World
What do Russians think of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine?
“Guys, the place’s the primary protest?” asks 28-year-old Ksenia, who’s taken to the road to protest for the primary time in her life.
It’s 9 pm in Moscow and the police have already damaged up the majority of the protests. Since anybody with anti-war indicators is arrested instantly, protesters casually stroll alongside till a big sufficient crowd gathers to shout their opposition to what is going on on in Ukraine.
Two middle-aged ladies hiss “no conflict!” to the police earlier than operating away, laughing nervously.
“Let’s work, go!” the policeman orders his underlings. A bunch of three younger cops take off down the road however don’t discover any appropriate targets. They lastly spot a person, who, as he is being dragged to the police van, is revealed to be very drunk. He’s launched.
The protesters trickle alongside smaller streets, following location updates from devoted Telegram channels. Convoys of police vans observe. It’s an enormous sport of cat and mouse. The night time ends with a 39-year-old man driving a automobile into the police limitations at Pushkin Sq. with indicators “That is conflict!” and “Stand up, individuals!” The automobile begins to burn; the person is arrested.
On the sixth day of the conflict in Ukraine, there have been greater than 6,000 arrests at anti-war protests throughout Russia.
“The night time of (the invasion), I used to be in a extremely nice temper,” remembers Ksenia. “My buddy and I had been celebrating February 23 (Day of the Defender of the Fatherland or, extra generally, Males’s Day).
“We had been exterior, consuming wine and singing on the swings. At 6:05 am Forbes introduced Putin declared the beginning of the army operation. And that’s it. My world divided right into a earlier than and after.”
Ksenia works in PR and speaks bluntly.
“Putin is loopy. No sane individual would do something like this. Ukraine will persevere. In the meantime, we’re going to be in [the] shit.”
‘It has been a very long time coming’
“You’re not a type of liberals, are you?” asks 49-year-old Yuri. He’s not a fan of anti-war protesters like Ksenia.
“I’m towards the conflict. However to be sincere, it’s been a very long time coming. The issue will not be with Ukraine, however with these Anglo-Saxons who’re creeping upon us. Simply have a look at what occurred to international locations they’ve obtained into, like Syria. And now they’re making an attempt to get at us (create inside strife) through Ukraine. Due to this fact, I believe all of that is justified and proper.”
The liberals that Yuri hates would reply in sort by calling him “a sufferer of the zombie-box”, or state tv. This ideological division runs by way of many Russian households. Nevertheless, Yuri’s sentiment is just too widespread to dismiss as loopy speak on the fringes.
The concern of NATO was and could be very actual right here. Examples of Yugoslavia and Libya, two states bombed by NATO forces, are used to drive fears that Russia could also be subsequent. The day earlier than the beginning of the conflict, Putin advised the nation of WWII-era guarantees to not increase NATO eastward and mentioned these guarantees had been damaged 5 occasions. Ukraine’s flirtation with NATO membership pushed these fears into overdrive.
Yuri is one among many seeing the occasions by way of a prism of concern.
“If I’m known as up, I’ll go,” he mentioned. “Russians are usually not afraid of the military. All of us have kids. No less than my kids will probably be protected.”
What does he consider the sanctions on Russia?
“Our individuals have at all times been below some sort of sanctions. We’re used to it. If we survived throughout the starvation and sieges, we’ll make it.”
It’s sunny, individuals are taking selfies on Pink Sq., whereas an extended convoy of Nationwide Guard buses rolls by the Kremlin partitions. Extra protests are anticipated.
Nikita, 20, tells Euronews: “I’m largely towards conflict. However I don’t know what I’d’ve performed within the place of the federal government. If conflict didn’t begin now, then possibly 5 – 6 years down the street Ukraine might’ve joined NATO and the results would’ve been a lot totally different for our nation. In fact, I actually really feel dangerous for the unusual individuals who can not affect their authorities’s choices.” Do you imply Russians or Ukrainians, Nikita is requested. “All of us. Our guys are dying over there and so are Ukrainians.”
“I’m towards conflict,” mentioned Olesya, 45, who has most of her family members within the separatist area of Donbas. “However I believe this could’ve been performed in 2014 after which we wouldn’t have conflict at present. The place was the West, with all its humanitarian issues, when the Ukrainians shelled the individuals of Donbas?”
The conflict in jap Ukraine broke out in 2014 after Russia annexed Crimea. Subsequent, two separatist areas in Donbas, Donetsk and Luhansk, declared their independence from Kyiv. It sparked a battle between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed separatists, which has seen casualties on either side.
However despite the fact that justification of the Ukraine invasion will be discovered amongst Russians, there have been no demonstrations of help.
Quite the opposite, the individuals taking to the streets are these towards it, regardless of threats of arrests. Most Russians have household and mates in Ukraine.
“Battle is at all times terrible. Battle by no means results in something good and gained’t this time both,” – says 18-year-old Tonya, carrying a bag with a hand-stitched “No conflict” signal.
“I’m scared and harm for my mates in Ukraine, who write to me ‘we’re taking place into the bomb shelter’. We joke, ‘It’s been an explosive morning, hasn’t it?’ and she or he says, ‘It’s been merely bombastic’. Prior to now three days, I’ve slept for 10 hours in complete. The remainder of the time I’m crying”.
A conflict with a rustic with the strongest historic and cultural ties to Russia was laughable, ridiculous, absurd. Till February 24, 2022. Putin’s assault on Ukraine took most Russians without warning.
World
Mount Everest remains believed to be climber who vanished 100 years ago
A National Geographic documentary team has found on Mount Everest what they believe is the partial remains of a British climber who vanished 100 years ago during a quest to become among the first to summit the world’s tallest mountain.
The organization announced Friday that the expedition found a foot encased in a sock embroidered with “AC Irvine” and a boot that could be that of Andrew “Sandy” Irvine, who disappeared at the age of 22 along with his co-climber, the legendary George Mallory, near Everest’s peak on June 8, 1924.
“It’s the first real evidence of where Sandy ended up,” photographer and director Jimmy Chin told National Geographic. “A lot of theories have been put out there.”
“When someone disappears and there’s no evidence of what happened to them, it can be really challenging for families. And just having some definitive information of where Sandy might’ve ended up is certainly [helpful], and also a big clue for the climbing community as to what happened,” Chin added.
MOUNT EVEREST CLIMBING DUO VANISHES FROM NOTORIOUS AREA OF WORLD’S TALLEST PEAK
In his final letter to his wife, Ruth, before he vanished on Mount Everest a century ago, the 37-year-old Mallory tried to ease her worries even as he said his chances of reaching the world’s highest peak were “50 to 1 against us.”
Mallory’s body was found in 1999, but there was no evidence that could point to the two having reached Everest’s summit at 29,032 feet, according to The Associated Press.
The apparent discovery of Irvine’s remains could narrow the search for a Kodak Vest Pocket camera lent to the climbers by expedition member Howard Somervell.
NEPALI GUIDE, UK MOUNTAINEER SURPASS THEIR OWN RECORDS FOR MOST CLIMBS OF MOUNT EVEREST
For mountaineers, the AP describes it as the equivalent of the Holy Grail — the possibility of photographic proof that the two did reach the summit, almost three decades before New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Nepalese Sherpa Tenzing Norgay got there on May, 29, 1953.
The sock and boot were found on the Central Rongbuk Glacier below the north face of Mount Everest in September.
Irvine’s family reportedly is volunteering to compare DNA test results with the remains to confirm their identity.
“I have lived with this story since I was a 7-year-old when my father told us about the mystery of Uncle Sandy on Everest,” Irvine’s great-niece and biographer, Julie Summers, told the AP. “When Jimmy told me that he saw the name AC Irvine on the label on the sock inside the boot, I found myself moved to tears. It was and will remain an extraordinary and poignant moment.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
Zelenskyy meets Scholz in Berlin despite NATO meeting cancellation
Ukrainian President Zelenskyy concluded his short European tour ahead of the US elections in Berlin on Friday by meeting German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. But was the trip a success?
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz received Ukrainian President Zelenskyy in Berlin on Friday, where Scholz promised further aid packages before the cold Ukrainian winter sets in.
During the tour that included visiting UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron and Italian PM Giorgia Meloni, Zelenskyy reportedly presented his peace plan, which pledges an end to the war in 2025.
Scholz promised new air defence systems and other weapons, along with a fresh military aid package, in collaboration with other NATO partners, worth €1.4 billion. €170 million has also been earmarked for Ukraine’s energy system, according to Scholz.
All eyes on Washington and 5 November
Zelenskyy was originally set to meet with US President Biden along with other key NATO members at a meeting on the Ramstein airbase scheduled for Saturday. However, the meeting was postponed after Biden stayed in the US as parts of the East coast were battered by hurricane Milton.
With no rescheduled date on the table for the meeting, experts suggest that Ukraine could be nervous ahead of the US election, less than a month away, as a visit from Biden may not carry as much weight when his presidency is coming to an end.
The polls are currently on knife edge between Trump and Harris and if Trump manages to win, experts are predicting that support for Ukraine will dry up from the US side.
The question remaining is how quickly Ukraine could be become a NATO member and if it would be the whole of Ukraine, or simply the territories not occupied by Russian forces. It is clear a lot will depend on the outcome of the US election next month.
World
Video: Japanese Atomic Bomb Survivors Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
new video loaded: Japanese Atomic Bomb Survivors Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
transcript
transcript
Japanese Atomic Bomb Survivors Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
The Nobel committee said that Nihon Hidankyo, the Japanese grass-roots movement of “hibakusha,” or atomic bombing survivors, has demonstrated that “nuclear weapons must never be used again.”
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This movement is receiving the Peace Prize for its efforts to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons and for demonstrating through witness testimony that nuclear weapons must never be used again.
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