Tag: Putin

  • Olawepo-Hashim commiserates with Russia, Putin over terror attack

    Olawepo-Hashim commiserates with Russia, Putin over terror attack

    In the wake of the terror attack in Russia, a former presidential candidate and chieftain of the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC), Mr. Gbenga Olawepo-Hashim, has sympathised with Russia, its president, and the people.

    In a letter, the APC chieftain wrote “to convey his sympathy to President Vladimir Putin, the great people of Russia, and the wounded and the families of those killed in the terrorist attack of the Music Hall in Moscow on Friday, March 22, 2024”.

    In the letter, dated Monday, March 25, 2024 and sent through the Embassy of the Russian Federation in Abuja, Olawepo-Hashim described the attack as “a fiendish assault on live culture and civilisation”.

    The business mogul said the “horrific act, which reportedly claimed 137 lives (and still counting) and many injured, must be condemned by all peace-loving people all over the world and people of good conscience”.

    He noted that “the attack further underscores the ubiquitous nature of terror, which no nation is immune against, as long as there exist ample number of fertile minds for evil sometimes not always possible to completely track”.

    Olawepo-Hashim said: “Sad occurrences, such as the 9/11 in the United States, the London Tube bombing, and many variants of terrorist actions such as this in powerful nations, highlight the necessity of increased international cooperation and solidarity against terrorism and the need to strengthen Peace Globally across political divides.

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    “Though Nigeria feels the pains of terrorism daily, Nigerian people must stand with Russia, a friendly nation that has demonstrated generous friendship and support to our nation in times of war and peace in the past.”

    The business mogul recalled that “not only did Russia support efforts to keep Nigeria one during the nation’s Civil War, Russia extended economic support for the building of important economic infrastructure and provided scholarships and technical training for the nation’s key professionals”.

    He added: hat “Russia was a key ally of our founding fathers in the struggle for independence from colonial rule.

    “The bond of friendship between Nigeria and the Russian people has been traditionally reciprocal, as demonstrated during the incident of the Chernobyl nuclear tragedy when Nigeria announced a substantial financial donation in solidarity with Russia.

    “Let me add my voice as a friend of Russia at a time like this to comfort those who were wounded in last Friday attack and to stand in solidarity with Russia.”

  • Putin wins fifth term

    Putin wins fifth term

    Vladimir Putin has won the presidential election with 87.97% of the vote, according to the first official results showed yesterday after polls closed.

    Putin tightened his grip on power, claiming another six-year term as Russian president after a brutally distorted election in which all serious challengers were wiped out before voting began.

    With 30 percent of ballots counted, Putin’s tally stood at 87.68% of the vote, election officials announced.

    Putin’s victory was never in doubt. But this is the biggest share of the vote he has claimed in any of his five presidential election wins since his first in 2000. An official celebration is scheduled for today.

    The result more than met the objective of an overwhelming victory to buttress Putin’s claim that Russians wholeheartedly back their leader and his invasion of Ukraine. With the winner already known ahead of time, the three-day vote was an exercise in pro-Putin mobilization and a test of loyalty for Russia’s state apparatus.

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    The election campaign, which saw three other candidates refrain from criticizing the president, was overshadowed by the death last month of Putin’s key opponent, Alexei Navalny.

    Even with Navalny out of the way, Putin was taking no chances. On the first two days of voting, thousands of public sector employees, students, and workers from Russian corporations were compelled to cast their ballots.

    Turnout was monitored by management civil service employees were required to report back once they had voted. In some regions, they were even expected to bring relatives and share their geolocations with supervisors via a specially designed app.

    But the intended image of unanimity was marred by dozens of acts of resistance. In about 20 Russian regions, individuals either set voting booths ablaze or poured paint into the ballot boxes.

    Authorities assert that the assailants many of whom were elderly women were acting on instructions from abroad. All involved now face the prospect of being sentenced to up to five years in prison.

    The most significant pushback against Putin occurred on Sunday at noon, when the Russian opposition rallied its supporters for a “Noon Against Putin” protest. The initiative encouraged people to go to the polls at noon and simultaneously vote for any candidate other than the incumbent.

    The noon demonstration at polling stations was aimed at challenging Putin’s legitimacy, both domestically and internationally.

    “For me, the main goal of the action is to make people who are depressed by repression, the seeming hopelessness of the struggle, and who feel isolated from their comrades-in-arms feel that they are not alone. I think this is especially important after Navalny’s murder,” said Gleb from Moscow, who cast his ballot at noon yesterday. He asked not to give his full name due to fear of reprisals.

    The opposition plan worked. Unusually large crowds were seen at polling stations across Russia, from the smallest Siberian towns to Moscow and St. Petersburg, as well as at Russian embassies and consulates worldwide from Phuket to Paris and Brussels.

    “This is a great opportunity to create the appearance that there are people who are not satisfied with the current state of affairs, who are willing to unite for collective action, and there are many of them,” said Daniel, who voted in the Russian consulate in Almaty, Kazakhstan. He declined to give his full name amid concerns over potential reprisals.

    From the moment the planned demonstration was announced, the Russian state mounted a concerted attempt to undermine it. Local authorities in Russia organized counterfeit public events at noon to distract voters.

    In addition, there were several rounds of deceptive mailings targeted at opposition voters in Russia. The first, on Wednesday, falsely claimed to be from Navalny’s team, announcing a postponement of the action. Navalny’s team quickly denied any delay.

    The second mailing, sent on Saturday, aimed to intimidate voters with a message saying, “Hi! Despite the fact that you support the ideas of an extremist organization, we are pleased you will vote in Moscow, as every vote matters! We urge you not to succumb to the ideas of those seeking to deceive you, and to vote calmly, without queues or provocations.”

    Ekaterina Duntsova and Boris Nadezhdin two potential candidates who advocated for immediate peace negotiations and an end to the war were barred from running against Putin in the contest.

  • Putin won’t stop until he is finally defeated

    Putin won’t stop until he is finally defeated

    • By Peter Dickinson

    There was no escaping the mounting sense of gloom in late February as the world marked the second anniversary of Russia’s full-scale Ukraine invasion.

    While a chorus of international leaders voiced their determination to continue standing with Ukraine, it is now evident that Russia holds the upper hand as the conflict evolves into a grinding war of attrition. Indeed, with the future of US military aid in doubt, the mood among Ukraine’s partners is visibly darkening as thoughts turn to the disastrous consequences of a potential Russian victory.

    In recent weeks, more and more Western leaders have begun publicly warning that their countries may soon become targets of Russian aggression. The latest leader to sound the alarm was French President Emmanuel Macron, who stated on Feb. 26 that Russia could attack NATO member states “in the next few years.” Macron also sparked a heated debate by refusing to rule out sending Western troops to Ukraine.

    Not everyone believes a victorious Putin would inevitably go further. Many remain skeptical and claim the Russian dictator is only interested in Ukraine. Others point to the Russian army’s well-documented difficulties during the current invasion as evidence that any Russian attack on the NATO alliance would amount to military suicide. These arguments reflect a fundamental failure among many in the West to grasp the true motives behind Russia’s invasion and the nature of the threat posed by Vladimir Putin’s imperial ambitions.

    This statement follows French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent refusal to dismiss the idea of sending troops to Ukraine, which has caused divisions among U.S. and European leaders.

    When Putin first launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, he initially sought to portray it as a defensive measure against “Ukrainian Nazis” and NATO expansion. However, as the conflict has unfolded, it has become increasingly apparent that the Kremlin is waging an old-fashioned colonial war of imperial expansion.

    In summer 2022, Putin directly compared his invasion to the eighteenth-century imperial conquests of Russian Czar Peter the Great. Months later, he proclaimed the annexation of four Ukrainian provinces while declaring them to be “historically Russian lands.” He has since asserted that “no Ukraine ever existed in the history of mankind,” and has issued orders for all traces of Ukrainian national identity to be eradicated from areas of Ukraine under Kremlin control.

    Putin’s historical motivations were perhaps most immediately obvious during his recent interview with American media personality Tucker Carlson. While Carlson openly encouraged Putin to blame NATO and the US for the invasion, the Russian ruler preferred to embark on a half-hour history lecture that placed the origins of the current war firmly in the distant past. Rather than seeking to justify his invasion in terms of contemporary geopolitics, Putin chose to argue that Ukraine was historically Russian and therefore a legitimate target.

    Putin’s chilling dream of reclaiming “historically Russian lands” puts a large number of countries at risk of suffering the same fate as Ukraine. The Kremlin strongman is notorious for lamenting the collapse of the Soviet Union, but his revisionist ambitions actually extend beyond the boundaries of the former USSR. On numerous occasions, Putin has expressed his belief that the Soviet Union was in fact a continuation of the Russian Empire, while the fall of the USSR was “the disintegration of historical Russia.” “What had been built up over 1,000 years was largely lost,” he commented in December 2021.

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    Based on this twisted logic, the historical arguments used by Putin to justify the invasion of Ukraine could be equally applied to any country that was once part of the Russian Empire. This would result in a list of potential targets including Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, Poland, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and the whole of Central Asia, not to mention Alaska. Anyone tempted to dismiss the idea of Russia invading these countries should consider that just ten years ago, most Ukrainians were equally sure such things were impossible in the twenty-first century.

    Nor is Putin solely motivated by his deep-seated desire to reverse Russia’s imperial decline. He also sees the invasion of Ukraine as a fight to end the era of Western dominance and establish a new multi-polar world order. After decades spent bristling at Russia’s reduced status and the perceived humiliations of the post-Soviet period, he is now attempting to frame the war in Ukraine as a battle against Pax Americana to shape the future of international relations. Putin believes victory over Ukraine would represent a decisive breakthrough that would undermine the entire post-1991 world order and reverse the verdict of the Cold War.

    Doubters argue that the Russian army is currently in no shape to undertake any further invasions, never mind confronting the military might of NATO itself. This reasoning is superficially persuasive. After all, Putin’s army has seen its reputation as the world’s number two military take a severe battering in Ukraine. Russian commanders have lost a series of key battles and have suffered catastrophic losses in both men and equipment that have left them increasingly dependent on the brute force of primitive human wave tactics.

    Despite these setbacks, it would be foolish to underestimate Russia’s military potential. In the past two years, Putin has placed the entire Russian economy on a war footing. Armament factories are now working around the clock and are already comfortably outproducing the entire NATO alliance in terms of artillery shells and other key armaments. Russia may have lost hundreds of thousands killed and wounded in Ukraine, but the Kremlin still has vast untapped reserves of fighting-age men who can be mobilized in time for the next big invasion.

    Skeptics also tend to overlook the likely impact of victory in Ukraine on Russia’s military capabilities. In practical terms, the conquest of Ukraine would secure hundreds of thousands of additional conscript troops and a vast array of new weapons for the Russian army. Control over Ukraine would significantly enhance the Kremlin war machine by offering renewed access to a range of major Ukrainian enterprises that previously played key roles in the Soviet military-industrial complex. It would make Russia the dominant force on global agricultural markets, handing Moscow enormous leverage that could be used to bribe allies and deter opponents.

    Crucially, success in Ukraine would provide Putin with enormous additional momentum while simultaneously destabilizing and demoralizing the whole democratic world. Inside Russia, pro-war sentiment would be further strengthened and Putin’s messianic vision of a new Russian Empire would be vindicated. Internationally, Russia’s existing allies would feel free to increase their support, while the countries of the nonaligned Global South would rush to strengthen ties with the triumphant Kremlin. In such a favorable geopolitical climate, Putin would doubtless find it difficult to resist the temptation to escalate his confrontation with the West. Indeed, he would almost certainly see it as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to achieve his historic mission.

    This does not mean we should expect to see Russian tanks on the streets of NATO capitals any time soon. Putin knows he can reach his goals by discrediting NATO rather than actually defeating the alliance on the battlefield. With this in mind, the Kremlin would be far more likely to opt for the kind of hybrid tactics employed during the early stages of the Ukraine invasion in 2014. Indeed, it is all too easy to imagine unidentified Russian troops operating inside NATO territory behind a veil of barely plausible deniability.

    An escalation of hybrid warfare against the NATO alliance would enable Moscow to exploit the lack of resolve and fear of escalation demonstrated by Western leaders over the past two years in Ukraine. Would the current generation of US, German, or French leaders be prepared to involve their countries in a war with Russia over an ambiguous “pro-Russian” uprising in an Estonian border town? If not, the absence of a decisive response could fatally undermine NATO’s core commitment to collective defense. The alliance might formally survive such a blow, but the loss of credibility would be catastrophic. It would not be long before individual NATO member countries started forming separate security arrangements of their own and began offering concessions to the Kremlin.

    Even if Putin chooses not to test NATO directly, a Russian victory in Ukraine would transform the international security environment and dramatically increase the risk of a truly global war. European countries would be forced to rapidly rearm, with defense budgets soon ballooning to levels that far surpass the current costs of supporting the Ukrainian war effort. Those who begrudge today’s spending on Ukraine would find themselves confronted with security expenditures five or ten times higher.

    Putin himself has provided ample evidence that his goals extend far beyond the reconquest of Ukraine. He makes no secret of his commitment to reclaiming what he regards as historically Russian lands, and believes he is fully justified in using military force to do so. Putin’s revisionist agenda is inextricably linked to his other great passion, namely the revival of Russia’s great power status as part of a post-Western world dominated by a handful of regional behemoths. These imperial ambitions led directly to the invasion of Ukraine and make further escalations virtually inevitable unless Russia is defeated.

    Ultimately, it is impossible to predict exactly what Putin will do if he wins in Ukraine. He may initially choose to pursue low-hanging geopolitical fruit by seizing small neighborhood countries like Moldova or Georgia. Alternatively, he might seek to press home his advantage against a weakened West by embarking on far bolder military gambits targeting the Baltic states or the Suwałki Gap. Of the many possible post-Ukraine scenarios for Russia, the least likely of all is the idea that an emboldened and victorious Putin would simply stop.

    ·               This article was first published in www.kyivpost.com with the title ‘Putin is on an historic mission and will not stop until he is finally defeated’

  • Putin to deliver state of the union address Feb. 29

    Putin to deliver state of the union address Feb. 29

    Russian President, Vladimir Putin, is to deliver his state of the nation address on Feb. 29, two weeks before the presidential election in which he is seeking another six-year term.

    Putin will address the Federal Assembly about his goals for the coming year, the Kremlin said yesterday.

    It is all but certain that Putin would secure a fifth term in the elections ion March 15 to March 17.

    The candidates on the ballot who were not from United Russia, the party associated with Putin, supported his policies, meaning there was no genuine political competition.

    The war in Ukraine is expected to loom large in the speech to be broadcast on state television.

    February 29 is just five days after the two-year anniversary of Putin’s all-out invasion. 

    Putin has promoted a prison officer days after the death of leading opposition figure, Alexei Navalny.

    Deputy head of FSIN prison authority, Valery Boyarinev, was promoted to colonel general of Ministry of Internal Affairs.

    The director of the Anti-Corruption Foundation, which was established by Navalny, wrote on his Telegram channel that Boyarinev was responsible for Navalny’s torture in prison.

    “This must be understood as Putin’s open reward for the torture,’’ Ivan Zhdanov said of Boyarinev’s promotion.

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    In July 2023, an order by Boyarinev to restrict the opposition politician’s ability to buy food and daily necessities became known during a court hearing against Navalny.

    The Kremlin has denied an international investigation demanded by European Union into the death.

    “We do not accept such demands at all,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said yesterday, according to Russian news agencies. Russia sees this as interference in its internal affairs.

    EU foreign policy Chief Josep Borrell had called for an independent international investigation into Navalny’s death.

    But Navalny’s spokeswoman said there was little hope of Russia releasing the body to his wife or mother anytime soon.

    The mother of Navalny has sent a video message to Putin pleading for his body to be released.

    In the one-minute video, Lyudmila Navalnaya stands outside the “Polar Wolf” prison camp where her son had been jailed while serving a decades-long sentence.

  • Putin’s 143 million prisoners

    Putin’s 143 million prisoners

    • By Diane Francis

    Amidst all the attention about Donald Trump and America’s 2024 Presidential election, the faux “re-election” of Vladimir Putin rolls on. Of course, it is a sham and he will win on March 17 because Russia is a criminal organization where elections are window-dressing and speech is about as free as it is inside China’s Politburo. Even so, credible polls reveal that support for Putin’s war ebbs as the conflict drags on, killing or maiming 315,000 and imperilling another 300,000 Russians at the warfront.

    But politics are also about “local” issues and Russians are upset because eggs are scarce and expensive, interest rates high, and frozen pipes burst constantly leaving hundreds of thousands without heat. But Russians endure by using dark humor and sarcasm to express feelings and opinions. One anti-war joke making the rounds these days is that “Putin’s partial mobilization means that you are drafted in whole and return back with parts missing”.

    But this election is different because movements opposing the war appear which may be why Putin suggests, through back channels, that he will accept a ceasefire even though, publicly, he doubles down. His latest billboard campaign boasts Imperially beneath his image that “Russia’s borders do not end anywhere” and recently declared that he still wants all of Ukraine.

    Surely Putin realizes that his army cannot beat a NATO-backed Ukraine. At the same time, however, he also realizes that he cannot lose power at home. So he bides his time and hopes for Western war fatigue and a Trump victory in the fall. This week, Trump won the Iowa Republican primary and repeated that he could solve the Ukraine war “very fast” – a pledge only possible if the White House threatens to stop providing military aid to Ukraine unless it negotiates a cease-fire. But Europeans rally to help Ukraine, in response to Washington’s political gridlock, and Kyiv is about to deploy this spring a few dozen F16s, donated by EU nations, that could decimate Putin’s hapless cannon fodder along the front line.

    But internal threats lurk inside Russia. Its obscene casualty rate has sparked a low-key, but effective anti-war protest from women relatives of soldiers, dubbed the “white scarves” movement. They hide their identities, gather to lay carnations at unknown soldier’s monuments, and have issued a manifesto calling Putin’s mobilization of their menfolk “legalized slavery”. Other groups have sprung up in remote regions where a disproportionate number of men from ethnic minorities have been press-ganged into the military and died. Putin avoids putting into uniform the rich, well-connected young “white” Russians who live in Moscow and St. Petersburg, as described in my June 12 newsletter “Putin’s other genocides”.

    Russian draftees die in droves due to improper training and equipment. Once inducted, they disappear, leaving relatives in the dark as to their whereabouts or condition. Many deaths are unreported and reports surface that conscripts have been shot as deserters for retreating or for refusing to obey dangerous orders. Army morale is low and many escape and hide. A recent investigation alleged that a group of draftees, who complained to officers, were purposely sent to their deaths in battle. “Our problems have been constantly ignored, but we won’t let our men be forgotten,” said Maria Andreyeva, the wife of a mobilized soldier and one of the few members of the movement willing to go public.

    White scarf protester with her toddler places a carnation at the Unknown Soldier’s memorial on January 16 on behalf on of missing loved ones., Moscow Times.

    The “white scarves” leaders tread carefully and, thus far, have not been subjected to the arrests and abuse that most anti-Putin activists incur. There has been some intimidation, and bans against certain protests, but violent repression is taboo. This is why the movement – online and off – continues and grows. Russian political analyst Dmitry Oreshkin believes this relatives’ movement is “a serious symptom of growing problems” in the country. And it is why authorities cautiously handle the situation because “the consequences [of action] could be unpredictable.”

    These women spread concern. A Russian investigative website reported recently that a letter signed by 100 family members of soldiers stationed in Ukraine demanded an end to Putin’s “meat assaults” against Ukraine’s military. Another reporter wrote that an entire platoon just deserted in Crimea and is being hunted.

    True or false, underground stories spread like COVID across Russia and the quiet protest by women has even garnered the attention of the esteemed Institute for the Study of War (ISW) in Washington. It recently commented that the “angry relatives” are Putin’s biggest concern. “Putin’s presidential campaign will reportedly not focus on the war in Ukraine, and the Kremlin likely considers the relatives of mobilized personnel to be a social group that may pose one of the greatest threats to his campaign.”

    Then there are the eggs and price of groceries. Police recently arrested a member of the Uzbek diaspora for “inciting hatred” with an online meme that spoofed both the country’s economic inflation and the military mobilization. He faces a jail sentence for this post and caption in Russian: “Screw you and your eggs! Bring back the roosters from the front.”

    Last month, Putin publicly apologized for the soaring cost of eggs. But discontent grows, according to recent polls conducted by non-governmental, independent organizations. Support for Putin’s war hits rock bottom, according to Euronews. In October, Russian pollster, the Chronicle, said support for the invasion had halved in two years.

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    It added that 40 percent of Russians favor the withdrawal of troops from Ukraine without war aims being achieved and that only 33 percent were against exiting from the war, down from 47 percent one year ago. Another poll found that 80 percent of Russians are worried about their financial well-being, a figure that’s 30 percent higher than recorded in May. Such anxiety is worrisome in any election, rigged or otherwise, but in combination with Putin’s quagmire in Ukraine is now reportedly unsettling Putin’s “siloviki” or the intelligence and security inner circle.

    Journalists say oligarch “clans” openly feud and discredit one another to shift blame as well as to secure more power for themselves after the election and war. Putin has always encouraged infighting to retain power. This tactic was demonstrated last year when a raucous rivalry between his military brass and the late oligarch and mercenary Yevgeny Prigozhin surfaced. The clash resulted in a violent but quick mutiny by Prigozhin; a climb down then a love-in with Putin, and finally his assassination weeks later.

    The reality is that the election is a foregone conclusion and Russia’s 143 million people are prisoners in a gigantic gulag with 10 timezones. Heroic political foe Alexey Navalny still survives and says that Russia will “collapse and crumble”. But his recent tweet illustrates his personal plight in captivity after being recently transferred during the election to a jail near the Arctic Circle.

    Putin keeps Navalny alive, and lets him communicate to the outside world, because he serves a purpose. Navalny’s increasingly gaunt appearances convey the message: Putin’s power is intractable and the consequences of anyone who opposes him are dire. Navalny recently resurfaced at a court hearing at his new hideous prison, and deployed the same dark humor and sarcasm that all Russians use to cope. He entered the court smiling and told the judge that he wanted the court to know that he missed the guards from his last prison, which caused the judge to laugh. Then he described his new conditions. “At this temperature, you can walk for more than half an hour, but only if you have time to grow a new nose, ears, and fingers.” Then he joked, tragically, that he hoped to figure out what court would accept a lawsuit from him so that he could change the weather.

    ·               This article was first published in www.kyivpost.com

  • West is Russia’s enemy, not Ukraine itself, says Putin

    West is Russia’s enemy, not Ukraine itself, says Putin

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said yesterday that the true enemy of his country is the West rather than Ukraine itself.

    “The point is not that they help our enemy, but they are our enemy, they solve their issues with their (Ukraine’s) hands,” Putin said during a meeting at a military hospital in the Moscow region.

    Stating that this has been the case “for centuries” and that it continues today, Putin said that Ukraine itself is not an enemy for Russia, but rather those that intend to “destroy Russian statehood” and inflict a “strategic defeat” of Moscow on the front line.

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    “There are people who sympathise with us, but there are so-called (Western) elites for whom the existence of Russia, at least in its current quality, in its current size, as they think, is unacceptable,” Putin further said.

    Russia’s president went on to argue that Western elites “nurtured” Ukraine for a long time to create the conflict seen today.

    “Unfortunately for us, they achieved, created this conflict and are trying to solve their task with the help of Ukrainians, namely the task of fighting Russia,” he said.

    Commenting on Ukraine’s recent strike on the Russian city of Belgorod which resulted in the death of 24 people, Putin said Russia should not strike back at places with civilian populations in Ukraine despite “everything boiling inside”.

    He said that Russia will not leave “a single crime of this kind” go “unpunished,” further describing the strike that took place on Saturday as a “terrorist attack”.

    Ukraine’s armed forces are doing this to intimidate Russia and create uncertainty in the country, Putin further said, adding: “But we, for our part, will increase the blows that I said.”

    He went on to say that Moscow wants to end the conflict “as quickly as possible” and “only on our terms.”

  • Putin visits United Arab Emirates on rare foreign trip

    Putin visits United Arab Emirates on rare foreign trip

    Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in the United Arab Emirates on Wednesday for a brief visit to the Gulf.

    The Russian president was greeted in Abu Dhabi by Emirati President, Mohammed bin Sajid, the country’s state news agency WAM announced on X.

    Putin plans to travel to Saudi Arabia later on to meet with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

    Putin praised the bilateral relationship between the countries as historically unprecedented and invited Sajid to attend the 2024 BRICS summit in Kazan, according to Russian information.

    The BRICS countries include Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

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    According to Putin, the United Arab Emirates are Russia’s most important trading partner in the Arab region.

    The wars in the Middle East and Ukraine were also addressed during the talks, according to Russian media.

    According to Russian state news agency Tass, Putin last visited Saudi Arabia and the UAE in 2019.

    The Russian president has rarely made foreign trips since ordering the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • U.S. anxious as North Korea’s Kim arrives in Russia to meet Putin

    U.S. anxious as North Korea’s Kim arrives in Russia to meet Putin

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has arrived in Russia for talks with President Vladimir Putin, a situation that has the Biden administration and its ally in South Korea fuming but powerless to prevent.

    North Korean state media and South Korean defence officials both confirmed that Kim crossed into Russia by train yesterday.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow Kim and Putin will meet in the Russian Far East, with both one-on-one and delegation-to-delegation talks slated, as well as a dinner. North Korean press photos of the reclusive North Korean leader’s delegation on the train show that it includes his foreign minister and senior military officials.

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    Putin is currently hosting a regular event in Vladivostok, the Eastern Economic Forum, designed to induce investment in the vast, underdeveloped spaces of the Russian Far East. In that endeavour, cheap and plentiful North Korean labour could feasibly play a role. But Kim has never attended an international forum, and there is speculation in Seoul that the bilateral meeting will take place not at the forum site but in the city of Ussuriysk, some 50 miles north of Vladivostok.

    Analysts said the two men will likely discuss an aid-for-arms swap: Pyongyang could supply artillery ammunition, tactical rockets and anti-tank munitions for Russia’s strapped forces fighting in Ukraine in return for food aid, energy aid, and/or assistance with such high-tech items as nuclear propulsion systems for submarines and satellites.

    South Korean and U.S figures are demanding — in vain, so far — that Russia and North Korea cease and desist: White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre warned that any arms deal between North Korea and Russia “would directly violate a number of U.N. Security Council resolutions” and that the U.S. will expose and sanction individuals and entities working to facilitate deals.

  • Prigozhin and Putin’s payback

    Prigozhin and Putin’s payback

    Revenge is a dreaded forte of Russian President Vladimir Putin. He deals the hand coldly and assuredly. In the wake of the mutiny in his country last June, Russia watchers branded Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin a ‘dead man walking.’ Prigozhin had led his Wagner mercenary troops to rebel again Russian military command, seized a southern Russian city and threatened to overrun Moscow – coming within 250 kilometres of the capital before the mutiny was pulled at the instance of a hurried pact that wrung humiliating concessions out of Mr. Putin. The Russian leader survived the rebellion appearing demystified and weakened. The Putin mystique was dented, but pundits predicted it wasn’t the final word. The final word, as is seems, was Prigozhin’s mangled remains in a plane wreckage, unless fate wrought a chilling coincidence on the mercenary warlord.

    Prigozhin, 62, was a longtime ally of the Russian strongman and Wagner, his 25,000-strong private army, has been a major fighting force for Russia in her invasion of Ukraine that elicited worldwide condemnation. When Prigozhin led his army in the June mutiny, Putin termed the action a betrayal and stab in the back. Russia watchers projected the warlord had a short life expectancy thereafter, given Putin’s reputation for vengeance. That projection appeared borne out last Wednesday with Prigozhin’s death in a plane crash in which all seven passengers and three crew perished. The Embraer Legacy business jet belonging to Prigozhin was travelling from Moscow to St. Petersburg when it crashed in Tver region, mid-way between Moscow and St. Petersburg and some 50 kilometres away from a countryside mansion of Mr. Putin in northern Russia. The aircraft was airborne for less than half an hour before it dropped from the sky.

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    Wednesday’s crash occurred exactly two months after the Wagner mutiny that Prigozhin led on 23rd June. The mercenary army fought alongside the Russian military in Ukraine and was associated with some of the worst atrocities of the conflict. But Prigozhin’s relationship with the Kremlin soured over the war’s high mortality rate, poor equipment and unpaid wages. He questioned the Kremlin’s motives for the invasion and accused Russian military bosses of incompetence. Prigozhin demanded  the sack of the military high command but was spurned by Putin, which was what ostensibly prompted the Wagner rebellion. After taking Rostov, the mercenary army marched north towards Moscow, forcing the capital into a lockdown before Belarus President Alexsandr Lukashenko brokered a deal that ended the standoff on 24th June. That deal shielded Prigozhin from direct reprisal from the Kremlin for the rebellion and allowed his fighters to move to neighbouring Belarus, join the Russian army or just retire home. Prigozhin himself agreed to relocate to Belarus, but he apparently was able to move freely within Russia with his plane reportedly flying back and forth. Reports said following the botched mutiny, he was warned his life was in danger. He was advised not to go into high buildings for fear of accidents, and he took painstaking care over his security including using body doubles and staging decoy itineraries. Besides Ukraine, Wagner is active in the Mideast, Central and West Africa. Early last week, Prigozhin posted a video in which he claimed to have just visited Africa and touted his army’s exploits, saying it was “making Russia even greater on all continents, and Africa even more free.”

    With his elaborate security measures, however, the mercenary chief couldn’t avoid his waterloo. His Embraer jet crashed and crushed all 10 souls on board after taking off from Moscow en route to St. Petersburg. Reports cited tracking data that showed the Prigozhin-linked plane rose to an altitude of some 29,000 feet after take-off from Moscow, before data transmission stopped as the aircraft plunged to zero feet. A burning wreckage of the plane was located in a field. Russian aviation authorities affirmed that Prigozhin’s name was on the manifest, but there was uncertainty as to whether he definitely was  on board as he reportedly was in the habit of checking-in for a particular flight while taking another flight as security precaution. Moreover, there were reports of a second Prigozhin-linked plane that air-returned after zig-zagging in Moscow sky following the crash of the other jet. There were speculations the warlord cheated death by travelling in a different plane, or even that he staged a ruse to escape into peaceful exile. A pro-Wagner medium said it was “premature” to say he had died because he regularly “confused everyone” by changing his travel plans at the last minute. But optimism about the warlord’s chances of survival waned when close associates couldn’t reach him in the crash aftermath.

    As for the crashed plane, images showed plumes of black smoke bellowing into the sky from the fireball wreckage. Responders said eight bodies were recovered and were in horrible state of mutilation, with one having the head totally severed and another with the face smashed in. A Wagner-linked social media channel reported that the jet was shot down by air defences, and that nearby residents heard loud bangs and saw vapour trails just before the crash. Inside sources in Russia, however, denied evidence of smoke trails in visuals of the crashing jet. Intelligence reports also refuted claims that the plane was downed by surface-to-air missile, arguing more for the likelihood of an explosion on board the aircraft before it bowed to gravity.

    On the day of the crash, President Putin who rarely travels to the Russian regions was in Kursk, near the Ukrainian border, on an unannounced trip to speak at an event marking the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Kursk in World War II. There were reports that sometime before the news of the crash broke, he was observed anxiously checking his watch on one arm, only to discomfittingly realise it was on the other arm. And as the news of the crash made the rounds, the Russian strongman stood in front of an orchestra. Russia experts ruled that ominous because a nickname for Wagner forces is ‘the orchestra.’ When he broke his silence some 24 hours later over the crash, Mr. Putin confirmed the death of Prigozhin. He lauded the warlord’s record as leader of Wagner that he said had “made a significant contribution to our common cause.” The Russian leader said “initial data” indicated that top Wagner figures were on board and expressed condolences to the families of all 10 people who died. “I knew Prigozhin from a long time, from early 1990s. He had a difficult path and made serious mistakes in his life. But he got results – for himself, and for the common cause when I asked him, like in the last few months,” he added. Prigozhin, according to him, was a “talented businessman…with a difficult destiny.”

    To be sure, there was nothing concrete showing the Russian leader had a hand in the crash that killed Prigozhin. But many Russia watchers would argue the mishap was retributive for the June mutiny – if not at the direct instance of Putin, at that of the Russian military generals the Wagner boss took upon. It was instructive, for instance, that the mercenary chief got killed exactly two months after the rebellion. Besides the factor of sheer retribution, there was suspicion Moscow aimed at decapitating Wagner to strengthen the hand of Russian military. After all, weakening Wagner inside Russia need not significantly affect its activities in foreign countries where it remained an important arm of Kremlin power. Besides, tighter Kremlin control over the group could also allow for integrating its non-military operations, such as lucrative mining contracts in African countries, in Russian budget. All these, however, isn’t to rule out the possibility that Prigozhin’s many foes may have orchestrated his death without a direct order from Mr. Putin.

    But Prigozhin was only a victim of cannibalistic dynamics of power. He was not like former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko, who fled Russia on exile and was pursued to the United Kingdom where lethal polonium was slipped into his drink and he died of acute radiation in 2006. That killing fostered a diplomatic row between the UK and Russia. Neither was Prigozhin like Russian tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who was abused in Moscow prison leading to his death in 2009, and in whose memory the United States enacted the Magnitsky Act (2016) to sanction rights offenders across the world. Prigozhin was a former Putin propagandist and cook, now served his patron ‘for dinner.’ He rode the tiger and has ended up in its belly.

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  • Putin offers to host next BRICS summit in Russia

    Putin offers to host next BRICS summit in Russia

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has offered to host the next summit of the BRICS alliance of emerging economies.

    Putin made the offer after he could not attend the event in South Africa this year due to an arrest warrant against him by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    In a speech, which was transmitted via video to the meeting in Johannesburg, Putin invited the representatives of the other member states Brazil, India, China and South Africa to the Russian city of Kazan in October 2024.

    The specific date is to be agreed through diplomatic channels.

    Putin announced that there would be more than 200 political, economic and social events under Russia’s BRICS presidency in the coming year.