World
Slovakia has been a haven for refugees from Ukraine. But for how long?
The central practice station of Bratislava, the Slovakian capital, is one thing of a crossroads for Ukrainian refugees.
Iryna, a mom with two younger ladies who not too long ago arrived from Lviv, is heading to Budapest, the capital of Hungary. “I’ve buddies there who can assist,” she says.
Anna, in her early 20s, goes westwards to Prague, the Czech capital, the place she says he has connections due to her IT job.
A Slovak volunteer — one among many who waits patiently with households on the railway platforms, conversing largely in Ukrainian or English — says the variety of refugees passing by the central station has decreased in current days, however he reckons they nonetheless want to assist dozens every day, most heading westwards.
As of March 30, greater than 283,300 Ukrainian refugees have entered Slovakia, in response to a Slovak police assertion. That accounts for round 5 p.c of the inhabitants, nearly the identical share of refugees because the extra populous Poland has now taken in.
On March 25, the Slovak Inside Ministry said that of the refugees getting into the nation, greater than 104,000, or two-fifths, had been kids.
It isn’t clear what number of have determined to remain in Slovakia, a rustic of round 5 and a half million folks. Below emergency legal guidelines, refugees can re-enter the nation with none paperwork in the event that they journey to different EU states or Ukraine.
Yana, who’s seeing off two Ukrainian buddies heading to the Czech Republic, says that she needs to remain in Bratislava. She has not too long ago began part-time at a neighborhood faculty. Her kids are set to quickly begin at a neighborhood faculty.
Identical to different Europeans, Slovaks had been shocked by the invasion, mentioned Katarína Klingová, a senior analysis fellow on the GLOBSEC Coverage Institute, a Bratislava-based suppose tank.
“Many Slovaks opened their properties and supplied lodging to Ukrainian refugees,” she mentioned. “Many went to the borders and supplied free transportation; many supplied monetary assist, meals donations, and different provides.”
Ukrainian is now broadcast alongside Slovak and English at public transport stations. The nation’s flag hangs from home windows and tower block balconies. The presidential palace within the capital has been lit up at evening with the blue and yellow of Ukraine.
“I very a lot recognize the method of Slovak residents for a way they welcome the Ukrainian households,” Eduard Heger, the prime minister, informed France24 in an interview on March 28.
“We’re making an attempt to make a heat welcome for them,“ he added, “and Slovak residents confirmed they’ve a giant coronary heart.”
However 5 weeks into the battle, charities and front-liner employees warn that the federal government must do extra to assist.
A 24-hour, large-capacity help middle was solely opened in Bratislava this week. On March 23, the Slovakian parliament handed the so-called “Lex Ukraine”, a regulation aimed toward making the lifetime of Ukrainian refugees in Slovakia simpler and extra simple. However it wasn’t formally signed by Zuzana Čaputová, the president, till March 29.
The next day, the federal government agreed to an lodging allowance for refugees, which will probably be paid by the state to hoteliers or households who put up refugees. Adults can have a stipend of €7 per evening, and under-15s will get €3.50.
The response of the authorities has been good provided that Slovakia has by no means skilled such a scenario of mass arrivals of refugees, says Zuzana Števulová, government director of the Human Rights League, a distinguished Slovakian civic affiliation.
However what continues to be lacking is the monetary help from the state, she added. Thus far, there has not been any emergency monetary scheme for charities to compensate them for these providers or to fund their actions.
If it wasn’t for personal donors, “we might not have the ability to fund our presence and actions anymore,” Števulová mentioned. “Due to this fact, we urgently want the state to offer us with help schemes.”
Since early March, Ukrainian refugees have been given the correct to employment with no work allow and have entry to fundamental healthcare, whereas kids can attend colleges and kindergartens.
However native newspapers report that colleges in sure areas of the nation are working out of house, but there are ample locations elsewhere within the nation. NGO employees say there must be extra linked considering from the authorities.
Amid this, a political scandal has arisen in current days. The Inside Ministry is below fireplace for giving a non-public firm a €2.5 million contract to run a large-capacity disaster middle within the jap border city of Michalovce.
The agency chosen is reportedly owned by the businessman Július Slovák, who had beforehand labored for the Atypical Folks and Unbiased Personalities occasion (OLaNO), one of many 4 events within the coalition authorities.
Roman Mikulec, the inside minister and a member of OLaNO, says the agency was really useful to him by charities alongside the border.
Most deny this, in response to native media reviews. Opposition politicians are demanding an reason why the corporate, which usually places on company occasions, was chosen for refugee reduction work, and why it was chosen with no public procurement course of.
Others query why the federal government felt the necessity to privatize out such a job.
There’s speak of a vote of confidence movement towards Mikulec in parliament. Even a few of his coalition companions are turning on him. A monetary watchdog is trying into the case.
Partly on account of this controversy, the Inside Ministry’s director of disaster administration, Marián Dritomský, resigned on March 29.
As the federal government tries to get its act collectively, there are issues that public sentiment might flip bitter.
“Within the occasion of a long-term battle in Ukraine, it is not going to be doable to keep up such a excessive degree of enthusiasm by way of volunteer capability, funds, and lodging for the refugees,” says Robert Vancel, of the Matej Bel College in Banská Bystrica.
On high of that, Slovakia has lengthy been a hotbed of Russian misinformation. Professional-Russian opinions have barely dipped since Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, launched his invasion of Ukraine late final month.
However a big share of the Slovak inhabitants stays sympathetic to Moscow. A survey launched this week by the Slovak Academy of Sciences discovered that 34 p.c of respondents consider that the battle in Ukraine was intentionally provoked by Western powers and that Russia solely responded to their provocation.
Some 28 p.c consider Putin’s narrative that Russia needs to disarm and “de-nazify” Ukraine.
Klingová, of the GLOBSEC think-tank, warns that Russian propaganda channels in Slovakia are additionally making an attempt to show public opinion towards Ukrainian refugees.
“Many disinformation shops try to spin tales of Ukrainian refugees getting assist and the whole lot totally free, whereas some Slovaks, together with aged, usually are not being taken care of,” she mentioned.
The 2 points aren’t separate, analysts say. With out simpler state funding for charities and reduction employees, some will wrestle to maintain going, placing extra strains on state providers. This, in flip, might exacerbate perceptions that Ukrainian refugees are receiving higher remedy than Slovaks.
On the identical time, with out efficient management from the federal government, the general public might start to really feel that they bear the total burden of serving to the refugees, an issue because the battle in Ukraine is predicted to result in a noticeable enhance in the price of residing.
Richard Sulík, the minister of economic system, has advised that the Ukraine battle might have an even bigger influence on Slovakia’s economic system than the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2019, 78 p.c of the nation’s imported oil and refined merchandise got here from Russia. Forecasters haven’t but revised their GDP progress forecasts for Slovakia this yr.
The minister of labor, Milan Krajniak, mentioned in mid-March that round 60,000 Ukrainian refugees would have the ability to discover work earlier than there may be an influence on the Slovak labor pressure.
“It can be crucial that the federal government finds methods to raise the burden and strain which is placed on Slovak residents and inhabitants,” says Števulová, of the Human Rights League.
“I consider this will probably be essential so as to forestall a unfavourable shift of public opinion in direction of refugees from Ukraine.”
World
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World
Hamas' Gaza death toll questioned as new report says its led to 'widespread inaccuracies and distortion'
A new report cites a laundry list of alleged errors in the casualty tallies that the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health has issued during the conflict in Gaza, and found that worldwide media widely report the inflated numbers with little or no scrutiny.
The Henry Jackson Society (HJS), a U.K. based think tank, found “widespread inaccuracies and distortion in the data collection process” for the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH) which has resulted in a “misleading picture of the conflict.” The study also analyzed how journalists worldwide have spread misleading MoH data without noting its shortcomings or offering alternative information from Israeli sources.
The report’s author, Andrew Fox, a fellow at HJS said his team’s research is based on lists of casualty figures that the MoH has released through Telegram as well as lists released by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Fox said he and his team have been able to examine segments of the reporting, despite changeable MoH data being “really hard to interrogate.”
On Tuesday, Gaza health authorities updated its number of dead to what it said was more than 45,000.
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The report said the ministry’s reporting long indicated that women and children made up more than half of the war dead, leading to accusations that Israel intentionally kills civilians in Gaza.
“If Israel was killing indiscriminately, you would expect deaths to roughly match the demographic proportions pre-war,” Fox said. At the time, adult men made up around 26% of the Gazan population. “The number of adult males that have died is vastly in excess of 26%,” he said.
Within accessible reporting, Fox and his team also found instances of casualty entries being recorded improperly, “artificially increas[ing] the numbers of women and children who are reported as killed.” This has included people with male names being listed as females, and grown adults being recorded as young children.
Analyzing data by category has further highlighted biases within reporting. There are three kinds of entries within MoH’s casualty figures: entries collected by hospitals prior to the breakdown of networks in November 2023, entries submitted by family members of the deceased, and entries collected through “media sources,” whose veracity researchers like Dr. David Adesnik, vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, has previously questioned.
Analysis of gender breakdowns among these groupings shows that hospital records “are distorted,” with a higher percentage of women and children among hospital-reported casualties than in those reported by family members.
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Though around 5,000 natural deaths typically occur in Gaza each year, the study found that MoH casualty figures do not account for natural deaths. It claims that it also fails to exclude deaths unassociated with Israeli military action from its count. This includes individuals believed to have been killed by Hamas, like 13-year-old Ahmed Shaddad Halmy Brikeh, who appears on a casualty list from August despite reports indicating he had “been shot dead by Hamas” while trying to get food from an aid shipment in December 2023. The list also excludes individuals killed by Hamas’ rockets, about 1,750 of which “fell short within the Gaza strip” between October 2023 and July 2024.
Fox and his team also found individuals who died before the conflict began had been added to MoH casualty counts. In addition, at least three cancer patients whose names were included in lists to leave the Gaza Strip for treatment in April had been listed as dead during the month of March.
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The ministry does not separate combatants and civilians in its casualty figures. Though the study states that Israeli forces have killed around 17,000 Hamas terrorists, Fox said that his research indicated the death toll may include as many as 22,000 members of Hamas. He said his research supports the fact that around 15,000 of the dead in Gaza are women and children, and 7,500 are non-combatant adult males.
“Collecting these sorts of lists in a war zone is a hugely challenging thing,” Fox admitted, but he stated that the MoH’s mistakes, whether innocent or deliberate, show that the institution is “really unreliable.”
Despite this unreliability, the Henry Jackson Society’s survey of reporting of the conflict found that 98% of media organizations it looked at utilized fatality data from MoH versus 5% who cited Israeli figures. Fox found that “fewer than one in every 50 articles [about the conflict] mentioned that the figures provided by the MoH were unverifiable or controversial,” though “Israeli statistics had their credibility questioned in half of the few articles that incorporated them.”
As an illustration of the phenomenon witnessed in the survey, Fox pointed out what he called an “incredibly biased” article from a British broadcaster that recently emerged citing MoH data claiming that there have been more than 45,000 deaths in Gaza. Though its report mentions MoH data, it does not break down the numbers of combatants and civilians, and does not mention the questionable veracity of MoH reporting. Instead, it parrots MoH claims, reporting that women and children make up for over half of the fatalities.
“It’s just a great example of everything we’ve written in the report,” Fox said.
World
Arson at karaoke bar in Vietnam’s Hanoi kills 11, police say
Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security says suspected perpetrator confessed to starting blaze after dispute with staff.
A suspected arson attack at a cafe and karaoke bar in Vietnam’s Hanoi has killed 11 people and injured two others, police have said.
Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security said on Thursday that it had arrested a man who confessed to starting the blaze on the ground floor of the building following a dispute with staff.
Rescue workers who rushed to the scene brought seven people out of the building alive, two of whom were rushed to hospital, police said.
Footage that circulated on social media showed a multistorey building engulfed in flames as firefighters worked at the scene while surrounded by a crowd of onlookers.
“At that time, we saw many people screaming for help but could not approach because the fire spread very quickly, and even with a ladder, we could not climb up,” the Lao Dong newspaper quoted a witness as saying.
The Tien Phong newspaper quoted a witness as saying there was a strong smell of petrol at the scene.
“Everyone shouted for those inside to run outside, but no one called for help,” the witness said.
CCTV footage published by the VnExpress news site appeared to show a man carrying a bucket towards the cafe seconds before the blaze began shortly after 11pm (16:00 GMT) on Wednesday.
Fires are a common hazard in Vietnam’s tightly packed urban centres.
Between 2017 and 2022, 433 people were killed in some 17,000 house fires in the country, most of them in urban areas, according to the Ministry of Public Security.
In September last year, 56 people, including four children, were killed and dozens injured in a fire at an apartment block in Hanoi.
This October, a court in southern Binh Duong province jailed six people, including four police officers, over safety lapses related to a fire at a karaoke complex that killed 32 people in 2022.
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