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Ukrainian family separated in EU due to documentation problems

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Ukrainian family separated in EU due to documentation problems

A Ukrainian household arriving within the EU was separated on account of issues with their documentation being recognised, in keeping with an NGO.

“Due to the warfare, many individuals misplaced their journey paperwork, in addition to inside paperwork,” stated Svitlana Botenko, from NGO Proper to Safety. “Usually the one factor they possess is [digital] identification.”

By way of the NGO, the household recounted to Euronews their harrowing story of being separated upon arriving in Italy.

Karyna Voronova despatched her 13-year-old daughter Ksenia, a eager aggressive bicycle owner, to Italy at the start of the warfare to proceed her coaching. The household break up up as they left Ukraine in these early days, with Ksenia travelling to Italy together with her grandmother.

However authorities in Italy decided that her grandmother Svitlana Osypova didn’t have the proper paperwork to show she was Ksenia’s grandmother, the household stated.

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Whereas Osypova was allowed to stick with her granddaughter, Ksenia was allegedly assigned completely different caretakers over the course of a number of months.

Ksenia’s mom grew to become involved and tried to reunite together with her daughter by means of the Italian courts however she says this too was met with pushback.

“No person believed us. The papers weren’t taken critically, every thing we’ve got proven was doubted as illegitimate or a forgery of some type. I understood I needed to go to my daughter instantly,” Voronova stated in an announcement.

Voronova believes that help from the area people in Sicily the place they had been staying, pushed the scales in her favour and allowed her to regain full custody of her youngster.

“The Italians have helped us quite a bit,” she stated. “Everybody who may make a name has referred to as [the] choose asking her to reunite the household. I really feel this has affected the judgement.”

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Ukrainian authorities finally supplied the validity the Italian courtroom wanted to shut the case and permit the household to get custody of the daughter.

Because the starting of the warfare in February, Italy has acquired round 6,000 unaccompanied minors from Ukraine, in keeping with the Italian Ministry of Labour and Social Insurance policies. The inflow resulted as households raced to get their kids in another country.

Euronews has contacted the Italian authorities for remark however they didn’t reply on the time of publication.

Tetiana Luzan, the advocacy coordinator for the Ukrainian NGO Proper to Safety, has skilled the desperation of Ukrainian mother and father firsthand.

“We’ve got a hotline, and from the very first days, individuals had been calling they usually had been able to ship their kids simply with anyone, actually simply to avoid wasting their lives,” she stated.

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EU international locations have completely different programs

In accordance with the Worldwide Organisation for Migration (IOM), many Ukrainians don’t attempt to depart the nation with out journey paperwork.

The IOM stated nevertheless that the warfare has made bodily paperwork tough to entry and preserve for migrants from different international locations dwelling in Ukraine.

Particular person member states have taken steps to bridge any gaps.

Poland, as an example, has partnered with Ukrainian authorities to host places of work in Warsaw during which Ukrainians can purchase a Ukrainian ID card or passport.

And in Slovakia, Ukrainians and others can apply for short-term refuge with out journey documentation.

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In an announcement, the European Fee confused that “the safety of youngsters stays one among our key priorities,” including that the popularity of digital paperwork is a call that falls to member states somewhat than the EU itself.

Luzan and Botenko referred to as for elevated dialogue amongst EU international locations and a typical place on the digitalisation of journey paperwork.

Botenko added that Europe has developed such digital documentation earlier than, citing the continent’s COVID-19 passport system developed in response to spikes in infections in 2021.

The subsequent step, the Ukrainian NGO stated, is for the EU to debate this problem with their Ukrainian counterparts, together with agreeing on frequent definitions for unaccompanied minors.

Doing so would supply European officers with a extra correct head rely of Ukrainian migrants, particularly minors, to verify residents returning to Ukraine have entry to the assets wanted to renew their lives there after the warfare.

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“If we don’t know the variety of kids, how do we all know that every one unaccompanied minors…[are] returned to Ukraine as soon as the warfare ended,” Luzan stated.

Voronova, who’s now dwelling together with her daughters in Kyiv, stated there may be nonetheless plenty of work to be performed to repair the immigration system within the EU and to reunify Ukrainian households who’re nonetheless separated.

“This case stays absurd and horrifying to me,” she stated. “I’m very sorry for all moms who additionally discovered themselves in comparable conditions.”

She added that she has heard tales of comparable conditions to her personal throughout Italy and confused the significance of cooperation between Italian and Ukrainian authorities as the one option to resolve this disaster.

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Remains of destroyed Kharkiv stadium exhibited in Berlin

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Remains of destroyed Kharkiv stadium exhibited in Berlin

The joy of the European Championship exists parallel to the suffering caused by Russia’s war of aggression, says Bärbel Bas, President of the German Bundestag.

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Remains of the Sonyachny Stadium from Kharkiv, damaged by Russian missiles, have found a new temporary home in Berlin.

German Bundestag President Bärbel Bas and Ukrainian Ambassador Oleksii Makeiev unveiled the interactive installation by the Ukrainian Association of Football in front of the German Parliament building.

The stand includes an interactive installation with the story of Sonyachny. Using virtual reality, it’s possible to experience the stadium in real-time, seeing its current state.

The damaged tribune was first displayed in Munich, where the Ukrainian team has played their first match at this year’s euros against Romania. The team has since been knocked out of the tournament.

Kharkiv was one of four Ukrainian host cities for the Euros in 2012. In 2022, the stadium on display was destroyed by Russian attacks.  

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So far, 500 sports facilities in Ukraine, including 77 football stadiums, have been damaged or destroyed by Russian bomb and missile attacks. 

Speaking to the press, Bas emphasized how this project communicates a message of duality: the joy of the European Championship exists in parallel to the suffering caused by Russia’s war of aggression.

She also expressed her support for the Ukrainian people.

“Today is the 19th day of the European Championship in Germany. That corresponds to the number of days in June alone on which air strikes were launched in Kharkiv. 468 hours. 19.5 days. In this sense, this stand is a memorial – a reminder that not far from here Russia is committing genocide on a daily basis, from which even soccer is not immune,” Ambassador Makeiv told journalists.

‘Peace has a price’

The damaged stand was first exhibited in Munich, where the Ukrainian team played its first match at this year’s European Championships against Romania. The Ukrainian team lost the game 3-0.

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The stand then travelled with the team to Düsseldorf where it was again put on display.

After three games resulting in a loss, a win and a draw, the Ukrainian team was eliminated from the tournament.

During the team’s last match in Stuttgart against Belgium, Ukrainian fans sent a sign. From the stands, they held a banner with the words “Peace has a price” along with a portrait of fallen soldier and football fan Nazariy Hryntsevich.

The image of Hryntsevich was created using artificial intelligence (AI) and the photos of 182 other fallen Ukrainian soldiers, all of whom were known to be avid fans of their local soccer clubs.

If the circumstances had been different, they would probably have been at the games in person or supporting their team in front of the TV. Instead, their static images radiate emotion and resilience.

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Watch more in the player above.

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World swimming federation confirms US federal investigation into Chinese swimmers' doping tests

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World swimming federation confirms US federal investigation into Chinese swimmers' doping tests

GENEVA (AP) — The international swimming federation says its top administrator has been ordered to testify as a witness in a U.S. criminal investigation into the case of 23 Chinese swimmers who failed doping tests in 2021 yet were allowed to continue competing.

The news comes just three weeks before the Paris Olympics, where 11 of the Chinese swimmers who tested positive for the banned heart medication three years ago are set to compete.

The swimmers won three gold medals for China at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, just weeks after the World Anti-Doping Agency declined to challenge Chinese authorities’ explanation of food contamination at a hotel to justify not suspending them.

Those decisions, which World Aquatics separately reached also, were not revealed until reporting in April by the New York Times and German broadcaster ARD.

A House Committee on China asked the Justice Department and the FBI on May 21 to investigate the case under a federal law that allows probes into suspected doping conspiracies even if they occurred outside the U.S.

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World Aquatics confirmed to The Associated Press on Thursday that executive director Brent Nowicki was subpoenaed to testify in the investigation.

“World Aquatics can confirm that its executive director, Brent Nowicki, was served with a witness subpoena by the United States government,” the federation said in a statement to AP. “He is working to schedule a meeting with the government, which, in all likelihood will obviate the need for testimony before a Grand Jury.”

World Aquatics declined to answer questions about where and when Nowicki was served his subpoena and didn’t say which office was handling the investigation.

“Per our standard practice, the FBI does not confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation,” the bureau said Thursday in an email reply.

The Chinese swimmers case could become the highest-profile use so far of a U.S. federal law passed in 2020 in fallout from the long-running scandal of Russian state-backed doping in sports.

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The 23 swimmers tested positive for trimetazidine in January 2021 and those were filed weeks later in the global anti-doping database. They included Zhang Yufei, who went on take Olympic gold in the women’s 200-meter butterfly and 4×200 freestyle relay, and Wang Shun, the men’s 200 medley champion.

A later investigation by Chinese state authorities said traces of the substance were found in the kitchen of a hotel where the team stayed. No explanation has been given about how and why the drug prescribed in pill form got there.

WADA accepted the theory which allowed the Chinese swimmers to continue to compete, and has since described it as “a relatively straightforward case of mass contamination.”

The agency has since defended its handling of the case that was kept secret in 2021, saying it had no way to independently disprove the theory during the COVID-19 pandemic when travel to China was not possible.

Lawyers for WADA said in April this year they did not have evidence to win separate appeals against the 23 swimmers before the Tokyo Olympics. Any appeals seeking suspensions for the swimmers would have been heard at the Court of Arbitration for Sport, where Nowicki was a long-time senior counsel before joining World Aquatics in 2021.

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“This scandal raises serious legal, ethical, and competitive concerns and may constitute a broader state-sponsored strategy by the People’s Republic of China to unfairly compete at the Olympic Games in ways Russia has previously done,” the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party said in the letter to the Justice Department and FBI.

The case was also raised at a congressional hearing last month in which swimming great Michael Phelps said athletes have lost faith in WADA as the global watchdog trying to keep cheaters out of sports.

Officials from the Montreal-based agency declined an invitation to come to the hearing, saying it would be “inappropriate to be pulled into a political debate before a U.S. congressional committee regarding a case from a different country, especially while an independent review into WADA’s handling of the case is ongoing.”

That review report is pending from a WADA-appointed former public prosecutor in the Swiss canton of Vaud that is home to the International Olympic Committee and governing bodies of many Olympic sports.

U.S. Anti-Doping Agency chief executive Travis Tygart suggested to The Associated Press an ongoing federal investigation could make sport officials traveling to the U.S. “fearful that they may have to answer questions about their activities from the FBI.”

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The U.S. will host the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles, and in Paris on July 24 the IOC should confirm Salt Lake City as host for the 2034 Winter Games.

The Rodchenkov Anti-Doping Act, named for a whistleblower who exposed Russian state-backed doping, passed with bipartisan backing. It received broad support from the global sports world for its aims to criminalize doping.

However, WADA lobbied against what it saw as a risk of overreach from the “extraterritorial” jurisdiction it could give to U.S. federal agencies, and the IOC also voiced concerns.

The Rodchenkov Act, Tygart said, “was enacted in 2021 with broad athlete, sport and multinational governmental support because WADA could not be trusted to be a strong, fair global watchdog to protect clean athletes and fair sport.”

___ Pells reported from Denver, Colorado.

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AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

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Biden to speak with Netanyahu Thursday on latest Hamas cease-fire proposal

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Biden to speak with Netanyahu Thursday on latest Hamas cease-fire proposal

President Biden will speak with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu via phone on Thursday following Hamas’ response to a hostage and cease-fire deal, Fox News Digital can confirm.

Israel said Wednesday it is examining Hamas’ offer of returning the remaining 116 hostages who were captured by the terrorist group during the Oct. 7 attacks, which left nearly 1,200 people dead. 

Netanyahu is set to convene his security cabinet later today to formulate a reaction to Hamas’ latest position, which could prove to be a pivotal step in ending the nine-month-long Israeli air and ground war that has devastated Gaza. The Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said the death toll in the war had climbed past 38,000, with at least 87,445 wounded.

NETANYAHU TRASHES NY TIMES REPORT CITING ANONYMOUS OFFICIALS WHO SAY ISRAELI MILITARY WANTS CEASE-FIRE IN GAZA

President Biden, left, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (Getty Images)

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The U.S. has rallied world support behind a plan that would see the hostages still held by the militant group released in return for a lasting truce and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza. However, until now, neither side appears to have fully embraced it. 

The current deal is reported to be based on a resolution outlined by President Biden in May, which would begin with an initial six-week cease-fire and the release of hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, the withdrawal of Israeli forces from populated areas in Gaza and the return of Palestinian civilians to all areas in the territory.

Phase two would see “a permanent end to hostilities, in exchange for the release of all other hostages still in Gaza, and a full withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.” 

Phase three would launch “a major multi-year reconstruction plan for Gaza and the return of the remains of any deceased hostages still in Gaza to their families.”

GAZA MILITANTS FIRE ROCKETS INTO ISRAEL AS TANK ADVANCES INTENSIFY IN NORTH AND SOUTH

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Israel Lebanon Border

An Israeli firefighter walks near smoke and fire following over-border rockets launching into Israel from Lebanon, amid ongoing cross-border hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, in northern Israel on June 12, 2024. (REUTERS/Gil Eliyahu)

Hamas suggested “amendments” to the proposal last month, some of which the U.S. said were unworkable, without providing specifics. The group sent another response Wednesday to Egypt and Qatar, which are mediating the talks, without providing details. A U.S. official said the Biden administration was examining the response, calling it constructive but saying more work needed to be done. The official, who was not authorized to comment publicly, spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press.

Hamas political official Bassem Naim said that the group has neither accepted nor rejected the American proposal and has “responded with some ideas to bridge the gap” between the two sides, without elaborating.

However, the transition from the first to the second phase has appeared to be the main sticking point.

Hamas is concerned that Israel will restart the war after the first phase, perhaps after making unrealistic demands in the talks. Israeli officials have expressed concern that Hamas will do the same, drawing out the talks and the initial cease-fire indefinitely without releasing the remaining captives.

Israeli Channel 12, citing a senior Israeli official, reports that Hamas has withdrawn its demand for guarantees that Israel would end the war and withdraw entirely from Gaza in order for it to even agree to the first stage of the deal.

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Additionally, the Hezbollah-linked newspaper Al-Akhbar reports that the Hamas plan involves Israel withdrawing troops from the Rafah Crossing area in agreement with Egypt but without having to fully withdraw from the key Philadelphi Corridor.

March for Israeli hostages

Israeli hostage families carry the photos of their loved ones who are held hostage by Hamas in Gaza as they march to Jerusalem. (Matan Golan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Netanyahu has been skeptical of the deal, saying that Israel is still committed to destroying Hamas. 

“The war will end once Israel achieves all of its objectives, including the destruction of Hamas and the release of all of our hostages,” Netanyahu said in a video statement given in Hebrew earlier this week. Netanyahu was slamming a New York Times report quoting senior Israeli officials who claim some military brass want a cease-fire with Hamas. 

Over the past nine months, 109 hostages have been released, seven have been rescued by the Israel Defense Forces, and the bodies of 19 have been recovered by the military from Gaza, including three who were mistakenly killed by troops, The Times of Israel reports.

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Fox News’ Yonat Friling and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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