It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Friday, March 11, 2022
In About-face, Guatemala President Calls For Strict Abortion Law To Be Shelved
The bill introduced as well a reform to the Civil Code, which, if signed by the president, would "expressly prohibit same-sex marriages" in Guatemala.
By Henry MORALES ARANA 03/10/22 AT 11:08 PM
Guatemala's President Alejandro Giammattei on Thursday called on Congress to shelve a new law ramping up prison sentences for women who choose to have an abortion, while banning both gay marriage and teaching on sexual diversity. Giammattei called on the speaker to shelve the law, passed by his allies in Congress this week, saying he would veto it if it came to his desk because it violates the Constitution and international agreements signed by the country. "If that law reaches my office, it will be vetoed, therefore, I recommend to the Congress of the Republic, with all due respect, that it please archive the decree," Giammattei said in a televised message.
The so-called Life and Family Protection Law punishes women who "have induced their own abortion or given their consent to another person to carry it out" with 10 years behind bars -- more than three times the current sentence of three years.
Abortion is only authorized in Guatemala when there is a threat to the mother's life.
The bill was passed by Congress on International Women's Day on Tuesday.
Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei has distanced himself from a strict anti-abortion law he had earlier hailed
Photo: AFP / Johan ORDONEZ
The bill introduced as well a reform to the Civil Code, which, if signed by the president, would "expressly prohibit same-sex marriages" in Guatemala.
It would also ban public and private teaching initiatives on sexual diversity, which it describes as "promoting in children and teenagers policies or programs that tend to lead to diversion from their sexual identities at birth."
Giammattei's rejection of the law came a day after the Christian Ibero-American Congress for Life and Family, which brings together conservative groups opposed to abortion and same-sex marriage, called the Central American country the "pro-life capital of Ibero-America."
"This is a day to celebrate that we have a country that learns, that teaches and does everything possible to respect life from conception to natural death," the president declared. But on Thursday, he distanced himself from the law, saying it had not originated in his office.
"I want to clarify that this initiative was not sent by the executive... We cannot agree, despite the fact that Guatemala has been declared the Ibero-American Capital for life," he said.
Chile's millennial president takes office with big plans for change
Gabriel Boric, 36, becomes Chile's youngest-ever president, and one of the youngest in the world
(AFP/CLAUDIO REYES)
Miguel SANCHEZ Thu, March 10, 2022
Leftist former student leader Gabriel Boric will be sworn in Friday as Chile's youngest-ever president, with plans to turn the country that for decades has served as a neoliberal laboratory into a greener, more egalitarian "welfare state."
Aged 36, Boric takes over the reins of a country clamoring for change following mass protests in 2019, which he supported, against deep-rooted inequality in income, healthcare, education and pensions.
The revolt, which left dozens dead and hundreds injured, was the catalyst for a process now under way to rewrite Chile's dictatorship-era constitution.
Boric has vowed to relegate "to the grave" Chile's neoliberal economic model, which dates from the era of military despot Augusto Pinochet and is widely seen as sidelining the poor and working classes. One percent of Chile's population owns about a quarter of its wealth.
Despite concern over his Frente Amplio (Broad Front)'s political alliance with the Communist Party in a country that traditionally votes for the center, Boric won a surprise runaway election victory last December.
He succeeded in mobilizing women and the youth, with a record voter turnout giving him nearly 56 percent of the vote to beat far-right Pinochet apologist Jose Antonio Kast.
The men, polar opposite political outsiders, had polled neck-and-neck ahead of the vote.
As the stock exchange dropped on news of Boric's victory, he vowed in his first official address to "expand social rights" in Chile, but to do so with "fiscal responsibility."
- Generational change -
A lawmaker since 2014, millennial Boric inherits an economy ravaged by the coronavirus outbreak.
Much of 2021's GDP growth was fueled by temporary pandemic grants and stop-gap withdrawals allowed from private pension funds.
The central bank has been hiking interest rates to curb inflation.
Boric has promised to introduce a European-style social democracy to Chile, boosting taxes to pay for social reform, and all while putting the brakes on spiralling debt.
He will tackle these challenges with a cabinet comprised mainly of women and young people -- their average age is 42.
The team includes two comrades with whom Boric, as a student, had led countrywide protests in 2011 for free, quality education.
Boric's defense minister is Maya Fernandez, the granddaughter of Salvador Allende, Latin America's first elected Marxist president who was ousted in Pinochet's coup d'etat of 1973.
Six cabinet members were born, lived or studied in exile during the Pinochet years. - 'Fragmented political climate' -
Analysts say Boric's daunting task will be further complicated by a Congress just about equally split between left- and right-wing parties.
This means that much negotiation and compromise will be required to pass laws to bring his plans to fruition.
"This is a government that comes to power in a very fragmented political climate, which does not have a parliamentary majority and therefore cannot make very radical reforms in the short term," political analyst Claudia Heiss of the University of Chile told AFP.
The new president's Broad Front party has never been in government.
Boric replaces the conservative Sebastian Pinera, who completes his second term with a disapproval rating of 71 percent, the worst recorded by a president since the return of democracy in 1990.
More than 20 international guests are due to attend the investiture ceremony in Valparaiso Friday, including Alberto Fernandez and Pedro Castillo -- the presidents of neighboring Argentina and Peru -- King Felipe VI of Spain, and famed Chilean author Isabel Allende.
msa-pb/mlr/jh/je
Leftist Gabriel Boric, the president breaking new ground in Chile
Miguel SANCHEZ Thu, 10 March 2022
Gabriel Boric has vowed to relegate Chile's neoliberal economic policies, widely seen as sidelining the poor and working classes, 'to the grave'
(AFP/MARTIN BERNETTI)
Gabriel Boric hails from Punta Arenas in Chile's far south, where his parents Luis Javier Boric and Maria Soledad Font still live
(AFP/CLAUDIO REYES)
Supporters of Chilean President-elect Gabriel Boric celebrate following the official results of the runoff election, in Santiago on December 19, 2021
(AFP/MARTIN BERNETTI)
Boric's father Luis told AFP the new president was politically minded from a young age (AFP/CLAUDIO REYES)
As he is sworn in as Chile's youngest ever president, leftist Gabriel Boric will be breaking new ground in more ways than one on Friday.
The 36-year-old, one of the youngest heads of state in the world, has vowed to send Chile's once-lauded neoliberal economic model -- which dates back to the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship -- to the "grave" but that is not the only way he will ruffle the establishment's feathers.
Whether refusing to wear a tie, shunning the upscale neighborhoods of Chile's political elites or naming a majority woman cabinet, Boric has already shown his presidency will be a clean break from what has come before in the South American country.
The former student activist only just met the required minimum age to run in last year's presidential race, seven years after being elected to his first political job as a member of Chile's Chamber of Deputies.
But his promise to install a "welfare state" in one of the world's most unequal countries, coupled with a progressive social, ecological and feminist agenda, saw him prevail over far-right rival Jose Antonio Kast in December's election run-off. - 'Tremendously fractured' -
"If Chile was the cradle of neoliberalism in Latin America, it will also be its grave," Boric said on the campaign trail.
The millennial leader of the Approve Dignity coalition that includes Chile's Communist Party, Boric has already aroused suspicion in a country where communist doctrine has few fans.
Despite those fears, his social welfare program proved popular enough to see him trounce Kast in the run-off.
He has distanced himself from other leftist governments in Latin America accused of authoritarianism.
"Venezuela is an experience that has failed and the main proof is the six million strong Venezuelan diaspora," said Boric in January.
He has also slammed the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the repression of opposition figures in Nicaragua.
Boric has promised to reduce the work week from 45 to 40 hours, to advance "green development" and to create 500,000 jobs for women.
His 24-member cabinet even has a majority of 14 women.
He has also vowed to reform Chile's pension and healthcare systems to promote access for the poor in a country where one percent owns 25 percent of the wealth, according to one UN agency.
"His honesty and transparence, his openness to dialogue are two of Gabriel's greatest virtues," said his 33-year-old journalist brother Simon.
Boric backed the 2019 anti-government revolt that resulted in dozens of deaths in clashes with police, and prompted a referendum that resulted in a process to rewrite Chile's pro-business, dictatorship-era constitution. - 'Let's do the impossible' -
In 2011, he led student protests for free schooling.
His detractors say Boric is inexperienced in politics, and he himself has conceded he has "much to learn."
But supporters say his lack of ties to the traditional ruling elite, increasingly viewed with hostility, counts in his favor.
He also cemented that difference by choosing to live in the largely dilapidated but historic neighborhood of Yungay -- on a road called "Orphans" that sits between others called "Liberty" and "Hope."
Boric, of Croatian and Catalan descent, has abandoned the unkempt, long hair of his activist days, seeking to build a more consensual and moderate image.
But while he has adopted jackets, he shuns ties and makes no attempt to hide his tattoos.
He supports marriage of same-sex couples and abortion rights.
Boric was born in Punta Arenas in Chile's far south. He is the oldest of three brothers and moved to the capital to study law, though he never sat for his bar exam.
He lives with his political scientist girlfriend Irina Karamanos -- has no children and is an avid reader of poetry and history.
"It relaxes me to read a lot," he told AFP.
"I come from the south of Patagonia where the world begins, where every story and the imagination meet."
His father, Luis Boric, told AFP a few months ago that the new president had been politically minded from a young age, painting messages such as "let's be realistic, let's do the impossible" and "reason makes strength" on the wall of his childhood bedroom.
"He wants to produce real change in society. He wants to eliminate many injustices that we have today," said the 75-year-old.
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Sealed with a kiss: Chile celebrates first same-sex weddings
Sealed with a kiss: Chile celebrates first same-sex weddingsJaime Nazar (L) and Javier Silva became the firs same-sex couple to legally tie the knot in Chile
(AFP/CLAUDIO REYES)
Thu, March 10, 2022, 9:49 AM·2 min read
Two same-sex couples became the first Thursday to legally tie the knot in Chile, which joined a handful of countries in majority Catholic Latin America to allow LGBTQ couples to marry.
Under a law approved by Congress in December and signed by outgoing President Sebastian Pinera, they can also now adopt children.
"We never imagined we would experience this moment in Chile," Jaime Nazar, 39, declared proudly after marrying his partner of seven years Javier Silva, 38, in a Santiago suburb.
The pair's two young children were there for the historic event.
"Now, yes, we can say we are a family," said Silva.
"Our children have the same conditions (as those of straight couples) and will have a better future without discrimination for having two dads who love each other," he added.
Silva carried the couple's 18-month-old son in his arms, while Nazar bore their daughter of four months.
The children are the product of surrogate pregnancies abroad that used the sperm of one of the couple. Until now, they had only one legally recognized father -- the biological donor. - 'Super proud' -
From 2015 until Thursday, same-sex couples wishing to formalize their relationship had only the option of civil union agreements, which confer most of the same rights that marriage does, but without the possibility of legal adoption.
"This is a very important step for the country. We feel super proud, privileged to be here," said Nazar, who is a dentist.
Consuelo Morales and Pabla Heuser, both 38, said they decided to get married mainly for their two-year-old daughter Josefa. "Today Josefa ceases to be an illegitimate daughter," said Morales. Heuser, who carried the child in her womb, had been the girl's sole legal parent until now.
In total, three same-sex weddings took place in Chile Thursday -- the day the law took effect.
It came on the eve of the swearing-in of leftist Gabriel Boric as Chile's youngest-ever president.
Chile had been awaiting the passage of the marriage bill since then-president Michelle Bachelet sent it to Congress in 2017.
In a surprise move, her conservative successor Pinera announced last year he would seek the urgent passage of the bill -- supported by a majority of Chileans -- through Congress.
Pinera signed it into law just two days after lawmakers gave the green light ahead of presidential elections in which Boric and his far-right rival Jose Antonio Kast polled neck-and neck.
Kast vehemently opposed broadening access to marriage rights, unlike Boric who supported the move.
Chile is now one of 30 countries in the world that allow same-sex marriage, and seven in Latin America along with Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Costa Rica, and some states in Mexico.
apg/pb/mlr/dw
Desperate relatives seek news from Ukraine port siege Liz COOKMAN Fri, 11 March 2022,
eFootage from the National Police of Ukraine on March 9 shows the damage caused to a children's hospital in Mariupol by Russian air strikes
(AFP/Handout)
Residents trapped inside Ukraine's besieged port city Mariupol pleaded for help on Friday as family members desperately tried to contact them amid a communications blackout.
The city is without water, gas and electricity, with communications down since March 2.
A few patches of weak phone signal remain the only way for most residents to get news out, and the connection is unreliable.
Channels on messaging app Telegram have sprung up, with friends and family posting pictures and information about their loved ones, hoping that others may know something of their fate.
Yulia, a 29-year-old teacher who fled Mariupol on March 3, said her mother-in-law was able to call only by walking to a tower far from her home and it was "really dangerous for her to get there".
But she had managed to call Yulia's husband today to let them know she was still alive.
"She said she was OK but the attacks don't stop. There are many corpses on the street and nobody buries them. They lie there for days. Sometimes utility services collect them and bury them all together in one huge grave," she said.
- Constant bombardment -
Yulia and her husband are among the few people to have escaped Mariupol since the siege began, having to face checkpoints manned by Russian troops to leave.
After a shell fell 50 metres from a crowd of people hoping to evacuate, some started to beg drivers to take them out, she said, but few people had spare seats.
"On the road, we saw burnt-out civilian cars, some were overturned on the side of the road. We understood that Russians had shot them," she said.
"Two kilometres from Mariupol, we saw Russians, their military equipment marked with the letter 'Z'. We thought that was our end, that they would kill us."
Mariupol has been under constant bombardment for 10 days from artillery shells, and Grad, Smerch and Tochka U rockets, according to city council member Petro Andriushchenko.
Rough estimates by the regional military administration put the number killed in Mariupol at 1,207, but it is thought there could be more under the debris.
Attempts to establish a humanitarian corridor to evacuate civilians and to take in supplies have failed on multiple occasions, as Ukrainian officials accuse Russia of not abiding by agreed ceasefires.
On Wednesday, three people -– including one child –- were killed and 14 others injured in an attack on a children's and maternity hospital, causing international outrage.
- 'Help us' -
Yana Karban, 30, has not spoken to her parents, who live on Mariupol's Left Bank, since March 2 but spends most hours of the day trying to find news.
Their neighbours managed to find a patch of phone signal for long enough to call their own daughter, who passed on news to Karban.
She received a message that said: "It's a total disaster in the building. They were just hit by shelling and eight apartments are on fire.
"My parents were crying, saying 'help us'. They want to leave the city but it's impossible as the shelling is everywhere –- it's impossible even to get out."
Her parent's neighbours are now unreachable again and Karban is unable to contact anyone in the city herself -– she is just waiting for news about the fires, or if there were any victims.
Images sent to AFP show green and blue-tinged shrapnel that Karban says were found in a wardrobe in her parent's building after attacks in the morning, shared by the sister of another neighbour.
Karban, a PR manager for a tech company, lives in Kyiv but fled on the second day of the war to Zurich via Poland.
The stress means she is now taking Phenibut and her therapist has her practicing Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR), a psychotherapy treatment, to alleviate her distress.
"I couldn't even stay in Poland as I was always seeing our flag flying and couldn't stop crying. I never thought that I'd become a war refugee," she said.
"It's more than horrible, your brain just can't process emotionally what is happening. But who cares about mental health –- you just want your parents to stay alive."
str-dc/er/yad
Odessa, a Russian-speaking port city in southwest Ukraine and an important strategic target in the Russian military offensive, is preparing for war. Fighting has not yet started in the city but the war is already creating rifts within families and among friends. FRANCE 24’s Gwendoline Debono report
Jews once again forced into exile from beloved Odessa
The century-old Chabad Synagogue in Odessa used to serve up to 150 worshippers a day before the Ukraine war but now only two or three come
(AFP/BULENT KILIC) (BULENT KILIC) Cécile FEUILLATRE Thu, March 10, 2022
Forced yet again into exile, as so many times in their tormented history, Jews are leaving in droves from the Ukrainian city of Odessa, threatening the last traces of a once-vibrant culture.
The Black Sea port, a place steeped in Jewish history, now sees many joining the throngs as they pack buses and trains heading for Moldova or Romania.
Some will go on to Germany, the United States, or Israel.
Many are old, knowing that they may well never return.
Some have already experienced exile, like Gallina Dimievitch, 87, "a child of war" who fled the Nazis with her parents in 1942, and who is now returning to Israel to one of her sons.
Her husband died on February 24, the day of the Russian invasion.
"I thank God that he didn't see this," sighs the former engineer in a small and seedy Odessa hotel where departing Jews are gathered.
"Today I have to leave the land of my husband and my parents, leave their graves behind me," she says.
There was little choice: her town of Mykolaiev, 100 kilometres east, has been under heavy Russian bombardment.
"I remember my mother telling me about having to flee from the Nazis. I guess I feel like her today," says 72-year-old Clara.
- 'Disintegration' -
For Russia, Odessa has strategic and symbolic importance.
It is Ukraine's largest port and a commercial hub, but also holds a powerful place in Russian history, from its founding by Catherine the Great to its resistance against the Nazis to violent clashes between Ukrainian nationalist and pro-Russian protesters in 2014.
Odessa was home to a very large Jewish community until the 1940s, when it was decimated by massacres and deportations during World War II.
Some 40,000 Jews still lived there before the latest invasion, out of a million inhabitants, according to Rabbi Avraham Wolff, head of the ultra-Orthodox Chabad community in Odessa.
Since the start of the war, around 20 percent have already left, the rabbi told AFP by phone from Germany where he has gone to oversee evacuations.
"It's one of the most difficult times of my life, seeing this disintegration of the Jewish community.
"It has happened just as the community was starting to grow again, with nurseries, schools, orphanages, a university...
"The pain is very great, but now the only thing that matters is to get out and save Ukraine's Jews."
- 'Sick' -
The century-old Chabad Synagogue in Odessa, closed during the Soviet period, used to serve up to 150 worshippers a day before the war.
Now only two or three come to pray.
Olexsander Klimanov, 64, retired, with a grey cap on his head, is one of them.
His family was evacuated, but he has decided to stay.
"My whole life is in Odessa, I'm old, I can't adapt like young people, learn a new language," he says.
"This is not the first time that we have seen Jews take the road to exile," he adds, recalling the discrimination and mass emigration faced by Jews during the period of Soviet rule.
But to leave is to abandon a history, roots, a Jewish heritage that makes this city and its region "invaluable" for the community.
Important figures were born or lived here, such as the poet Haim Bialik and Israeli Zionist leader Vladimir Jabotinsky, and it is home to a huge Jewish cemetery.
"We must preserve the heritage," says Anna Bartaret, a young mother about to be evacuated with her two girls aged eight and 10.
A marketing manager, she was very involved in the Jewish community of Mykolaiev.
Her great-grandfather was a rabbi and she fears for the old books of the synagogue, including an 18th century Torah that she kept at her home.
Her face hardens at the mention of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his desire to "de-nazify" Ukraine whose president, Volodymyr Zelensky, is himself Jewish.
"Putin is sick," she says simply.
She plans to go only as far as neighbouring Moldova, she adds, determined that she will "return to Ukraine on foot when everything is over".
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HATE SPEECH OK AGAINST RUSSIA, NOT
Facebook eases rules to allow violent speech against ‘Russian invaders’
Facebook said Thursday that due to the invasion of Ukraine it has temporarily eased its rules regarding violent speech to allow statements like “death to Russian invaders,” but not credible threats against civilians.
Moscow’s internationally condemned invasion of its neighbor has provoked unprecedented sanctions from Western governments and businesses, but also a surge of online anger.
“As a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we have temporarily made allowances for forms of political expression that would normally violate our rules like violent speech such as ‘death to the Russian invaders,'” Facebook’s parent company Meta said in a statement.
“We still won’t allow credible calls for violence against Russian civilians,” it added.
Facebook made its statement after a Reuters report, citing the firm’s emails to its content moderators, which said the policy applies to Armenia, Azerbaijan, Estonia, Georgia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia and Ukraine.
Facebook and other US tech giants have moved to penalize Russia for the attack on Ukraine, and Moscow has also moved to block access to the leading social media network as well as Twitter.
Russia thus joins the very small club of countries barring the largest social network in the world, along with China and North Korea.
Since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine last month, Russian authorities have stepped up pressure against independent media even though press freedoms in the country were already rapidly waning.
Blocking of Facebook and restricting of Twitter last week came the same day Moscow backed the imposition of jail terms on media publishing “false information” about the military.
In this context, Facebook had played a key information distribution role in Russia, even as it endures withering criticism in the West over matters ranging from political division to teenagers’ mental health.
The war is, meanwhile, taking place during a period of unprecedented crackdown on the Russian opposition, with has included protest leaders being assassinated, jailed or forced out of the country.
Big US tech firms like Apple and Microsoft have announced halting the sale of their products in Russia, while other companies have made public their “pauses” of certain business activities or ties.
Last week, US internet service provider Cogent Communications said it had “terminated its contracts with customers billing out of Russia.”
The Washington Post reported Cogent has “several dozen customers in Russia, with many of them, such as state-owned telecommunications giant Rostelecom, being close to the government.”
It’s exactly the kind of measure Ukrainian officials have been campaigning heavily for as they ask Russia be cut off from everything from Netflix to Instagram.
TRUMP LET PUTIN TAKE SYRIA Russia tactics in Ukraine war mirror Syria testing ground: experts
sA combination of file pictures shows an apartment building in Ukraine's Kharkiv on March 8, 2022 (L) and a destroyed building in Syria's old city of Aleppo on December 17, 2016
(AFP/Sergey BOBOK, YOUSSEF KARWASHAN)Less
SURE OBAMA FUMBLED AT THE RED LINE IN SYRAI BUT IT WAS TRUMP WHO AFTER GETTING HIS ROCKS OFF BLOWING UP A DESERTED SYRIAN BASE, LEFT THE COUNTRY TO PUTIN. Hashem Osseiran Thu, March 10, 2022, 6:58 AM·4 min read
Besieging cities, shelling civilian infrastructure and arranging "safe corridors": the tactics used by Russia in its war on Ukraine mirror those it tested and fine-tuned to drain resistance in Syria's conflict.
But unlike its Syria play book, the challenge Russia faces from a Western-backed army in Ukraine dwarfs that of Syrian rebels who lacked military might or broad international backing, analysts said.
Russia entered Syria's civil war in 2015 on the side of President Bashar al-Assad's regime, allowing Damascus to clock up decisive victories in the decade-long conflict.
Since President Vladimir Putin ordered an invasion on February 24, tens of thousands of Russian troops have swarmed into Ukraine, where they have shelled urban centres and forced people to flee, sparking international outrage.
Moscow denies targeting civilian areas in Ukraine, despite widespread evidence suggesting otherwise, with Western powers and rights groups accusing it of committing possible war crimes.
A French military source said Russia's operations in Ukraine marked a "change of scale".
"Syria was a small theatre," he told AFP on condition of anonymity.
But many of the tactics deployed in Ukraine draw from Russia's battles in Syria, where it tested weapons systems and gained vital combat experience.
"For Russia, Syria is a training ground for men and equipment," said analyst Fabrice Balanche.
- Strategy to 'terrorise' -
Russia has long been accused by rights groups of supporting Syria's regime in besieging civilian populations and bombing infrastructure to draw rebels out of key areas.
To bolster Assad, "Russia's first goal in Syria was to reconquer big cities," including the economic hub of Aleppo and rebel-held districts around Damascus, Balanche said.
In Ukraine, Russia's push towards major cities including Kyiv, Kharkiv and Odessa follows a similar pattern but is meant to strip legitimacy from authorities there, he said.
Balanche said indiscriminate Russian bombing of hospitals and schools is another aspect of the Syrian conflict playing out in Ukraine as part of a strategy to "terrorise" civilians.
At least 270 medical facilities in Syria have been attacked by Russia and Assad's regime since 2011, according to the Syrian Archive, a non-profit organisation that archives digital material from the war.
Russia also targeted schools and markets during a blistering Aleppo offensive in 2016 and a devastating 2019-2020 campaign against rebels in neighbouring Idlib province, the country's last major opposition bastion, according to rights groups.
"Russia bombs military targets... then health and energy infrastructure to make life impossible for civilians and to push them to leave," Balanche told AFP.
"Once the civilians are gone, it is easier for the army to move forward."
Last month, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International accused Russia of using cluster munitions on a hospital and school in Kharkiv, saying the attacks could constitute war crimes.
On Wednesday, Russian forces reportedly bombed a children's hospital in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol that Kyiv says killed three people, including a girl.
That attack sparked international outrage with many global powers accusing Russia of committing an atrocity.
- Different battlefield -
In another parallel strategy, Russia has announced so-called safe corridors to allow civilians to exit Ukrainian cities it has laid siege to.
It is a strategy tried and tested in Syria, sometimes resulting in the death, injury and detention of civilians who try to escape besieged rebel districts without international guarantees, according to experts.
But Russia faces a different landscape in Ukraine, where it has deployed a much larger contingent, in a high-stakes intervention.
"In Syria, Russia primarily relied on its air power and certain specialised units to advise and assist the pro-Assad forces," said Nicholas Heras of the Newlines Institute in Washington.
"Whereas in Ukraine the Russians are the (main) fighting force," he added.
Another key difference, according to Heras, concerns the capabilities of Russia's opponents.
In Ukraine, Russia is confronted by an army that is armed and supported by Western nations, Heras said, flagging its anti-air and anti-armour capabilities.
Meanwhile, "Russia was involved in a minor league war in Syria where it had total dominance," he added.
According to Anton Mardasov, a non-resident expert at the Russian International Affairs Council, Moscow now has a sharper sense of its weapons systems.
It has "corrected many of the shortcomings of high-precision ground, sea and air-based weapons that were identified during the use of missile systems in Syria," he told AFP.
"In Ukraine, high-precision weapons are used quite actively and accurately."
bur/ho/aya/dv/hc
THEY REFUSED TO SEND IRON DOME Ukraine's Jewish ex-PM urges stronger Israeli response to Russia Then Ukrainian prime minister Volodymyr Groysman speaks to a journalist in May 2018
- Sergei SUPINSKY by Gareth Browne
March 10, 2022 — Jerusalem (AFP)
Former Ukrainian premier Volodymyr Groysman, who lost much of his family in the Holocaust, compared Russia's invasion of his country to Nazism and said the West and Israel needed to do more in response.
Groysman, who was Ukraine's first openly Jewish prime minister, was in office from 2016 to 2019.
For the brief period in 2019 when he served under President Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine was the only country in the world besides Israel to have a Jewish head of state and head of government.
"Part of my family survived the Holocaust... the other part did not," Groysman, 44, told AFP in Jerusalem from his hometown of Vinnytsia, southwest of Kyiv.
"What's happening now, I'm not exaggerating, is a continuation of the Nazi policy on a national basis," rather than religious, he said.
"Hitler was not stopped by economic sanctions... We need more weapons, we need to close the sky," he added, echoing calls from the Kyiv government to enforce a no-fly zone over Ukraine, something NATO has so far ruled out for fear of starting a World War III. - 'Blankets' not enough -
Ukranian officials, including Zelensky, have made direct appeals to the international Jewish community to take action in response to the Russian invasion, especially after last week's Russian strike beside Kyiv's Babi Yar Holocaust memorial site.
But Zelensky and his envoys have been more pointed in addressing the Israeli response to the crisis.
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has so far avoided forceful condemnation of the Russian invasion, seeking to maintain delicate security ties with Moscow, especially in relation to neighbouring Syria.
Bennett has also attempted to play a mediation role, speaking repeatedly to Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin, including a three-hour meeting at the Kremlin on Saturday.
Last week, Zelensky voiced gratitude at images of Jews praying at Jerusalem's Western Wall wrapped in the Ukranian flag, but told reporters he did not feel "that the Israeli government had wrapped itself with the Ukranian flag".
Speaking to journalists this week, Ukraine's envoy to Israel, Yevgen Korniychuk, thanked Bennett for his mediation efforts but grew emotional when expressing frustration that Israel had not yet approved the export of defensive equipment -- specifically helmets and flak jackets -- to Ukraine.
"I don't know what these people (Israeli officials) are afraid of, to provide personal security to Ukrainians," Korniychuk said, as he put on the type of helmet he said Ukrainians were seeking to acquire.
Groysman, who drew plaudits while in office for talking openly about his Judaism in a country with a history of anti-Semitism, also voiced gratitude at Bennett's mediation efforts but said Israel needed to approve non-humanitarian forms of assistance.
"Your blankets will not protect Ukrainians from missile and bomb attacks," he told AFP.
According to Israeli media, Bennett has repeatedly rebuffed requests by Zelensky for military assistance.
Groysman said the war offered a "historic chance" for the West to defeat Putin and "cleanse Russia from this total evil".
Rejecting notions that Putin could be "stopped from within" by internal rivals, he said military defeat of Russia was essential to safeguard "a sustainable peace".
"Russia is a potential threat for Israel, and for Europe, and for other democratic countries," he said.
"It's time to end this - this is the perfect chance."
Chelsea won the Champions League for the second time under
Roman Abramovich's ownership last season
(AFP/PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU)
Roman Abramovich was in Abu Dhabi last month to watch his beloved Chelsea lift the Club World Cup for the first time, celebrating yet more silverware during his trophy-laden two decades in charge.
In the space of a few weeks, the Russian billionaire has been cornered into putting the London club up for sale and slapped with sanctions by the UK government throwing the Blues into turmoil.
Speculation has been rife since Russia's invasion of Ukraine over whether the 55-year-old would be included in the targeted action against oligarchs perceived to be close to the Kremlin.
Britain's announcement that Abramovich -- described by the government as part of Russian President Vladimir Putin's inner circle -- had been sanctioned, came on the day the European and world club champions celebrated their 117th birthday.
Chelsea can continue playing despite the restrictions on its owner but Abramovich's plans to offload the club have been scuppered.
A new licence would have to be granted by the government for Chelsea to be passed into new ownership and no proceeds would go to Abramovich.
The Chelsea of 2022 are a different beast from the under-achieving club he bought in 2003 for just £140 million ($187 million) at a time when Manchester United and Arsenal ruled the roost in the Premier League.
The club were transformed from also-rans teetering on the brink of a financial crisis into one of the richest in the world thanks to the deep pockets of the Russian, who routinely bankrolled blockbuster transfers.
He has been rewarded with a staggering 19 major trophies in his 19-year reign -- changing the face of English and European football.
"For the first time in our 117 years of existence, we can claim to be the world champions and not only that, we are able to say our men's first team has won every major competition they have been able to enter," the club said on its website before the news of sanctions landed on Thursday.
Abramovich's arrival at Stamford Bridge also set a trend for a wave of foreign investment in the Premier League
Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester United are all American-owned, Manchester City have won five of the past 10 titles thanks to Abu Dhabi backing, while Newcastle are now bankrolled by the Saudi sovereign wealth fund. - 'Special One' -
One of Abramovich's early masterstrokes was to bring in Jose Mourinho as manager to replace Claudio Ranieri in 2004.
The self-styled "Special One", fresh from Champions League success with Porto, delivered a first league championship since 1955 in his first season and repeated the feat in 2006.
The Portuguese departed in 2007 but despite frequent managerial changes the trophies continued to flood in as the Blues belied the idea that stability breeds success.
A total of 13 men have managed the club over the past 19 years, with Mourinho and Guus Hiddink doing so on two occasions.
The unheralded Roberto Di Matteo succeeded where big-name managers Mourinho and Carlo Ancelotti had failed by winning the club's first Champions League with an ageing team in 2012.
Even then the Italian was sacked three months into the following season.
Mourinho's two spells account for half of Chelsea's six league titles in their history, yet Abramovich twice decided to part ways with the Portuguese.
The same fate befell the club's all-time top goalscorer, Frank Lampard, last year but the Russian's ruthless approach continued to reap the rewards.
Within four months of succeeding Lampard, Thomas Tuchel was celebrating the club's second Champions League title on the field with Abramovich in Portugal.
Tuchel's admission that it was the first time the pair had met underlined the hands-off approach Abramovich has taken to the day-to-day running of the club.
Director Marina Granovskaia, a close ally of the owner, took the lead on the recruitment of players and managers but the Russian's vast wealth underpinned two decades of almost unbroken success.
Last month's 2-1 victory against Palmeiras in Abu Dhabi completed Abramovich's trophy collection.
"At least we closed this cycle for him and for his effort and his passion and commitment to the club," said Tuchel. "So it was good timing on this matter."
Chelsea's success under Abramovich has made them one of the giants of European football but they face a future clouded by uncertainty.
kca-jw/mw
Holocaust memorial suspends ties with Chelsea’s Abramovich
Jerusalem (AFP) – Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial announced Thursday it has suspended ties with Roman Abramovich, the Russian billionaire owner of Chelsea FC and major donor facing sanctions worldwide following the invasion of Ukraine.
“In light of recent developments, Yad Vashem has decided to suspend the strategic partnership with Mr. Roman Abramovich,” spokesman Simmy Allen said in a statement.
Last month, Yad Vashem announced “a new long-term strategic partnership” with Abramovich that would expand Holocaust research and remembrance. Allen said the Russian was donating “an eight-figure sum”, making Abramovich the memorial’s second-largest donor.
He said the partnership was now suspended.
The museum faced scrutiny after a report in The Washington Post that it had joined the chief Ashkenazi rabbi of Israel, David Lau, and Sheba Medical Centre director general Yitshak Kreiss in urging the US not to sanction Abramovich.
Allen did not confirm the mogul was mentioned, but told AFP that Yad Vashem had signed a letter to the US ambassador to Israel, Thomas Nides, “in order to increase US awareness of the potentially negative consequences of possible economic sanctions in the future upon important causes shared by the US and its ally Israel”.
Abramovich, 55, is facing rising sanctions over his perceived close ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
On Thursday, the UK froze his assets and banned him from travel over Russia’s Ukraine invasion launched on February 24.
Chelsea Football Club later said they were pressing for talks with the British government “seeking permission for the licence to be amended in order to allow the club to operate as normal as possible”.
Abramovich had announced last week that he was selling the English Premier League club.
Chelsea Q&A: What is next for the club after Roman Abramovich's sanctions?
Sky Sports chief news reporter Kaveh Solhekol answers all the key questions after Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich was sanctioned by the UK Government, plunging the Premier League club into crisis...
It has been a seismic day in the history of Chelsea after their Russian owner Roman Abramovich was sanctioned by the UK Government early on Thursday.
The decision to freeze the Blues owner's assets, including his Premier League club based in west London, comes in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The UK Government says Abramovich has links to president Vladimir Putin, despite his denials.
Abramovich announced last week that he is looking to sell the club, but Thursday morning's announcement means that process has been paused for now - and the ownership of the Blues is in the hands of the UK Government.
The big question is - now what? What lies ahead for Chelsea as a business and a community? What happens to the all-star squad that Abramovich helped assemble at Stamford Bridge? And can Abramovich still sell the club? Why has the UK Government punished Roman Abramovich?
"For the past couple of weeks, the UK government have asked the National Crime Agency to find a link between Roman Abramovich and Vladimir Putin.
"They needed to prove beyond doubt that Abramovich was close to Putin, and obviously they have that evidence now and have been able to freeze his assets and issue such strong statements.
"We know for a fact Abramovich was involved in politics. He was a politician; he was basically a member of parliament in Russia, he was the governor of the Chukotka region until 2008.
Image:Roman Abramovich pictured with Vladimir Putin in 2016
"Abramovich was close to former Russian president Boris Yeltsin. It was because of his relationship with Yeltsin that he grew to be so rich. We know that he was close to Putin.
"For his part, Abramovich has stressed that was all in the past, that he is not involved in politics anymore. Obviously, the UK government have looked have at the evidence and decided he is and that he is close to Putin, and in light of what Putin and Russia are doing in Ukraine, his assets have been frozen." So, what can and can't Chelsea do?
"Sanctions on Abramovich have been imposed to stop him making any money but Chelsea have been given a licence for football-related activity to continue because they are a significant cultural asset.
"They can carry on playing games, their games can be shown on TV and they can continue to receive broadcast revenues. That means they can carry on paying wages and bills but they can't give players new contracts.
"From today [Thursday], Chelsea cannot sell tickets to any games. So the only people who can go to Stamford Bridge and watch a game are those who have already purchased match tickets or season tickets.
The Chelsea supporters trust have called on the Government to act quickly after owner Roman Abramovich was hit with sanctions.
"The club shop is closed; you cannot buy merchandise from Chelsea anymore. You can buy merchandise from third parties, however, providing they still have stock.
"At home games, they are allowed to spend up to £500,000 on security, catering and stewarding. For away games, they are only allowed to spend up to £20,000 on travel.
"No expenditure allowed on new works or refurbishments. Loan arrangements agreed before today can continue and outstanding transfer payments due to clubs can continue to be paid." What does this all mean for the current Chelsea first-team players - and their women's and youth teams?
"They'll be able to carry on paying their players and day-to-day bills. Chelsea have money to operate. In their latest accounts, they lost £145m for the year, that was covered by Roman Abramovich.
"He won't be able to do that at the moment, but Chelsea have the funds to continue. I would not worry about the short term. Chelsea are not going to go out of business.
Image:Chelsea players pre-match against Burnley
"It's business as usual [for the whole club, including women's and youth teams]. They can carry on operating but are under the same restrictions as the first team. The limit of £20k for travel applies to every team.
"The government don't want to damage Chelsea, they recognise it's a cultural asset. They want these teams to carry on running." Will Chelsea get a points deduction from the Premier League?
"I haven't heard anything to suggest there will be a points deduction from the FA. As far as the Premier League are concerned, they want to manage the process so that Chelsea can continue to operate.
"There is no appetite to punish Chelsea at the moment, the focus is on protecting the integrity of the competitions Chelsea are involved in. The Premier League have already confirmed tonight's match between Norwich and Chelsea will go ahead."
. How can Chelsea fulfil European away games with just a £20,000 budget?
"There's some flexibility when it comes to that. I don't sense it is going to be strictly policed. Chelsea have arrangements in place with their travel partners whereby they are paid in advance of the season." Can Roman Abramovich still sell Chelsea, despite these sanctions?
"A No 10 spokesman says Abramovich's sale of Chelsea could still happen - but it would need more negotiations with the UK Treasury.
"The UK Government are open to Abramovich selling Chelsea, even though they sanctioned him on Thursday morning, as they are only interested in punishing those close to Putin - not punishing the Chelsea fans.
"Another licence, similar to the football-related activities one, would have to be submitted by the Government to allow Abramovich to sell Chelsea."
Timeline of events since Russia invaded Ukraine Feb 24: Russian forces begin an invasion of Ukraine Feb 24: Labour MP Chris Bryant says Abramovich should not be allowed to own the club given Russia's invasion of Ukraine Feb 24: Bryant used Parliamentary Privilege to reveal Abramovich is selling his UK home and one of his flats, telling the House of Commons he’s 'terrified of being sanctioned' Feb 26: In a statement, 'stewardship' of the club is handed over to the Chelsea Foundation March 1: The Charity Commission raise concerns over Abramovich's statement, before he announces his intention to sell Chelsea after 19 years, with the Russian promising to donate money from the sale to help victims of the war in Ukraine March 3: Gary Neville tells Sky Sports: 'It's more of a reactive measure than a planned measure' March 5: Chelsea fans sing Abramovich's name during a minute's applause at Turf Moor in support for Ukraine; Thomas Tuchel says he has ‘no problem’ remaining Chelsea boss despite Abramovich's plan to sell the club March 7: As many as 10 parties consider making bids for the west London club March 10: Abramovich's attempt to sell Chelsea are halted after the oligarch was sanctioned by the UK government as part of its response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine
ADMITED RAPIST
Court refuses to drop rape charge against actor Gerard Depardieu
Prosecutors say there is 'serious' evidence against Gerard Depardieu
(AFP/Tiziana FABI)
Guillaume DAUDIN, Jurgen HECKER Thu, March 10, 2022
A Paris court on Thursday rejected a bid by Gerard Depardieu to have rape charges against him dropped, the chief prosecutor in the case said, raising the prospect of a trial for the iconic French actor.
Depardieu, 73, was charged with raping and sexually assaulting a young French actress at his home in Paris in 2018, an accusation he has called "baseless".
But Paris chief prosecutor Remy Heitz said in a statement that there was "serious and confirmed evidence that justifies Gerard Depardieu to remain charged" in the case brought by the actress, Charlotte Arnould.
The case will now go back to the prosecuting magistrate who is to resume her work on the case, Heitz said.
Arnould, who was present in the courthouse, declined to comment on the decision, but her lawyer, Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, told AFP that her client was "relieved".
Depardieu's lawyer, Herve Temime, declined to comment.
Arnould filed her complaint in the summer of 2018 when she was 22, saying she had been raped twice by Depardieu in his swank Left Bank mansion in the French capital a few days earlier.
Prosecutors dropped the case in June 2019, citing lack of evidence, but it was reopened the following year after Arnould filed a new complaint.
- 'Trying to survive' -
The actor was charged in December 2020 but not jailed, or even ordered under judicial supervision.
One year later, Arnould revealed her identity on Twitter, saying: "I am Depardieu's victim. He was charged one year ago. He is working, while all I am doing is trying to survive." Depardieu is a friend of Arnould's family and has known her since she was a child.
In 1991, Time magazine asked Depardieu about a 1978 interview in Film Comment magazine in which he described his rough childhood and was quoted as saying "I had plenty of rapes, too many to count". Asked if he had participated in the rapes, he told Time that he had. "But it was absolutely normal in those times," the actor said.
Depardieu later denied making the remarks and threatened to sue the magazine, but Time refused to retract the passage, saying the interview had been recorded on tape.
Depardieu became a star in France from the 1980s with roles in "The Last Metro", "Police" and "Cyrano de Bergerac", before Peter Weir's "Green Card" also made him a Hollywood celebrity.
He later acted in global productions, including Kenneth Branagh's "Hamlet", Ang Lee's "Life of Pi" and Netflix's "Marseille" series. In 2013, he sparked an outcry by leaving France and taking Russian nationality to protest a proposed tax hike on the rich in his homeland.
Depardieu, a friend of Russian President Vladimir Putin, last week came out against the war in Ukraine and called for negotiations.
"I am against this fratricidal war. I say 'stop the weapons and negotiate'," Depardieu said.
Depardieu currently stars in two films showing in French cinemas. In one he plays the role of Maigret, the fictional police detective created by writer Georges Simenon, who investigates the murder of a young girl.
In the other, "Robust", he plays an ageing, jaded actor who develops a relationship with a young female security guard.