Sabtu, 10 September 2022

Ukraine's lightning advance near Kharkiv leaves Russian forces in disarray - Financial Times

Russia abandoned military strongholds in northeastern Ukraine on Saturday in an apparent rout of Russia’s front line positions, after Ukrainian forces pushed forward in a lightning advance that has left Moscow’s forces in disarray.

Russia’s defence ministry said its forces had pulled back from the strategic city of Izyum, claiming it had decided to “regroup” and transfer them south-eastwards to the Donetsk region.

The Russian retreat is one of President Vladimir Putin’s biggest setbacks since he ordered a full invasion of Ukraine on February 24, and could prove a turning point, involving the capture of thousands of Russian soldiers and their equipment.

“Since the beginning of September, about 2,000km of our territory have been freed,” Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine’s president, said in his daily evening video address to the nation.

“The Russian army is showing its best — showing its back . . . it is a good choice for them to run away. There is no place for the occupiers in Ukraine and there will be no place,” Zelenskyy said.

In an apparent bid to encourage more Russian soldiers to surrender, Zelenskyy promised that Ukraine would “guarantee” Russian soldiers who surrender fair treatment “in accordance with the Geneva Conventions”.

Videos posted on social media show bedraggled Russian troops who had abandoned their vehicles and positions in a hurry, leaving equipment and food behind. Locals cheered Ukrainian forces as they advanced through liberated villages.

“The world earlier didn’t think that the Russians could be beaten . . . Today the world has seen that it’s proven that the Russians can and should be beaten. We are doing that and will do that,” Oleksii Reznikov, Ukraine’s defence minister, said on Saturday during the Yalta European Strategy conference in Kyiv.

In comments to the Financial Times, Reznikov described the rapid counteroffensive that had taken Russian soldiers by surprise and led many to flee as being like a “snowball rolling down the hill, getting bigger and bigger.”

He claimed that Ukraine’s counter-offensive was also making steady progress in southern regions near the city of Kherson. “We are moving but probably a bit slower” than in the east, he said.

The Russian defence ministry made a rare statement on Saturday portraying the pullback from Balakliia and Izyum as a move intended to focus attention on a different frontline, rather than a defeat following the Ukrainian attack, which began on September 6.

“In order to achieve objectives . . . it was decided to regroup the Russian troops . . . to increase efforts in the Donetsk direction,” defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said. He added that to this end: “an operation was conducted over three days to wind down and transfer out” Russian troops in that area.

The announcement came soon after Ukrainian troops captured Kupyansk, north of Izyum, a road and rail hub supplying Russia’s defences across northeastern Ukraine. This has left thousands of Russian troops cut off from supplies across a stretch of the battleground where some of the most intense battles of the war have been fought.

Ukrainian officials have not yet officially confirmed the capture of Izyum, but videos on social media show Ukrainian troops raising the national flag on the outskirts. Some officials confirmed it had been liberated.

Annalena Baerbock, Germany’s foreign minister, said the Ukrainian advance was a moment of hope. “This is what we need,” she said speaking on a visit to Kyiv. “We know that the time between UN General Assembly and Christmas is crucial and weapons support is crucial and we will be at their side.”

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba leave a joint news in Kyiv,
German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock and her Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba meet in Kyiv on Saturday © REUTERS

Analysts said Kyiv’s attack had taken advantage of Russian defences that had been depleted after troops were sent south to fend off a separate Ukrainian offensive. As many as 10,000 Russian troops may be caught in the new manoeuvre, Lawrence Freedman, emeritus professor of war studies at King’s College London, estimated.

Despite stiffer Russian resistance in the south, Nataliya Humenyuk, spokesperson for Ukraine’s armed forces near Kherson, said on Saturday that government troops were also making significant gains in the region.

“There is an advance of our troops along the southern front along various sections, from two to several dozen kilometres,” she said.

Military analysts said Ukraine had launched the two, nearly simultaneous, offensives to overwhelm the Russian military’s centralised system of command, which struggles with multidirectional deployments.

“Russian generals are afraid to make mistakes . . . which leads to the centralisation of decision-making, because everybody’s trying to push decisions as much upwards as possible to avoid responsibility. That kills their ability to deal with multidirectional approaches,” said Andriy Zagorodnyuk, a former Ukrainian defence minister.

“So that is exactly what our armed forces are doing . . . attacking where Russians don’t expect and in more than one direction,” he told participants at the Yalta conference.

Ukrainian officials said government troops were also advancing towards towns further east, including Lysychansk, Lyman and Kreminna.

One military commentator, embedded with Russian troops, described it as a “catastrophe” and the “biggest Russian military defeat since 1943”.

Below: Counter-offensive on Friday 9 September. Reports on Saturday suggest Ukrainian forces have reached both Kupyansk and Izyum.

But amid a growing sense of euphoria in Kyiv, analysts warned against reading too much into early Ukrainian successes, as supply lines could become overstretched while the Russian army retains fearsome capabilities.

“They [the Russians] have very good electronic warfare. They have very good artillery. They do have a few high-tech weapons . . . So, you have got to be careful. You always have to respect the adversary,” General Wesley Clarke, a former supreme Nato commander, said.

Russia is reportedly sending in more troops. Ukraine’s general staff said that 1,200 Chechen soldiers had been deployed to reinforce Russian positions around Kherson. Videos posted on social media on Saturday also allegedly showed the Russian army helicoptering in fresh troops to reinforce Izyum.


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2022-09-10 19:40:32Z
1560875820

Jumat, 09 September 2022

Charles becomes King: the first 24 hours - Guardian News

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2022-09-09 20:26:46Z
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Liberated Ukrainians embrace troops on lightning advance near Kharkiv - POLITICO Europe

As Ukrainian troops race forward in what appears to be an unexpectedly successful counteroffensive in the northeastern Kharkiv region, locals are coming out to greet their liberators with hugs and promises of pancakes, according to videos published on social media.

Ukrainian soldiers have punched through the Russian frontlines in a lightning maneuver and seem to be establishing a noose around Russian forces in the highly strategic town of Izyum, which is of crucial logistical importance for Moscow’s operations in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. Seeming caught off-guard, Russia insists that it is sending reinforcements and is “evacuating” civilians in the face of the Ukrainian advance.

As they push deeper into the Russian-occupied territory, the Ukrainian soldiers are posting videos of their reception in towns and villages along the route of their breakthrough. In footage recorded in the town of Balakliia, which had a pre-war population of around 28,000, a group of women cheer the incoming Ukrainian soldiers on the main square of the town. A Ukrainian soldier also appears in the background, wiping his feet on what looks like the flag of one of the pro-Russian separatist groups.

In another video, a group of women embrace several Ukrainian soldiers at the entrance to an apartment building in Balakliia, shedding tears of joy and repeating “Thanks, boys!” One of the women even offers pancakes to her liberators.

“It’s hard for us, but we are pushing forward,” Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, commander-in-chief of the armed forces, said in a terse comment on these videos.

The Ukrainian counteroffensive in the Kharkiv region is Kyiv’s biggest advance since Russian troops were forced to withdraw from around Kyiv and northern Ukraine in early March. Since then, Russia has concentrated its military assault on Ukraine’s industrial Donbas region.

The move to impose a stranglehold around Izyum, a town with a pre-war population of 46,000, has rekindled memories of a major encounter fought in almost exactly the same territory in World War II. It was here that the Germans delivered a major blow with Operation Federicus against Joseph Stalin’s Red Army, which overreached and suffered some quarter of a million dead and wounded.

Commenting on the capture of Balakliia, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy wrote on Thursday night that “everything is in its right place. The Ukrainian flag is in a free Ukrainian city under a free Ukrainian sky.”

One image that circulated on social media on Friday showed that Ukrainian troops had already reached the outskirts of the town of Kupiansk, a major railway junction. As the crow flies, Kupiansk is only around 40 kilometers from the Russian border.

If Ukraine regains control over the town, this could potentially lead to the collapse of the Russian army group around Kharkiv.

Mykhailo Podoliak, an adviser to Zelenskyy’soffice, said in a televised interview aired on Thursday night that Kupiansk is “a key strategic site through which the entire Kharkiv grouping of Russian troops receives replenishment and reserves.”

“This is a key transport junction, which we need to win back, and then we will look at where to go from there — to the north or to the south,” Podoliak explained.

Meanwhile, it’s not clear what resistance Ukraine could face. On Friday afternoon, Russia’s defense ministry published a short video that purportedly showed a “transfer of Russian troops in the Kharkiv direction.” However, it was not clear from the footage how many troops and with what kinds of equipment Russia could move in its defense of the region.

Vitaly Ganchev, the Russia-appointed head of the Kharkiv government, said in a televised interview that pro-Russian authorities had started to “evacuate civilians” from Izyum and Kupiansk.

While Kyiv’s lightning advance may bring some relief to pro-Ukrainian local residents, those who agreed to collaborate with the occupation authorities in the Kherson region to the south could now face repercussions.

Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of the office of Zelenskyy’s chief of staff, posted on Friday a photo showing a captured, blindfolded man with his hands bound behind his back, who was introduced as the former head of the Russian-installed government of Ivanivka, a village in the Kherson region.

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2022-09-09 18:31:50Z
1560875820

King Charles III addresses the nation and the Commonwealth - Sky News

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2022-09-09 17:38:10Z
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Russian, Chinese and Saudi leaders send condolences | News - The Times

In countries where relations with the British government have often been strained, the tributes that poured in for Queen Elizabeth II have been no less effusive, speaking volumes to the deep respect and admiration felt for Britain’s longest serving monarch from all corners of the globe.

During her reign, Queen Elizabeth visited more than 100 countries across six continents and charmed numerous presidents and prime ministers in more than 150 state visits.

At a time of rising tensions with Moscow over the war in Ukraine, Russia’s president Vladimir Putin offered “sincere sympathy” to the UK and extended his condolences to King Charles for the “irreparable loss” of his mother.

What happens next after the Queen’s death?

“I wish you courage and resilience in the

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2022-09-09 15:15:00Z
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What are King Charles III’s views on the Middle East? - Al Jazeera English

The British royal family is constitutionally obliged to stay out of political issues, but Charles is known for his close Gulf ties.

King Charles III, as he is now known, automatically became the head of the monarchy the moment his mother Queen Elizabeth II died.

Aged 73, he is the longest-serving heir apparent in British history.

The British royal family are constitutionally obliged to stay out of political issues, but when it comes to the Middle East region, it is no secret that Charles has cultivated close relations with the ruling families of the Gulf states for decades.

He has also expressed sympathy for Palestinians living under Israeli occupation.

Here is what we know about his thoughts on the key issues in the region.

Role in promoting UK arms exports to Middle East

According to a report, Charles has played a crucial role in advancing 14.5 billion pounds ($16.8bn)  worth of United Kingdom arms exports to monarchies in the last decade.

Since the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings, Charles has held 95 meetings with eight Middle Eastern states whose power and control were briefly threatened by the protests.

However, according to a 300-page book titled Charles At Seventy: Thoughts, Hopes and Dreams, published in 2018, Charles allegedly told UK ministers that he no longer wants to use his Gulf connections to sell arms on behalf of British companies in the Middle East.

Sympathy for the Palestinian people

In his first official trip to the occupied West Bank in January 2020, Charles expressed his heartbreak over witnessing the “suffering” and “hardship” endured by the Palestinian population under Israeli occupation.

During his speech from Bethlehem, Charles said: “It is my dearest wish that the future will bring freedom, justice and equality to all Palestinians, enabling you to thrive and to prosper.”

Sky News TV at the time said the speech constituted “the biggest show of support that a member of the Royal family ever has [expressed] for the Palestinians”.

According to Jobson, Charles believes that the Israel-Palestine conflict is “the fundamental reason for the hostility and all the ‘pent-up poison’ throughout the Islamic world”.

Close relations with Gulf Arab states

Charles III’s important connections to Gulf states have been bolstered by decades of longstanding and respectful relationships between the British royal family and the Gulf ruling families.

But he has often found himself mired in controversy when it comes to accepting cash donations.

This year, it was revealed that between 2011-2015, he was personally given three million euro ($3m) in cash by former Qatari prime minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al-Thani, some of it in shopping bags.

Charles’ office said the money was handed over to one of his charities, which carried out appropriate governance and gave assurances that all the correct processes were followed.

However, at the time, a senior royal source also added that he would no longer accept large sums of cash for his charities.

Last year, an investigation by the London Metropolitan Police revealed that Charles’ closest aide Michael Fawcett had coordinated work to grant a royal honour and even British citizenship to Saudi billionaire Mahfouz Marei Mubarak bin Mahfouz, who donated more than 1.5 million British pounds ($2m) to renovation projects of particular interest to the-then prince.

Opposition to 2003 Iraq war

The book, written by Robert Jobson in cooperation with Clarence House, Charles’ office, also contained a string of revelations when it came to the royal’s views on the 2003 Iraq war.

Jobson wrote that Charles was a passionate opponent of the 2003 United States-led invasion of Iraq and that he was “plunged in despair” by then-British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s support of the war and might have tried to argue against it had he been king.

“He told political figures and those in his trusted circle that he regarded the [President George] Bush administration as ‘terrifying’ and pilloried what he believes was Blair’s lack of perspicacity,” Jobson wrote. “He believed Blair had behaved like Bush’s ‘poodle’ and said so.”

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2022-09-09 12:57:32Z
1562469487

Priest pays tribute to siblings killed in Ireland as their coffins arrive at church ahead of funeral - Daily Mail

'We have been robbed of three young lives': Priest pays tribute to siblings killed in Ireland as their coffins arrive at church ahead of funeral today where huge crowds are expected

  • Funeral mass for Lisa Cash and Christy and Chelsea Cawley will be held today
  • Yesterday, their bodies were taken to the church in emotional scenes
  • Father Paul O'Driscoll asked 'How could this happen?' at church service
  • Crowds thronged the streets as horse-drawn carriages carried the coffins 
  • Older brother Andy Cash, 24, charged with murdering them on Sunday 

A priest has paid tribute to the three siblings tragically killed in a horrific knife frenzy in Ireland ahead of their funeral today, where thousands are expected to attend.

Lisa Cash, 18, and eight-year-old twin siblings, Christy and Chelsea Cawley will be laid to rest at Bohernabreena Cemetery following their funeral mass at St Aidan's Church in Brookfield at 10am.

A large crowd of mourners, including their grief-stricken mother Margaret 'Twink' Cash McDonagh, 40, gathered yesterday to watch as the children's remains were brought to the church by a horse-drawn carriage.

She was consoled by friends and relatives as she broke down in tears as the bodies were taken to St Aidan's in Tallaght while a man played the bagpipes ahead of today's funeral.

In the church grounds, Lisa's coffin was taken first to the church door followed by Chelsea and Christy's in unison, The Irish Mirror reported.

Father Paul O'Driscoll bless their remains before a short service was held in which he said: 'We have been robbed of three young lives.'

Older brother Andy Cash, 24, has been charged with killing his three younger siblings in a horrific rampage in the early hours of Sunday morning at their home up the road in Rossfield Avenue, Tallaght.    

Margaret Cash McDonagh is consoled as the coffins of her children arrive at St Aidan's Church, Brookfield, Tallaght
The coffins of Lisa Cash, 18, and her eight-year-old twin siblings, Christy and Chelsea Cawley, make their way to St Aidan's Church
A lone piper walks in front of the coffins of Lisa Cash, 18, and her eight-year-old twin siblings, Christy and Chelsea Cawley, as they make their way to St Aidan's Church
The coffins of Lisa Cash, 18, and her eight-year-old twin siblings, Christy and Chelsea Cawley, make their way to St Aidan's Church, Brookfield, Tallaght, ahead of their removal service
At the church, Lisa's coffin was carried in first, while twin siblings Chelsea and Christy's coffins were brought in together afterwards

Fr O'Driscoll said the children were 'cherished' by their mother, adding: 'Lisa, Chelsea and Christy will be forever loved and very sadly missed by their heartbroken family. We have been robbed of three young lives. 

'Their genetic family, their family of faith, not only are they robbed of their lives but they have been robbed of all of their innocence, our sense of what is normal.

'People are stopping each other in the streets and the shops in disbelief, how could this happen?'

At about 9.20pm on Monday, Cash appeared before a special sitting of Dublin District Court, charged with three courts of murder.

Cash of Tallaght, south Dublin, stood when requested by Judge McNamara so she could formally identify him at the special sitting.

McNamara remanded Nash in custody. He will appear before Cloverhill district court at 10am on Friday via video link.

Cash allegedly stabbed Lisa when she tried to protect the twins, while their 14-year-old brother managed to escape through a window and call for help, the Irish Sun reported.

Lisa's body was found at the bottom of the stairs with apparent stab wounds.

It is believed that older sister Lisa was babysitting at the time they lost their lives.

Yesterday, three local schools united in grief, and together tried to find a way to explain the deaths of three young people to classmates and friends and minds too young to grasp what happened in that home.

Balloons were released into the air in their memory, while schoolchildren and friends broke down in tears as their parents struggled to find the words to comfort them.

Eight-year-old twins Christy and Chelsea Cawley were stabbed to death in their home in Ireland on Sunday morning
Lisa Cash, 18, who along with her two younger siblings died in a violent incident at a house in Tallaght, Dublin

The victims' 14-year-old brother was taken to hospital with serious but non-life threatening injuries, and their mother was released from hospital on Sunday and is being supported by her family.

Taoiseach Micheál Martin has expressed his 'deepest sympathies' to their family, and said that the 'terrible tragedy' had 'left the nation shocked and very saddened', while Garda Commissioner Drew Harris described the deaths as 'dreadful and traumatic'. 

Minister for Higher Education Simon Harris said: 'What we're all reading in the newspapers and hearing on television and on radio programmes is just beyond a horrifically tragic and devastating scenario.'

'Three young beautiful lives to be extinguished overnight... We think particularly of that community, but I think it's something that has shocked the entire country.

'Our hearts and thoughts and our prayers go to the family, to their poor mum and the 14-year-old boy, to all their neighbours, all their friends, to the schoolchildren going back to school today, where there'll be two empty desks where beautiful twins only returned to school in recent days.

Andy Cash (pictured), 24, has been charged with killing his sister, 18, and eight-year-old twin siblings in Dublin, as neighbours honoured the tragic victims on Monday
Lisa Cash, 18, and her two younger siblings, eight-year-old twins Christy and Chelsea Cawley

'I think the whole nation holds all of them in our thoughts.'

Neighbours said they will never forget what they saw and heard in the early hours of Sunday.

One neighbour, who did not want to give his name, said he was watching TV when he was alerted to scenes outside.

'I went outside and could see gardaí with their weapons out. We couldn't make sense of what was happening. It was very traumatic to see it all happen.

'They were a lovely, beautiful family. Our granddaughter sometimes played with the kids out on the street.

'None of us slept that night. People will not get over this. The community is rocked badly, mentally and physically. The guards did really well that night. They should be given medals. And the paramedics fought and fought so hard to save them. Lisa was a beautiful young girl and she tried her best to save those kids.'

Outside the house are pictures of the three, showing Christy and Chelsea making their first Holy Communion, among the long row of floral tributes.  

Another neighbour earlier told the Irish Daily Mail her daughter had only been playing with Christy and Chelsea two days previously.

'It was the first day that I let her out to play around the corner – just down the road from their house.'

Mourners gathered in droves to leave candles, messages and flowers along the wall outside the home where the trio were murdered
Twins Chelsea and Christy Cawley, aged eight, and their older sister Lisa Cash, 18, were killed at their home in Rossfield Avenue, Tallaght. Pictured: Locals release balloons at a vigil for the three siblings, who died on Sunday morning
Schoolmates are pictured attending vigil of Lisa Cash, 18, and her eight-year-old twin siblings Christy and Chelsea Cawley

Her young daughter continued the story: 'We played hide and seek down there. We had a good time. I can't believe it – that they are not here now.'

Another neighbour, who also asked not to be named, told the Mail: 'Their brother who was in the house went to get help. He is their hero. There are no words to describe what we saw and what happened.

'The whole community will need counselling now.'

Another neighbour, who also asked not to be named, told the Irish Daily Mail said: 'There are no words to describe what we saw and what happened. The whole community will need counselling now.' 

The principal of St Aidan's school, Kevin Shortall, paid tribute to Lisa, saying she was 'a quiet, beautiful young girl, very diligent, hard-working, got on with her work, was a great support to her friends in times of trouble.

'She is remembered as one of the most honest, genuine young people, full of integrity and no fuss, no drama around her.

'I believe she was babysitting at the time, and that would have been something that she was just so good at.

A pair of mourners share a tragic embrace at the vigil of Lisa Cash and her eight-year-old twin siblings Chelsea and Christy Crawley

'She was the kind of person you could trust. That's the person Lisa was.

'We are all just meeting each other and shaking our heads and giving each other hugs and things like that. It's a very difficult morning.'

Mr Shortall said he had liaised with the principal of the primary school that Christy and Chelsea had attended on how to respond to the 'unprecedented' tragedy.

On Sunday, the Brookfield Community Centre opened to allow people to gather and help them deal with the tragic news.

'It doesn't feel like real life,' said Fianna Fáil councillor Teresa Costello.

'We've lost three young, vibrant, beautiful lives out of our community, in the most unimaginable terms, and it's going to be a really difficult road ahead.

'People are numb. I think it's not sinking in, but it's there and it's so raw for people and it's something you never imagine is going to be on your doorstep.

'The scale of what's emerging in terms of the detail, you never imagine that's something to happen, particularly to children, and the wider community here are well aware of what happened because they saw it.

'They saw it from their own houses, from their gardens, from the road.

'It's important to remember the names Lisa, Chelsea and Christy. They're the three most important people right now.

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2022-09-09 07:54:28Z
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