Posted on September 26, 2024
Crises in Ukraine, Mideast and Sudan dominate UN General Assembly meetings
The war in Ukraine, Sudan’s humanitarian crisis, and an escalation between Israel and Hezbollah dominated the second day of the United Nations General Assembly meetings. VOA U.N. Correspondent Margaret Besheer reports.
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Posted on September 26, 2024
OECD sees global economy ‘turning corner’ toward growth
Posted on September 25, 2024
Пентагон оприлюднив вміст нового пакету допомоги Україні на 375 мільйонів доларів
Новий пакет допомоги передбачає, зокрема, боєприпаси для HIMARS та артилерію
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Posted on September 25, 2024
ОП: під час зустрічі Зеленського зі Стармером говорили про зміцнення України
За даними ОП, на зустрічі також приділили увагу реалізації двосторонньої безпекової угоди, імплементації формули миру, і підготовці до другого саміту миру
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Zoo in Finland with financial woes to return giant pandas to China
HELSINKI — A zoo in Finland has agreed with Chinese authorities to return two loaned giant pandas to China more than eight years ahead of schedule because they have become too expensive for the facility to maintain as the number of visitors has declined.
The private Ahtari Zoo in central Finland some 330 kilometers north of Helsinki said Wednesday on its Facebook page that the female panda Lumi, Finnish for “snow,” and the male panda Pyry, meaning “snowfall,” will return “prematurely” to China later this year.
The panda pair was China’s gift to mark the Nordic nation’s 100 years of independence in 2017, and they were supposed to be on loan until 2033.
But since then, the zoo has experienced several challenges, including a decline in visitors due to the 2020 coronavirus pandemic and Russia’s war against Ukraine, as well as an increase in inflation and interest rates, the facility said in a statement.
The panda deal between Helsinki and Beijing, a 15-year loan agreement, had been finalized in April 2017 when Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Finland for talks with then-Finnish President Sauli Niinisto. The pandas arrived in Finland in January 2018.
The Ahtari Zoo, which specializes in typical northern European animals such as bears, lynxes and wolverines, built a special annex at a cost of about $9 million in hopes of luring more tourists to the remote nature reserve.
The upkeep of Lumi and Pyry, including a preservation fee to China, cost the zoo $1.7 million annually. The bamboo that giant pandas eat was flown in from the Netherlands.
The Chinese Embassy in Helsinki noted to Finnish media that Beijing had tried to help Ahtari solve its financial difficulties by urging Chinese companies operating in Finland to make donations to the zoo and supporting its debt arrangements.
However, declining visitor numbers combined with drastic changes in the economic environment proved too high a burden for the smallish Finnish zoo. The panda pair will enter a monthlong quarantine in late October before being shipped back to China.
Finland, a country of 5.6 million people, was among the first Western nations to establish political ties with China, doing so in 1950. China has presented giant pandas to countries as a sign of goodwill and closer political ties, and Finland was the first Nordic nation to receive them.
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Офіс президента відреагував на заяви Путіна щодо ядерної зброї
Posted on September 25, 2024
Грузинська делегація в ООН не аплодувала Байдену на слова про Україну після скасування зустрічей
Адміністрація президента США Джо Байдена відмовилась від зустрічей із грузинською делегацією та скасувала запрошення прем’єр-міністра Грузії на прийом
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Pope expels bishop, 9 others from Peru movement over ‘sadistic’ abuses
VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis took the unusual decision Wednesday to expel 10 people — a bishop, priests and laypeople — from a troubled Catholic movement in Peru after a Vatican investigation uncovered “sadistic” abuses of power, authority and spirituality.
The move against the leadership of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, or Sodalitium of Christian Life, followed Francis’ decision last month to expel the group’s founder, Luis Figari, after he was found to have sodomized his recruits.
The decision was announced by the Peruvian Bishops Conference, which posted a statement from the Vatican embassy on its website.
The statement was astonishing because it listed the abuses uncovered by the Vatican investigation that have rarely been punished canonically with such measures, and the people responsible. According to the statement, the Vatican investigators uncovered physical abuses “including with sadism and violence,” sect-like abuses of conscience, spiritual abuse, abuses of authority, economic abuses in administering church money and the “abuse in the exercise of the apostolate of journalism.”
The latter was presumably aimed at a Sodalitium-linked journalist who has attacked critics of the movement on social media.
Figari founded the movement in 1971 as a lay community to recruit “soldiers for God,” one of several Catholic societies born as a conservative reaction to the left-leaning liberation theology movement that swept through Latin America, starting in the 1960s. At its height, the group counted about 20,000 members across South America and the United States. It was enormously influential in Peru.
Victims of Figari’s abuses complained to the Lima archdiocese in 2011, although other claims against him reportedly date to 2000. But neither the local church nor the Holy See took concrete action until one of the victims, Pedro Salinas, wrote a book along with journalist Paola Ugaz detailing the twisted practices of the Sodalitium in 2015, entitled “Half Monks, Half Soldiers.”
An outside investigation ordered by Sodalitium determined that Figari was “narcissistic, paranoid, demeaning, vulgar, vindictive, manipulative, racist, sexist, elitist and obsessed with sexual issues and the sexual orientation” of Sodalitium’s members.
The investigation, published in 2017, found that Figari sodomized his recruits and forced them to fondle him and one another. He liked to watch them “experience pain, discomfort and fear” and humiliated them in front of others to enhance his control over them, the report found.
Still, the Holy See declined to expel Figari from the movement in 2017 and merely ordered him to live apart from the Sodalitium community in Rome and cease all contact with it. The Vatican was seemingly tied in knots by canon law that did not foresee such punishments for founders of religious communities who weren’t priests.
But according to the findings of the latest Vatican investigation, the abuses went beyond Figari and included harassing and hacking the communications of their victims all the while covering up crimes committed as part of their official duties.
The highest-ranking person ordered expelled was Archbishop Jose Antonio Eguren, whom Francis already forced to resign as bishop of Piura in April over his record, after he sued Salinas and Ugaz for their reporting.
The Vatican, in the statement, said the Peruvian bishops join Pope Francis in “seeking the forgiveness of the victims” while calling on the troubled movement to initiate a journey of justice and reparation.
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Volunteer group locates some 2,000 bodies in Ukraine’s Donetsk
A volunteer group is searching for the remains of people killed in the conflict with Russia in Ukraine’s Donetsk region. The group Platsdarm says it has recovered around 2,000 bodies since 2014. Yaroslava Movchan has the story, narrated by Anna Rice. Videographer: Dmytro Hlushko
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Finland zoo returns giant pandas to China over cost
HELSINKI — Finland will return two giant pandas to China in November, more than eight years ahead of time, as the zoo where they live can no longer afford their upkeep, the chair of the zoo’s board told Reuters on Tuesday.
The pandas, named Lumi and Pyry, were brought to Finland in January 2018, months after Chinese President Xi Jinping visited the Nordic country and signed a joint agreement on protecting the animals.
Since its founding in 1949, the People’s Republic of China has sent pandas to foreign zoos to strengthen trading ties, cement foreign relations and boost its international image.
The Finnish agreement was for a stay of 15 years, but instead the pandas will soon go into a month-long quarantine before they are shipped back to China, according to Ahtari Zoo, the pandas’ current home.
The zoo, a private company, had invested over 8 million euros ($8.92 million) in the facility where the animals live and faced annual costs of 1.5 million euros for their upkeep, including a preservation fee paid to China, Ahtari Chair Risto Sivonen said.
The zoo had hoped the pandas would attract visitors to the central Finland location but last year said it had instead accumulated mounting debts as the pandemic curbed travel, and that it was discussing a return.
Rising inflation had added to the costs, the zoo said, and Finland’s government in 2023 rejected pleas for state funding.
In all, negotiations to return the animals had lasted three years, Sivonen said.
“Now we reached a point where the Chinese said it could be done,” Sivonen said.
The return of the pandas was a business decision made by the zoo which did not involve Finland’s government and should not impact relations between the two countries, a spokesperson for Finland’s foreign ministry said.
Despite efforts by China to aid the zoo, the two countries in the end jointly concluded after friendly consultations to return the pandas, the Chinese embassy in Helsinki said in a statement to Reuters.
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Мінʼюст подав позов про конфіскацію «Миргородської», «Моршинської», «Альфа Страхування» в росіянина Фрідмана та партнерів
Позов ґрунтується, зокрема, на знахідках розслідування «Схем» (Радіо Свобода) про підтримку компаніями Фрідмана російської війни проти України
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Lviv BookForum стартує 2 жовтня, заплановані 150 подій
Панельні дискусії, публічні інтерв’ю, обговорення, майстер-класи, «Ніч поезії» відбуватимуться на восьми локаціях у місті й водночас онлайн
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Зеленський і Столтенберґ обговорили посилення української ППО
«Ми обговорили необхідність посилення української ППО, продовження роботи заради того, щоб наша держава отримала запрошення в НАТО якомога скоріше, і важливість вчасної реалізації всіх домовленості Вашингтонського саміту Альянсу»
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Environmentalists value peat, smear Finland’s parliament in red paint
Helsinki — Environmental activists sprayed red paint on Finland’s parliament building on Wednesday to protest against the peat industry, sparking strong criticism from politicians.
Activists from Extinction Rebellion Finland and Swedish organization Aterstall Vatmarker (Restore Wetlands) smeared several granite columns at the building’s main entrance in red paint resembling blood.
They told AFP they were protesting against the Finnish state-owned company Neova mining peat in Swedish wetlands.
Peat extracted from wetlands is often used as an energy source or for farming purposes, emitting large amounts of carbon dioxide.
In their natural state, peatlands store large amounts of carbon dioxide.
“We have painted the columns with this easily washable paint to show that Finland is actively involved in accelerating the climate crisis,” said Valpuri Nykanen, an activist from Extinction Rebellion Finland standing outside the building.
“Finland is mining peat in Sweden, while we know that we must phase out oil, gas and all fossil fuels and peat is very fossil,” added Lior Tell-Stefansson from Aterstall Vatmarker.
Police arrived at the scene after 8:00 am (0500 GMT) and removed 10 protesters sitting on the stairs with signs in their hands.
The incident was investigated as aggravated damage to property, the police said in a statement.
Several Finnish politicians immediately condemned the act.
Newspaper Helsingin Sanomat quoted Prime Minister Petteri Orpo as saying it was “completely incomprehensible and unacceptable vandalism.”
“Finland is a free democracy. We have the right to demonstrate and influence things, but we have civilized ways of doing it,” Orpo said.
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Ярослав Базилевич і УКУ відкрили стипендіальний фонд пам’яті загиблих від ракетного обстрілу у Львові доньок і дружини
18-річна Дарія Базилевич була студенткою УКУ, вона загинула на сходовому майданчику будинку разом із мамою Євгенією (43 роки) і двома сестрами Яриною (21 рік) та Емілією (7 років)
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Зеленський виступить на засіданні Генасамблеї ООН 25 вересня
Під час свого тижневого візиту до США Зеленський інтенсивно проводить зустрічі і виступи із закликами до Вашингтона продовжувати вирішальну підтримку України
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Спікер Палати представників США Джонсон «не впевнений», чи зможе зустрітися з Зеленським
«Я не думаю, що ми будемо у місті в четвер. Розклад наших засідань змінився»
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Climate change doubles chance of floods like those in Central Europe, report says
WARSAW, Poland — Climate change has made downpours like the one that caused devastating floods in central Europe this month twice as likely to occur, a report said on Wednesday, as its scientific authors urged policymakers to act to stop global warming.
The worst flooding to hit central Europe in at least two decades has left 24 people dead, with towns strewn with mud and debris, buildings damaged, bridges collapsed and authorities left with a bill for repairs that runs into billions of dollars.
The report from World Weather Attribution, an international group of scientists that studies the effects of climate change on extreme weather events, found that the four days of rainfall brought by Storm Boris were the heaviest ever recorded in central Europe.
It said that climate change had made such downpours at least twice as likely and 7% heavier.
“Yet again, these floods highlight the devastating results of fossil fuel-driven warming,” Joyce Kimutai, a researcher at Imperial College London’s Grantham Institute and co-author of the study, said in a statement.
“Until oil, gas and coal are replaced with renewable energy, storms like Boris will unleash even heavier rainfall, driving economy-crippling floods.”
The report said that while the combination of weather patterns that caused the storm – including cold air moving over the Alps and very warm air over the Mediterranean and the Black Seas – was unusual, climate change made such storms more intense and more likely.
According to the report, such a storm is expected to occur on average about once every 100 to 300 years in today’s climate with 1.3 degrees Celsius of warming from pre-industrial levels.
However, it said that such storms will result in at least 5% more rain and occur about 50% more frequently than now if warming from pre-industrial levels reaches 2 C, which is expected to happen in the 2050s.
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Posted on September 25, 2024
Biden spotlights Mideast, Ukraine, offers hope in UN address
Joe Biden used his final presidential address before the U.N. General Assembly to urge unity in the face of challenges that include conflicts in Ukraine, Gaza and Sudan. VOA White House correspondent Anita Powell reports from New York.
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Posted on September 24, 2024
Нардеп Дмитрук повідомив про своє затримання і суд у Лондоні. Він обіцяє «залишатися на звʼязку»
«Зеленський вимагає моєї термінової екстрадиції. Сьогодні в рамках цього процесу я був затриманий співробітниками правоохоронних органіу»
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Posted on September 24, 2024
РФ вивозить українських дітей до Білорусі, де їх перевиховують у «ворогів власного народу» – звіт
Правозахисники заявили, що документи підтверджують «участь білоруських агентів у викоріненні української етнічної у дітей»
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Posted on September 24, 2024
Critics say Russia is militarizing classrooms
A new school year begins in Russia, the third that is starting with Moscow’s war in Ukraine as a backdrop. Elizabeth Cherneff narrates this report from Ricardo Marquina on what critics say are Russia’s moves to militarize education by introducing new subjects that explain and justify its full-scale assault on Ukraine.
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Posted on September 24, 2024
Міграційна служба Румунії не коментує, чи просив нардеп Одарченко про притулок
Напередодні стало відомо, що народний депутат, якого підозрюють у пропозиції хабаря, втік до Румунії
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Posted on September 24, 2024
Правоохоронці відкрили справу за дезертирство через заяву Гнезділова про СЗЧ – медіа
Сам Гнезділов наголосив, що «СЗЧ – кримінальний злочин» і закликав вирішувати проблеми, а не мовчати про них
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Posted on September 24, 2024
«Це реалістичний сценарій»: МЗС відреагувало на слова Павела щодо окупованих Росією територій
У зовнішньополітичному відомстві наголосили на важливості посилення тиску на Росію, щоб примусити її до справедливого миру
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