Jumat, 14 Oktober 2022

No regrets on Ukraine: Russia ‘acted correctly’, says Putin - Al Jazeera English

Russia’s leader said he has no plans “for now” to launch massive air raids such as those carried out this week, in which more than 100 long-range missiles were fired at targets across Ukraine.

“We do not set ourselves the task of destroying Ukraine. No, of course not,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday at the end of a summit in Kazakhstan.

He added the call-up of reservists would be finished in two weeks, promising an end to the divisive mobilisation that has seen hundreds of thousands of men summoned to fight in Ukraine and huge numbers fleeing the country.

Defending the mobilisation order, Putin told a news conference the front line was too long to defend solely with contract soldiers. He ordered the call-up to bolster the fight along a 1,100-km (684-mile) front line where Ukrainian counteroffensives have inflicted blows to Moscow’s military prestige.

Putin said 222,000 out of an expected 300,000 reservists had already been mobilised. “This work is coming to an end,” he said.

Since the mobilisation order was given, Russian forces have continued to lose ground in eastern Ukraine and also lost a substantial area in the south.

Even some of Putin’s own supporters have criticised the Kremlin’s handling of the war, increasing pressure on him to do more to turn the tide in Russia’s favour.

After attending the summit of regional leaders from Asia and Eastern Europe, Putin said he did not regret sending troops into Ukraine nearly eight months ago.

“What is happening today is unpleasant, to put it mildly,” he said. “But we would have had all this a little later, only under worse conditions for us, that’s all. So my actions are correct and timely.”

‘Do not believe Putin’

The troop mobilisation was troubled from the start with confusion about who was eligible for the draft in a country where almost all men under age 65 are registered as reservists.

Russia’s leader said all activated recruits will receive needed training and he would assign Russia’s Security Council “to conduct an inspection of how mobilised citizens are being trained”.

But reports have indicated recruits deployed to the front lines in Ukraine have received little training and inadequate equipment. Several mobilised reservists were reported to have died in combat in Ukraine this week.

Asked about the possibility of expanded conscription, the Russian president said the defence ministry had not asked him to authorise that. “In the foreseeable future, I don’t see any need. Nothing further is planned.”

But some questioned the veracity of Putin’s comments.

“Do not believe Putin about ‘two weeks.’ Mobilisation can only be canceled by his decree. No decree – no cancellation,” Vyacheslav Gimadi, a lawyer at imprisoned opposition leader Alexey Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation, wrote on Facebook.

INTERACTIVE - WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN UKRAINE 233

‘Now in suspense’

The war’s momentum has shifted towards Ukraine as its military recaptures cities, towns and villages that Russia took early in the war.

Ukrainian forces reported retaking 75 populated places in the north of the Kherson region in the last month, according to Ukraine’s Ministry for Reintegration of Temporarily Occupied Territories.

A similar campaign in eastern Ukraine resulted in most of the Kharkiv region returning to Ukrainian control, as well as parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, the ministry said.

Konstantin, a Kherson resident who withheld his last name for safety reasons, said columns of military trucks moved around the region’s capital and eventually left. Most government offices reduced working hours, and schools were closed, he said.

“The city is now in suspense. Primarily, the Russian military from the headquarters and the family of collaborators are leaving,” Konstantin said. “Everyone is discussing the imminent arrival of the Ukrainian military and preparing for it.”

‘Myth of invincibility’

Putin repeated the claim that Russia was prepared for peace talks, blaming Kyiv for the lack of negotiations.

“We even reached certain agreements in Istanbul [in the spring],” Putin said, thanking Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for his mediation efforts.

“These agreements were actually almost initialled. But as soon as the [Russian] troops withdrew from Kyiv, the Kyiv authorities immediately lost the desire to negotiate.”

Ukraine officially rejected any possibility of negotiating with Putin after he illegally annexed Ukraine’s Kherson, Zaporizhia, Donetsk and Luhansk regions as Russian territory last month following “referendums” that Kyiv and the West denounced as a sham.

Putin has promised to retaliate harshly if Ukraine or its allies attack Russian territory, including the annexed regions of Ukraine. Russia’s Belgorod region on the border with Ukraine came under attack for a second day Friday.

Ukrainian shelling blew up an ammunition depot in Belgorod on Thursday, killing and wounding an unspecified number of people, according to Russia’s Investigative Committee.

“We have buried the myth of the invincibility of the Russian army,” General Valeriy Zaluzhny, commander of Ukraine’s armed forces, said in a video message on Friday, pledging to liberate all Russian-occupied areas.

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2022-10-14 20:33:38Z
1594306582

Vladimir Putin signals end of Russia's unpopular mobilisation drive - Financial Times

Vladimir Putin has said Russia’s mobilisation drive to bolster its forces fighting in its faltering invasion of Ukraine will end within two weeks but defended the army from criticism of the draft.

Russia’s president on Friday said about 220,000 men had been drafted into the army since he called up reserves and moved to annex four occupied regions of south-eastern Ukraine. He said this was a sufficient effort to bolster forces on the battlefield.

“Nothing additional is being planned,” Putin said, adding that he did not “see any need” to further strengthen the 1,100km frontline in Ukraine.

Russia’s army continues to flail nearly eight months after Putin first sent troops into Ukraine and his initial plan of a blitzkrieg to capture Kyiv failed.

Western officials say Putin’s mobilisation of men unfit for combat — even if the figures are in the hundreds of thousands — is unlikely to shift momentum in Russia’s favour in the immediate future, as Ukraine presses ahead with its counteroffensive.

The draft has also proved deeply unpopular in Russia, from which more men fled to Kazakhstan in the first two weeks alone following Putin’s decree than joined the army.

Some officials and pro-Kremlin commentators have also criticised widespread reports of “excesses” during the draft despite promises from Putin to only call up a limited force.

In some regions, draft officers and police have press-ganged people off the street to join the army, while several men have died at the front — apparently skipping the basic training Putin promised they would be offered.

But Putin said the training was meant to take between 10 and 25 days, indicating he saw no problems with the reports. He said 33,000 people had joined their combat units and 16,000 of them were taking part in combat operations.

Despite Putin’s threat that he would use nuclear weapons to defend the Ukrainian regions he now considers part of Russia, Kyiv’s forces have continued to advance since he held a ceremony in the Kremlin and a rally on Red Square to celebrate the annexation.

In particular, western officials say Ukraine is close to retaking all of the southern Kherson region up to the Dnipro river as soon as next week. On Thursday Russia-installed officials appealed to Moscow to help evacuate the local population.

On Friday a western official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters, said “it is conceivable” that Ukrainian forces could recapture much of Kherson by the end of next week.

“We think that the Russian position [in Kherson] is extremely fragile,” the official said. “And you would have noticed that in the last 24 hours, the occupation authorities have announced that they are evacuating the civilian population from that area, really underlining how vulnerable they are on that [right] flank, and also demonstrating the absurdity of the claimed annexations of Kherson as well as Zaporizhzhia and the Donbas.”

Moscow on Monday responded to its battlefield setbacks and the bomb attack on the bridge linking the occupied Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea to Russia with its largest aerial assault since the war’s early days. The response was spearheaded by the Russian forces’ new commander, Sergei Surovikin, known as “General Armageddon”.

Putin said there was “no need” for further strikes on such a scale after he claimed the army hit 22 of the 29 Ukrainian infrastructure targets.

The western official said Ukraine’s allies “do not think that Russia’s mobilisation will affect the battlefield situation” between now and winter.

The new recruits “are already on the battlefield”, the official said. “There is evidence that they have been taking casualties. It is clear that they have been fielded with very, very limited training and very, very poor equipment. It is really unlikely that they have any sort of positive impact in the near term.”

The person added: “We question whether Russia has the resources available to mobilise that number of troops, to equip them and train them properly, and certainly to equip them and train them in a way which makes them fit to conduct operations during the winter.”

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2022-10-14 15:09:43Z
1603448741

Kamis, 13 Oktober 2022

Florida jury recommends life in prison for school gunman Nikolas Cruz over 2018 Parkland massacre of 17 people - Sky News

A jury in Florida has recommended a sentence of life in prison for school gunman Nikolas Cruz over the 2018 Parkland massacre which left 17 people dead.

Cruz pleaded guilty last year to premeditated murder at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

The expelled student was 18 years old when he used a semi-automatic assault rifle to kill 14 students and three staff members in one of America's worst school shootings.

After three months of testimony and lawyers' arguments, 12 jurors reached their recommendation after seven hours of deliberations over two days.

As the life sentences were announced many of the relatives of the victims could be seen shaking their heads and some cried.

In Florida, a death sentence could only have been handed down if jurors had unanimously recommended Cruz be executed.

Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer will formally issue the sentence at a later date.

More on Florida School Shooting

Cruz had said he chose Valentine's Day to make it impossible for Stoneman Douglas students to celebrate the holiday ever again.

During the three-month sentencing trial the prosecution had argued Cruz's crime was both premeditated as well as heinous and cruel - details among the criteria Florida law establishes for deciding on a death sentence.

His defence team had acknowledged the severity of his crimes, but asked jurors to consider mitigating factors, including lifelong mental health disorders resulting from his biological mother's substance abuse during pregnancy.

Cruz had apologised for his crimes and asked to be given a life sentence without the possibility of parole in order to dedicate his life to helping others.

Shooter Nikolas Cruz in court today. Pic: Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun Sentinel via AP, Pool
Image: Pic: AP
Nikolas Cruz

The sentencing proceedings included testimony from survivors of the shooting as well as mobile phone footage of students crying out for help or whispering as they hid during the shooting.

Lead prosecutor Mike Satz focused on Cruz's eight months of planning and the seven minutes during which he stalked the halls of the school, firing 140 shots from his AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle before escaping.

Cruz's lead attorney, Melisa McNeill, and her team did not question the horror of his actions but focused on their belief his birth mother's heavy drinking during pregnancy had left him with foetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

Their experts said his troubling and sometimes violent behaviour, which started at the age of two, was misdiagnosed as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, meaning he never got the right treatment.

A senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School weeps in front of a cross and Star of David for shooting victim Meadow Pollack while a fellow classmate consoles her at a memorial by the school in Parkland, Florida, U.S. February 18, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake
Image: A school in mourning - Marjory Stoneman Douglas students days after the deadly attack

Mr Satz and his team contended Cruz did not suffer from foetal alcohol damage but had anti-social personality disorder.

Their witnesses said Cruz faked brain damage during testing and was capable of controlling his actions but chose not to.

Prosecutors also played several videos of Cruz discussing the crime with their mental health experts during which he talked about his planning and motivation.

The defence alleged on cross-examination that Cruz was sexually molested and raped by a 12-year-old neighbour when he was nine.

The massacre led to renewed calls for tighter gun control in the US, which have gained further support this year following the shooting of 19 children and two teachers at a school in Uvalde, Texas and another shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, that left 10 people dead.

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2022-10-13 16:22:53Z
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Another Russian energy boss has mysteriously died in hospital - Metro.co.uk

Nikolay Petrunin, 46, United Russia MP, Deputy Head of State Duma???s Energy Committee.
The father-of-three allegedly died from Covid complications (Picture: News Tula/east2west news)

An energy boss has become the latest high profile Russian to die in suspicious circumstances since Putin invaded Ukraine.

Nikolay Petrunin, 47, dubbed the ‘gas wonderkid’, died after allegedly slipping into a month-long coma from Covid.

It follows a series of mysterious deaths in Russia, with critics fearing Putin’s cronies may be behind the alleged killings.

Multi-millionaire Petrunin, who was a father-of-three, was deputy chairman of the powerful energy committee, and he built gas pipelines with links to Gazprom.

He was also fiercely loyal to the Russian president and seen as a ‘political prodigy’.

His wife, Albina Petrunina, is also prominent figure in Russian society, achieving the rank of ‘major’ in the police force and becoming the co-owner of MetaTrendCity company.

Petrunin’s death comes days after leading ‘incorruptible’ judge Sergey Maslov was killed in the Crimean Bridge blast last week.

Nikolay Petrunin, 46, United Russia MP, Deputy Head of State Duma???s Energy Committee.
Petrunin was seen as a ‘political prodigy’ (Picture: News Tula/east2west news)

He was described as an ‘unusually independent-minded’ official who ruled on ‘sensitive’ cases involving big businesses.

Two weeks ago, Putin’s former ally Pavel Pchelnikov was found dead with a gunshot wound to the head on his balcony.

He was the director of communications at Digital Logistics, which was blamed by the Kremlin after servers were hacked from Ukraine.

This led to the delay of critical supplies getting to Russian troops.

Last month oil tycoon Ravil Maganov fell to his death from a sixth floor window of a Moscow hospital, but one report says he was beaten before he was ‘thrown out of a window’.

Maganov’s oil company Lukoil had voiced opposition to the war in Ukraine.

Energy executive Ivan Pecorin, 39, was the next official to wind up dead after falling foul of the Kremin.

He fell to his death from a boat travelling at full speed near Russky Island in the Sea of Japan.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2022-10-13 11:57:00Z
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Rabu, 12 Oktober 2022

Alex Jones Must Pay Almost $1 Billion for Sandy Hook Lies - Bloomberg

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  1. Alex Jones Must Pay Almost $1 Billion for Sandy Hook Lies  Bloomberg
  2. Alex Jones told to pay $965m damages to Sandy Hook victims' families  BBC
  3. Deliberations resume in trial over Jones' Sandy Hook lies  The Independent
  4. Alex Jones: US conspiracy theorist ordered to pay $965m to Sandy Hook massacre victims he defamed  Sky News
  5. View Full coverage on Google News

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2022-10-12 19:54:48Z
1606655543

Zelenskyy vows to make battlefield 'more painful' for Russian forces after another day of deadly rocket strikes on Ukraine - Sky News

Volodymyr Zelenskyy was defiant as he vowed to make the battlefield "more painful" for Russian troops after another deadly day of rockets raining down on Ukraine.

The Ukrainian president said air defence was the "number one priority" after thousands of people spent Monday in bomb shelters as explosions erupted in cities across the country.

'Terrorists must be neutralised' - Ukraine war latest updates

At least 14 people were killed and 97 injured in attacks on Kyiv, Kharkiv, Dnipro, Lviv, Sumy, Zaporizhzhia, Zhytomyr and elsewhere.

Vladimir Putin said the strikes were in retaliation for its "terrorist action" against Russian territory - the attack on the Kerch Strait Bridge in Crimea - but Ukraine has rejected this claim of "provocation".

"We will do everything to strengthen our armed forces," President Zelenskyy said in his nightly address. "We will make the battlefield more painful for the enemy."

"Now the occupiers are not capable of opposing us on the battlefield already, that is why they resort to this terror," he said on Telegram.

More on Russia

Meanwhile, in his nightly address, which he delivered from the streets of Kyiv, Mr Zelenskyy said Ukraine "cannot be intimidated" following the strikes.

He continued: "Only united even more. Ukraine cannot be stopped. Only convinced even more that terrorists must be neutralised.

"The Russian army specifically struck these blows precisely during the morning rush hour. This is a typical terrorist tactic. They wanted to instill more fear and affect more people. They did. The whole world took notice."

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'Ukraine cannot be stopped'

In a call with the Ukrainian leader, Joe Biden reiterated that the US will provide advanced air defence systems.

It comes after the Pentagon said on 27 September that it would start delivering the National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS) over the next two months or so.

Former Ukrainian prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, told Sky News that "critical infrastructure" were among Russia's key targets in Monday's strikes and that Ukraine is expecting some blackouts as a result, putting hospitals in "jeopardy".

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Putin exacts revenge on Ukraine

President Putin has said the strikes were retaliation for the attack on the Kerch Strait Bridge, which links occupied Crimea to Russia.

The Russian leader has blamed the damage on Ukrainian special forces, but Kyiv has not claimed responsibility for the blast.

Whoever was responsible, the attack is set to further squeeze Russian logistics and supply lines amid speculation that Kremlin forces will soon be down to their last supplies of fuel and unable to transport their troops.

The strike on the bridge came after months of Ukrainian forces using HIMARS rocket attacks to degrade Russian logistics, hitting ammunition stores and transport networks.

Sir Jeremy Fleming, the head of GCHQ, is set to deliver a speech saying that Russia is running out of weapons for its war against Ukraine and the costs to the Kremlin are "staggering" in terms of soldiers and equipment lost.

He will say that Ukrainian armed forces are "turning the tide" on the physical battlefield as well as in cyberspace.

Special event at the Imperial War Museum examining the conflict in Ukraine

You can get tickets here for a special event at the Imperial War Museum looking at the war in Ukraine

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2022-10-12 09:01:13Z
1600045085

Crimea bridge attack arrests as fresh blasts heard - BBC

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Russia says it has detained eight people in connection with Saturday's explosion on a key bridge linking Russia to Crimea.

Its FSB security service said five of those held were Russians, while the others were Ukrainian and Armenian.

It says Kyiv was behind the attack but a Ukrainian official described Russia's investigation as "nonsense".

The news came as explosions were reported in the Ukrainian cities of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia and Nikopol.

The BBC's Hugo Bachega in Kyiv said five explosions had been heard in Kherson, one of the largest cities under Russian occupation, while there were unconfirmed reports that the air defence system in the city had been activated.

He said it was not clear what had triggered the explosions.

Ukraine's military said its troops were continuing their advance in the region, capturing another five settlements.

Meanwhile there were also blasts in several Ukrainian-controlled cities.

Three people, including a six-year-old, girl were seriously injured by shelling in Nikopol, in Dnipro region, a Ukrainian presidential spokesman said.

Ukraine's Emergency Ministry reported several S-300 missiles had fallen in and around Zaporizhzhia, with one destroying a residential building in a suburb. It said a family were pulled from the wreckage.

'Fake structures'

The blast on the Crimea Bridge was a powerful symbolic blow to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who opened the bridge in 2018, four years after Russia's annexation of Crimea.

President Putin called it an "act of terrorism", saying Ukraine's intelligence agents had aimed to destroy a critically important piece of Russia's civil infrastructure.

But a spokesman for the Ukrainian intelligence services, Andriy Yusov, rubbished the Russian accusations.

"All the activities of the FSB and [Russia's] Investigative Committee are nonsense," he told Ukrainian media. "They are fake structures which serve the Putin regime, so we're definitely not going to comment on their latest announcements."

Russian forces retaliated on Monday with a wave of missile strikes across the country, including on central Kyiv, killing 19 people.

Following more strikes on Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged countries to hit Moscow with more sanctions in response to "a new wave of terror".

He called on the West to find new ways to apply political pressure to Russia and support Ukraine.

The calls came after he met the G7 group of nations for emergency virtual talks on Tuesday.

The bloc - which consists of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and US - promised to continue providing "financial, humanitarian, military, diplomatic and legal" support to his country "for as long as it takes".

Nato also said it would stand with Ukraine for as long as necessary.

Separately International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) head Rafael Grossi tweeted that the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant had lost external power for the second time in five days and back-up diesel generators had been started up.

"This repeated loss of #ZNPP's off-site power is a deeply worrying development and it underlines the urgent need for a nuclear safety & security protection zone around the site," he added.

Also Ukrainian nuclear agency Enerhoatom said in a post on Telegram that the Russian authorities at the plant, the largest in Europe, were not allowing it to deliver fresh supplies of diesel fuel.

Moscow seized the massive facility in March, but kept on its Ukrainian staff. Both Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of repeatedly shelling the plant, amid global concerns that this could lead to a major radiation incident in Europe.

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2022-10-12 08:28:27Z
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