World
Ukrainian dentist connects refugees with European host families
NEWNow you can hearken to Fox Information articles!
A Ukrainian dentist, who stays within the nation, is connecting fleeing refugees to European households keen to host them.
“For us, we do not see every other method,” Nazariy Mykhaylyuk advised Fox Information. “The one method is definitely to assist these individuals as a result of they’re in additional important situation than we’re.”
Two million Ukrainians have fled the nation over the 2 weeks since Russia invaded Ukraine. The United Nations has confirmed 1,509 civilian casualties, not together with these injured or killed after a Mariupol maternity hospital was shelled. The WHO has confirmed 18 assaults on medical services by Russian forces.
Mykhaylyuk has made many connections as a world dentistry speaker touring to greater than 60 international locations over the previous 10 years.
RUSSIA INVADES UKRAINE: LIVE UPDATES
The dentist and his household woke as much as the sound of Russian missiles in Kyiv on Feb. 24. They have been of their automotive quarter-hour later, forsaking “our house, behind our enterprise, every thing in Kyiv as a result of we understood that crucial at this second is definitely our life,” Mykhaylyuk advised Fox Information.
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Quickly after, Europeans that Mykhaylyuk had related with through the years started contacting him providing to assist. Mykhaylyuk concurrently began receiving requests to assist Ukrainian refugees.
He mentioned he sends “their contacts to companions and to pals in Europe, and so they get in contact with them instantly and assist them.”
“That is how we have put them in touch with refugee households,” Mykhaylyuk advised Fox Information. “For instance, like in the present day, I obtained a telephone name from Spain the place greater than 30 households are prepared to simply accept the refugees proper of their homes.”
“As you understand, many individuals are leaving Ukraine, particularly ladies and youngsters, and so they have no place to go,” Mykhaylyuk mentioned from a resort in western Ukraine, the place many refugees are staying.
“They really misplaced every thing. In a single second, every thing simply turned the wrong way up,” Mykhaylyuk mentioned. “So what they really have is simply their suitcase. That is it.”
“That is why they have no assist after they go to Europe,” he continued. “Nobody is ready for them.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged the U.S. and Poland to “ship us planes” to assist defend his nation’s airspace.
“Our nation, we’re all the time able to assist one another. I am doing what I can in my particular place,” Mykhaylyuk advised Fox Information. “I am positively shocked that so many individuals have been prepared to assist” and assist “us with every thing they will.”
“We’re very completely satisfied to be useful, and we’re prepared to assist all of those that want it,” he continued.
World
Video: An American’s Desperate Effort to Save Her Family in Gaza
new video loaded: An American’s Desperate Effort to Save Her Family in Gaza
transcript
transcript
An American’s Desperate Effort to Save Her Family in Gaza
Following an Israeli airstrike on a camp for displaced Palestinians in Rafah, Gaza, Rolla Alaydi, a Palestinian American, could not reach her family members in Rafah for days, leaving her unsure if they had survived the attack.
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We’re going to start a long journey of trying to get them out of Gaza to the safety. I have a total of 21 family members, and they are scattered in different areas of Gaza. They took a decision not to be in one area in case something happened — not all of them will be killed or bombed. Before the war started, all my family, they have their degree. They have all their own career. They lived a very decent life. I feel just hopeless doing nothing. Just waiting and time, just killing me. I cannot even give them the medicine that I got for them. I don’t know what to do. Not strong at all. Not strong at all. When I saw the images of burning tents and the bombing of Rafah, I almost got heart attack because I know for sure my brother, his six kids and his wife, they are in tent in Rafah. This could be my family. They could be burned. They could be killed. The internet signal is weak. It took a whole week from the incident of Rafah to know about my family that they survived. I don’t know what will happen to them next hour. Every hour is unpredictable. If I don’t hear from my family in three days, going to the fourth, I go insane. Voice message: “Your call cannot be completed as dialed. Please check the number and dial again.” My mind is just going all over the scenarios. Like they could be killed, they could be bombed, they could be burned, and no one recognized their faces. And that is the most — horrific, scary feeling. I have to be strong just for my family. All my family, 21 family members, depends on me. I’m their only source of hope.
Recent episodes in Israel-Hamas War
World
German police shoot ax-wielding man with 'incendiary device' threatening fans near Euro 2024 soccer match
Police in Germany said officers opened fire on an ax-wielding suspect who put fans in jeopardy near a Euro 2024 fan parade in the city of Hamburg Sunday.
Hamburg Police said an unidentified person threatened officers “with a pickaxe and an incendiary device” in the St. Pauli district.
The incident reportedly happened on the sidelines of a Euro 2024 soccer fan parade, which was unfolding hours before Poland and the Netherlands were scheduled to play in the city’s stadium, Volksparkstadion.
Officers deployed their guns, and the attacker was injured and received medical attention, police said on X.
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The department afterward announced a “major police operation” underway, adding the event at Heiligengeistfeld “is subject to various security checks and is well protected.”
“We are currently assuming that there was a lone perpetrator,” police added.
The incident happened around the same time as the Dutch fan parade. Nearly 40,000 soccer fans were marching through the entertainment district, according to German state broadcaster DW.
The suspect reportedly walked out of a bar and began waving an ax in a “threatening manner.” Officers opened fire after the man refused to lay down the ax, hitting him in the leg, German news agency Deutsche Presse-Agentur reported, citing Hamburg Police. German media published images of a person lying in the street surrounded by paramedics and police officers.
“According to current knowledge, there is no football connection,” a police spokesman told the outlet. The motive was not immediately announced.
EUROPEAN VOTERS REJECT SOCIALISM, FAR-LEFT POLICIES IN EU PARLIAMENT ELECTIONS: ‘POLITICAL EARTHQUAKE’
German authorities have put police on high alert during the tournament, which began Friday and runs through July 14, for fear of possible fan violence and terrorist attacks.
On Friday, police shot to death a 27-year-old Afghan national after he fatally attacked a 23-year-old compatriot with a “knife-like object” and later wounded three people watching the televised game between Germany and Scotland in Wolmirstedt, a small town about 80 miles west of Berlin.
Police said Sunday the motive for that attack was still unclear.
The Interior Ministry in Saxony-Anhalt state, which includes Wolmirstedt, said police had increased their presence across the state.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
Protesters in Brussels march against right-wing ideology
It’s the second major march in the Belgian capital denouncing the far-right since the EU elections on June 9th which saw right, far-right and populist parties winning big at the polls.
More than 4,000 people have marched through Brussels in protest against the political right and racism.
Organised by the Anti-fascist Coordination of Belgium (CAB) the march brought together around 20 social movements and organisations.
It’s the second major march in the Belgian capital denouncing the far-right since the EU elections on June 9th which saw right and far-right parties winning big.
“This march is important today to show a message of hope in the face of the messages of despair that the far right wants to bring us,” said CAB member Sixtine Van Outryve.
“It’s important to show that we’re in solidarity with everyone, whatever their nationality, whatever they earn, whatever they do. We stand together and we want a society that doesn’t divide us. A society that doesn’t exclude, a society that isn’t racist or sexist.”
“Many of us were shocked by the election results, showing far-right breakthroughs at the European level,” Van Outryve said, expressing concern about what she called an “alarming” trend towards the normalisation of far-right discourse.
Right and far-right parties scored big in the EU elections with the most dramatic result coming in France. Marine le Pen’s National Rally took first place in the polls with more than 31% of the vote, prompting President Emmanuel Macron to dissolve the National Assembly and call snap elections.
In Italy, Giorgia Meloni’s right-wing Brothers of Italy bagged the most votes (28.7%) while in Germany, the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) surged to second place, knocking Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats into third.
There were also victories for right-leaning and populist parties in Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria.
Demonstrators in Brussels were keen to show that the rise of the far-right wasn’t “inevitable” and that it was important to confront it by building social and democratic alternatives.
“We’re going to show them that young people aren’t entirely seduced by far right and that the majority of us continue to fight against their ideas,” said a 17-year-old protester called Henri.
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