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This rebuilt hospital makes case for green reconstruction of Ukraine

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This rebuilt hospital makes case for green reconstruction of Ukraine

A Ukrainian hospital broken in a Russian missile assault has been become a clean-energy mannequin for the way forward for the nation’s infrastructure, even because the struggle within the nation rages on.

The destruction of the small hospital in Horenka, a village on the outskirts of Kyiv, occurred within the first month of the Russian invasion. Shelling from a missile strike hit the hospital grounds, leaving the constructing’s home windows shattered, its exterior broken, and an erosion of the electrical energy provide. 

The aftermath turned the hospital that after catered to a inhabitants of 10,000-12,000 sufferers from 4 totally different villages into an instance of the brutalities of Vladimir Putin’s struggle and left it with a €56,000 restore invoice for heating reconstruction.

“I, with one other physician, was on the hospital. We have been attempting to deal with folks and provides vaccinations,” Physician Olena Opanasenko, who works on the hospital, instructed Euronews. “It was 25 February 2022 when the electrical energy of the hospital was disconnected, and it wasn’t reconnected till Might,” she mentioned.

Horenka’s hospital is one among an estimated 330 that had been destroyed throughout the nation by the top of December 2022, in accordance to a report by the Kyiv Faculty of Economics. In whole, the nation has suffered infrastructure damages of not less than €129 billion.

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Debates surrounding how Ukraine will have the ability to rebuild after the struggle have led some to recommend that the duty would require fast-paced designs that bypass goals to fulfill the nation’s pre-war Paris Local weather Settlement objectives of chopping CO2 emissions by 65 % by 2030. 

‘Hospitals are one of the vital infrastructure’

However some native and environmental NGOs — Greenpeace Central and Jap Europe (CEE),  Eco Motion, Eco Membership, and Victory of Ukraine — got down to show the hospital might be rebuilt quick to fulfill the wants of the native inhabitants but in addition in such a approach that it stays resilient towards future assaults and create a clean-energy grid that lowered consumption prices.

“It’s very troublesome for folks to obtain this medical help elsewhere within the space as many hospitals have been broken within the space. Hospitals are one of the vital infrastructure that must be rebuilt already now whereas individuals are coming again as within the case of Horenka,” Greenpeace CEE Campaigner Denys Tsutsaiev instructed Euronews.

“Reconstructing quick may imply that you don’t use the very best know-how, that you don’t do the very best evaluation for the wants of the folks of the area. This isn’t one thing that helps the long run resilience of the folks of Ukraine,” he added.

On-the-ground work on the hospital started final fall as Ukraine’s heating season was quickly approaching, and as Russian was pounding the nation with fixed missile strikes. 

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“There have been fairly often energy outages. We determined that if we might set up the solar energy system, which may have battery storage, this hospital may proceed working with out interruption for the entire time,” Tsutsaiev mentioned.

With every additional assault, issues arose, delays got here when there have been electrical energy cuts, which compelled the challenge to cease, and so they needed to wait for 2 months for tools for the photo voltaic system to be transported to the hospital.

However clean-energy infrastructure was ultimately put in within the constructing, similar to a heating pump — which takes warmth from the bottom or air round a constructing and will increase it to a temperature that can maintain the hospital heat inside — and a hybrid solar energy system that makes use of photo voltaic panels to provide vitality through the day to be used when there is no such thing as a daylight.

This led to an 80 % discount in heating prices and fewer CO2 emissions, one of many main contributors to local weather change, based on Tsutsaiev.

“Earlier than struggle, I used to be enthusiastic about saving the atmosphere,” Sergiy Regeda, a volunteer with Victory of Ukraine, mentioned. “I watched totally different documentaries, studying extra about this, about recycling, about clear vitality. And now, I’ve direct entry to it.”

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“Now we are able to see firsthand how this works, how we are able to truly implement this in our municipality. So that is what we’re doing,” he added.

Different municipalities

The necessity for the Horenka Hospital is noticed every day, with about 50 and 60 sufferers visiting docs, getting vaccines, and having checkups and gynecological exams. A station can be arrange in a separate room the place Medical doctors With out Borders helps survivors of Russian traumas get better from their accidents.

With its clear vitality grid, the hospital can be ready for any future assaults. 

The solar energy system “covers just about one hundred pc the wants of the hospital through the daytime, and if there’s a energy lower through the night time, there’s a battery which just about can maintain it over into the night time, so the crucial infrastructure of the hospital nonetheless operates, the fridges and emergency lights,” Tsutsaiev mentioned.

However though utilizing clear vitality has its advantages, it additionally has drawbacks similar to potential tools failure and problem in sourcing substitute if wanted as a result of shortages available on the market and the necessity to import all of the tools from overseas, Tsutaiev mentioned.

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Nonetheless, Greenpeace has taught the hospital workers learn how to navigate any potential disturbances, together with learn how to monitor the solar energy station, deal with issues as they happen, monitor the vitality consumption and alter their behaviour to decrease consumption whether it is too excessive.

Now, the NGO hopes to duplicate the accomplishment in different areas of Ukraine. “We’re actively selling the instance of the hospital to different municipalities to allow them to embrace such concepts into their reconstruction plan and replicate this challenge too.”

“We’re attempting to get them [staff] extra acquainted with the programs. And naturally, we all know that is sort of like a job mannequin for others.”

A side agreed upon by each Greenpeace and Victory for Ukraine is that rebuilding Ukraine quick just isn’t a sustainable choice, each for the atmosphere and for future generations dwelling in a free Ukraine.

“If we discuss in regards to the restoration of industries, enterprises, social infrastructure, crucial factor is that the restoration have to be supplied based on new, trendy, economical, energy-efficient, and ecological world requirements,” Regeda mentioned.

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“I’m certain that our plans will probably be profitable. It is usually essential to revive folks’s destroyed houses, as a result of hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have misplaced their homes and flats. I’m certain that after our victory, all folks will return to their houses, and those that misplaced them will get new, even higher ones,” he added.

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Severe storms kill at least 21 across US Midwest and South

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Severe storms kill at least 21 across US Midwest and South
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Severe weather sweeping across the American Midwest and South has left at least 21 people dead, with officials warning that the death toll may rise. 

In Kentucky, at least 14 people were confirmed dead, with local authorities saying nine people were killed after what appeared to be a powerful tornado touched down in the south-eastern part of the state. 

Structures collapsed, and a car was flipped on a motorway as the storm ripped through the largely rural area. Authorities said there were also multiple reports of serious injuries. 

While the US’s National Weather Service has not yet confirmed that it was a tornado which struck Kentucky, meteorologist Philomon Geertson said it was likely.  

“Lives have been changed forever here tonight. This is a time we come together, and we pray for this community,” said the mayor of London, Kentucky, Randall Wendle. “I have never personally witnessed what I’ve witnessed here tonight.”  

Only two months ago, severe weather caused at least 24 deaths and widespread damage in Kentucky. Hundreds had to be rescued during that storm. 

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Missouri pounded by storms

At least seven people were killed in neighbouring Missouri and tornadoes were also triggered in Wisconsin by the severe weather.  

More than 600,000 homes and businesses across a dozen states lost power as of Saturday, with Missouri and Kentucky among the hardest hit. 

St. Louis mayor Cara Spencer confirmed the deaths of at least five people in the city and said more than 5,000 homes were damaged. 

“This is truly, truly devastating,” she said. “The loss of life and the destruction is truly, truly horrendous.” 

The city’s fire department said three people had to be rescued after part of a nearby church collapsed, but one of these people died. A curfew was imposed Friday night in the neighbourhoods damaged the most. 

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The US National Weather Service said tornadoes also hit Illinois, with more severe weather conditions expected all the way to the Atlantic coast. 

The total number of injured was not immediately available. However, hospitals in area reported receiving dozens of injured – some in serious condition. 

Additional sources • AP

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Walz calls Trump a 'tyrant' who is trampling Americans' rights and violating the rule of law

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Walz calls Trump a 'tyrant' who is trampling Americans' rights and violating the rule of law

Democratic Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota assailed Donald Trump in a law school graduation speech Saturday, accusing the Republican president of creating a national emergency by repeatedly violating the rule of law.

Walz, the vice presidential nominee in 2024, used his remarks at the University of Minnesota’s law school commencement ceremony to call on graduates to stand up to abuses of power. Lawyers, he said, “our first and last line of defense.”

“Right now, more than any other time in my lifetime, we need you to live up to the oath that you’re about to make. Because, I have to be honest with you: You are graduating into a genuine emergency,” Walz told the crowd, which greeted him with loud applause. “Every single day, the president of the United States finds new ways to trample rights and undermine the rule of law.”

Walz pointed to Trump’s immigration crackdown, which includes deporting alleged gang members to a notorious prison in El Salvador without due process, and the offer of a gifted jet from the Qatari ruling family to the president.

“This is what the crumbling of rule of law looks like in real time. And it’s exactly what the founders of this nation feared: A tyrant, abusing power to persecute scapegoats and enemies,” he said.

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Since Kamala Harris’ loss to Trump in November, Democrats have been debating which direction to take the party amid deep frustrations from Democratic voters that its leaders are failing to do enough to check the new administration.

Walz is among a long list of potential 2028 candidates who have been traveling to early voting states.

Others include Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who sharply criticized “do-nothing” Democrats last month for failing to oppose Trump. Pritzker, who is scheduled to headline a Minnesota Democratic dinner in June, drew attention in February when he used part of his joint budget and State of the State address to draw a parallel between Trump’s rhetoric and the rise of Nazi Germany.

This past week, President Joe Biden’s transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, returned to Iowa for a town hall where he criticized Trump’s administration while demanding that Democrats make their agenda clear and reach out to people who disagree with them.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has been hosting a high-profile podcast. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have been drawing huge crowds to rallies across the country. Walz and Gov. Wes Moore of Maryland have scheduled stops in South Carolina at the end of May.

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In his commencement speech, Walz acknowledged his words were particularly pointed for a celebratory ceremony.

“Some would say, ’Boy, this is getting way too political for a commencement address.’ But I would argue: I wouldn’t be honoring my oath if I didn’t address this head on,” he said to applause and cheers.

Later, he scoffed at some Democrats who have urged the party to focus on issues such as trade, where Trump is polling badly, instead of the rule of law.

He also attacked “feckless” and “cowardly” big law firms that have acquiesced to Trump in the face of threats, with some offering millions in pro bono work and other benefits.

“It’s a flagrant betrayal of the oath they took as lawyers,” he said, urging graduates to refuse to work for or with those firms as they make their way into the workforce.

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Grandmother arrested at abortion clinic warns of expanding free speech 'buffer zones'

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Grandmother arrested at abortion clinic warns of expanding free speech 'buffer zones'

A grandmother in the U.K. who was arrested for holding a sign outside an abortion clinic is sounding the alarm against further attacks on free speech as lawmakers move to expand so-called “buffer zones” outside such facilities.

Rose Docherty, 74, was arrested in Glasgow, Scotland near the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) in February for holding a sign that read: “Coercion is a crime, here to talk if you want.”

Docherty was the first person to be arrested and charged under the Abortion Services (Safe Access Zones) Act, which went into effect in September, the BBC reported. 

The law prohibits any protests or vigils from taking place within 200m or 656ft of 30 clinics offering abortion services in Scotland, but the law specifies that the Safe Access Zone could be extended if considered appropriate. 

Docherty’s arrest came just days after Vice President JD Vance highlighted the law as an example of free speech being under attack in the U.K.

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Rose Docherty, 74, was arrested in Glasgow, Scotland near the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) in February for holding a sign that read: “Coercion is a crime, here to talk if you want.” (Rose Docherty)

UK WOMAN THREATENED WITH FINE FOR PRAYING WITHIN ABORTION FACILITY’S ‘BUFFER ZONE:’ ‘ GROSSLY ORWELLIAN’

Now, Gillian Mackay, the Green Party parliamentarian responsible for introducing the buffer zones legislation, has now suggested that the Scottish government consider expanding the area of prohibition on “influence” outside hospitals, according to ADF International, a Christian legal advocacy group.

Docherty has rejected a formal warning from the Crown Office – arguing that it was “unjust” – and is waiting to find out what action may now be taken against her.

In her first broadcast interview since her arrest, she told the BBC she had “no reason to regret” the incident, noting it was an “alarming” and “surreal” experience. 

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She said she had read the law and believed her actions did not violate the legislation. 

“I gave consideration to what I was doing…I looked at the law and saw what it said I couldn’t do, and thought, OK, well, this is what I can do…I can offer to listen, and if anyone wants to come and speak to me, they can do so, only if they want to come and speak with me,” she told BBC’s Scotcast.

She said she is prepared to go to prison over the offense.

Docherty has also said that the government essentially wants to stamp out any opposition to abortion.

“I believe it wouldn’t matter where we stood…it wouldn’t matter how far they pushed the ‘buffer zone,’” she told ADF International, a Christian legal advocacy group.

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Nicola Sturgeon (L) poses for a photograph with Scottish Green

Former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, left, poses for a photograph with Scottish Green MSP Gillian Mackay, right, in the lobby of the Scottish Parliament, in support of Mackay’s “buffer zones” bill on June 27, 2023 in Edinburgh, Scotland. (Ken Jack/Getty Images)

NEW ONLINE ‘MISINFORMATION’ BILL SLAMMED AS ‘BIGGEST ATTACK’ ON FREEDOMS IN AUSTRALIA

“It wouldn’t matter where we stood –201 meters, or 500 meters away – it seems the authorities would still try to crack down harshly and unfairly on individuals because the government simply disagree with their point of view. This is unjust – of course, there should be laws against harassment, and we all condemn such behavior. But merely offering conversations near a hospital is not a crime.” 

Dr Greg Irwin, a doctor at the QEUH, was pictured confronting a group of protesters in February 2023, saying that they “cause emotional upset to patients, but also to staff members,” per the BBC. Groups have been protesting outside the hospital for 10 years, leading to the passing of the Safe Access Zones Act.

Mackay said patients and staff had told her that they still had to pass the protesters when attending the QEUH leading to distress.

“I think it’s appropriate that we take those concerns seriously and the government take a look at whether an extension is appropriate or not,” Mackay told the BBC.

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The act allows ministers to extend the size of a buffer zone if it is decided that the existing zone is not adequate, a Scottish government spokesperson told the outlet.

Portrait of Isabel Vaughan-Spruce

Isabel Vaughan-Spruce was arrested for praying silently outside an abortion clinic in Birmingham, England. (Alliance Defending Freedom UK)

Docherty isn’t the first person to be arrested outside abortion facilities. 

For instance, Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, a prominent pro-life activist, was arrested twice in Birmingham for silently praying without any signs near an abortion facility within a buffer zone. She was arrested under a local law known as a Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO). She was later awarded $13,000 in compensation for wrongful arrests, according to Christian Today.

The U.K. has drawn international attention for its alleged clampdown on free speech. A number of people have been investigated and arrested for social media posts. 

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