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Meet the Italian who drove 3,200-km to pick up Ukrainian refugees

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Meet the Italian who drove 3,200-km to pick up Ukrainian refugees

Public help for taking in Ukrainian refugees, like in lots of different elements of Europe, is powerful in Italy, with one current ballot suggesting greater than four-in-five individuals have been in favour.

On-line the sentiment is identical. One Fb group for Ukrainians in Italy has seen a surge in presents for lodging and jobs since Russia’s invasion.

The political class in Rome, too, has shortly mobilised in its help for Ukrainians, whereas donations to a fund for these fleeing are nearing €4 million.

However few Italians have gone to the lengths of Daniele Bellofiore.

The Turin-born 44-year-old has many years of expertise in hospitality and humanitarian work. After abandoning a regulation diploma and a job in IT, each of which have been far faraway from his targets, he determined to attach his ardour for nature and serving to others by transferring to Kenya and Tanzania, the place he arrange two associations to help small companies and craftspeople. He spent 12 years there after which moved again to Italy, opening a B&B in Tuscany, which he runs to at the present time.

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Following Russia’s assault on Ukraine and the next humanitarian disaster, Bellofiore was left feeling profoundly involved. But it was an in depth Ukrainian household pal – Oleg, a doorman in his mom’s residence block in Rome – who triggered him into taking motion.

“On the primary night time of the conflict, I requested him how I might assist, and if there was somebody I might assist,” Bellofiore instructed Euronews. “A number of days later, he instructed me he knew some individuals who wished to flee.”

Bellofiore would later uncover that these people had managed to flee, however that there was one one who hoped to rescue their cousin. By then, Oleg’s phrases had phrases strengthened Bellofiore’s resolve, and his intentions have been set. With none monetary backing apart from a number of donations from pals, Bellofiore spent the times rousing help and getting a bunch collectively to plan a street journey to Poland.

‘It was a complete emergency, indescribable’

On the morning of 6 March, Bellofiore and his workforce left the Tuscan city of Siena. The group introduced medical provides, meals, garments, blankets and different requirements and met up with different helpers alongside the journey up the peninsula. The convoy had eight individuals in six vehicles.

After stopping for the night time in Vienna, Bellofiore made it to the Polish border metropolis of Przemyśl, fewer than 100 kilometres from Lviv, by Monday afternoon. They left their provides and went to the makeshift Tesco refugee centre, the place Bellofiore witnessed scenes that left him profoundly distressed.

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“What I noticed there’s corresponding to what I witnessed in my time in Africa,” he recounted. “It was a complete emergency. It was indescribable.”

The next day, the workforce dispersed to different cities like Medyka, finally managing to choose up between 10 and 20 individuals, in keeping with estimates from totally different workforce members.

Bellofiore himself accompanied an 84-year-old woman, who was affected by visible impairment, her youthful niece, and her two canine, to convey them to Italy, lastly making it again to Rome on Wednesday. “Terrified and in a state of utter anxiousness” initially of their journey, by the tip, Bellofiore recounts how they have been instructing him Ukrainian songs and singing collectively.

Being the primary street journey of this type, the logistical channels alongside the 1000’s of kilometres have been a number of. However Bellofiore’s plans don’t finish there, as he’s promptly anticipating to embark upon a second journey on 13 March. This time, he’s planning one thing larger – extra individuals, higher coordination, and a minivan to assist issues alongside.

Amongst others, Stefano Torrelli can also be planning to hitch Bellofiore once more on Sunday. The 33-year-old native of Reggio Emilia, in northern Italy, instructed Euronews he was left “unable to sleep or work” upon listening to the information of Ukraine’s invasion. He discovered Bellofiore’s initiative on Fb – which instantly urged him to hitch within the effort.

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“We introduced as many as attainable who wanted to return to Italy with our vehicles, all of them having to go to totally different locations,” he acknowledged. “We noticed the concern and the uncertainty in individuals’s eyes, we noticed individuals who should have handed unimaginable horrors. For our subsequent journey, we’re planning to have an even bigger automotive, vans, and to assist much more individuals.”

Throughout and following his journey, Bellofiore is documenting every part on social media, sharing movies on his Fb web page (titled “Daniele Unpostonelmondo”, after the identify of his B&B). However whereas the feedback and likes – which embody messages of gratitude from the kin of these he’s helped – nonetheless stay within the double digits, his initiative is spreading quickly, to the purpose that he’s now inundated with lots of of messages and requests.

“We speak about [refugees] as in the event that they’re packages to move from one place to a different,” Bellofiore lamented. “However these are people, every of whom have their wants. As a part of this mission, we attempt to assist these individuals discover their internal peace proper from the beginning of the journey itself.”

‘Individuals again residence are terrified’

Peering from behind a busy freeway in Rebibbia – Rome’s much-maligned jail neighbourhood – a small Ukrainian flag flaps violently within the gelid northerly winds which have been freezing the Italian capital for the previous few weeks.

Apart from the pole, an enclosed alleyway resulting in a small bungalow reveals a bilingual poster promoting a Ukrainian restaurant after which an indication: Associazione Cristiana Culturale Italo Ucraina (Italo-Ukrainian Christian Cultural Affiliation).

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Whereas nondescript in its look, the gate conceals one of many predominant organisations on the forefront of a Herculean effort to help Ukrainian refugees fleeing to Italy.

From effectively earlier than the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the centre – based by a former Italian Marine, Mario Tronca – has been helping and internet hosting Ukrainians wanting to return to Italy.

But arrivals have dramatically multiplied since Russia despatched its troops in.

Because the solar begins to set, one other coach loaded with passengers makes its manner into the centre’s sprawling automotive park. Volunteers hurry to greet the current arrivals, who’re worn out by the sheer size of their journey. As one of many assistants, Igor, revealed, lots of them have been ready for over twelve hours attributable to queues on the Austrian border.

Small pastries and toys are swiftly distributed. Wrapped in puffer coats and gloves, one mom, accompanying her ten-year-old daughter, recalled their traumatic expertise after leaving their residence in Kyiv.

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“We left on the second day of the conflict, stopping in varied cities, in the course of the bombings and rubble, after some pals got here with a automotive to convey us out,” she instructed Euronews.

“There are pals right here in Italy who can be internet hosting us. We nonetheless know so many individuals again residence, they’re all terrified.”

The lady is one in every of greater than 23,000 Ukrainians escaping to Italy, most of whom have fled for the reason that invasion on 24 February.

Vehicles proceed pulling up, conversations swap seamlessly between Italian and Ukrainian, and other people come to offer support. One helper, carrying packing containers, reveals in passing that her household continues to be caught in Ukraine and that every one she will do proper now could be assist those that are have made it out.

As dusk descends, the lately arrived people quickly disperse, leaving the automotive park as empty and silent because it was half an hour earlier than.

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Video: Beirut Residents Stunned as Israeli Strikes Hit City Center

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Video: Beirut Residents Stunned as Israeli Strikes Hit City Center

Israeli strikes on Monday killed members of Palestinian militant groups in Lebanon, including the representative of Hamas in the country. One of the attacks targeted a central Beirut neighborhood for the first time in nearly two decades.

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Death toll rises to 18 in South Africa mass shootings, police say

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Death toll rises to 18 in South Africa mass shootings, police say
  • One more person has died from mass shootings at two houses in a South African village over the weekend, raising the death toll to 18.
  • Police are still searching for the suspects who opened fire on a family event in Lusikisiki village in Eastern Cape province on Saturday.
  • South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said that 38 people had been killed in mass shootings in the past two years.

One more person has died from mass shootings at two houses on the same street in a South African village over the weekend, bringing the death toll to 18, officials said Monday.

Police are still searching for the assailants who opened fire Saturday on people who had reportedly gathered for a family event in Lusikisiki village in Eastern Cape province.

The shootings, which took place in two separate houses on the same street, fueled outrage over a recent spate of mass shootings in the country.

MISSING NORTH CAROLINA STUDENT BROOK CHEUVRONT, 20, FOUND DEAD IN SOUTH AFRICA

The motive for the killings remains unknown and police said on Monday that the investigation is continuing, and no arrests have been made.

This photo shows the scene where 17 people were killed in two mass shootings that took place in close proximity to each other on Friday night in Lusikisiki, South Africa, police said on Sept. 28, 2024. (South African Police Services via AP)

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South African President Cyril Ramaphosa condemned the killings and promised that the government would deploy all needed resources in the investigation.

He said Monday that 38 people had been killed in previous mass shootings in the past two years and 25 suspects have been arrested.

“I feel deeply for all the families and members of the broader community affected by this attack, and on behalf of all of us as South Africans, I offer you our deepest sympathies,” he said.

“While we are united in our grief, we are also united in our outrage and condemnation of this excessive criminal assault which will not go unpunished,” he said.

Shooting scene

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa condemned the killings and promised that the government would deploy all needed resources in the investigation. (South African Police Services via AP)

The shootings follow a mass killing in KwaZulu-Natal province in April 2023. Ten members of the same family, including seven women and a 13-year-old boy, were killed at their home.

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Sixteen people were fatally shot in a bar in the Johannesburg township of Soweto in 2022, the worst mass shooting in South Africa in decades before the latest killings in Lusikisiki.

South Africa has one of the highest homicide rates in the world. It recorded 12,734 homicides in the first six months of this year, according to police.

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Why tensions with neighbours have stalled North Macedonia’s EU bid

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Why tensions with neighbours have stalled North Macedonia’s EU bid

EU ambassadors failed to approve the opening of the next chapter of EU accession talks with Skopje last week.

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In the rural highlands where North Macedonia’s north-east borders Bulgaria’s west, workers swelter in the late September heat.

They’re entering the final stages of building a strategically critical high-speed road connecting the capitals of Skopje and Sofia.

The road is part of the planned ‘Corridor 8’ route linking Italy’s Adriatic coast by sea to Albania, then stretching all the way through North Macedonia to the port of Varna on Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast. A rail connection along the same corridor is also in the works.

When complete, it will anchor the Western Balkan nations of Albania and North Macedonia into Europe’s transport and trading network, quite literally paving their way into the European Union, while also providing NATO with a strategic military corridor.

But the rail and road project, like North Macedonia’s bid to join the European bloc, has been rigged with obstacles, delays and disputes.

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The country’s populist prime minister Hristijan Mickoski has accused Bulgaria of failing to commit to the rail route on its territory, saying the railway will end in a “dead end” on the Bulgarian border. He has threatened to divert the EU funds dedicated to the project to another route known as Corridor 10, which would link Skopje with Belgrade and Budapest to the north, where Eurosceptic nationalists considered close to Mickoski are in government. 

The corridor dispute comes amid what Bulgarian officials see as a further unravelling in relations between the two countries, which have plunged to a new low since the right-wing VMRO-DPMNE party scored victory in North Macedonia’s parliamentary and presidential elections last May. 

A long-standing dispute with Greece over North Macedonia’s name has also resurfaced, as nationalists in Skopje informally refer to the country as ‘Macedonia’ in what officials in Athens see as a blatant violation of the 2018 Prespa agreement.

It meant there was no unanimous agreement among EU ambassadors last week to open the first negotiating chapters on North Macedonia’s accession to the bloc. Neighbouring Albania, meanwhile, has been given the green light.

EU bets on cash-for-reforms strategy

Despite Albania now overtaking its neighbour, officials in Brussels and Skopje still hope the recently-installed Macedonian government will remain focused on its accession path.

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The EU executive is betting on its new €6-billion Growth Plan for the Western Balkans, under which it will inject investment into the seven Western Balkan candidate countries over the next three years in return for reforms designed to bring their economies and societies closer to the EU.

The €6 billion – which consists of €2 billion in grants and €4 billion in concessional loans – will be distributed according to each country’s GDP and population, but only made available once they have implemented so-called ‘reform agendas’ designed to align their laws, standards and practices with those of the EU.

Another unique feature of the Growth Plan is that countries that fail to hit their reform targets could see the funds allocated to them diverted to other countries in the Western Balkans region.

EU sources say the model is designed to create “competition” between neighbours and incentivise quicker reforms.

“Luckily, the new North Macedonian government has really bought into the EU accession process as did the previous government,” a diplomatic source said. “When the new government was sworn in, there were no major deviations from the reform agenda negotiated by the previous government.”

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“But the proof is in the pudding. We’ll need to wait and see if they implement these reforms,” the diplomat added.

The cash-for-reforms model is part of Brussels’ plan to accelerate reforms on a raft of issues including the rule of law, the independence of the judiciary and the fight against corruption. The reform agendas are expected to be endorsed as early as October, meaning the first “pre-financing” payments could be disbursed by the end of this year. 

All countries – with the exception of Bosnia and Herzegovina – have to date submitted their draft reform agendas, as officials in Sarajevo are still deciding how the country’s parliamentary assembly should endorse the plans.

“If a country doesn’t meet its commitment under their reform agendas, the money allocated to it could be transferred to another country in the Western Balkans, creating an element of competition completely new compared to previous financing instruments,” an EU official explained.

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Another EU official, speaking on condition of anonymity, added that tackling corruption was one of the biggest challenges in North Macedonia and other candidate countries in the region, but that the EU executive had robust mechanisms to safeguard its funding.

“Corruption is present. But we have a policy of zero tolerance for corruption and very strict frameworks in place,” the EU official said, “If it happens, and it does, our mechanisms kick in.”

Member states wield veto power

But even if Skopje successfully meets all its targets and reaps the benefits of the Growth Plan, it can only progress on its path to EU membership if it continues to mend the relationship with neighbouring Bulgaria.

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That will prove challenging as lawmakers in Sofia and Skopje continue to exchange combative rhetoric.

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Each member state must give its explicit green light to the opening of each step in the EU accession process.

Responding to EU ambassadors’ failure to move on accession talks with North Macedonia, former Bulgarian premier Boyko Borissov – who leads the biggest party in the Bulgarian parliament and chairs its foreign affairs committee – said Skopje had to “face the consequences of its actions,” accusing Mickoski’s government of blaming Bulgaria for delays in its membership bid.

Borissov recently called for the resignation of North Macedonia’s deputy prime minister and transport minister after a war of words involving the Corridor 8 route linking the country’s capitals.

Bulgaria will vote in its seventh election in just three years on October 27, following multiple failures to form a government.

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