Posted on February 5, 2025
Правозахисники закликали до санкцій проти причетних до затримань кримських татар 5 лютого
Правозахисники закликали уряди іноземних держав та міжнародні організації висловити протест проти затримань у Криму 5 лютого
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Posted on February 5, 2025
Зеленський і голова МЗС Британії обговорили сторічну угоду та інші формати допомоги Україні
Девід Леммі, коментуючи зустріч, заявив, що через три роки повномасштабного вторгнення «Україна міцно стоїть на ногах»
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Posted on February 5, 2025
Генштаб ЗСУ: російська армія сім разів атакувала позиції Сил оборони на Куп’янському напрямку
«Ворог, попри значні втрати, які завдають йому наші захисники, продовжує спроби прорвати оборону українських військ»
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Posted on February 5, 2025
Є потенціал у закупівлі LNG-газу у Америки: Сибіга про можливості співпраці з США
Голова МЗС нагадав, що в «плані перемоги» Зеленського був пункт щодо українських ресурсів і можливостей для партнерів розробляти їх
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Posted on February 5, 2025
China says it is willing to work with EU on ‘global challenges’
BEIJING — China is willing to work with the European Union on boosting cooperation and responding to “global challenges,” its foreign ministry said on Wednesday, as the bloc faces potential U.S. tariffs on its shipments to the world’s largest economy.
China attaches great importance to EU ties and hopes the bloc will become a reliable cooperation partner, said Lin Jian, spokesperson at the Chinese ministry.
The EU’s trade chief said on Tuesday that the bloc wanted to engage swiftly with the United States over President Donald Trump’s planned tariffs. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen forecast negotiations with Washington would be tough.
As transatlantic ties come under strain with Trump’s tariff threats, China hawks within the EU such as von der Leyen are showing signs of willingness to rethink the relationship between Beijing and Brussels, a bond that had been tested by trade tensions and China’s ties with Russia.
Speaking in Brussels on Tuesday, von der Leyen said the EU would keep “de-risking” its relationship with China but added that there was room to “find solutions” in their mutual interest and “find agreements” that could even expand trade and investment ties.
She did not give details on what those agreements could be.
In Davos, Switzerland, last month, von der Leyen also said both sides should find solutions of mutual interest.
In October, the EU imposed double-digit tariffs on China-made electric vehicles after an anti-subsidy investigation, in addition to its standard car import duty of 10%. The move drew loud protests from Beijing, which in return, raised market entry barriers for certain EU products such as brandy.
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Posted on February 5, 2025
Зеленський озвучив свою позицію щодо ідеї проведення виборів в Україні зараз
Володимир Зеленський пояснив, що без гарантій безпеки неможливо скасувати воєнний стан і відповідно провести вибори
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Posted on February 5, 2025
Нічна атака БПЛА: на Кіровоградщині пошкоджені приватні будинки
«Уламками безпілотника пошкоджено чотири житлові будинки, чотири господарчі споруди, авто та паркани»
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Posted on February 5, 2025
Trump orders target several UN bodies
WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday stopped U.S. engagement with the U.N. Human Rights Council, extended a halt to funding for the Palestinian relief agency UNRWA and ordered a review of the U.N. cultural agency UNESCO.
“It’s got great potential and based on the potential we’ll continue to go along with it, but they got to get their act together,” Trump told reporters. “It’s not being well run, to be honest and they’re not doing the job.
“A lot of these conflicts that we’re working on should be settled, or at least we should have some help in settling them. We never seem to get help. That should be the primary purpose of the United Nations,” the U.S. president said.
U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said, “From day one, U.S. support for the United Nations has saved countless lives and advanced global security.”
“The secretary-general looks forward to continuing his productive relationship with President Trump and the U.S. government to strengthen that relationship in today’s turbulent world.”
Trump said that he was not looking to take away money from the 193-member world body, though he complained that Washington had to pay a disproportionate amount.
Washington is the U.N.’s largest contributor – followed by China – accounting for 22% of the core U.N. budget and 27% of the peacekeeping budget. The U.N. has said the U.S. currently owes a total of $2.8 billion, of which $1.5 billion is for the regular budget. These payments are not voluntary.
UNRWA
Trump’s order on Tuesday was largely symbolic and mirrored moves he made during his first term in office, from 2017-2021.
Since taking office for a second term on Jan. 20, Trump has ordered the U.S. to withdraw from the World Health Organization and from the Paris climate agreement – also steps he took during his first term in office.
The U.S. was UNRWA’s biggest donor – providing $300 million-$400 million a year – but former President Joe Biden paused funding in January 2024 after Israel accused about a dozen UNRWA staff of taking part in the deadly Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Palestinian militants Hamas that triggered the war in Gaza.
The U.S. Congress then formally suspended contributions to UNRWA until at least March 2025. UNRWA provides aid, health and education services to millions of Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.
The United Nations has said that nine UNRWA staff may have been involved in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack and were fired. A Hamas commander in Lebanon – killed in September by Israel – was also found to have had a UNRWA job. The U.N. has vowed to investigate all accusations made and repeatedly asked Israel for evidence, which it says has not been provided.
Human Rights Council
The first Trump administration also quit the 47-member Human Rights Council halfway through a three-year term over what it called chronic bias against Israel and a lack of reform. The U.S. is not currently a member of the Geneva-based body. Under Biden, the U.S. was re-elected and served a 2022-2024 term.
A council working group is due to review the U.S. human rights record later this year, a process all countries undergo every few years. While the council has no legally binding power, its debates carry political weight and criticism can raise global pressure on governments to change course.
Trump’s executive order on Tuesday also asks Secretary of State Marco Rubio to review and report back to him on international organizations, conventions, or treaties that “promote radical or anti-American sentiment.”
He specified that the U.N. Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) should be reviewed first because Washington had previously accused it of anti-Israel bias.
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Posted on February 5, 2025
Зеленський стверджує, що Україна втратила вбитими понад 45 тисяч військових, а РФ – усемеро більше
Генеральний штаб ЗСУ оцінює втрати РФ убитими й пораненими станом на ранок 4 лютого у майже 843 тисячі осіб, це щонайменше на 100 тисяч відрізняється від даних, наведених Зеленським
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Posted on February 4, 2025
«Поверніть нам ядерну зброю» – Зеленський про гарантії безпеки в разі відмови у вступі до НАТО
Україна відмовилася від ядерної зброї після підписання в грудні 1994 року Будапештського меморандуму
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Posted on February 4, 2025
As quakes rattle Greek islands, a few brave tourists enjoy having Santorini to themselves
Santorini, Greece — More Greek islands closed schools Tuesday as hundreds of earthquakes rattled the Aegean Sea, while a handful of hardy tourists enjoyed having Santorini’s stunning views to themselves.
Thousands of residents and seasonal workers have left the Cycladic Islands as hundreds of quakes up to magnitude 5 were recorded in the volcanic region since Friday. Ferry and commercial flight operators added services to accommodate departures.
The quakes have caused cracks in some older buildings but no injuries have been reported so far. On Tuesday, schools were shut on 13 islands, up from four the previous day. Santorini earlier canceled public events, restricted travel to the island and banned construction work in certain areas.
Efthimios Lekkas, head of the state-run Earthquake Planning and Protection Organization, said that the epicenter of earthquakes in the Aegean Sea was moving northward away from Santorini, emphasizing that there was no connection to the area’s dormant volcanoes.
“This may last several days or several weeks. We are not able to predict the evolution of the sequence in time,” Lekkas told state-run television.
In Santorini’s main town, Fira, the narrow, whitewashed streets along the island’s clifftops were deserted — a rare sight even in the offseason — except for small pockets of tour groups, many from Asian countries.
Joseph Liu, from Guangzhou in southern China, said that he had wanted to visit Santorini for years after seeing it in a documentary. He joined family and tour group members on a balcony deck typically used for high-end wedding receptions.
“This place is amazing, really beautiful. Just like I saw in the program: the mystery, the scenery,” he said. “The [group] leader told us about the earthquakes before we came so it was not a surprise.”
Retired police officer and ship worker Panagiotis Hatzigeorgiou, who has lived on Santorini for more than three decades, said that he has turned down offers to stay with relatives in Athens.
“Older residents are used to the earthquakes … But it’s different this time. It’s not the same to have earthquakes every 2-3 minutes. The main thing is not to worry,” he said, adding with a laugh: “Now we can listen to music alone and have coffee by ourselves.”
In Athens, government officials are continuing to hold daily high-level planning and assessment meetings with briefings from island officials.
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Posted on February 4, 2025
Донька засудженої в Криму Сенеджук розповіла про переслідування жінок на півострові
«Відчуття, що вони знову взялися показувати свою владу та затримують велику кількість дівчат, жінок»
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Posted on January 31, 2025
Russian drones injure 4 in Ukraine’s south, Ukrainian officials say
KYIV, UKRAINE — Russia launched a barrage of drones on Ukraine in an overnight attack on Friday, injuring four people and damaging a hospital and a grain warehouse in the southern Odesa region, officials said.
Ukraine’s air defenses shot down 59 of 102 Russian drones, the air force said. It said that 37 drones were “lost,” referring to the use of electronic warfare to redirect them.
Russian drones caused damage in the northeastern Sumy region, the Odesa region in the south and the central Cherkasy Region.
Oleh Kiper, the Odesa regional governor, said that four civilians, including a doctor, were injured in drone attacks targeting the city of Chornomorsk.
The strikes also partially disrupted electricity supplies in the city and damaged the city’s hospital, an administrative building, a grain warehouse, a residential house, and several trucks, he said on the Telegram app.
Regional officials in the central Cherkasy region said that drone debris damaged an apartment building in the region.
Meanwhile, an oil refinery in Russia’s southern Volgograd region caught fire after an overnight Ukrainian drone attack, but the blaze has now been put out, the regional governor said on Friday.
Andrei Bocharov, the governor, said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app that Russian air defenses had repelled an attack on his region by eight drones.
“As a result of falling debris from one of the drones, a fire broke out on the territory of an oil refinery, which was promptly extinguished. One injured refinery worker was hospitalized,” he said.
Andriy Kovalenko, the head of Ukraine’s Centre for Countering Disinformation, said on Telegram that the Volgograd oil refinery, which he described as one of Russia’s largest, had been struck.
SHOT, a Russian news outlet with contacts in the security services, said four Ukrainian drones had been destroyed over a second refinery in Yaroslavl, northeast of Moscow.
Ukraine has carried out frequent air attacks on Russian refineries, oil depots and industrial sites to cripple key infrastructure underpinning Russia’s war effort.
This week it claimed to have struck and set on fire a Lukoil refinery, Russia’s fourth largest, in the Nizhny Novgorod region, east of Moscow.
Sources at Lukoil denied that the NORSI refinery was hit, and said production was not affected. Petrochemical company Sibur said there had been a drone strike and fire at its nearby plant.
Russia is currently feeding more crude oil through its refineries in the hope of boosting fuel exports after new U.S. sanctions on Russian tankers and traders made exports of unprocessed crude more difficult, sources told Reuters this week.
A Ukrainian drone attack last week forced a refinery in Ryazan, southeast of Moscow, to suspend operations. Russia’s Defense Ministry said in a statement on Friday that 49 Ukrainian drones had been downed over the country overnight, including 25 in the southern Rostov region and eight in the Volgograd region.
Drones had also been detected and destroyed in the Kursk, Yaroslavl, Belgorod, Voronezh, and Krasnodar regions, it said.
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Posted on January 31, 2025
Порошенку можуть скоротити відсторонення від засідань Ради до трьох днів через можливу реакцію Європи – Потураєв
«Це можуть сприйняти як надмірне покарання»
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Posted on January 31, 2025
Spain struggles to meet NATO defense target, as Trump demands huge additional spending
Visiting Spain this week, NATO’s secretary-general called for members to boost military spending in the face of the threat from Russia. Spain spends the least on defense relative to the size of its economy. And as Henry Ridgwell reports, US President Donald Trump has singled out Madrid for failing to meet the NATO target.
Camera: Alfonso Beato
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Posted on January 31, 2025
Командування: Сили оборони відбили 10 спроб військ РФ просунутися на Краматорському напрямку
Від початку доби на фронті, за даними командування, відбулося 125 бойових зіткнень
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Posted on January 31, 2025
Zelenskyy condemns Russian strike that killed 9 as ‘terrible tragedy’
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned an early Thursday morning Russian drone strike that killed at least nine people as a “terrible tragedy.”
The drone, which struck an apartment building in the city of Sumy in northeastern Ukraine, also injured 13 people, according to regional authorities.
“This is a terrible tragedy, a terrible Russian crime. It is very important that the world does not stop putting pressure on Russia for this terror,” Zelenskyy said on Telegram.
Police said the search-and-rescue operation had concluded after 19 hours.
Three elderly couples were among those killed, and an 8-year-old child was among those wounded. The child’s mother was killed in the attack.
“[Russian President Vladimir] Putin claims to be ready for negotiations, but this is what he actually does,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said on social media.
Russia launched 81 drones at Ukraine overnight, the Ukrainian military said Thursday. The attacks damaged businesses and homes around the country, according to the military.
In the southern region of Odesa, the attack damaged a grain warehouse and a hospital, according to the governor.
Meanwhile, James Anderson, a British man who was captured while fighting on the Ukrainian side in Russia’s Kursk region, will face terrorism and mercenary charges, Russian state investigators said Thursday.
Russia announced in November that it had captured Anderson.
Also, the review and 90-day freeze on U.S. foreign aid means Ukrainian aid groups that rely on U.S. funding are being forced to cut services.
Zelenskyy said U.S. military assistance to Ukraine was not affected by U.S. President Donald Trump’s freeze on foreign aid, but the Ukrainian president still expressed concern about the funding pause.
Some information for this report came from Reuters and Agence France-Presse.
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Голова КМВА каже, що не отримав «жодних обґрунтувань» для зупинки громадського транспорту під час тривог
«Необхідний виважений, комплексний підхід, який врахує як безпекові, так і транспортні аспекти», заявив Ткаченко
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Turkey, Azerbaijan step up efforts to create land corridor through Armenia
Azerbaijan and Turkey are stepping up efforts to secure a land corridor between their countries through Armenia. Until now, Iran, a key ally of Armenia, has backed Yerevan’s opposition to what is known as the Zangezur corridor. With Iran weakened in the region, Ankara and Baku see an opportunity to secure a key strategic goal. Dorian Jones reports from Istanbul.
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Безрукова каже, що Умєров не відповідає на її пропозиції «деескалації» щодо АОЗ
«Цей скандал абсолютно зайвий і його можна було уникнути простою розмовою», вважає відсторонена керівниця агентства
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Держекоінспекція: Україна збирає докази забруднення Чорного моря нафтопродуктами
У майбутньому це дозволить подавати позови для відшкодування збитків проти Росії, заявив представник інспекції
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Russia weds biolab, organ harvesting conspiracies to discredit US, Ukraine
Russian disinformation narratives about illicit organ harvesting and biological experiments in Ukraine have no basis in fact. Russia intentionally distorts Ukrainian law intended to support vital medical procedures.
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Троє українців посмертно вшановані званням Праведник народів світу
Україна посідає четверте місце за чисельністю Праведників народів світу після Польщі, Нідерландів, Франції
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Вирішуватиме Єврокомісія – Стефанішина про відновлення транзиту російського газу через Україну
Єврокомісія 29 січня в обмін на розблокування продовження санкцій ЄС проти Росії надала Угорщині запевнення, що сприятиме переговорам з Україною щодо транзиту енергоносіїв
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Posted on January 30, 2025
UN rights chief seeks $500 million in 2025, warning that lives are at risk
GENEVA — The U.N. human rights chief appealed on Thursday for $500 million in funding for 2025 to support its work, such as investigating human rights abuses around the world from Syria to Sudan, warning that lives hang in the balance.
The U.N. human rights office has been grappling with chronic funding shortages that some worry could be exacerbated by cuts to U.S. foreign aid by President Donald Trump. The annual appeal is for funds beyond the allocated U.N. funds from member states’ fees, which make up just a fraction of the office’s needs.
“In 2025, we expect no let-up in major challenges to human rights,” High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk told member states in a speech at the U.N. in Geneva.
“I am very concerned that if we do not reach our funding targets in 2025, we will leave people … to struggle and possibly fail, without adequate support,” he said.
He said any shortfall would mean more people remain in illegal detention; that governments are allowed to continue with discriminatory policies; violations may go undocumented; and human rights defenders could lose protection.
“In short, lives are at stake,” Turk said.
The human rights office gets about 5% of the regular U.N. budget, but the majority of its funding comes voluntarily in response to its annual appeal announced on Thursday.
Western states give the most, with the United States donating $35 million last year or about 15% of the total received in 2024, followed by the European Commission, U.N. data showed. Still, the office received only about half of the $500 million it sought last year.
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Posted on January 30, 2025
Trump’s ‘make peace or die’ message to Putin is deepfake. Yet it fooled Russians
The Russian lawmaker attributed to Trump a quote from a deepfake video created by Ukrainian bloggers and shared on the Telegram messaging platform.
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