrested between August and December.

On Tuesday, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights also published a report alleging systematic state repression intended “to prevent the political participation of the opposition” and “sow terror among citizens”.

But in the lead-up to Friday’s inauguration, more than 1,500 prisoners detained in the post-election sweep have been released, in what critics say could be an attempt to reduce scrutiny on the government’s human rights record.

Alfredo Romero, the director of Foro Penal, a Venezuelan human rights watchdog, explained that “having a number of innocent youths with their relatives, especially their mothers, at the door of the prisons” holding vigils was reflecting poorly on the Maduro administration.

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Rights groups have also questioned the accuracy of the government’s numbers.

Romero said that at least 1,749 prisoners remained in custody as of the first week of January, and more alleged dissidents had since been detained.

“People may be released from prison, but it doesn’t mean that new ones won’t be jailed,” he said.

Maria Corina Machado greets a crowd of supporters on January 9
Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado greets supporters at a protest against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, on January 9 [Ariana Cubillos/AP Photo]

Inauguration backlash

Despite widespread fear over repression, demonstrations are expected on the day of Maduro’s third inauguration.

Gonzalez, the opposition’s presidential candidate, has also pledged to return to Venezuela from his exile abroad and be sworn in on Friday. It is unclear how or if he will follow through on that pledge.

In a video message posted to social media on Sunday, Machado, who has remained in hiding in Venezuela for months, called on Venezuelans to march in support of a transition of power this week.

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“Maduro is not going to leave on his own, we must make him leave with the strength of a population that never gives up,” Machado said. “It is time to stand firm and make them understand that this is as far as they go. That this is over.”

In turn, the Maduro government has ramped up security and deployed more than 1,200 military personnel to cities across the country to “guarantee peace” on inauguration day.

The government has also detained more than 12 human rights defenders, political activists, and relatives of opposition figures in recent days, according to Amnesty International, a human rights organisation.

The detainments allegedly include Gonzalez’s son-in-law, Rafael Tudares: The presidential candidate said Tudares was abducted by masked men in Caracas on Tuesday.

And on Thursday, Machado herself was detained as she left an anti-Maduro protest, according to opposition officials who said her transportation was fired upon. She was swiftly released.

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Jesus Medina looks out an open window near a brick wall
Jesus Medina told Al Jazeera he plans to continue fighting for a better Venezuela [Christina Noriega/Al Jazeera]

An uncertain future

The recent arrests have prompted a new swell of international condemnation.

The United States Embassy in Venezuela has called the detention of Gonzalez’s son-in-law an act of “intimidation” against the opposition. Colombian President Gustavo Petro said that the arrests prevented him from attending Maduro’s inauguration on Friday.

Still, Maduro’s control of state institutions has allowed security forces to act with impunity, according to the recent report from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

Medina himself believes repression in Venezuela may escalate if Maduro remains in power for a third term.

“If we do not achieve freedom, there will be much more persecution,” said Medina. “They will try to put an end to everything that they consider the opposition, including political leaders and the media.”

For now, he added that he hopes to continue his work exposing human rights abuses from abroad.

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“What I have decided is that, no matter what, I’ll fight for my country.”

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