Connect with us

World

Ukrainian children find a welcoming classroom in Berlin

Published

on

Ukrainian children find a welcoming classroom in Berlin

NEWNow you can take heed to Fox Information articles!

BERLIN — Ukrainian refugee Mariia Kerashchenko tightly clasped the palms of her two youngsters as she walked them by the courtyard of a seedy Berlin constructing, up a graffiti-covered stairway, and into a contemporary, sunlit classroom.

Her 7-year-old son, Myroslav, is one among 40 youngsters who began their first day of faculty Monday, solely weeks after becoming a member of the thousands and thousands flooding into Europe to flee the battle in Ukraine.

Daughter Zoriana, who’s 3, remains to be too younger for the category, which is being taught by two Ukrainians who additionally fled to the German capital. The teachings, a part of a volunteer initiative, will put together the youngsters for getting into Berlin’s common college system.

“It will get me emotional once I see all the assistance and solidarity right here,” the 30-year-old Kerashchenko, from Vinnytsia in central Ukraine, informed The Related Press, her eyes welling with tears.

Advertisement

NEARLY 1,000 CIVILIANS DEAD IN UKRAINE; PUTIN PUTS SPIES ON HOUSE ARREST: LIVE UPDATES

“Each day, I hope that we will return to Ukraine, however it’s too harmful for now, so within the meantime it’s fantastic that my son can go to high school in Germany,” she added.

The courses for the refugees had been put collectively by Burcak Sevilgen and Faina Karlitski, who in solely two weeks raised the funds, organized the rent-free school rooms and marketed their program on the messaging service Telegram.

Ukrainian emergency workers and volunteers carry an injured pregnant girl from the broken by shelling maternity hospital in Mariupol, Ukraine.
(AP Photograph/Evgeniy Maloletka)

The kids nervously clutched their new train books, sharpened pencils and erasers as their new academics welcomed them in Ukrainian on the third ground of the previous manufacturing facility. They’ll observe their curriculum from again residence and in addition take German language courses. The three hours of faculty every weekday will probably be adopted by actions resembling playacting, portray or handicrafts.

Advertisement

Natalia Khalil, 33, from Rivne in western Ukraine, is instructing the third and fourth graders, whereas Tatjana Gubskaya, 56, will probably be accountable for the primary and second graders. Gubskaya fled Ukraine along with her daughter and a 7-year-old grandson, who’s in her classroom.

UKRAINE-RUSSIA WAR: PHOTOS SHOW DEVASTATION AND SUFFERING AS RUSSIAN BOMBARDMENT CONTINUES

“The youngsters are grateful to have some type of routine once more and meet different youngsters from Ukraine — they and their moms have all been very burdened recently,” mentioned Gubskaya, who additionally taught second grade courses earlier than the Feb. 24 Russian invasion.

The academics will probably be paid 500 euros monthly in donations till they’ve work permits and may be formally employed.

Sevilgen, 36, one of many two individuals behind the refugee courses, is a Berlin trainer herself. She and her 31-year-old buddy Karlitski, a administration marketing consultant, determined to do what they might to get not less than a number of the refugee youngsters again into college rapidly.

Advertisement

“We each have at all times had a watch for social points and needed to assist right here as effectively,” Sevilgen mentioned, explaining why they’ve spent each free minute to arrange the courses.

Two refugee children from the Ukraine stand in front of a white board before their classes start in Berlin, Germany, Monday, March 21, 2022. 

Two refugee youngsters from the Ukraine stand in entrance of a white board earlier than their courses begin in Berlin, Germany, Monday, March 21, 2022. 
(AP Photograph/Markus Schreiber)

They began elevating funds and organized with the Berlin youth help program Arche — “ark” in English — to take over the sponsorship for the courses. They obtained a proposal from on-line search engine Ecosia to make use of the rent-free rooms in Berlin’s immigrant neighborhood of Wedding ceremony and rapidly linked through Telegram with Ukrainian moms who had just lately arrived in Berlin.

UN REFUGEE AGENCY: 10 MILLION PEOPLE DISPLACED IN UKRAINE, OR HAVE LEFT COUNTRY

Greater than 3 million Ukrainians have fled overseas, most of them to Poland. The bulk are moms and their youngsters, with males of navy age not allowed to go away Ukraine. Contained in the nation, over 6 million have been displaced, in response to the United Nations.

Germany has registered 225,357 Ukrainian refugees as of Monday, though the true numbers are anticipated to be a lot increased, since they don’t want a visa to enter the nation, and federal police solely preserve data of refugees arriving by prepare or bus. These Ukrainians getting into Germany from Poland by automotive often usually are not registered.

Advertisement

As much as 10,000 refugees have been arriving by prepare every day in Berlin for the reason that begin of the battle, and hundreds extra have come by automotive. Many are staying at shelters within the metropolis’s conference middle and at a former airport, whereas others are with family members who immigrated years in the past and belong to a 300,000-member Ukrainian diaspora.

FOUR WAYS UKRAINE COULD DEFEAT RUSSIA

The federal government estimates that about half of the refugees are youngsters and youngsters who might want to attend colleges and kindergartens. It has established a activity pressure to coordinate their college attendance in Germany’s 16 states.

Volunteers Burcak Sevilgen, right, and Faina Karlitski pose for a photo at a space where they organized two school classes for Ukrainian refugees in Berlin, Germany, Monday, March 21, 2022.

Volunteers Burcak Sevilgen, proper, and Faina Karlitski pose for a photograph at an area the place they organized two college courses for Ukrainian refugees in Berlin, Germany, Monday, March 21, 2022.
(AP Photograph/Markus Schreiber)

A number of Berlin colleges, together with some personal establishments, have already got taken in just a few refugees, and metropolis officers are within the course of of creating as much as 50 particular welcome courses to carry them up to the mark in language expertise. The authorities can draw from their expertise from 2015-16, when about 1 million individuals fled conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. These youngsters finally entered the varsity system.

Advertisement

Till the welcome courses are up and working, the 2 courses organized by Sevilgen and Karlitski will assist ease the youngsters’s transition to their new lives, train them German and allow them to make new associates.

“A brand new routine and different youngsters — these are an important issues for them proper now,” Sevilgen mentioned. “And if we get extra donations, we hope that we will preserve this mission working so long as it takes to get the youngsters into the common Berlin colleges.”

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

World

Japan's soon-to-be prime minister faces big challenge as he tries to move past ruling party scandals

Published

on

Japan's soon-to-be prime minister faces big challenge as he tries to move past ruling party scandals

TOKYO (AP) — The person chosen Friday to lead Japan’s governing party, and become prime minister next week, is a veteran politician with deep policy experience, a taste for curry and anime — and big challenges ahead of him as he tries to unite a fractious party and hold off an opposition eager to capitalize on recent corruption scandals.

Shigeru Ishiba has long been popular with voters but has often struggled to win over his conservative fellow Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers.

A vocal critic of the hawkish politics of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, he was long seen as a troublesome outsider by some party members. That makes Friday’s victory a huge comeback for Ishiba. It could also signal a break from years of Abe’s influence over the party, even after the former prime minister’s assassination.

Some analysts believe that Ishiba was chosen as much for his image as a centrist who can counter challenges by the more liberal main opposition party as for his policy views.

The 67-year-old former banker was running in the party leadership race for a fifth time and had said this was going to be his “final battle.”

Advertisement

Ishiba was first elected to parliament in 1986, after being influenced by the late Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka, who was popular with the public. He has served as defense minister, agriculture minister and in other key Cabinet posts, and as the LDP secretary general under Abe.

His party will now look for him to use his experience, stability and expertise to beat back the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, which recently chose as its new leader former Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, a veteran known for his inspiring speeches.

University of Tokyo politics professor Yu Uchiyama said political parties tend to make centrist shifts to win elections, and Ishiba could do well in an upcoming parliamentary face-off with the opposition leader.

Considered a defense policy expert, Ishiba has proposed an Asian version of the NATO military alliance and a more equal and mutual Japan-U.S. security alliance, including having Japanese Self Defense Force bases in the United States.

Ishiba is a supporter of Taiwan’ s democracy. He calls for the establishment of a disaster management agency in one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries.

Advertisement

Ishiba has vowed to push for more diversity and gender equality. He supports a revision to a 19th century civil code that requires married couples to choose one of their surnames. That has caused most women to adopt their husband’s surname. Moves to change the code have stalled for decades because of LDP opposition.

At a recent speech in Tokyo, Ishiba said Japanese women are among the shortest sleepers in the world because of their heavy responsibilities both at work and home. He said most husbands, including himself, hardly help with childrearing and homemaking.

Ishiba also supports legalizing same-sex marriage.

Ishiba is known as a policy “otaku,” or nerd, especially in security and defense issues. He likes anime, building model warships and listening to 1970s and ‘80s Japanese pop songs. He says his favorite food is curried rice.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

World

Hezbollah stores weapons among civilians in Lebanon, US says its not sharing intel with IDF

Published

on

Hezbollah stores weapons among civilians in Lebanon, US says its not sharing intel with IDF

Join Fox News for access to this content

Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account – free of charge.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

The fighting between Israel and Hezbollah has drastically escalated over the last month as the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has begun targeting the terrorist network’s hot spots and military storage units, all of which are strategically embedded within civilian villages.

Images and videos provided to Fox News Digital of the recent strikes in southern Lebanon show precision missiles hitting what have been deemed civilian buildings.

Advertisement

Hezbollah’s use of civilian infrastructure has not only created a sophisticated network of meeting houses, weapons storage units and well-hidden missile launching positions across southern Lebanon and in the suburbs of Beirut, it has ensured a war with Hezbollah cannot be conducted without immense collateral damage. 

ISRAEL READIES RESERVE TROOPS ON BORDER WITH LEBANON: ‘PREPARE YOURSELVES’

Hezbollah rockets are stored in a building somewhere in Lebanon. (IDF Spokesman’s Unit. )

Since Monday, more than 1,800 casualties have been reported and at least 560 people are believed to have been killed, including 50 children and more than 90 women, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry. 

On Thursday, the U.S. again urged Israel to agree to a cease-fire in Lebanon, and deputy Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh confirmed with reporters that the U.S. is not aiding Jerusalem militarily or with intelligence in its Lebanon-based campaign.

Advertisement

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected the international community’s calls for a cease-fire and instead instructed his troops to continue fighting “with full force.”

French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday warned Israel that it “cannot without consequence just expand its operations to Lebanon” as commanders on the Israeli-Lebanon border ordered its troops to “prepare” for a possible ground invasion. 

No invasion has been ordered at this time, though Israeli and U.S. security experts have told Fox News Digital that the network Hezbollah has established on the foundation of everyday life within Lebanon means war with the terrorist network will likely be even more costly in terms of human lives than what has been witnessed in Gaza.

explosion in Lebanon

Smoke rises from Israeli airstrikes on villages in the Nabatiyeh district, seen from the southern town of Marjayoun, Lebanon, on Monday, Sept. 23, 2024. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

According to the Israel-based Alma Research and Education Center, a nonprofit organization that researches Israeli security challenges along the border with Lebanon, Hezbollah has long relied on the use of civilian infrastructure to serve its needs. 

ISRAEL-HEZBOLLAH WAR: NETANYAHU ‘DID NOT EVEN RESPOND’ TO US CEASE-FIRE DEAL, PLEDGES TO FIGHT ‘FULL FORCE’

Advertisement

“The phenomenon of renting houses, rooms, warehouses within the Shiite civilian areas by Hezbollah is well known since the beginning of the 2000s,” Tal Beeri, head of the research department at Alma, told Fox News Digital, adding that the terrorists also rent structures in non-Shia areas of Lebanon as well.

“Evidence of this matter was found in looted documents and investigations of Hezbollah operatives during the Second Lebanon War in 2006. Since then, Hezbollah has only accelerated the phenomenon and estimates are that every third house in southern Lebanon has been used by Hezbollah for its needs,” he added. 

Beeri shared research with Fox News Digital that showed findings from 2021 breaking down the sophisticated system in which Hezbollah has intertwined itself in the everyday running of local villages across the country. 

Israeli strikes Lebanon

A man displays photographs as people sift through the rubble of a building in an area targeted overnight by Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon’s town of Saksakiyeh, on Sept. 26, 2024. Israel flatly rejected on Sept. 26 a push led by key backer the United States for a 21-day cease-fire in Lebanon, as it vowed to keep fighting Hezbollah militants “until victory.” (Photo by MAHMOUD ZAYYAT/AFP via Getty Images)

Hezbollah officials dubbed a “Rabat” – loosely translated to “the liaison” – are installed in villages across Lebanon and serve as the representative of the terrorist group, facilitating the needs of the villagers in coordination with the hyper-localized operations of Hezbollah.

The Rabat, which can oversee multiple villages, reportedly establishes relationships with the residents by facilitating requests for aid such as money, food and even with localized disputes.  

Advertisement

“In places where Hezbollah decides to expropriate or lease civilian land or properties from the residents for the purpose of its military activities, the ‘Rabat’ conducts the expropriation or leasing procedure vis-à-vis the relevant resident,” Beeri found. 

The report, based on documents seized following the 2006 war with Hezbollah, found that the Rabat also recommended to local Hezbollah units the best locations in each town that are “suitable to serve the human shield tactic” based on the storage requirements surrounding concealment, infrastructure type and weapons placement. 

Israeli strikes Lebanon

Images show civilian buildings used by Hezbollah in Lebanon to store weapons. (Photo provided by Israel Defense Force)

The Rabat then coordinates the logistics between the terrorist organization and the local property owner. 

“The ‘Rabat’ strengthens Hezbollah’s grip on the Lebanese village residents’ day-to-day life, their property, and needs, allowing Hezbollah to turn them into human shields on a wider scale,” the report found.

Hezbollah’s control over local communities and its ability to stockpile and transfer weapons throughout the country through a sophisticated tunnel system signifies that the UN Resolution 1701 passed in 2006 to prevent a third war between the terrorist network and Israel has failed. 

Advertisement

 

While it remains unclear if U.N. Security Council members are looking to revamp the resolution to counter the terrorist group’s movements and stop Israeli operations in civilian areas, the international community has called on Netanyahu to cease his campaign – many leaders from both adversary and allied nations, have fervently warned against invading Lebanon.

Netanyahu is set to address the U.N. body on Friday during what has been described by the Israeli ambassador to the U.N. as the most “hostile” environment he has seen in his roughly 10 years of attending the top summit.  

Continue Reading

World

Is the EU's forest protection law becoming Brussels' next nightmare? | Radio Schuman

Published

on

In an interview with Euronews, the outgoing European Commissioner for Environment, Ocean and Fisheries Virginijus Sinkevičius said that he finds very ‘difficult’ to understand why the position on the deforestation law has changed significantly after its approval.

Continue Reading

Trending