Category: Russia-Ukraine conflict

General update on Russia Invasion

  • Singapore warns citizens of life imprisonment for joining Ukrainian military

    Singapore warns citizens of life imprisonment for joining Ukrainian military

    Singaporean citizens are prohibited by law to travel or attempt to travel to Ukraine to partake in hostilities, with the punishment set to range from 15 years to life in prison.

    The Singaporean Foreign Ministry, Dr Vivian Balakrishnan said this on Thursday.

    “We will like to highlight that it is an offence for any person, whilst in Singapore, to wage, attempt to wage.

    “Or by abetting the waging of war, against the government of any power with which Singapore is not at war,” the ministry said, as quoted by The Straits Times newspaper.

    Singapore’s criminal code punishes the involvement of citizens in foreign hostilities with a prison sentence from 15 years to life, as well as a fine, according to the report.

    “For citizens of Singapore, in particular, even if they committed these acts whilst outside Singapore, they will be legally deemed to have committed them as if in Singapore, and hence liable for an offence,’’ the statement read.

    READ ALSO: Ukraine crisis: Damage to EU worse than COVID-19 pandemic – Volkswagen

    Shortly after the start of the Russian operation, Volodymyr Zelenskyy called on foreigners to come to Ukraine and take up arms as part of a so-called international legion.

    Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has promised simplified visa and entry procedures for all foreign fighters.

    UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss backed Kiev’s initiative, said that if people wanted to support Ukraine’s struggle for freedom and democracy, she would support them.

    Her position was later dismissed by UK Defence Minister Ben Wallace, who said that British citizens were advised against travel to Ukraine as involvement in any military action is dangerous.

    Russia launched the operation on Feb. 24, responding to calls for help from the breakaway Donetsk and Luhansk people’s republics in countering the aggression of Ukrainian troops. (Sputnik/NAN)

  • Envoy tells U.S. not to harm China’s legitimate interests in handling Russia

    Envoy tells U.S. not to harm China’s legitimate interests in handling Russia

    Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson on Thursday warned U.S. not to undermine China’s legitimate rights and interests in handling ties with Russia, otherwise, China would make firm and resolute responses.

    Spokesperson Zhao Lijian was responding to a query about recent claims by a few countries including the U.S. which said China has not made concrete measures to help resolve the conflict in Ukraine, nor has it coordinated with the West to impose sanctions on Russia.

    “For those accusing China of ‘looking on unconcerned’ on the Ukraine issue, they should first ask themselves what role they have played in the crisis?” Zhao asked.

    On the Ukraine issue, Zhao said China has always adopted an objective and fair attitude, made judgments independently based on the merits of the matter itself, and played a constructive role in promoting peace talks.

    “We hope the relevant sides can keep calm, restrained, encourage and support all diplomatic efforts conducive to the peaceful settlement of the Ukraine crisis, so as to jointly help cool down the situation.’’

    Zhao said it has been proven by practice that sanctions would not solve problems, on the contrary, they would lead to new problems.

    He added that sanctions will not only result in two or multiple economic losers but also disturb the process of a political settlement, which was “not constructive at all.

    According to Zhao, in handling ties with Russia, U.S. side should not impose the so-called sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction on Chinese enterprises and individuals, or damage China’s legitimate rights and interests, otherwise China will make firm and resolute responses. (Xinhua/NAN)

  • Russia no longer wants to work with Council of Europe

    Russia no longer wants to work with Council of Europe

    Following Russia’s suspension from the Council of Europe, the country no longer wants to participate in the work of the body, the Russian Foreign Ministry in Moscow says.

    “Russia will not participate in the transformation of Europe’s oldest organisation by NATO and the EU, which obediently follows it, into another platform for Western domination and narcissism.

    “They should have fun communicating with each other, without Russia,” a statement said.

    The exit from the Council of Europe also entails the exit from all mechanisms,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.

    Read Also: Russian commanders will be held to account for war crimes – UK

    The foreign ministry said that, states opposed to Russia would abuse their majority in the committee of ministers with representatives of the 47 member states and thus continue the “destruction” of the Council of Europe.

    Russia repeatedly complains of alleged discrimination.

    The council had reacted to the Russian attack on Ukraine by suspending it.

    This decision was considered historic. Russia temporarily lost its representation rights in the Strasbourg-based organisation.

    Meanwhile, the country will formally remain a member until the end of the financial year, Russian politicians in Moscow emphasised. (dpa/NAN)

  • Ukraine crisis: Damage to EU worse than COVID-19 pandemic – Volkswagen

    Ukraine crisis: Damage to EU worse than COVID-19 pandemic – Volkswagen

    Russia’s military operation in Ukraine could inflict greater economic damage on European economy than coronavirus pandemic, the head of Volkswagen carmaker, Herbet Diess, said on Thursday.

    On March 3, Volkswagen Group said it would suspend production at its Russian plants in Kaluga and Nizhny Novgorod, with vehicle deliveries to Russia also suspended.

    Read Also: Ukrainian ambassador demands “Airlift 2.0” from Berlin

    The interruption to global supply chains “could lead to huge price increases, scarcity of energy and inflation, Diess said, adding that it could be very risky for the European and German economies.

    Volkswagen has 7,000 employees in Russia, it sold over 204,000 cars in Russia in 2021, out of 9 millions in total.

    Russia launched a military operation in Ukraine on Feb. 24 after the breakaway Donbas republics appealed for help in defending themselves against the Ukrainian military.

    In response, Western nations have rolled out comprehensive sanctions against Russia. (Sputnik/NAN)

  • U.S. House approves Ukraine humanitarian and military aid

    U.S. House approves Ukraine humanitarian and military aid

    The U.S. House approved a 1.5 trillion dollars spending bill to keep the government’s doors open for the next six months and send 13.6 billion dollars in humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine.

    The bill included more than 4 billion dollars to assist Ukraine and others in Eastern Europe grappling with the millions of refugees fleeing the former Soviet republic after Russia invaded two weeks ago.

    Nearly 7 billion dollars would backfill the transfer of U.S. military equipment to Ukraine and its allies, as well as cover the current and future deployment of American troops and equipment to defend NATO in the region.

    U.S. President Joe Biden said he would not send troops to Ukraine.

    Read Also: Ukrainian ambassador demands “Airlift 2.0” from Berlin

    “We are becoming a witness to one of the worst humanitarian crises we have seen in generations, which is why this bill provides 13.6 billion dollars in humanitarian assistance.

    “The defence support and economic aid to help the Ukrainian people in their most desperate hour of need,’’ said House Appropriations Chairperson Rosa DeLauro, D-Connecticut.

    The bill was divided into two parts. The defence portion was approved overwhelmingly by members of both parties, 361 to369.

    The remaining pieces had less support from Republicans but were approved 260 to 171, with one present vote.

    The 2,741-page government spending bill attempts to avert a shutdown as soon as Friday evening.

    The bill now moves to the Senate, where leaders hope to approve it quickly, but they have a brief, stopgap spending bill on deck if needed to avert a shutdown.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Ukrainian ambassador demands “Airlift 2.0” from Berlin

    Ukrainian ambassador demands “Airlift 2.0” from Berlin

    Germany needs to provide aid to war-torn Ukraine, the country’s ambassador to Germany said as he made an urgent plea for help before the Berlin House of Representatives.

    “We need a supply corridor to Ukraine to provide people with medicine and food,’’ Andriy Melnyk told the state parliament on Thursday.

    “We need a Berlin Airlift 2.0 only this time by land.’’

    The diplomat was referring to the Western Allies’ aid to Berlin after World War II.

    “We all learned in our history books how brave this city was, back when the Soviets had imposed a blockade,’’ the Ukrainian ambassador recalled of 1948-49.

    Read Also: Russian commanders will be held to account for war crimes – UK

    “Today, many Ukrainians feel the same way as the Germans did back then.

    “And we ask you to do everything possible to strengthen Ukraine’s defence capabilities,’’ he said.

    “We must not be abandoned, we are there; we are fighting for our lives and for our children.

    “But we are also fighting for you, we are also fighting for your freedom,’’ Melnyk said to the applause from the members of the Berlin parliament. (dpa/NAN)

  • Russian commanders will be held to account for war crimes – UK

    Russian commanders will be held to account for war crimes – UK

    Russian military commanders, as well as people at the very top of the Russian government, will be held to account for any war crimes in Ukraine, Britain’s armed forces minister said on Thursday.

    “Russian commanders need to remember that war crimes are not just committed by those at the very top of the Russian government,” James Heappey told Sky News.

    “They are committed all the way down the chain of command by all who are involved and these atrocities are being watched.

    “They’re being catalogued and people will be held to account,” he added.

    He said “the despicable bombing of a maternity hospital in Ukraine” is a war crime committed by Russian troops.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the strike in Mariupol was part of a “genocide” on his people.

    Three people, including a child, were killed in the attack, according to the besieged city’s council.

    A war crime is a violation of the laws of war that gives rise to individual criminal responsibility for actions by the combatants, such as intentionally killing civilians or intentionally killing prisoners of war.

    Read Also: Ukrainian ambassador demands “Airlift 2.0” from Berlin

    Actions such as torture, hostage-taking, unnecessary destruction of civilian property, deception by perfidy, wartime sexual violence, pillaging, and conscription of children in the military constitute war crime.

    Other acts considered to be war crime are committing genocide or ethnic cleansing, the granting of no quarter even when there is surrender, and flouting the legal distinctions of proportionality and military necessity.

    The formal concept of war crimes emerged from the codification of the customary international law that applied to warfare between sovereign states, such as the Lieber Code (1863) of the Union Army in the American Civil War and the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 for international war.

    In the aftermath of the Second World War, the war-crime trials of the leaders of the Axis powers established the Nuremberg principles of law, such as the fact that international criminal law defines what is a war crime.

    In 1949, the Geneva Conventions legally defined new war crimes and established that states could exercise universal jurisdiction over war criminals.

    In the late 20th century and early 21st century, international courts extrapolated and defined additional categories of war crimes applicable to a civil war. (Reuters/NAN)

  • Taiwan studies Ukraine war for own battle strategy with China

    Taiwan studies Ukraine war for own battle strategy with China

    Taiwan’s military strategists have been studying Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and the country’s resistance, preparatory to the island’s own battle strategy in the event its giant neighbour, China, ever makes good its threat to take them by force.

    While Taiwan’s government has not reported any unusual activity by the military in China, which views the island as its own territory, Taipei has raised its alert level.

    Russia’s use of precision missiles, as well as Ukraine’s tactically well thought through resistance even when outmanned and outgunned, are being carefully watched in security circles in Taiwan, whose own forces are likewise dwarfed by China’s.

    Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen has championed the idea of “asymmetric warfare”, to make its forces more mobile and hard to attack, with, for example, vehicle-mounted missiles.

    Ma Cheng-Kun, director of the Graduate Institute of China Military Affairs Studies at Taiwan’s National Defence University, said Ukraine had used the same concept with mobile weapons to stymie Russian forces.

    “Ukraine’s military has been making full use of asymmetric warfare, very effectively, and so far successfully holding off Russia’s advance,” added Ma, a government advisor on China policy.

    “That’s exactly what our armed forces have been proactively developing,” he said, pointing to weapons such as the lightweight and indigenously-developed Kestrel shoulder-launched anti-armour rocket designed for close-in warfare.

    “From Ukraine’s performance, we can be even more confident in our own,” he added.

    Taiwan has been developing other missiles which can reach far into China.

    Last week, the defence ministry said the country planned to more than double its yearly missile production capacity to close to 500 this year.

    That will include the upgraded version of the Hsiung Feng IIE missile, the longer-range Hsiung Sheng land-attack missile which military experts say is capable of hitting targets further inland in China.

    READ ALSO: Ukraine: Why Russia struck

    Taiwan’s Defence Ministry says it has a “close grasp” of the international security situation and that it is working hard to “improve its armaments and national defence combat capability all the time” but that the military is “not provocative”.

    There are big differences however between Taiwan and Ukraine’s positions that have offered reassurance.

    Taiwan’s government has repeatedly pointed out, for example, the natural barrier of the Taiwan Strait which separates it from China.

    Strategists say Taiwan can also easily detect signs of Chinese military movements and make preparations ahead of an invasion in which China would need to mobilise hundreds of thousands of soldiers and equipment like ships, which could be easily targeted by Taiwanese missiles.

    To put boots on the ground China would have to cross the strait, “so it’s a much higher risk” for China, said Su Tzu-yun, an associate research fellow at Taiwan’s top military think tank, the Institute for National Defence and Security Research.

    Looming in the background is the perennial debate – given new focus by the Ukraine war – about whether U.S. forces would ride to Taiwan’s aid in the event of a Chinese attack.

    Washington practices “strategic ambiguity” on the subject, giving no clear answer either way.

    Lo Chih-cheng, a senior lawmaker from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party who sits on parliament’s defence and foreign affairs committee, said the Biden administration sending a team of top former officials to Taiwan last week shortly after Ukraine was invaded should dispel the idea that the United States is not to be relied on.

    “At this time it sent a message to the other side of the strait, to Taiwan’s people, that the United States is a trustworthy country,” he told a party podcast on Tuesday.

    Taiwan, a major semiconductor producer, hopes its geographic and supply chain importance makes it different from Ukraine.

    But the Biden administration repeatedly ruling out sending troops to Ukraine has caused unease for some in Taiwan.

    “Do people in Taiwan really think now that the West and the United States will still come to save us?” said Chao Chien-min, a former deputy head of Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council now at Taiwan’s Chinese Culture University. (NAN)

  • Don wants Russia out as permanent UNSC member

    Don wants Russia out as permanent UNSC member

    A lecturer at the Lagos State University, Ojo, Lagos, Dr Dapo Thomas, has called for the removal of Russia as Permanent Member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) following its invasion of Ukraine.

    He suggested the European country be replaced by India.

    Thomas spoke during a symposium titled ‘Unpacking the Ukraine Conundrum: Analysis of the Russian-Ukrainian War.’

    The Department of History and International Studies, Lagos State University held the symposium on the ongoing vicissitudes between Russia and Ukraine.

    Experts and scholars of International Relations both within and outside the department were all invited to table their analysis on the stipulated topic.

    Making his presentation, Thomas said: “If the objective of the United Nations Security Council is to maintain or to ensure global security and peace, Russia’s action/ attack on Ukraine has signposted the failure of that objective.

    “So, on what moral or political plank is Russia being retained as a Permanent Member of the UNSC? I propose Russia’s removal from the UNSC having lost the moral and professional authority to be a disciplined nation. In its place, I will suggest India for these reasons:
    a) It is the largest democracy in the world.

    b) It has a very stable polity that has NEVER been disrupted since 1947.

    c) It is also a major power with very disciplined and liberal foreign policy.

    •Scrap UNSC, Maintain only the UN General Assembly.

    •Cancel the Veto power and adopt a majority vote system or the concept of “Status Parity”

    Explaining what he meant by Wasteland
    Agenda in his presentation, Thomas said: “This is my coinage for the carnage going on in Kyiv. It means deliberate, methodical, premeditated and scientific extermination and decimation of all physical, biological and physiological entities of a defined geographical and political territory by the army of an adversary with machines of War.

    “What are these machines of War?: Tanks, aircraft, poison gas, armoured vehicles, heavy machine guns, cluster munitions, vacuum bombs and airships.

    “Who is this Emperor here? : Vladimir Putin. Why? : he has never been happy with the bifurcation of the Soviet Union and dreams of re-creating a new Soviet or Russian Empire under the guise of “ I am the victim “ “perceptive reality “.

    To avoid or prevent a Wasteland Mission, he said: ” Intervention by other states not involved in a war should be activated 2nd or 3rd day of attack irrespective of the status of the states involved.

    READ ALSO: Our sanctions will hurt you, Russia warns West

    “Punitive actions like denuclearization demilitarization heavy fines should be imposed on any aggressor nation.

    “Death toll for War Crime investigation, trial and punishment should be specified. I am suggesting a figure range of 100-150 deaths.”

    He added: ‘I am advocating for the zero-nuclear weapon system. And if this is not acceptable to the major powers, then let every state protect its country according to the “available capability “. Putin raising his nuclear forces to high alert is a clear demonstration that madness is not restricted to Iran, Syria and any other perceived belligerent state.

    ” What is the purpose of allowing some states to possess nuclear weapons and denying others from doing the same?”

    Proliferation, he further said may be dangerous “but there is a need for fresh justification for preventing the non-nuclear states from having their own nuclear weapons. The old excuse of not wanting some madmen in Asia or Europe to be in possession of deadly and destructive weapons like nuclear weapons is no longer tenable. Today, some madmen also wear suits not only jalamia.”

    Thomas adopted the interpretive and prescriptive approaches in his presentation.

    Looking at the causes of war under the interpretive approach, he discussed the following: (a) Historical Excuse – 11&12th centuries incorporated into Russian Empire- 1793
    Federated into Russia in 1918
    German invasion in-1941
    Retaken by USSR in 1944
    Ukraine/Crimea joined together – 1954
    Ukrainian independence- 1991(Dec 5)
    Crimean war-2014.

    (b) Ideological Rationalization – Don’t join NATO/EU

    (c) Personality/ identity Crisis

    Carl Rogers ( American psychologist): The personality or “self” is an organized, consistent pattern of perception of the “I” or “Me” that lies at the heart of an individual’s experiences.

    Under the prescriptive, he examined the concept of Align or Perish •Warning to all non-aligned States – Align now or be perished soon.

  • 40 people injured during feminist demonstration in Mexico

    40 people injured during feminist demonstration in Mexico

    Over 40 people sustained injuries during the feminist demonstrations on the occasion of International Women’s Day in the capital of Mexico, the city’s Ministry of Citizen Security said on Wednesday.

    “The Rescue Squad and Medical Emergencies provided more than 40 medical services to people that have suffered from dehydration, heatstroke, and others.

    “Only eight people were transferred to hospitals, six of them police officers,’’ the ministry wrote on Twitter.

    According to Secretary to the Government of Mexico City, Marti Batrez, 75,000 women participated in the march.

    The groups of extremists were among the participants and engaged in vandalism during the march, a Sputnik correspondent reported, adding that they tried to break the fence of the cathedral at the end of the demonstration.

    READ ALSO: A sustainable feminist recovery

    Maintenance of order during women demonstrations in Mexico City is provided by the women police units.

    The authorities thus try to minimise aggression against officers but clashes between protesters and police occur on regular basis.

    The march took place due to the continued increase in reports of serious crimes against women.

    According to the Secretariat of Security and Civilian Protection, in six years, the number of cases involving the murder of women in Mexico has increased by 235 per cent.

    While 969 femicides were committed in the country in 2021. (Sputnik/NAN)