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Ukrainian refugees bring new life to Spain’s rural villages

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Ukrainian refugees bring new life to Spain’s rural villages

Svetlana friends over the balcony of her new dwelling onto the empty sq. in Aguilafuente, a village of barely 600 inhabitants within the depths of Castilla y León. 

The once-thriving heartland of Spain is now scattered with abandoned and slowly emptying villages, unfold throughout sweeping, arable plains.

“Jesus has introduced me to paradise,” Svetlana says simply as her youthful son Miroslav, 7, bursts into tears for the fifth time within the area of an hour. But it surely’s higher than the bunker. That was the household’s dwelling again in March, in Sarata, Ukraine after the conflict broke out.

Throughout these darkish days, whereas they have been sheltering from bombs, Svetlana misplaced her voice. She suffers from bronchial asthma and the worry affected her vocal cords. Finally, she accepted a neighbour’s supply to drive her and her kids to the border with Moldova.

From there, the household caught a practice to Romania, the place they managed to bag three of the 100,000 free aircraft tickets donated by Wizz Air.

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Svetlana had dreamed of dwelling in Spain since she first clicked her heels in a pair of flamenco footwear as a 10-year-old.

Now, as a substitute of a dancer, she is likely one of the 135,000 which have come to the nation since February as refugees.

The Catholic NGO, Messengers of Peace launched her to policewoman Cristina Olalla, whose household housed her and, along with locals, offered her and her sons with meals and garments.

The boys now go to the village faculty, boosting its pupil physique to 38. On Sundays, they go to mass and be part of locals for an aperitivo on the bar within the sq..

But it surely’s been a troublesome adjustment as they communicate no Spanish and the boys battle to slot in. “It’s not a change they selected and so they’re nonetheless proof against it,” mentioned the boys’ instructor, María Jesús Garrido.

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However Svetlana loves the tiny neighborhood that got here to her rescue. “The folks listed here are completely satisfied,” she mentioned. “In Ukraine, they’re unhappy. We’re going to keep.”

Some in Spain at the moment are hoping that by welcoming new immigrants to the nation, they may also help carry extra life to the depopulated areas, whose thinning-out has been a serious supply of concern for years.

Miguel García, president of the Depopulation and Demographic Problem Fee inside Spain’s Federation of Municipalities and Provinces (FEMP), goes additional. He says the brand new arrivals are pivotal for the survival of those villages, often known as “empty Spain”.

“The immigrant inhabitants, together with the Ukrainian refugee teams, are important to maintaining the villages alive,” he tells Euronews. “We should be capable to facilitate and promote alternatives for this inhabitants.

“However additionally it is important to deal with the shortage of reasonably priced housing within the villages, which is at present the primary drawback. What good is broadband if you happen to don’t have a roof over your head?”

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Regardless of the shortage of housing, many Ukrainians have been accommodated in properties owned by the Church, by the council, or by metropolis dwellers, who repeatedly say the Ukrainian arrivals “might simply be us”.

‘We miss town’

5 kilometres down the highway from Svetlana, two younger skilled moms are much less upbeat about their new dwelling. 

“It’s surreal, loopy,” says Tonia, trying as if she has been transported by a time machine to the village of Aldea Actual, one other island in an enormous expanse of farmland. “We miss town.”

Tonia and Iryna have include their kids – three between them – and one set of parents-in-law. They selected Spain as a result of they reckoned it could be low-cost, and certainly, the church has offered free lodging.

The daddy-in-law has planted lettuce and tomatoes. Somebody lent him a motorbike and he can now be seen driving it round Aldea Actual’s empty streets.

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Tonia is an editor from Kyiv and Iryna is a monetary analyst from close by Irpin, the place a battle raged for a month between February 27 and March 28 as a part of Russia’s bid to encompass the capital.

Whereas the Ukrainians have recaptured Irpin, the constructing in entrance of Iryna’s dwelling has been lowered to rubble. The home windows of her personal home are damaged. However she is determined to get again, as is Tonia.

“All of the hugs and kissing right here is an excessive amount of. We don’t try this with strangers,” Tonia says.

Additionally they miss their husbands. “We received’t be right here to eat the lettuce,” Iryna mentioned. “The women must be at their very own faculty in September.”

‘It is nice to have them’

Lots of the Ukrainian refugees coming to Spain are moms with younger kids who’ve visibly introduced life to a few of these backwater cities, filling the faculties and parks anew.

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Within the Galician province of Ourense, dwelling to considered one of Europe’s oldest populations, greater than 50 Ukrainian refugees have gone some method to lowering the common age in two villages and one nation city.

Bussed in from the Ukrainian border by six Spanish mates who arrange SOS Ternopil Galitzia, they’ve been housed in empty flats and transformed public buildings in San Xoán de Río, Manzaneda and A Pobra de Trives.

Manuel, 97, shuffles throughout the primary avenue in San Xoán de Río. “It’s nice to have them,” he says, including: “It might have been us.”

Manuel was 10 when the Spanish Civil Struggle broke out, a time when folks have been nonetheless preventing over rural Spain.

The mayor of San Xoán de de Río, José Miguel Pérez, says 10% of the village’s 500 inhabitants are over 90.Now, there are 9 kids of their midst once more. 

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Pérez is happy and hopes that a number of the refugees will keep in Spain, although he acknowledges that the majority will depart when it’s protected to take action.

One other lady named Svetlana is amongst those that goal to return when the time is true. She has introduced her three-year-old son, Ivan, together with her to Galicia however left her 19-year-old daughter and oldsters behind in Kyiv.

Her cousin will stay right here within the village along with his spouse and youngsters. He’s a mechanic by commerce and located work within the neighborhood.

Svetlana has additionally began a job, working shifts in a nursing dwelling – seven days straight, then two days off, then one other eight. She is shocked and desires to carry it to the mayor’s consideration with out seeming ungrateful. However he shrugs. “It’s a personal place. That’s how it’s.”

Again in Aldea Actual, Iryna and Tonia have been in contact with their husbands. “They mentioned it’s too early to come back again,” Iryna mentioned. “Possibly by the tip of the summer season.”

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It seems they could be right here for the lettuce in spite of everything.

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Iraq's Kurdish Regional Security Council announces arrest of top aide of former Islamic State leader

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Iraq's Kurdish Regional Security Council announces arrest of top aide of former Islamic State leader

The Kurdish Regional Security Council announced in a statement on Friday that it captured a senior Islamic State figure, Socrates Khalil.

Khalil was known to be a confidant of the late Islamic State leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

“After spending five years in Turkey, Khalil returned to Kurdistan with a forged passport and was swiftly apprehended,” the statement said.

Khalil made bombs for the Islamic State and was entrusted by al-Baghdadi with various major operations, the statement added, saying that he was instrumental in the 2014 Islamic State takeover of Mosul, and participated in many battles against Iraqi forces and the Peshmerga forces.

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UN experts say South Sudan is close to securing a $13 billion oil-backed loan from a UAE company

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UN experts say South Sudan is close to securing a $13 billion oil-backed loan from a UAE company

U.N. experts say South Sudan is close to securing a $13 billion loan from a company in the United Arab Emirates, despite the oil-rich country’s difficulties in managing debts backed by its oil reserves.

The panel of experts said in a report to the U.N. Security Council that loan documents it has seen indicate the deal with the company, Hamad Bin Khalifa Department of Projects, would be South Sudan’s largest-ever oil-backed loan.

SOUTH SUDAN MEDIATION TALKS LAUNCHED IN KENYA WITH A HOPE OF ENDING CONFLICT

The experts, who monitor an arms embargo against South Sudan, said in the oil section of the report obtained by The Associated Press this week that “servicing this loan would likely tie up most of South Sudan’s revenue (for) many years, depending on oil prices.”

U.N. experts say South Sudan is close to securing a $13 billion loan from a company in the United Arab Emirates, despite the oil-rich country’s difficulties in managing debts backed by its oil reserves. (Photo by TIZIANA FABI/AFP via Getty Images)

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Hamad Bin Khalifa Department of Projects, registered in Dubai, has no listed phone number and its website isn’t working. An email address associated with the company bounced back. The UAE Mission to the United Nations declined to comment, saying Hamad is a private company.

South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 following decades of civil war that cost million of lives, and oil is the backbone of the young nation’s economy.

Soon after independence, South Sudan fought its own civil war from 2013 to 2018, when rivals President Salva Kiir and Vice President Riek Machar signed a power-sharing agreement and formed a coalition government. South Sudan is under pressure from the United States and other nations to more quickly implement the 2018 peace deal that ended the civil war and prepare for elections.

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s latest update, South Sudan produced an average of about 149,000 barrels of liquid fuels per day in 2023. The landlocked country uses Sudan’s pipelines to transfer its oil to Port Sudan for shipment to global markets in an agreement with the Sudanese government, which pockets $23 per barrel as transit fees for the oil exports.

South Sudanese Information Minister Michael Makuei Lueth told reporters in February that outside factors, including the civil war still raging in Sudan, have hurt South Sudan’s oil exports. He also said oil wells, which were water-logged by heavy floods during the past rainy season, weren’t yet fully operational.

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The section on oil in the experts report said documents for the loan from the UAE company, signed between December and February by South Sudan’s minister of finance, indicate the loan is split into tranches.

According to the documents, around 70% of the loan is to be allocated to infrastructure projects, with the first payment in excess of $5 billion, the panel said. Following a three-year grace period, “the loan will be secured against the delivery of crude oil for a period of up to 17 years.”

The panel of experts raised serious questions about South Sudan’s oil-based debts.

South Sudan lost a case in the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes stemming from a $700 million loan it received from Qatar National Bank in 2012.

When the panel wrote its report, the tribunal had not reached a decision on how much the government would have to pay, but The Sudan Tribune reported Sunday that South Sudan has been ordered to pay more than $1 billion.

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The panel of experts said it has also confirmed that the government owes $151.97 million to the Eastern and Southern African Trade and Development Bank stemming from a previous oil-related deal.

South Sudan was supposed to hold elections before February 2023, but that timetable was pushed back last August to December 2024.

In early April, South Sudan’s president warned lawmakers “not to cling to power just weeks after his former rival turned deputy proposed a further postponement of elections.

The panel of experts said would be “a significant milestone” and warned that the country’s leaders are running short of time “to ensure divergent expectations do not fuel further tensions and strife.”

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The experts also noted South Sudan’s humanitarian crisis. in which an estimated 9 million of the country’s 12.5 million people need protection and humanitarian assistance, according to the U.N. The country has also seen an increase in the number of refugees fleeing the war in neighboring Sudan, further complicating humanitarian assistance to those affected by South Sudan’s internal conflict.

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India’s biggest election prize: Can the Gandhi family survive Modi?

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India’s biggest election prize: Can the Gandhi family survive Modi?

Amethi/Rae Bareli, India Irfan*, a tea stall owner, is convinced that change is afoot.

“There has not been much traffic on this road from Rae Bareli to Amethi ever since the Congress lost power in 2014,” he says, referring to two towns and a party that for decades have been synonymous with one family – the Nehru-Gandhis, or as they are more commonly known, the Gandhis.

The first family of Indian politics has ruled the country for almost half of its journey since independence in 1947, with three generations of prime ministers: Jawaharlal Nehru, his daughter Indira Gandhi, and grandson Rajiv Gandhi. And through ups and downs, when the Congress has been in power and out of it, Amethi and Rae Bareli, separated by 62km (38 miles), have for the most part stood by the family. They’ve served as safe constituencies for India’s grand old party in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, which is India’s largest electoral prize: with 80 seats out of the nation’s total of 543 in the lower house of parliament.

In 2019, that tradition received a dramatic jolt when the Congress leader Rahul Gandhi – son of Rajiv – lost Amethi by 55,000 votes to Smriti Irani, a feisty minister in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government, which has been in power nationally since 2014. Rahul’s mother and former Congress chief, Sonia Gandhi, retained Rae Bareli for the party, the only seat it won in Uttar Pradesh as the BJP swept the nation, winning 303 seats overall.

Now, five years later, the towns are a tense microcosm of the national battle between the BJP and opposition Congress; between Modi and the Gandhis. Rahul is replacing his 77-year-old mother from Rae Bareli this time. BJP’s Irani is seeking reelection from Amethi. Each of them is expected to face tough competition from the other’s party. Amethi and Rae Bareli vote on May 20 in India’s giant election.

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At stake are more than two seats: If the BJP wins Rae Bareli and retains Amethi, it will effectively have wiped out the Gandhi family and the Congress from Uttar Pradesh. Conversely, say opposition leaders, a Congress win in both seats could seed anti-BJP momentum in a state that often decides who rules nationally.

Irfan, from his vantage point of Tiloi town near Amethi and Rae Bareli, believes the political winds are blowing in the direction of the Congress. “Storm is building in both the cities, which will impact the entire state,” he says.

Yet, storms can be unpredictable – and Amethi and Rae Bareli know that.

A supporter of India’s Congress party wearing an outfit with portraits of former Indian Prime Ministers Indira Gandhi, top, and Rajiv Gandhi, waves to the camera at an election campaign rally addressed by Rahul Gandhi in Thane, on the outskirts of Mumbai, India, on March 6, 2014 [File: Rajanish Kakade/AP Photo]

Boost for the opposition?

In a video posted by the Congress party on social platforms, Rahul and his mother Sonia are seen leafing through old photos of the family visiting and contesting from Amethi and Rae Bareli, as they reflect on their family’s old association with the towns.

It is a decades-old bond. Feroze Gandhi, Indira’s husband and Rahul’s grandfather, won Rae Bareli in 1952 – independent India’s first election. Indira and Sonia won this seat subsequently, their stints interspersed by terms when their loyalists were nominated to contest from the town instead.

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Only thrice has the Congress lost Rae Bareli. In 1977, a national opposition coalition toppled Indira’s government to come to power amid a wave of anger against the Congress over its imposition of a state of national emergency in 1975, when civil liberties were suspended and thousands of its political opponents were arrested. In 1996 and 1998, when the BJP was rising nationally and first came to power, it defeated the Congress here – though the Gandhi family was not in the contest on those occasions.

In Amethi, Indira’s elder son Feroze Gandhi lost the 1977 election but won in 1980. The Congress lost only once since then, in 1998, before Irani’s upset in 2019. Sonia and Rahul have both won from Amethi.

After his loss in 2019, many pundits had wondered whether Rahul would ever contest from the family pocket boroughs – or even from Uttar Pradesh – again. He had won from Wayanad in the southern state of Kerala in 2019 and contested from there again this time.

The Congress party insiders say he was unconvinced about contesting from a second seat this time, but was eventually swayed by pressure from Sonia, who was opposed to giving up the family’s bastions without a fight. Rahul’s sister Priyanka, who is now also a leader of Congress, decided against contesting.

With Rahul contesting from Rae Bareli, a longtime family friend Kishori Lal Sharma is competing against Irani from Amethi. It’s a scenario that could work for the opposition, say some of its leaders. In the days before the Congress decided on its candidates for these seats, Ameeque Jamei, a national spokesperson for the Samajwadi Party – the Congress’s biggest ally in Uttar Pradesh – had told Al Jazeera that if Rahul or Priyanka contested, the “opposition fight against the BJP will gain greater meaning”. He predicted that the Congress-led INDIA alliance that is challenging the BJP nationally could win up to 20 of Uttar Pradesh’s 80 seats.

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That is easier said than done. Rahul faces a formidable challenger in the BJP’s Dinesh Pratap Singh, who gave Sonia a tough fight in 2019, cutting her winning margin substantially. Singh has been unsparing in his criticism of how the Gandhis treat their bloodline. The party and family rarely even mention Feroze Gandhi, Rahul’s grandfather, whose grave is 100km (60 miles) from Rae Bareli.

“A person who cannot be that of his grandfather, how can he be yours,” says Singh.

Vice President of India’s ruling Congress party Rahul Gandhi, second right, holds a handful of flower petals to throw back at supporters, with his sister Priyanka Vadra seated by his side as he arrives to file his nomination for the ongoing general elections in Amethi, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, Saturday, April 12, 2014. Gandhi, heir to the country's Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, is leading the struggling party's campaign in the general election. The multiphase voting across the country runs until May 12, with results for the 543-seat lower house of parliament announced May 16. (AP Photo/ Rajesh Kumar Singh)
Rahul Gandhi, right, and sister Priyanka campaigning in Amethi, Uttar Pradesh, ahead of the 2014 national election [Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP Photo]

Barbershop politics

On the ground, Rahul and Priyanka are barnstorming the otherwise sleepy cities of Rae Bareli and Amethi, in their own ways.

Recently, Rahul slipped into a local barbershop to get his beard trimmed. His videos of sitting in the barbershop went viral. Priyanka divides time between the two towns, holding road shows and corner meetings.

The Congress has also brought in other heavyweight leaders to strengthen its campaigns here with their experience and political guile. At Rae Bareli’s Shalimar Guest House, Bhupesh Baghel, the former chief minister of the central state of Chhattisgarh, is marshalling supporters. “Rahul has a lot of support in Rae Bareli. So, I don’t have to do very much,” he says.

Ashok Gehlot, the former chief minister of Rajasthan, is handling the Congress campaign in Amethi against Smriti Irani, who has doubled down on her accusations that the Gandhi family neglected the town and Rae Bareli for decades despite winning from there.

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The Congress is counting on the support of two key voting blocs. Muslims constitute 22 percent of Uttar Pradesh’s population. A Muslim leader from Amethi, Muhammad Alam, said many from his community could have considered voting for the BJP, but Modi’s recent attacks – including suggestions that the Congress would take Hindu wealth and give it to Muslims – had changed their minds.

Gautam Rane, a Dalit activist in Uttar Pradesh’s capital, Lucknow, says sections of the community, which sits at the bottom of India’s complex caste hierarchy, are also shifting towards the Congress. The community has traditionally backed the regional Bahujan Samaj Party in the state. The Congress has used stray comments by some BJP leaders to suggest that the party wants to change the constitution and take away caste-based affirmative action benefits from the Dalits – a charge that the BJP has denied.

“This is Rahul Gandhi’s elections,” Rane says. “No one [else] matters.”

* Name changed to protect identity

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