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Turkiye's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu on Thursday spoke over the phone with his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba and discussed the latest situation in Ukraine, diplomatic sources said.
Cavusoglu, according to the sources, told Kuleba that Turkiye welcomed the announcement that Russia and Ukraine reached an understanding to create humanitarian corridors for evacuation of civilians.
Noting that the corridors will not only allow evacuation of Turkish citizens, the minister said it will also facilitate the delivery of humanitarian aid to these regions.
On late Thursday, Russia and Ukraine announced they reached an understanding to create humanitarian corridors for evacuation of civilians and for food and medicine deliveries.
Ukraine's lead negotiator Mikhail Podolyak said at a news conference following the second round of negotiations in the Belarusian region of Brest that there is "a possibility of a temporary cease-fire for a period of evacuation in regions where it takes place."
Russia's war on Ukraine, which began on Feb. 24, has met international outrage with the EU, US and UK, among others, implementing tough financial sanctions on Moscow.
According to UN figures, 227 civilians have been killed and 525 injured in Ukraine since the start of the war. Ukrainian authorities, however, put the death toll at over 2,000./aa
The US announced sweeping sanctions on eight of Russian President Vladimir Putin's "cronies," including Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, and imposed visa restrictions on 19 other individuals in retaliation for Moscow's war on Ukraine.
In addition to Peskov, the Biden administration is imposing sanctions on Russian businessman Alisher Usmanov, whose $600 million mega yacht was seized by Germany on Wednesday, oil magnate Nikolay Tokarev, and construction mogul brothers Boris and Arkady Rotenberg.
Yevgeniy Prigozhin, who was previously sanctioned for alleged election interference in the US, was designated alongside Russian politician Igor Shuvalov, and defense conglomerate owner Sergey Chemezov, according to a White House statement.
In addition to many associated businesses, the individuals' immediate family members were also placed on the US blacklist, as well as Usmanov's private jet.
The Department of State further imposed visa sanctions on 19 Russian oligarchs, and 47 of the family members and "close associates," denying them US entry.
"These oligarchs are known to direct, authorize, fund, significantly support, or carry out malign activities in support of Russia’s destabilizing foreign policy," the White House said.
The Treasury Department is further expected to designate seven Russian entities and 26 Russia and Ukraine-based individuals that are accused of playing "central roles in these organizations, enabling the Government of the Russian Federation’s efforts to spread disinformation and influence perceptions as a part of their invasion of Ukraine."
The entities to be blacklisted include SDN Strategic Culture Foundation and its outlets Odna Rodyna, Rhythm of Eurasia, and Journal Kamerton; SouthFront; SDN InfoRos; New Eastern Outlook; Oriental Review; United World International; and Geopolitical./aa
The Russian president on Thursday accused Ukraine of not allowing foreign nationals to leave the country.
The “course of the confrontation” shows that Russia fights against “neo-Nazis,” Vladimir Putin said at a meeting of the Russian Security Council in Moscow.
Putin accused the Ukrainian authorities of taking foreigners “hostage,” opening fire on Chinese students in the city of Kharkiv and locking up more than 1,000 Indian citizens at a railway station.
"Nationalist and neo-Nazi formations, among them foreign mercenaries, including from the Middle East, are hiding behind civilians as a human shield," he claimed.
The Ukrainian nationalists locked up civilians in the upper floors of residential buildings and installed weapons and military equipment in the ground floors, knowing that the Russian army does not strike civilian infrastructure, he claimed.
"Instead of fulfilling the promise to remove these equipment from residential buildings, kindergartens, hospitals, on the contrary, they placed tanks, artillery, mortars there, acting as fascists," he said.
Russia's war on Ukraine, which began on Feb. 24, has met international outrage with the EU, US and UK, among others, implementing tough financial sanctions on Moscow.
According to UN figures, 227 civilians have been killed and 525 injured in Ukraine since the start of the war. Ukrainian authorities, however, put the death toll at over 2,000.
More than 1 million people have fled Ukraine to neighboring countries, the UN Refugee Agency said./agencies
The leaders of the US, India, Japan and Australia discussed Thursday the ongoing "humanitarian crisis" in Ukraine prompted by Russia's invasion of its eastern European neighbor.
The group, collectively known as the Quad, said in a statement that they agreed to create a new "humanitarian assistance and disaster relief mechanism" intended to better prepare for it to "meet future humanitarian challenges in the Indo-Pacific and provide a channel for communication as they each address and respond to the crisis in Ukraine."
Separately, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and US President Joe Biden agreed to an in-person meeting in Tokyo "in the coming months."
Russia's war on Ukraine, which began Feb. 24, has been met international outrage with the EU, US and UK, among others, implementing tough financial sanctions on Moscow.
According to UN figures, 227 civilians have been killed and 525 injured in Ukraine since the start of the war. Ukrainian authorities, however, put the death toll at more than 2,000.
More than 1 million people have fled Ukraine to neighboring countries, according to the UN Refugee Agency./aa
US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi urged a ban Thursday on Russian oil imports.
"I'm all for that. Ban it," Pelosi told reporters during a news conference as she has become the highest American official to support the move.
US President Joe Biden said earlier this week a ban is on the table but Washington and its allies have not moved forward with that option because of record energy prices, high inflation and Europe's overdependence on Russian oil and natural gas.
Europe buys around 40% of its natural gas from Russia, while the US wants to partially replace those sales with its vast shale gas resources via liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports.
US senators Lisa Murkowski, from Alaska, and Joe Manchin, from West Virginia, have proposed legislation to ban Russian oil imports.
Murkowski, in a letter to Biden on Wednesday, called for him to expedite the approval of LNG exports to the US' NATO allies, blunt Russia and China's energy-fueled ambitions and restore America's dominant role in global energy.
The letter was signed by all 11 Republican members of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
International oil benchmark Brent crude price soared to $119.78 Thursday -- its highest since May 2, 2012.
US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) jumped to $116.50, marking its highest level since Sept. 2, 2008./aa
The Russian Defense Ministry accused the West on Thursday of sending mercenaries to Ukraine to support the Ukrainian armed forces.
At a daily briefing in Moscow, ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said the employees of private military companies raid Russia's military convoy, attack aviation, using US Javelin and UK NLOW anti-tank missiles and a man-portable air-defense system Stinger, and other weapons, supplied by the West.
Meanwhile, Konashenkov said the US intelligence launched a mass campaign to recruit more mercenaries.
Great Britain, Denmark, Latvia, Poland, and Croatia legally authorized their citizens to take part in the hostilities in Ukraine, while France plans to send ethnic Ukrainians serving in its foreign legion to Ukraine as well, he continued.
"According to Zelenskyy, about 16,000 foreign mercenaries are expected to arrive in Ukraine in addition to those already available to compensate for the crushing military failures of the Ukrainian security forces. A visa-free regime is officially introduced for them," he noted.
"Last week, about 200 troops arrived in Ukraine from Croatia, they joined one of the Nazi battalions," Konashenkov added.
"Today, the military attache at the Croatian Embassy in Moscow was summoned to the Russian Defense Ministry.
"The military attache was informed of the illegal activities of a Croatian citizen Denis Sheler, who participated in the fighting in the southeast of Ukraine in 2015, forming detachments of Croatian mercenaries to be sent to Ukraine. We informed him that we are aware of the arrival in Ukraine of about 200 Croatian mercenaries," he said.
Konashenkov warned that mercenaries cannot pretend for the status of prisoners of war, "the best thing that awaits foreign mercenaries when detained is criminal prosecution."
Since Feb. 24 -- days after Russian recognition of two separatist-held enclaves in eastern Ukraine -- Russia's war on Ukraine has been met by an outcry from the international community, with the EU, UK, and US implementing a range of economic sanctions against Russia.
Russia has been further isolated after its planes have been barred from flying in European and Canadian airspace, and a number of its banks have been kicked out of the SWIFT international banking system./aa
A leading Syrian opposition figure has accused the West of “double standards” in dealing with the crises in Syria and Ukraine.
Anas al-Abdah, who heads the Syrian Negotiation Commission, made the remarks during an interview with Anadolu Agency as Russia’s war on Ukraine enters its second week.
"In Syria, there is a massacre of an entire people in front of the eyes of the world and with international complicity, while in Ukraine, the whole Western world is trying to protect it and its people," al-Abdah said.
Russia's war on Ukraine, which began on Feb. 24, has been met with international outrage, with the EU, US, and UK, among others, implementing tough financial sanctions on Moscow.
Over 2,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine since the start of the war, according to Ukrainian authorities.
Western double standards
Explaining the Western double standards, al-Abdah said he supports the safety of Ukrainians against Russian aggression but accused the West of favoring some countries over others.
"We support the protection of Ukrainians from the weapons of Russian President Vladimir Putin, but we are against this crude and public duplicity of Western countries," he said, adding that “the killing of a person should not be tolerated, regardless of the victim's nationality or belief."
The politician noted the strong support extended by the US and its European allies to the Ukrainians but said their strategy towards the Syrian crisis has “slackened” and has “flaws.”
The West "gave Russia direct and indirect support to carry out new adventures that may not stop at the borders of Ukraine," al-Abdah said.
He added: "Failure to anticipate the danger before it becomes a reality on the ground, is the biggest failure that any country's leadership can fall into."
Al-Abdah said he believes that "the acceleration of Western countries to take strong positions against Russia in its invasion of Ukraine is because they felt this invasion poses a direct threat to their interests and national security."
However, he said, “in Syria, their positions were weaker against President Bashar al-Assad (of Syria) and Russia, not because they do not threaten their national security, but because Western countries did not sense the reality of that threat.”
Al-Abdah warned the West that “they are losing the Middle East to Russia and Iran" that together “have made the region a hotbed of cross-border terrorism, and turned Syria into a drug lab that kills all peoples."
Ukraine and Syria crises
Al-Abdah noted that similarities exist between what happened and is happening in Syria and what is happening in Ukraine.
"Russia's invasion of Ukraine aims to weaken the West and its political and economic control in a region with an important geopolitical and geostrategic dimension," he said.
But he pointed out that while the leadership of Ukraine “supported the struggle of its people against the ambitions of Russia,” in Syria, the regime has been “serving the interests of Russia and Iran” by inviting them to intervene in the Arab country and has used “all possible weapons to kill the Syrian people who only demanded their freedom and dignity."
Al-Abdah accused Russia of killing Syrians for years and supporting the Assad regime with weapons to kill Syrians while the world remained “deaf to the cries of the Syrians and their distress."
Western media
Al-Abdah also accused the Western media of “double standards” in the way they covered refugees.
He said some Western media worked on “demonizing the Syrian opposition as promoting terrorist organizations” which also contributed to the mistreatment of Syrian refugees.
"Western countries are fully aware of the misinformation and attempt to stigmatize the Syrian opposition and the Syrian people with terrorism and they remain silent about it," he said.
He added: "This situation harmed us and our struggle against the fascist regime in Damascus and its supporters, our struggle for our freedom and the future of our country."
While praising “the position of Western countries” on supporting the right of the Ukrainian people to confront an occupying force like Russia,” al-Abdah warned the West that “losing Syria to Russia and Iran will not be less dangerous for them than leaving Ukraine to Russia.”
Al-Abdah called for the rallying of Western support against Russia’s intervention in Syria.
“This is an international opportunity to weaken the Russian and Iranian arrogance once and for all. If they miss that opportunity, it may not return in the short and medium-term."
Syria has been mired in a vicious civil war since early 2011 when the Bashar al-Assad regime cracked down on pro-democracy protests with unexpected ferocity. /aa
Russia’s war on Ukraine, now in its second week, is exacting a severe toll on children, the UN Children’s Agency (UNICEF) said on Thursday.
“The use of explosive weapons in cities could quickly turn this crisis into a catastrophe for Ukraine’s children,” Afshan Khan, UNICEF’s regional director for Europe and Central Asia, said in a statement.
“There are no armed operations of this scale that do not result in children being harmed. The consequences will be tragic,” Khan said.
UNICEF said that millions of children could be caught up in the violence as the fighting intensifies in and around the country’s major urban centers.
“The conflict has also sparked massive population displacement that could soon constitute one of Europe’s largest refugee crises since the Second World War,” UNICEF said.
“Half a million children have already fled Ukraine to neighboring countries, with the number of refugees continuing to grow,” it added.
The UN agency said that children are especially vulnerable to being injured or killed when weapons and explosive munitions are used in populated areas.
Since Feb. 24, at least 17 children have been killed and 30 injured, UNICEF said.
“These are only the reports that the United Nations has been able to verify – the true number of child casualties is likely far higher,” it added.
Hundreds of homes have been damaged or destroyed, and there are reports of schools, orphanages, and health centers sustaining heavy damage, UNICEF said.
It said that humanitarian needs across Ukraine are multiplying by the hour, adding that hundreds of thousands of people are without safe drinking water because of damage to water system infrastructure, and many have been cut off from access to other essential services like healthcare.
The UN said the country is running low on critical medical supplies and has had to halt urgent efforts to curb a polio outbreak.
UNICEF said it is appealing for $276 million for its programs inside Ukraine and needs an additional $73 million to assist children in neighboring countries./aa
The White House requested $10 billion in US aid Thursday to help Ukraine with humanitarian efforts.
“This funding request is based on the Administration’s best information on resource requirements at this time,” White House Acting Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young said in a letter to House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
The request is part of a $32.5 billion emergency funding request to Congress, which includes $22.5 billion in coronavirus funds “to avoid disruption to ongoing COVID response efforts over the next few months,” said Young.
The letter points out that the US has already provided Ukraine with $1.4 billion in assistance, highlighting the need for more aid.
“This request identifies an immediate need for $10.0 billion in additional humanitarian, security, and economic assistance for Ukraine and Central European partners due to Russia’s unjustified and unprovoked invasion,” said Young. “It also outlines a number of authorities needed to provide maximum flexibility in supporting Ukraine, our European allies and partners, and other emergent global needs.”
The funding package will be used to support the Defense Department in its efforts to assist European Command forces and NATO in that region. It includes funding for cybersecurity, as well as international aid to provide humanitarian assistance such as food and economic help.
US lawmakers have until March 11 to reach an agreement on the funding deal.
“I urge the Congress to address these critical and urgent needs as part of a comprehensive government funding bill ahead of the March 11th funding deadline,” said Young. “We will remain in touch with the Congress in the coming weeks and months as we assess resource requirements beyond these immediate needs.”
“Given the rapidly evolving situation in Ukraine, I anticipate that additional needs may arise over time,” she added.
Russia's war on Ukraine, which began on Feb. 24, has met international outrage with the EU, US and UK, among others, implementing tough financial sanctions on Moscow.
According to UN figures, 227 civilians have been killed and 525 injured in Ukraine since the start of the war. Ukrainian authorities, however, put the death toll at over 2,000.
More than 1 million people have fled Ukraine to neighboring countries, the UN Refugee Agency said./aa
Discrimination and racism against foreign nationals fleeing Ukraine “must end,” the head of the International Organization for Migration said on Thursday, calling on states to investigate and to “address it immediately.
“I am alarmed about verified credible reports of discrimination, violence and xenophobia against third country nationals attempting to flee the conflict in Ukraine,” said IOM Director General Antonio Vitorino.
He added his voice to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) chief Filippo Grandi who expressed dismay on Tuesday over reports that foreigners fleeing Ukraine due to the invasion from Russia are experiencing mistreatment and he had pleaded for more humanity and compassion for non-Europeans and refugees from other nations.
“Let me be clear, discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, nationality, or migration status is unacceptable. I deplore any such acts and call on States to investigate this issue and address it immediately,” Vittorio said.
He said that men, women, and children from dozens of nationalities, including migrant workers and students living in Ukraine are facing acute challenges attempting to leave conflict-affected areas, cross borders into neighboring countries, and seek life-saving assistance.
“We are receiving reports of discrimination resulting in heightened risk and suffering,” said the IOM head.
International humanitarian law
Vittorio insisted that neighboring countries need to ensure that all those fleeing Ukraine are granted unhindered access to territory regardless of status and in accordance with International Humanitarian Law.
“Protection and immediate assistance must be provided in a non-discriminatory and culturally appropriate manner, in line with the humanitarian imperative, to all conflict-affected people throughout their journey to safety,” he said.
Vittorio welcomed the European Commission’s proposal to activate the Temporary Protection Directive to assist people fleeing Ukraine.
It issued a call on EU states to ensure the inclusion of third-country nationals in such protection measures.
Agnes Callamard, secretary-general of Amnesty International, also commented on discrimination that people from some nations face during the crisis.
"The racism, crass ignorance of some journalists and others commenting on the refugee flows out of Ukraine is just disgusting,” Callamard had written in a Tweet.
“And yet so revealing of Western nations' treatment of refugees and migrants for decades. Biopolitics, Racism enshrined in every bit of our systems, psyche,” she said./aa