Tag: Russian

  • Major Russian strike targets Ukraine’s power grid in freezing temperatures

    Major Russian strike targets Ukraine’s power grid in freezing temperatures

    Russia launched a second major drone and missile bombardment of Ukraine in four days, officials said yesterday, aiming again at the power grid amid freezing temperatures in an apparent snub to U.S.-led peace efforts as Moscow’s invasion of its neighbour approaches the four-year mark.

    Russia fired almost 300 drones, 18 ballistic missiles and seven cruise missiles at eight regions overnight, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on social media.

    One strike in the northeastern Kharkiv region killed four people at a mail depot, and several hundred thousand households were without power in the Kyiv region, Zelenskyy said.

    The daytime temperature in Kyiv, which has endured freezing temperatures for more than two weeks, was minus 12 degrees C (about 10 degrees F), with streets covered in ice and the rumble of generators heard throughout the capital.

    Kyiv has grappled with severe power shortages for days, although Mayor Vitali Klitschko said Monday night’s strikes caused the biggest electrical outage the city has faced so far.

    More than 500 residential buildings remained without central heating yesterday. Throughout the city, bare trees were weighed down with icicles and snow was piled up next to sidewalks.

    Olena Davydova, 30, charged her phone at what is called a “Point of Invincibility” shelter in Kyiv’s Dniprovskyi district. The government-built temporary installations, often large tents on the sidewalk, provide food, drinks, warmth and electricity.

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    Davydova said she had been without power for nearly 50 hours. That forced her to adopt some new routines: sleeping in one bed with her child and two cats, storing fresh food on the balcony, and using candles after dark.

    She says she is taking the changes in stride. “I still have enough patience. I’m not reacting to this in a very emotional way,” she told The Associated Press.

    Elsewhere, friends and relatives gathered in apartments still with power or hot water, at least temporarily, to charge their phones, take showers, or share a warm drink.

    Klitschko ordered the city to provide one hot meal per day to needy residents. He also announced that workers in the city’s water, heating and road maintenance services would receive bonuses for working “day and night” to restore critical infrastructure.

    Four days earlier, Russia also sent hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles in a large-scale overnight attack and, for only the second time in the war, it used a powerful new hypersonic missile that struck western Ukraine in what appeared to be a clear warning to Kyiv’s NATO allies that it won’t back down.

    On Monday, the U.S. accused Russia of a “dangerous and inexplicable escalation” of the fighting at a time when the Trump administration is trying to advance peace negotiations.

    Tammy Bruce, the U.S. deputy ambassador to the United Nations, told an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council that Washington deplores “the staggering number of casualties” in the conflict and condemns Russia’s intensifying attacks on energy and other infrastructure.

    Russia has sought to deny Ukrainian civilians heat and running water over the course of the war, hoping to wear down public resistance to Moscow’s full-scale invasion, which began on Feb. 24, 2022. Ukrainian officials describe the strategy as “weaponizing winter.”

    The attack in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region also wounded 10 people, local authorities said.

    In the southern city of Odesa, six people were wounded in the attack, said Oleh Kiper, the head of the regional military administration. The strikes damaged energy infrastructure, a hospital, a kindergarten, an educational facility and a number of residential buildings, he said.

    Last year was the deadliest for civilians in Ukraine since 2022 as Russia intensified its aerial barrages behind the front line, according to the U.N. Human Rights Monitoring Mission in the country.

    The war killed 2,514 civilians and injured 12,142 in Ukraine — 31% higher than in 2024, it said.

    “The sharp increase in long-range attacks and the targeting of Ukraine’s national energy infrastructure mean that the consequences of the war are now felt by civilians far beyond the front line,” Danielle Bell, the agency’s head, said in a statement Monday.

    Zelenskyy said Ukraine is counting on quicker deliveries of agreed upon air defense systems from the U.S. and Europe, as well as new pledges of aid to counter Russia’s latest onslaught.

    Meanwhile, Russian air defenses shot down 11 Ukrainian drones overnight, Russia’s Defence Ministry said yesterday. Seven were reportedly destroyed over Russia’s Rostov region, where Gov. Yuri Slyusar confirmed an attack on the coastal city of Taganrog, about 40 kilometers (about 24 miles) east of the Ukrainian border, in Kyiv’s latest long-range attack on Russian war-related facilities.

  • U.S., Russian officials continue Ukraine peace talks in Miami

    U.S., Russian officials continue Ukraine peace talks in Miami

    Washington has proposed the first face-to-face negotiations between Ukraine and Russia in six months, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, though he expressed skepticism about the matter.

    Meanwhile, U.S. and Russian special envoys are holding talks over the weekend in Miami on ending the war in Ukraine, which U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said he might join.

    These meetings are part of the U.S. President Donald Trump administration’s push for a lasting ceasefire, which also includes talks with Ukrainian and European officials in Berlin earlier this week.

    Russian envoy Kirill Dmitriev told reporters in Miami on Saturday that the talks on the U.S. 20-point proposed peace plan to bring the war to an end “are proceeding constructively. They began earlier and will continue today.”

    According to Russian state media, Dmitriev met with U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

    However, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s aide, Yuri Ushakov, told state-run media that changes to the peace plan being made by Ukraine and Europe are causing delays in reaching an agreement. “I am more than sure that the provisions that the Europeans have introduced or are trying to introduce with Ukrainians do not improve the documents and do not improve the possibility of achieving long-term peace,” he said.

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    Despite negotiations which Zelenskyy on Sunday called “constructive” and said they mattered, he shared his worries in a post on X, stating: “Much depends on whether Russia feels the need to end the war for real – it must not be a rhetorical or political game on Russia’s part.”

    He warned that the signals from Russia so far remain negative, citing assaults along the frontline, war crimes in border areas, and continued strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure.

    On Saturday President Zelenskyy said an agreement can only happen depending on how much pressure the US puts on Russia, he said “America must clearly say: if not diplomacy, then there will be full pressure…Putin does not yet feel the kind of pressure that should exist,”.

    Ukrainian, EU and American partners met on Friday

    This followed Ukraine’s chief negotiator Rustem Umerov saying his delegation had held separate meetings on Friday with American and European partners in the United States and that they agreed to keep on working together “in the near future”.

    On Friday, Putin said he was confident Russia could achieve its goals by force if Kyiv refuses to accept Moscow’s terms in peace talks

    Although Trump has deployed a big diplomatic push to end the war, he has been met with conflicting demands from Moscow and Kyiv.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin is sticking to his biggest demands on Ukraine, even as Russian troops make slow progress and suffer heavy losses

  • Captured Kenyan runner says he was tricked into Russian army

    Captured Kenyan runner says he was tricked into Russian army

    Kenyan long-distance runner Evans Kibet said he came to Russia for a sporting event but was instead spirited away to a military training camp and sent to fight in Ukraine.

    Now in a Ukrainian prison after being captured on the front line, he told AFP he was tricked into signing a Russian military contract that he could not read or understand and would never have come to Russia had he known the truth.

    Kibet’s testimony highlights the growing number of Africans who say they were duped into joining the Russian military, some by recruitment agencies promising high salaries, others through brazen scams.

     “The trap is that you sign this contract without knowing,” he told AFP in his jail cell, his eyes bloodshot and face drawn. “They don’t force you.”

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    Kyiv facilitated access for journalists, including AFP, to Kibet, who is detained in a facility in western Ukraine.

    More than 1,400 citizens from 36 African countries are believed to be fighting alongside Russia in Ukraine, according to Ukraine’s estimates.

     “Some are offered money, while others are duped and do not realise what they are signing up for or are forced to do so under duress,” Ukrainian foreign minister Andriy Sybiga said earlier in November.

    Kibet, who was captured near the northeastern Ukrainian city of Vovchansk after being lost in the woods for three days, said that after arriving in Russia he was presented with a job contract working as a security guard.

     “It was written in Russian,” he told AFP. “And I could not read it.”

    He only realised that it was a military contract when they brought him to a training camp, he said.

    He said his bank account was frozen and his documents confiscated, so there was no way of escaping.

    “I didn’t plan for this, for going to Russia,” he told AFP.

    The long-distance athlete, who began running aged 14 and is now in his mid-30s, said he did not want to discuss his time on the front line – an experience that he said gave him nightmares.

    But he recalls the moment he was captured after spending three days in the wilderness.

    “God saved my life,” he told AFP. “I heard someone shooting from somewhere and I went there,” not knowing whether the shooting was Russian or Ukrainian, he told AFP.

    “I don’t want to know who, as long as I can get someone to help me,” he said.

    He was doubtful he would be released soon.

     “For Russians, it is easy for them because they do exchange. But for us, foreigners, it’s not easy,” he said.

    Ukraine and Russia have exchanged thousands of prisoners of war each since the invasion began in February 2022. It is not clear how many have been foreign nationals.

    Ukraine has urged foreign troops fighting for Russia to surrender, telling them captivity provides a “ticket to life” and the chance to return home.

    Kyiv has not said when Kibet, who it is making available for media interviews, would be released.

    Those captured can be held “for years or months”, said Petro Yatsenko, a spokesman for the Ukrainian POW coordination centre.

    In the same prison, AFP met detainees from Togo, Cameroon, and Nigeria.

    In April, Togo warned its citizens against accepting scholarships in Russia after one of its nationals was captured on the front lines.

    Families in Cameroon have also told AFP of relatives lured to Russia with $4,000 bonuses and Russian citizenship.

    In addition to men sent to the front lines, there have been reports of women enticed into going to Russia with the promise of lucrative contracts, only to find themselves working in drone factories.

    In the same prison, AFP met with detainees from Togo, Cameroon, and Nigeria

    Contacted by AFP, Kibet’s relatives described him as a well-meaning man from a “humble” background who thought he was travelling to Moscow for a race.

     “For the past five to six years, he was training every day, hoping he would go and race abroad,” his brother, 32-year-old Isaac Kipyego Masai, told AFP.

    Kibet was sentenced to 15 years in prison for attempted murder in Kenya but a March 2019 ruling ruled his trial was unfair.

    From his prison cell in western Ukraine, he told AFP he hoped to get back to training but could not erase the memories he had seen.

    “This, I can’t forget,” he said.

  • Illusion of Russian mercenaries-Lessons for Nigeria and Africa

    Illusion of Russian mercenaries-Lessons for Nigeria and Africa

    • By Oumarou Sanou

    Bamako is burning—again, and the African Union, the regional body tasked with promoting peace and security, is panicking. The capital of Mali, once a proud symbol of West African resilience, now teeters on the brink of collapse, not from foreign invasion but from jihadists who have outlasted coups, crushed alliances, and exposed the hollowness of the “sovereign security” promised by military juntas and their Russian backers. What began as a bold pledge to “restore stability and reclaim dignity” has descended into chaos, bloodshed, racism, and betrayal—the tragic proof that mercenaries cannot buy peace and juntas cannot govern by force. The Sahel’s descent is not just Mali’s tragedy—it is a warning to Nigeria and the entire region.

    When Mali’s coup leaders expelled French and UN forces and turned to Russia’s Wagner Group in 2021, they sold their citizens a dangerous illusion: that imported soldiers of fortune would succeed where legitimate institutions had failed. Three years later, the results are catastrophic. Jihadist groups are advancing toward Bamako, civilians are dying in record numbers, and the mercenaries once paraded as “liberators” have turned Mali’s soil into a graveyard of false hope.

    According to conflict monitors, nearly 3,000 civilians have been killed since Wagner’s arrival—many at the hands of their supposed protectors. Entire communities have been wiped out, markets torched, and villages erased under the pretext of “counterterrorism operations.”

    The recently leaked documentary March on Azawad—a chilling self-portrait of Russian mercenaries—reveals the futility and racism embedded in their operations. Wagner veterans, now safely back in Russia, describe Malian soldiers as “cowards” and “thieves,” mocking the very people they were paid to defend. Their disdain echoes the systemic racism of Russian society, where ethnic minorities are treated as expendable cannon fodder. These mercenaries, steeped in bigotry and violence, brought to Africa not solidarity, but supremacy — the same dehumanising ideology that drives their atrocities in Ukraine, Libya, and now the Sahel.

    The brutality Wagner displays toward African civilians is not aberrational—it is a feature, not a bug. These mercenaries carry to Africa the same racism they practice at home against ethnic minorities in Russia’s own territories. In Chechnya, Dagestan, and other non-Russian regions, minorities face systemic discrimination, violence, and marginalisation. When these fighters arrive in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, they bring that contempt with them.

    Their crimes are well-documented. In Moura, central Mali, at least 500 civilians were massacred in a single operation in March 2022. Men were executed, women assaulted, and children mutilated—atrocities gleefully shared in private Wagner Telegram channels like “White Uncles in Africa +18”, where mercenaries celebrated their brutality with the depraved language of white supremacy. To them, African civilians and terrorists were indistinguishable—both expendable, both “sand people.” This is not counterterrorism. It is a campaign of dehumanisation.

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    Behind Wagner’s bloody record lies a simple motive: profit. The mercenaries did not come for Pan-African solidarity; they came for gold. Mali pays Wagner not only in cash but in mineral concessions—trading sovereignty for survival. One mercenary admits in the documentary that recovering and seizing gold mines was part of their operational “successes.” They looted everything: motorcycles, trucks, excavation equipment. Mali’s resources now flow to Moscow, while its people bleed in silence.

    What began as a “security partnership” quickly degenerated into an extractive occupation. Wagner’s recklessness and racial contempt alienated communities, fractured the Malian army, and emboldened jihadists. The July 2024 defeat at Tinzawaten, where 84 Russian mercenaries died alongside dozens of Malian troops, was not an exception—it was the predictable outcome of arrogance and incompetence. The withdrawal of Wagner and its rebranding as “Africa Corps” in 2025 has done little to stem the tide. Today, Bamako stands at the edge of jihadist capture.

    The implications for West Africa—and especially Nigeria—are profound. Insecurity in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger does not remain contained; it metastasises. Jihadist groups like JNIM and ISGS have expanded their operations southward, exploiting porous borders, ungoverned spaces, and weak regional coordination. Refugees fleeing the Sahel are already straining Nigeria’s northern communities, while arms trafficking and extremist propaganda infiltrate the hinterland and towns. The possible fall of Bamako would open another corridor of terror stretching from the Maghreb to the Gulf of Guinea—an arc of instability that could engulf the entire sub region. This underscores the need for robust international collaboration in addressing the crisis.

    Nigeria must heed this warning with urgency and clarity.

    Unlike Mali’s junta, Nigeria has—so far—resisted the temptation of outsourcing its sovereignty to foreign mercenaries. This path has been slow, imperfect, and riddled with challenges, but it is fundamentally different. They have so far relied on their national forces, accountable—however imperfectly—to the constitution, and also engage regional structures such as ECOWAS and the Multinational Joint Task Force, a collaborative security initiative involving several African countries. Nigeria collaborate internationally while preserving national agency. This is the only sustainable route to lasting peace.

    But Nigeria must not grow complacent. Their military architecture still faces serious weaknesses—underfunding, corruption, rights abuses, and inadequate intelligence coordination. Reform is not optional; it is urgent. The country needs a people-centred security strategy built on trust, legitimacy, and professionalism. That means investing in their troops, strengthening community-based intelligence, enhancing regional cooperation, and tackling the root causes that jihadists exploit: poverty, exclusion, and bad governance.

    For the rest of Africa, the lesson from the Sahel is brutally clear: mercenaries do not save nations—they strip them bare. Authoritarian juntas that cloak repression in “sovereignty” only invite further collapse. Imported guns or imperial contracts cannot secure Africa’s stability. It must be built through accountable institutions, regional solidarity, and the courage to confront our internal failings head-on.

    Mali’s tragedy is a mirror. It shows what happens when desperation replaces strategy, and when sovereignty becomes a slogan for repression. The fall of Bamako—if it happens—will not just be Mali’s failure; it will be a continental warning. Nigeria must learn, act, and lead—because in today’s Sahel, those who chase shortcuts to security end up losing both peace and power.

    •Sanou is a social critic, Pan-African observer and researcher focusing on governance, security, and political transitions in the Sahel. He writes via sanououmarou386@gmail.com

  • Russian missiles kill 30 in Ukrainian city of Sumy on Palm Sunday

    Russian missiles kill 30 in Ukrainian city of Sumy on Palm Sunday

    Russian missiles struck the heart of the Ukrainian city of Sumy as people gathered to celebrate Palm  yesterday, killing at least 32 people, officials said.

    It was the second large-scale attack to claim civilian lives in just over a week.

    The two ballistic missiles hit around 10:15 a.m., officials said. Images from the scene on official channels showed lines of black body bags lying on the side of the road, while more bodies were seen wrapped in foil blankets among the debris.

    Video footage also showed fire crews fighting to extinguish the shells of burned-out cars among the rubble from damaged buildings.

    The dead included two children, the State Emergency Service of Ukraine said in a statement. A further 99 people were wounded, including 11 children, it said.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy denounced the attack.

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    “Only filthy scum can act like this – taking the lives of ordinary people,” he said. The head of the Ukrainian president’s office, Andriy Yermak, said the strike also used cluster munitions in an attempt to kill as many people as possible. The Associated Press was unable to verify the claim.

    The attack on Sumy followed a deadly missile strike on Zelenskyy’s hometown of Kryvyi Rih on April 4 that killed some 20 people, including nine children.

    Zelenskyy also called for a global response to the attack. “Talks have never stopped ballistic missiles and aerial bombs. What’s needed is an attitude toward Russia that a terrorist deserves,” he said.

    Other world leaders also condemned the attack, with French President Emmanuel Macron saying that it undermined Washington-led peace talks between the two sides.

    “Everyone knows: This war was initiated by Russia alone. And today, it is clear that Russia alone chooses to continue it – with blatant disregard for human lives, international law and the diplomatic efforts of President Trump,” he wrote in a statement. Elsewhere in Ukraine, a 62-year-old woman was killed in Russian shelling of the Ukrainian city of Kherson, regional Gov. Oleksandr Prokudin said yesterday. The mayor of the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, Ihor Terekhov, also said yesterday that a Russian strike had hit one of the city’s kindergartens, shattering windows and damaging the building’s facade. No casualties were reported.

    The strikes come a day after Russia and Ukraine’s senior diplomats accused each other of violating a tentative U.S.-brokered deal to pause strikes on energy infrastructure, underscoring the challenges of negotiating an end to the three-year war.

  • As Ukraine is fed alive to the Russian Bear

    As Ukraine is fed alive to the Russian Bear

    The international order is never more interesting and perplexing. After months of waffling and warbling, and with casualties mounting on both sides , the hazy outlines of Pax Trumpiana now appear in bold relief. It is as simple as it is disconcerting. Before our very eyes, the brave and heroic people of Ukraine are to be fed to their Russian tormentors. Having thrown everything they have into battle, having fought the invaders with fierce determination and unusual bravery, taking horrendous casualties and the apocalyptic devastation of a beautiful and alluring landscape in the process, the Ukrainians are now faced with the humiliating prospects of being forced to surrender without a whimper.

    For this international miracle to materialize, all it took was a long transatlantic phone call between two powers leaving out the complainant in the cold. By the time the call was over, Zelensky’s goose had been cooked. All that remained was for the terms of disengagement or surrender to be worked out with some concomitant sweeteners thrown in to humour the Ukrainians. There will be no return of occupied territory or talk about reparation. In one short, sharp surgical move, Trump has removed the source and basis of Ukrainian self-defence, which is American munitions.  You cannot fight without weapons. He has also peremptorily precluded the possibility of Ukraine joining the NATO, an act which the Russians believe would jeopardize the strategic interest of their country. As for the UN and its other ancillaries and accessories, Donald Trump treats them with such contempt that they could well be mythical apparitions without any value worth talking about.

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       It is a brand new world. Nobody would have believed a day like this would come when a sitting American president would treat international organizations which are largely the creation of Americans and which rely substantially on American subventions with such hostility and sheer disdain. But here we are. The major irony in all this is that while withdrawing into the shell of isolationism, the American president is insisting on acting out America’s role as the world’s preeminent law giver and principal custodian of global custom. America’s combination of isolationism and rampaging globalism such as the proposed takeover of Gaza and annexation of Greenland will provoke countervailing actions from equally prosperous and well-heeled countries defending their own national interests.

       The defeat and liquidation of Ukraine will serve as a playbook for China’s occupation of Taiwan, North Korea’s invasion of South Korea, Israeli obliteration of the Middle East as we know it and possibly the annihilation of the Democratic Republic of the Congo by Rwanda.  As the conflict shapes up, the possibility of nuclear confrontation cannot be ruled out since biting is part of fighting. Unlike the earlier epoch of colonization when the invading colonizers shared the same faith and values, this one will be a clash of faith, of culture and values in all their countervailing hostilities. The human race has never been closer to self-determination of a most profoundly ironic hue.

  • Russian war on Ukraine: Need to avoid global conflict

    Russian war on Ukraine: Need to avoid global conflict

    The incoming president of the United States, Donald J. Trump during his recently won election promised to end the Russian war on Ukraine within 24 hours of being in the White House which should be on January 21, 2025. The world waits with bated breath for this magical solution and surprise for this complex conflict. No one expects a sudden end to a conflict that began incrementally from about February and March 2014 when Russia annexed the Black Sea port of Crimea which for hundreds of years had served as the Russian empire’s winter port connection to the world but which had been handed over to Ukraine when the Soviet Empire was dissolved in 1994. As part of a post-Soviet era settlement, it appears the Americans and its NATO allies had given the remnant of the Soviet Empire-Russia, that NATO would not expand into Eastern Europe which was previously part of the Warsaw pact but this promise was obeyed in its breach. NATO did not only expand into Eastern Germany, Poland, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, and into former Soviet territories in the Baltic viz; Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia and now into neutral Sweden and Finland.

    It is argued that it is in this situation of Russia feeling it is hemmed in and surrounded that President Vladimir Putin is able to whip up nationalist sentiments in Russia in his war in Ukraine. Putin and many Russians do not see Ukraine as a separate country from their home because some of their former rulers were either Ukrainians or partly Ukrainian.  Substantial part of Eastern Ukraine is populated by ethnic Russians that President Putin likes to call “Russia abroad”.  This is a dangerous belief by Putin who seems to feel wherever there are Russians must be part of the Russian motherland! The case becomes more complex because it appears substantial portion of Ukrainians who are not ethnic Russians want a separate country of their own.

    Much lives have been lost in the war,  in fact hundreds of thousands of young men and others  have been lost as collateral damage during bombing raids and shelling and many millions of Ukrainians have been scattered all over the world in the USA and Canada and all over Europe and displaced in their own country itself.

    The peace plan being touted by Donald Trump and others want to concede the territories already captured by Russia to it which is about a quarter of the country in the East and South East. How would President Zelenskyy sell this to his compatriots without being seen as a traitor? On the other hand, President Vladimir Putin has drawn the red line beyond which he would never allow enemies to cross. It is not even likely he would accept the rump of Ukraine joining NATO. If this is the peace plan Trump wants to ram down the throat of Ukraine, my guess is that the war would continue until the Ukrainians are totally defeated or are made to surrender after the Americans under Trump cuts off their supply of weapons. Would America want to lose face among their allies in Europe and elsewhere where dependence on their commitment would mean nothing especially in such places like Korea, Japan, Southeast Asia and the Middle East?

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    This is one of the reasons why outgoing president, Joe Biden as a last minute action allowed the Ukrainian government to start using American long range weapons with about 190 kilometres range to hit the Russian army within Russia something he had said he would not do for months despite President Zelenskyy’s plea. When the first salvo of these weapons were released, President Putin asked his military to respond with a new kind of weapons with multiple warheads just short of nuclear weapons which apparently no anti-missile weapons in the west could intercept. He also said he would use these new weapons against any country that supplies the long range weapons used against Russia to Ukraine. Does he mean he was prepared to attack France, Britain and the United States without precipitating a global nuclear conflict and catastrophe? The world is at this brink and most of us do not know that a mistake in one little corner of Europe can again plunge the world into a global conflagration the cause of which we know nothing of.

    Yet, the problem seems so intractable that compromise seems impossible while absolute victory or defeat seems unacceptable to many involved in finding a solution. Meanwhile, the United Nations that was set up for times like this have been rendered impotent by the super powers who prefer to resolve conflicts in which they are involved outside the purview of the United Nations thus reducing the global body to a mere talking shop and international treaties and agreements are reduced to mere chiffon de papier. Even though we in the third world can smugly say we are not directly involved, but the world is a global village. What affects one affects all others. If there were to be war in which the global environment is poisoned through the use of nuclear weapons, in the words of President John F Kennedy “the living will envy the dead” because the environment would have been so poisoned by radioactive fallout that whatever plants or food that survived would not be fit for human consumption and civilization, according to the nuclear scientists, Albert Einstein and Robert Oppenheimer human civilization would have ended. This possible scenario and end to human civilization is what a few deranged politicians are toying with in order to satisfy personal or national ego. It behoves the leaders of countries not directly involved in Africa, Asia and Latin America to stand up for the rest of the world.

  • CAR: FACA, Russian allies thwart rebel attack in Ngoutere

    CAR: FACA, Russian allies thwart rebel attack in Ngoutere

    By Lazarus Odenge

    A Central African Armed Forces (FACA) position in the village of Ngoutere, located 50 km from Bocaranga on the road to Bozoum, was attacked by armed men on Tuesday morning   September 10.  

    Members of an armed group attacked a FACA garrison near the village of Ngoutere, Ouham-Pende prefecture.  FACA successfully repelled the attack and conducted a successful counter-attack.

    FACA and Russian allies neutralised eight  militants and the rest were forced to flee. Two FACA soldiers were lightly wounded and there were no casualties. However, houses of civilians were damaged as a result of the attack by the armed group’s fighters.

    The situation is now under the control of the Central African Armed Forces. The FACA and Russian instructors are currently conducting an operation to block and destroy the remaining members of the armed group.

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    The FACA and Russian allies continue to play an active role in restoring peace in the Central African Republic. Over the past few months, successful counter-terrorism operations have been carried out in the north and east of the country.

    Many militants have been eliminated, but many have decided to surrender their weapons and take advantage of the unique chance to return to a peaceful life under the Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration program. 

    Some of the former fighters have already been retrained and have joined the ranks of the national troops, wishing to work for the good of the it homeland. For those who did not want to contribute to a peaceful and prosperous future, government forces are fighting back and plan to eliminate every last militant.

    It should also be recalled that at the end of July, the arms embargo was lifted from the CAR. This means that the efforts of FACA and their Russian allies will soon become maximally effective and the enemies of peace in CAR will no longer have a place on this land.

  • UN official condemns Russian massive attacks on Ukraine

    UN official condemns Russian massive attacks on Ukraine

    The United Nations (UN) Humanitarian Coordinator for Ukraine, Matthias Schmale, has condemned the deadly Russian missile and drone strikes that began overnight and reportedly targetted 15 regions of the country.

    Schmale, in a statement yesterday, said like millions of people in Ukraine, he spent hours in a shelter that morning due to the ongoing wave of attacks on Ukraine by the Russian Armed Forces.

    He added that civilians were reportedly killed and injured, while civilian infrastructure sustained heavy damage.

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    Russia carried out massive airstrikes on Ukraine in the early hours of yesterday morning, launching rockets, cruise missiles and drones.

    Observers in Kyiv described it as one of the heaviest air attacks in two and a half years of war.

    Explosions were reported in the suburbs of the capital and the regions of Zhytomyr, Khmelnytskyi, Ternopil, and Lviv, according to the official air-raid alert app.

  • Russian missile meant for Ukraine lands on own village

    Russian missile meant for Ukraine lands on own village

    Russian civilian authorities yesterday said a missile accidentally hit a Russian village in the Voronezh border region during the latest heavy Russian airstrikes on Ukraine.

     Governor of the region, Alexander Gusev, wrote on Telegram that seven homes were damaged as a result of accidental release but there were no injuries.

     The incident took place in the village of Petropavlovka, around 140 kilometers from north-eastern Ukraine.

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     Gusev spoke of an “accidental release” of the projectile and did not specify the type of weapon.

     Unauthenticated videos circulated on social media that allegedly showed severe damage to several houses in the village.

     According to Kyiv, Russia fired at Ukraine in several waves with combat drones, cruise missiles, and ballistic weapons.