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Zelenskyy condemns Russia’s rejection of Easter truce, says it shows how Putin treats Christianity

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Zelenskyy condemns Russia’s rejection of Easter truce, says it shows how Putin treats Christianity

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned Russian President Vladimir Putin, suggesting that the Russian chief has little regard for Christianity as a result of he rejected an Easter truce.

“Sadly, Russia rejected the proposal to ascertain an Easter truce,” Zelenskyy mentioned in a video Thursday. (Whereas Western Christians celebrated Easter final Sunday, Japanese Christians have fun it this upcoming Sunday, April 24.)

RUSSIA INVADES UKRAINE: LIVE UPDATES

“This reveals very effectively how the leaders of this state really deal with the Christian religion, one of the joyful and necessary holidays,” the Ukrainian president declared. “However we maintain our hope. Hope for peace, hope that life will overcome demise.” Easter celebrates the day when Christians imagine Jesus Christ rose from the lifeless, three days after His Crucifixion on Good Friday.

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy offers a speech.
(Instagram/@zelenskiy_official)

“Tomorrow is Good Friday for Japanese Christians,” Zelenskyy famous. He known as the vacation “essentially the most sorrowful day of the 12 months a day when every little thing you are able to do in life will weigh lower than prayer. Apart from one [thing]… defending the Homeland, defending brothers-in-arms in battle.”

Earlier this week, Russia rejected a United Nations proposal for a cease-fire throughout Holy Week, the week main as much as Easter. 

RUSSIA REJECTS CEASE-FIRE FOR CIVILIAN EVACUATION AMID EASTERN ORTHODOX HOLY WEEK

Civilians, together with youngsters, stay trapped within the japanese area of Donbas, the place Russian forces started a new fierce offensive, and within the devastated port metropolis of Mariupol. Guterres mentioned earlier Tuesday that greater than 12 million individuals in Ukraine wanted humanitarian help. He predicted that quantity would rise to fifteen.7 million, about 40% of all Ukrainians remaining within the nation. 

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Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Yerevan, Armenia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a gathering of the Supreme Eurasian Financial Council in Yerevan, Armenia.
(Shutterstock)

Even China, which has not condemned Russia and abstained from votes on resolutions in opposition to the aggressor nation, mentioned it supported a humanitarian cease-fire.

Russia’s rejection got here after the pinnacle of the World Council of Church buildings reached out to Moscow’s Patriarch Kirill, urging him to make use of his non secular authority as the pinnacle of Russia’s Orthodox Church to name for a cease-fire as Orthodox Christians have fun Easter this weekend.

FILE - Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulates Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill on the 13th anniversary of his enthronement in Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022.

FILE – Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulates Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill on the thirteenth anniversary of his enthronement in Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022.
(Alexei Nikolsky, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Picture by way of AP)

“Our humble request to your Holiness on this explicit and not possible scenario is to intervene and ask publicly for a ceasefire for a minimum of just a few hours throughout the Resurrection service,” Rev. Ioan Sauca, a Romanian Orthodox priest and appearing common secretary of the World Council of Church buildings, wrote in a letter revealed Tuesday.

HUNDREDS OF ORTHODOX CHURCHES IN UKRAINE REJECT MOSCOW PATRIARCHATE FOR KYIV, CHURCH LEADER SAYS

Sauca additionally famous that the combating in World Conflict I “stopped for a second in order that the troopers might share with each other the Resurrection greeting.”

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Most Russians and Ukrainians determine as Japanese Orthodox, as does Putin. Zelenskyy, nevertheless, is Jewish.

FILE - Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill delivers the Christmas Liturgy in the Christ the Saviour Cathedral in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

FILE – Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill delivers the Christmas Liturgy within the Christ the Saviour Cathedral in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022. (AP Picture/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
(AP Picture/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

The Kyiv-based Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU) broke away from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) earlier than the Russian invasion, however a whole bunch of Orthodox church buildings have reportedly switched their affiliation from Moscow to Kyiv because the begin of the struggle. Whereas the OCU began in 1995, it gained official recognition at an Oct. 2018 synod in Constantinople. The Metropolitan Epiphanius I used to be elected in Dec. 2018.

A big majority of Ukraine’s inhabitants identifies as Japanese Orthodox Christian, whereas a major minority of Ukrainian Catholics worship with a Byzantine liturgy much like the Orthodox however are loyal to the pope, surveys present. 

 

A 2018 survey discovered that about 67.3% of Ukraine’s inhabitants identifies as one or one other strand of Orthodox Christianity, with 28.7% a part of the Kyiv-based OCU, 23.4% merely “Orthodox,” and 12.8% UOC-MP. One other 7.7% of the inhabitants identifies as broadly Christian, whereas Ukrainian Byzantine Ceremony Catholics make up 9.4%, Protestants make up 2.2%, Latin Ceremony Catholics make up 0.8%, Muslims make up 2.5%, and Judaism makes up 0.4%. One other 11% declared themselves non-religious or unaffiliated.

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World

Wednesday Briefing

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Wednesday Briefing

Israel and Hamas are close to a deal on a cease-fire in Gaza and the release of hostages there, Antony Blinken, the U.S. secretary of state, said yesterday. “It’s closer than it’s ever been before,” he said. “But right now as we sit here we await final word from Hamas on its acceptance. And until we get that word, we’ll remain on the brink.”

Negotiators said Hamas seemed ready to accept the deal, including its details about the exchange of Palestinian prisoners for hostages and the specific movements of Israeli troops as they withdraw from positions in Gaza, a person familiar with the talks said last night.

The person said Israel was also locked in on the agreement, and that both sides seemed prepared to announce their acceptance of it in the very near future. Neither Israeli nor Hamas officials have publicly confirmed their positions. Here’s what we know about the proposal.

Gaza: An analysis in The Lancet found that Palestinian deaths from bombs and other traumatic injuries may have been undercounted by 40 percent during the first nine months of the war.

Yoon Suk Yeol today became the first sitting South Korean president to be detained for questioning by criminal investigators, after striking a deal with law enforcement officials that ended a weekslong standoff. He has been accused of insurrection in connection with his short-lived declaration of martial law last month.

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In a video message, Yoon said he had agreed to submit to questioning to prevent a “bloody” clash between his bodyguards and the police. But he called the investigation and the warrant to detain him illegal. Here’s what to know about South Korea’s leadership crisis.

Investigators have 48 hours to question Yoon, after which they could apply for a separate warrant to formally arrest him. Separately, the Constitutional Court is deliberating whether the National Assembly’s Dec. 14 impeachment of Yoon was legitimate and whether the president, currently suspended, should be permanently removed from office.

Pete Hegseth, Donald Trump’s pick for defense secretary, emerged from a tense confirmation hearing yesterday with the Republican Party’s support intact. A Senate vote on whether he should lead the Pentagon — a department with three million employees and a budget of $849 billion — could come as soon as Monday.

Over hours of questioning, Democrats quizzed Hegseth about sexual misconduct allegations — Hegseth was accused of rape in 2017 — and his drinking habits. They called him unfit to lead the Pentagon and grilled Hegseth, a former Fox News host, on his long history of disparaging comments about women in the military.

What’s next: It was unclear whether Hegseth had left the hearing with the votes he needed. If all Senate Democrats oppose him, Hegseth will have to secure the backing of at least 50 of the 53 Republicans in the chamber.

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Related: A report was released yesterday that detailed the special counsel’s investigation into Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election. Here are four takeaways.

The Maha Kumbh Mela festival in India begins this week. It is expected to draw up to 400 million Hindu pilgrims to the banks of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers, in what would be the world’s largest gathering.

The ceremony happens every 12 years and centers on a series of holy baths. But it has also become an important political event. For Prime Minister Narendra Modi, it is a chance to promote his right-wing party.

All-night diners are a signature New York institution. But in a city that supposedly never sleeps, they’re disappearing as costs rise and habits change.

Priya Krishna, a reporter for The Times, spent a Friday night at Kellogg’s Diner in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, dining nonstop from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. “Surprisingly, I drew no scrutiny from the staff for my hourslong stay,” she writes, “a heartening reminder that no other place will welcome you as unconditionally as an all-night diner.”

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Read about Priya’s night of pecan pie, lost treasures and Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.”

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South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol arrested: report

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South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol arrested: report

Suspended South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has reportedly been arrested over insurrection charges stemming from his ill-fated martial law declaration last month.

Yoon’s detention was reported Wednesday by Yonhap, one of the country’s largest news outlets. A warrant for his arrest, initially requested after he failed to show up for questioning, has been out since Dec. 31.

Police dispatched some 3,200 officers to the president’s sprawling hillside estate in Seoul, according to Reuters, where he has spent weeks in hiding whilst surrounded by a personal security detail.

Video shows officers closing in on Yoon’s residence, according to Reuters, where hundreds of his supporters had already gathered to protest on his behalf. Earlier, they were reportedly seen pushing through a group of them.

SOUTH KOREA’S IMPEACHED PRESIDENT AVOIDS ARREST ATTEMPT AFTER HOURSLONG STANDOFF

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A previous attempt to detain Yoon was called off on Jan. 3 following a six-hour standoff between military guards and the president’s security staff. 

“As I have repeatedly emphasized the need for prevention of physical conflict between state agencies,” Acting President Choi Sang-mok said in a statement Wednesday. “I will sternly hold those responsible if unfortunate events occur.”

Authorities are making a second attempt to detain suspended South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol following last month’s martial law declaration. (South Korea Presidential Office via AP, File)

Executing a warrant for Yoon’s arrest has proven difficult for investigators, as the president’s legal counsel insists it is impossible to do so under a law barring non-consensual searches of locations potentially linked to military secrets.

Yoon’s lawyers have also decried such a warrant as an illegal means of publicly humiliating him.

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ARREST WARRANT ISSUED FOR IMPEACHED SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENT AS POLITICAL CRISIS DEEPENS

The arrest warrant is the first ever to be levied against a sitting South Korean president. Yoon’s warrant stems from his declaration of martial law on Dec. 3 out of apparent frustration with the opposition-dominated parliament’s refusal to pass key items on his political agenda.

The move was decried within South Korea and abroad, where analysts expressed shock at the sudden and unprecedented move in what is typically one of Asia’s most stable democracies.

Officers close in on Yoon residence

Police officers are seen closing in on suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol’s residence in Seoul, South Korea, alongside investigators of the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials. (REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji)

Parliament unanimously rejected Yoon’s declaration, and subsequently suspended him on Dec. 14 in a 204-85 vote that included members of his own party. 

Yoon will be formally impeached should the Constitutional Court uphold the motion with a three-fourths majority.

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The court’s next hearing is scheduled for Thursday.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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World

Looking for a job in IT? These countries are desperate for new hires

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Looking for a job in IT? These countries are desperate for new hires

Over two-thirds of large companies struggle to fill their IT roles. What are the highest-paid jobs? Which countries are most in need?

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As the IT sector continues to grow, thousands of European companies are having trouble filling the many positions available.

According to 2024 Eurostat data, 57.5% of EU businesses can’t recruit all the necessary ICT specialists.

The gap between labour demand and actual employment has grown by 20% in the past ten years.

Large businesses are facing the biggest challenges.

Sixty-eight per cent of them are unable to fill all their ICT specialist positions, followed by medium (59.2%) and small-sized enterprises (53.4%).

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Germany, the Czech Republic, Malta, Austria, and Luxembourg are the countries most in need of ICT specialists, with at least 65% of businesses facing shortages.

The percentages are even higher for large enterprises: 84% in Malta, 80% in Germany, 79% in the Czech Republic, 78% in Slovenia, 76% in Austria, 75% in Luxembourg, 73% in Latvia, 72% in Hungary and 71% in Croatia.

Spain, Poland, and Bulgaria have the least hiring problems, although at least 30% of companies in these countries still face ICT shortages.

What are the highest-paid IT positions?

The main difficulties in recruitment, according to Eurostat, are a lack of applications, insufficient qualifications and experience, and high salary expectations.

Salaries in the ICT sector have consistently outpaced average wages in Europe in the last decade, according to the 2024 OECD Digital Economy Outlook. In the EU, in particular, annual wages grew by 0.24% compared to 0.20% in the rest of the economy.

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Recruitment specialists Robert Walters have listed the top-paid ICT jobs in countries including Germany, which seems to be struggling the most in the EU to recruit specialists.

The highest-paid role is Chief Information Technology Officer, with an annual base of €150k for employees with at least three years of experience, to €180k for those with at least eight years.

The consultancy role in the highest bracket is the SAP/ERP one, with a base of €100k. (SAP ERP is an enterprise resource planning software.)

Data engineer and data scientist positions are both in the €100-120k bracket.

Video editor • Mert Can Yilmaz

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