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Russia-Ukraine War - News and Developments PART 2


@beijingwalker
EU countries demand for oil from Russia cant match China and India's combined demand for Russian oil - oil is now an asset currency and commodity with sustained demand. Phasing it out in the world is at least 20-40 years away. The world cannot ignore Russian energy, it literally ignored US and EU toothless idiotic sanctions on it. smh. SO much for "free market", we see US turns against its own capitalistic and free market "rules" when those systems put it at the disadvantage.

And don't believe in the Nordstream blast pushed by the Russians blaming on U.S. or whoever. We know who did it.
Which one is it- you dont believe or you don't accept?
 
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Putin just has to stay away from the green countries in order to get away with unlawful deportation and transfer of population of occupied areas. Russia has been doing this for centuries.
View attachment 920765
If you are talking about arrest, then depends on which country is issuing the arrest warrant, and whether or not Interpol Red Notice is involved, the list can expanded dramatically. ICC can't arrest anyone, so it's up to the convening authority to do so, in this case, it would have been from the Hague in the Netherland. If the dutch activitate the interpol Red notice system, then all the world but 3 (some pacific countries and North Korea) are technically responsible to arrest him even Russia. But then whether or not the local authority will execute that Red Notice is other issue, and whether or not the local authority will extradite Putin is another issue.

Also, bear in mind Red Notice cannot be use for crime that motivated by Politics, Religion and Race
 
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Putin’s men ‘trap’ Ukrainian unit in Vuhledar; Russia storms Avdiivka after Bakhmut​

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Russophobia At The UN Security Council: Claiming to Be the Victim When You Are the Aggressor Is Part Of The Crime - Only Truth About Russia - Quora
Timothy Snyder’s Testimony full text

  • The term "russophobia" is being used in this setting to advance the claim that the imperial power is the victim, even as the imperial power, Russia, is carrying out a war of atrocity
  • Claiming to be the victim when you are in fact the aggressor is not a defense. It is actually part of the crime.
“Ladies and gentlemen,

I come before you as a historian of the region, as a historian of eastern Europe, and specifically as a historian of mass killing and political atrocity. I am glad to be asked to brief you on the use of the term "russophobia" by Russian state actors. I believe that such a discussion can clarify something about the character of Russia's war of aggression in Ukraine and Russia's illegal occupation of Ukrainian territory. I will speak briefly and confine myself to two points.

  • My first point is that harm to Russians, and harm to Russian culture, is primarily a result of the policies of the Russian Federation. If we are concerned about harm to Russians and Russian culture, then we should be concerned with the policies of the Russian state.
  • My second point will be that the term "russophobia," which we are discussing today, has been exploited during this war as a form of imperial propaganda in which the aggressor claims to be the victim.
  • It has served this last year as a justification for Russian war crimes in Ukraine.
Let me begin from the first point. The premise, when we discuss "russophobia," is that we are concerned about harm to Russians. That is a premise that I certainly share. I share the concern for Russians. I share the concern for Russian culture. Let us recall, then, the actions this last year which have caused the greatest harm to Russians and to Russian culture. I'll briefly name ten.

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Timothy Snyder, an American historian specializing in the modern history of Central and Eastern Europe. He is the Richard C. Levin Professor of History at Yale University and a permanent fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna.

1. Forcing the most creative and productive Russians to emigrate. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has caused about 750,000 Russians to leave Russia, including some of the most creative and productive people. This is irreparable harm to Russian culture, and it is the result of Russian policy.

2. The destruction of independent Russian journalism so that Russians cannot know the world around them. This, too, is Russian policy, and causes irreparable harm to Russian culture.

3. General censorship and repression of freedom of speech in Russia. In Ukraine, you can say what you like in either Russian or Ukrainian. In Russia, you cannot.

On the day of the Ukrainian volunteer, Daryna Kolomiiets prays for her 55-year-old father, who joined the Armed Forces of Ukraine as a volunteer, to return from the front safe and sound.

If you stand in Russia with a sign saying "no to war," you will be arrested and very likely imprisoned. If you stand in Ukraine with a sign that says "no to war," regardless of what language it is in, nothing will happen to you. Russia is a country of one major language where you can say little. Ukraine is a country of two languages where you may say what you like.

When I visit Ukraine, people report to me about Russian war crimes using both languages, using Ukrainian or using Russian as they prefer.

4. The attack on Russian culture by way of censoring schoolbooks, weakening Russian cultural institutions at home, and the destruction of museums and non-governmental organizations devoted to Russian history. All of those things are Russian policy.

5. The perversion of the memory of the Great Fatherland war by fighting a war of aggression in 2014 and 2022, thereby depriving all future generations of Russians of that heritage. That is Russian policy. It has done great harm to Russian culture.

6. The downgrading of Russian culture around the world, and the end of what used to be called "russkiy mir," the Russian world abroad. It used to be the case that there were many people who felt friendly to Russia and the Russian culture in Ukraine. That has been brought to an end by two Russian invasions. Those invasions were Russian state policy.

7. The mass killing of Russian speakers in Ukraine. The Russian war of aggression in Ukraine has killed more speakers of Russian than any other action by far.

8. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has led to the mass death of Russian citizens fighting as soldiers in its war of aggression. Some 200,000 Russians have are dead or maimed. This is, of course, simply Russian policy. It is Russian policy to send young Russians to die in Ukraine.

9. War crimes, trauma, and guilt. This war means that a generation of young Russians, those who survive, will be involved in war crimes, and will be wrapped up in trauma and guilt for the rest of their lives. That is great harm to Russian culture.

All of this harm to Russians and to Russian culture has been achieved by the Russian government itself, mostly in the course of the last year. So if we were sincerely concerned about harm to Russians, these are the some of the things that we would think about. But perhaps the worst Russian policy with respect to Russians is the last one.

10. The sustained training or education of Russians to believe that genocide is normal. We see this in the president of Russia's repeated claims that Ukraine does not exist. We see this in genocidal fantasies on Russian state media. We see this in a year of state television reaching millions or tens of millions Russian citizens every day. We see this when Russian state television presents Ukrainians as pigs. We see this when Russian state television presents Ukrainians as parasites. We see this when Russian state television presents Ukrainians as worms. We see this when Russian state television presents Ukrainians as Satanists or as ghouls. We see this when Russian state television proclaims that Ukrainian children should be drowned. We see this when Russian state television proclaims that Ukrainian houses should be burned with the people inside. We see this when people appear on Russian state television and say: "They should not exist at all. We should execute them by firing squad." We see this when someone appears on Russian state television and says "we will kill 1 million, we will kill 5 million, we can exterminate all of you," meaning all of the Ukrainians.

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This is a photo Timothy Snyder took in the basement of the school at Yahidne in the Chernihiv region of Ukraine. In Yahidne, the Russian occupiers held the entire population of the village in the school basement. Some people were executed, others died of exhaustion. The text is “59 children”; that is how many were among those so imprisoned in a very small space. On the ground floor of the school was Russian graffiti repeating television propaganda slogans, for example that Ukrainians are “devils.”

Now, if we were sincerely concerned about harms to Russians, we would be concerned about what Russian policy is doing to Russians. The claim that Ukrainians are "russophobes" is one more element of Russian hate speech in Russian state television. In Russian media, those other claims about Ukrainians are intermixed with the claim that Ukrainians are russophobes. So, for example, in the statement on Russian state television where the speaker proposed that all Ukrainians be exterminated, his reasoning was that they should all be exterminated because they exhibit "russophobia."

The claim that Ukrainians have to be killed because they have a mental illness known as "russophobia" is bad for Russians, because it educates them in genocide. But of course, such a claim is much worse for Ukrainians.

This is a photo I took in the basement of the school at Yahidne in the Chernihiv region of Ukraine. In Yahidne, the Russian occupiers held the entire population of the village in the school basement. Some people were executed, others died of exhaustion. The text is “59 children”; that is how many were among those so imprisoned in a very small space. On the ground floor of the school was Russian graffiti repeating television propaganda slogans, for example that Ukrainians are “devils.”

This brings me to my second point. The term "russophobia" is a rhetorical strategy that we know from the history of imperialism.

When an empire attacks, the empire claims that it is the victim. The rhetoric that Ukrainians are somehow "russophobes" is being used by the Russian state to justify a war of aggression. The language is very important. But it is the setting in which it is used that matters most. This is the setting: the Russian invasion of Ukraine itself, the destruction of whole Ukrainian cities, the execution of Ukrainian local leaders, the forced deportation of Ukrainian children, the displacement of almost half the Ukrainian population, the destruction of hundreds of hospitals and thousands of schools, the deliberate targeting of water and heat supplies during the winter. That is the setting. That is what is actually happening.

  • The term "russophobia" is being used in this setting to advance the claim that the imperial power is the victim, even as the imperial power, Russia, is carrying out a war of atrocity. This is historically typical behavior. The imperial power dehumanizes the actual victim, and claims to be the victim. When the victim (in this case Ukraine) opposes being attacked, being murdered, being colonized, the empire says that wanting to be left in peace is unreasonable, an illness. This is a "phobia."
This claim that the victims are irrational, that they are "phobic," that they have a "phobia," is meant to distract from the actual experience of the victims in the real world, which is an experience, of course, of aggression and war and atrocity. The term "russophobia" is imperial strategy designed to change the subject from an actual war of aggression to the feelings of the aggressors, thereby suppressing the existence and the experience of the people who are most harmed. The imperialist says: "We are the only people here. We are the real victims. And our hurt feelings count more than other people's lives."

  • Now, Russia's war crimes in Ukraine can be and will be evaluated by Ukrainian law, because they take place on Ukrainian territory, and by international law. To the naked eye, we can see that there is a war of aggression, crimes against humanity, and genocide.
The application of the word "russophobia" in this setting, the claim that Ukrainians are mentally ill rather than that they are experiencing an atrocity, is colonial rhetoric. It serves as part of a larger practice of hate speech. That is why this session is important: it helps us to see Russia's genocidal hate speech. The idea that Ukrainians have a disease called "russophobia" is used as an argument to destroy them, along with the arguments that they are vermin, parasites, Satanists and so on.

  • Claiming to be the victim when you are in fact the aggressor is not a defense. It is actually part of the crime. Hate speech directed against Ukrainians is not part of the defense of the Russian Federation or its citizens. It is an element of the crimes that Russian citizens are committing on Ukrainian territory. In this sense, in calling this session, the Russian state has found a new way to confess to war crimes. Thank you for your attention.
Source: kyivpost . com
 
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Putin’s men ‘trap’ Ukrainian unit in Vuhledar; Russia storms Avdiivka after Bakhmut​



The predictions of this indian garbage channel are always lies and wrong. Just look through the thumbnail’s if you don’t want to watch for the predictions , they are almost always wrong it’s pretty pathetic to be honest.
 
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If you are talking about arrest, then depends on which country is issuing the arrest warrant, and whether or not Interpol Red Notice is involved, the list can expanded dramatically. ICC can't arrest anyone, so it's up to the convening authority to do so, in this case, it would have been from the Hague in the Netherland. If the dutch activitate the interpol Red notice system, then all the world but 3 (some pacific countries and North Korea) are technically responsible to arrest him even Russia. But then whether or not the local authority will execute that Red Notice is other issue, and whether or not the local authority will extradite Putin is another issue.

Also, bear in mind Red Notice cannot be use for crime that motivated by Politics, Religion and Race
I just like the fact that Putin is on the ICC warrant list. He is obviously not going to put himself in a situation where he gets arrested while being president, but it is a slap in his face and it most certainly caused some emotional damage in Russia. His lackeys were instantly all over social media talking crap. But it is never going away - his selfmade glossy image took some irreparably damage.
It adds to the isolation of Russia. Imagine how Brazil and South Africa has to deal with this at the next BRICS summits. And his minions might start feeling the preasure - who says the state sponsered russian agitators might not come under the ICC microscope? Russia might be a great country, but all in power for some strange reason move their assets and families out of the country. That escape option might just vanish if ICC smell blood.
 
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