Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Column: A billionaires tax is a necessity. Even the White House knows it

Michael Hiltzik
Mon, March 28, 2022

President Biden has proposed a billionaires tax. (Evan Vucci / Associated Press)

After years of largely theoretical discussion among Democrats, the idea of a billionaires tax has now become official policy.

Kudos to President Biden for putting the billionaires tax on the table as part of his budget proposal for fiscal 2023. As we've reported many times in recent years, a means of forcing the richest of the rich to pay their fair share of taxes has long been overdue.

Until now, the idea has been identified with the liberal wing of the Democratic Party, proposed in the past by Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Ron Wyden of Oregon, as well as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I.-Vt.).

This approach means that the very wealthiest Americans pay taxes as they go, just like everyone else, and eliminates the inefficient sheltering of income for decades or generations.

President Biden, introducing his billionaires tax

Biden has now made it mainstream, though his plan is somewhat more modest than the others — his proposal for a wealth tax would raise about $360 billion over 10 years, according to the White House, less than Wyden's ($507 billion) or Warren's ($2.75 trillion). The differences arise in part from where the tax would start and how it would be calculated.

The earlier proposals provoked a chorus of hand-wringing from our beleaguered billionaire class.

Billionaire Leon Cooperman objected to Warren's plan with profanity, and billionaire Elon Musk tried to tweak Wyden over his proposal, which like Biden's targeted unrealized capital gains — that is, gains in the value of assets such as stocks and bonds before they're sold. Wyden responded that Musk's approach of turning tax policy into a game merely underscored the necessity of a wealth tax.

So will this plan, especially because it takes direct aim at the capital gains tax, the favorite loophole of the wealthy.

Biden's proposal is for a minimum 20% tax on the income of households with more than $100 million in wealth. The White House says that more than half the revenue would come from households worth more than $1 billion.

If it's passed, the proposal would be a major step toward closing the gap in tax rates between the middle- and working-classes on one side and the wealthy on the other.

The White House in September estimated that the 400 wealthiest families in America paid an average federal individual income tax rate of 8.2% on $1.8 trillion of income between 2010 and 2018. "A firefighter or teacher can pay double that tax rate," Biden said in his budget statement Monday, citing the earlier estimate.

The proposal would also draw a bright line between the policies of the Democratic and Republican parties.

The latter has all but defined itself as an agent of the wealthy. Its latest position paper, the "Rescue America" plan issued by Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, called for raising taxes on the poorest American households. (Scott's household net worth of about $220 million, by the way, would put him right in the target zone of Biden's proposal.)

Nor should it be forgotten that the last restructuring of the federal income tax, in 2017, was a GOP project that disproportionately cut taxes on the rich.

Biden's focus on the treatment of capital gains is proper, as we've reported in the past. The reason is that capital gains, which enjoy preferable treatment in several respects, provide most of the income reported by the wealthy. The richer you are, the more of your income receives that happy treatment.

In tax year 2019, the most recent for which the IRS published statistics, those with more than $10 million in reported income attributed 57% of it to net capital gains and dividends (which also receive preferential tax treatment). For households with less than $75,000 in income, the figure was 2.2%.

More than 80% of the income of that latter group came from wages and salaries, which are taxed at higher rate and taxed as they're earned. For the wealthy group, the figure was only 17%.

According to the Federal Reserve, the top 1% of households by wealth (a threshold that starts at about $11.1 million) own about 23% of all the corporate equities and mutual fund shares in the country; the bottom half of all households own a collective 0.7%.

How do capital asset owners make out like bandits at tax time? Let us count the ways. First, the maximum tax rate is lower — 23.8% (including the net investment income tax of 3.8%), compared with the 40.8% top rate on ordinary income.

Then there's the fact, as the late tax expert Edward Kleinbard of USC never tired of pointing out, that the tax is our only voluntary tax: It's levied only if and when the owner chooses to sell.

If it's still in the owner's estate at death, all the embedded tax is extinguished forever — the heirs have to pay tax only on the difference between the asset's value at the previous owner's death and its value when they sell, rather than the difference between its purchase price and their sale price.

This is known as the step-up in basis at death, and it's a crucial driver of the accumulation of wealth within family dynasties.

Biden is absolutely correct in targeting the manipulation of the capital gains tax for eradication by proposing a minimum billionaires tax that includes unrealized capital gains. "The preponderance of capital gains in the portfolios of the wealthy accounts for why it has been so difficult to bring its tax treatment into line with what the rest of us suffer.

"This approach means that the very wealthiest Americans pay taxes as they go, just like everyone else, and eliminates the inefficient sheltering of income for decades or generations," Biden said in a fact sheet issued Monday.

You'll probably be hearing from water-carriers for the rich that taxing unrealized gains doesn't compensate asset owners for their losses in down years. The numbers show that this is a made-up problem: The stock market has been a very reliable engine of wealth growth and remarkably resilient even during what the average person might consider bad times.

Over the last 40 years, or the period from January 1982 through the end of 2021, there were only seven years in which the Standard & Poor's 500 index, the best proxy for the overall stock market, lost money. On average, stocks gained 12.4%. One dollar invested at the beginning of the period was worth $107.13 at the end.

By the same token, through the 21 years of this century (that is, January 2001 through Dec. 31, 2021) there have been only five down years and an average gain of 8.38% a year. One dollar invested when the ball came down at Times Square on New Year's Day 2001 is worth more than five times as much today.

Even during the worst economic stretch of the last 100 years, the Great Depression (defined for our purposes as January 1929 through the end of 1939), the stock market lost an average of 0.6% a year.

In any event, Biden's proposal would give the target households up to nine years to fork over what they owe on existing unrealized gains and five years to pay the tax on new income. That would "smooth year-to-year variation in investment income," the fact sheet states.

The coming debate over Biden's tax proposal will probably focus in part on its constitutionality. This question will be a stalking horse aimed at absolving critics of the charge that they're just out to protect billionaires. But it's been endlessly masticated by experts, many of whom assert that it can be fashioned in a way that passes constitutional muster.

Biden's characterization of the levy as a "Billionaire Minimum Income Tax" — emphasis on the word "income" — is designed to keep the proposal within the exemption for income taxes from the Constitution's strictures on how taxes must be calculated.

That's clever, but it addresses just one of the untold ways that spokespersons for the wealthy will try to eviscerate a plan that hits them in their well-fattened pocketbooks. With so much money at stake, the battle could be ferocious.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
FRANCE FACISM
Spooked by immigration, Islam and ‘woke’ ideas: Who are Éric Zemmour’s supporters?

Tue, 29 March 2022,


Far-right polemicist Éric Zemmour has vowed to reverse the immigration he blames for undermining France’s identity and core values if he wins the country’s upcoming presidential election. FRANCE 24 spoke to his supporters who gathered by the thousands in Paris on Sunday.

A writer and talk show pundit known for his polarising attacks on Muslims and immigrants, Zemmour emerged as the election’s dark horse early on in the campaign, drawing from both the mainstream conservative camp and voters disappointed by the far right’s traditional champion, Marine Le Pen. He has since slipped down the table in voter surveys, polling at around 10-11 percent, though his supporters still rank among the most raucous and motivated ahead of the first round of the election on April 10.

On Sunday, tens of thousands gathered at the Trocadéro in Paris, facing the Eiffel Tower, hoping to inject new momentum into his campaign. They included veteran far-rightists, staunch Catholics, anti-LGBT activists and anti-vaxxers for whom Zemmour is the best candidate to halt immigration, restore order and uphold traditional French values.

Eugénie, 18, defending ‘Christian values’


Donning a “Zemmour 2022” cap and a baptism medal wrapped around her neck, 18-year-old Eugénie is getting ready to cast her very first ballot on April 10 – and she could hardly be more thrilled about her choice of candidate. “I never thought I’d support someone with such fervour,” she says. “I’m lucky to be casting my first vote for a candidate I really like.” The philosophy student was just 9 years old when she first took part in a Paris rally, back in 2013, to oppose marriage for same-sex couples. Nine years on, she’s back on the streets of the French capital to “prove that Zemmour is not alone, contrary to what the media claim”.

A practising Catholic, Eugénie stresses the former pundit’s “love of France (...) and the fact that he’s the only candidate to defend Christian values”. He’s also “the only one to challenge the transhumanist movement [advocates of human-enhancement technologies]”, she argues, praising Zemmour’s conservative stance on “bioethical debates that undermine society”. While she acknowledges that transhumanism is a niche concern, even for the far-right candidate, Eugénie wholeheartedly subscribes to his core policy: his pledge to halt, and indeed reverse, immigration.

“It’s good to be humane and welcoming towards foreigners, but when there is a refusal to assimilate we cannot surrender our culture,” says the young Zemmouriste, whose champion has called for a ban on “non-French” first names. Eugénie is aware that Zemmour has slipped behind his rivals in the race for the all-important runoff. But she already has a Plan B in the other far-right candidate, Marine Le Pen, who is polling in second place behind the incumbent, Emmanuel Macron.

Marc, 57, dreading a ‘great replacement’


“I live nearby, it’s a nice day, I’ve come to gauge the atmosphere,” says 57-year-old Marc, observing the raucous crowd gathered on the Trocadéro. An anti-vaxxer and opponent of the Covid-19 health pass, he describes himself as the “family’s ugly duckling”. “I didn’t get the Covid jab, unlike my mother and brother who sold out to Macron,” he says. Born to a French mother and Yugoslav father, Marc says he can identify with Zemmour, whose parents left their native Algeria when it was still a French territory. In fact, he claims “lots of people of immigrant background can relate to Zemmour”.

Like the far-right candidate, Marc says he is most concerned about the so-called “great replacement”, a conspiracy theory purporting that white Europeans are being replaced by immigrants from Africa and the Middle East, with the complicity of political elites. “It’s not just a theory, it’s everywhere,” says the self-employed part-time worker in the building industry, pointing to the “growing number of women wearing (Muslim) veils in Paris and its suburbs”. Aside from immigration, Marc also agrees with Zemmour’s stances on education and his opposition to “woke” ideas. “Finally, we have a candidate who challenges all the anti-racist, feminist and LGBT talk we are constantly fed by the media,” he says.

>> Read more: Pushing far-right agenda, French news networks shape election debate

Ana, 53, from Fillon to Zemmour


Portuguese-born “but very well assimilated, like Zemmour wants”, 53-year-old Ana is perfectly at ease with Zemmour’s hardline stance on immigration. “All of my children have French names, it’s important for them to integrate,” says the mother of four, who travelled from Bellême in Normandy to attend the rally in Paris. A longtime Zemmour fan, Ana was first drawn to the far-right pundit by his televised appearances back in the 1990s and has read every one of his books. She’s a regular participant at his rallies, when she isn’t busy running the kitchen of her restaurant.

A devout Catholic, Ana voted for conservative candidate François Fillon in 2017. Five years on, she sees Zemmour as the champion of Christian values. “He’s the only one with a plan to save our civilisation from the ‘great replacement’. Our race is in decline and we’re heading for catastrophe,” she says, describing Zemmour as an opportunity for France. Ana is convinced the former pundit would have averted the war in Ukraine had he been in power. “He would have known how to negotiate with Putin because he is a man of peace,” she says of Zemmour, who has frequently praised the Russian president, once saying he longed for a “French Putin”.

Florent, 40, yearning for order


Another longtime supporter, Florent signed up for Zemmour’s fledgling party “Reconquête !” at the first opportunity. “I like his ideas, his personality and his background too. He’s the only one to cast a lucid eye on the situation, particularly when it comes to immigration,” says the 40-year-old school supervisor from the leafy Paris suburb of Saint-Cloud, for whom the “great replacement” is well underway.

“When you see the number of veiled women increasing in a wealthy town like Saint-Cloud, where I live, it means immigration is everywhere,” he claims. “What will the country look like in 20 years? We must act now.” Florent is also drawn to Zemmour’s education platform, with its focus on discipline. “Every day I see kids falling by the wayside. We must restore order to the system,” he says. However, Florent is increasingly pessimistic about his candidate’s chances of qualifying for the run-off. If he fails, he will vote for Le Pen, “without a doubt” – as he has done in the past. “Everything must be done to get rid of Macron,” he adds.

Séverine, 42, disappointed by Le Pen


A one-time Le Pen supporter, 42-year-old Séverine recently switched her allegiance to Zemmour, angered by Le Pen’s jabs at the former pundit. “I didn’t like it when Le Pen branded him ‘far right’,” she says. “And when she had a go at him for having ‘Nazis’ in his party, it was really absurd, because she has the very same problem.” An administrative worker in a suburb of Paris, Séverine says she leans “neither right nor left” and is drawn to Zemmour’s earnest talk. “He’s not a politician, he’s a man of the people, like a family friend,” she says of the hardline polemicist, who has two convictions for hate speech and is appealing a third.

While she does not live in the countryside, Séverine approves of Zemmour’s promise to hand struggling rural families a €10,000 cheque. She also backs him to halt “the decline in France’s education system”. Holding up a banner that reads “Women with Zemmour”, she dismisses the accusations of misogyny levelled at the far-right candidate, who has repeatedly blasted feminist campaigns and attempts to introduce gender parity in government. “Such accusations are totally unfounded,” she claims. “I even get the impression there are more women than men at his rallies.”

This article was adapted from the original in French.
'Revenge': Russia strikes break eery quiet in battered Mykolaiv




Ukraine says it has recaptured territory in recent days
 (AFP/BULENT KILIC)

Selim Saheb Ettaba
Tue, March 29, 2022

Several days of calm in the southern Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv came to an abrupt end around breakfast-time Tuesday, when a Russian rocket strike ripped a gaping hole through local government building, killing seven people.

AFP journalists saw dust-covered rescue workers in hard hats pull two bodies from the debris as they searched for survivors: a man in uniform and an elderly woman, whose body they covered in a green sheet.

"Most people escaped miraculously," regional governor Vitaly Kim wrote on Facebook, confirming that regional government office had been targeted.

Initially, he said, several civilians and soldiers were unaccounted for.

Later -- during an address to Danish lawmakers -- President Volodymyr Zelensky described the true scale of the strike.

"As far as we know now seven people were killed, 22 were wounded, and people are still going through the rubble," Zelensky said in a video address to the parliament.

"I was having breakfast in my apartment," Donald, 69, a retired Canadian postal worker with Ukrainian residency told AFP. "I heard a whoosh, then a boom and my windows rattled.

"It's scary. We have been lucky here in Mykolaiv. We haven't had that many explosions in the centre of the city," he added.

The tall administrative building was left with a large section torn away, its rows of windows all blown out and its base surrounded by large chunks of concrete.

In the aftermath of the attack, you could look through the massive hole left in the building to see the cloudless spring sky on the other side.



Damaged government building in Mykolaiv, after Russian strike 
(AFP/Eleonore SENS)

- 'He wants revenge' -


Mykolaiv, a key southern port city, has seen fierce fighting since Moscow launched its invasion late last month. But it had been quiet in recent days until Tuesday morning's strike.

The Russian army has been falling back southeast towards Kherson, the only major Ukrainian city it claims complete control of -- and now the focus of a Ukrainian counter-offensive.

Outside a nearby residential complex, locals shaken by the blast -- some still in their pyjamas -- exchanged information about the attack and observed the damage.

Among them was Yelena Dovgykh, 65, in slippers and carrying a little dog and a plastic bag with documents under her arm.

She was making breakfast when she heard the strike, she told AFP. "I went down just as I was. I took my papers and my dog."

Another resident, Svetlana Fedorenko, cut her hand picking up broken glass from her balcony and living room kitchen. But she has known worse, she insisted.

"Putin is a bastard. That's all there is to it," said Viktor Gaivonenko, a neighbour who came to help her clean up the debris, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

He was targeting governor Kim and Zelensky because "they boost the morale of the people and our soldiers," said Fedorenko.

"He wants to get revenge for the resistance Mykolaiv is putting up that's blocking him from reaching Odessa," she added.

Governor Kim appeared to agree.

Russian forces "realised they couldn't take Mykolaiv and decided to say hello to me, to say hello to all of us," Kim wrote after the strikes, adding that his own office had been destroyed.

Mykolaiv is a key city on the road to Odessa, Ukraine's biggest port, and its capture would be a significant one for Russia's invasion of Ukraine, launched in late February.

Just a day before the attack, residents had been marking the 78th anniversary of the liberation of Mykolaiv from the Nazis by Soviet Red Army troops towards the end of World War Two.

On Mykolaiv's central avenue, a monument commemorating those soldiers stands a Soviet T-34/85 tank, with fresh flowers lying at its base.

"We drove out the Nazis in 1944," Ukraine's defence ministry said in a statement this week to mark the occasion.

"We will not give the Russian fascists a chance in 2022."

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What's the cost of damage to Ukraine's infrastructure amid Russia's invasion?


What's the cost of damage to Ukraine's infrastructure amid Russia's invasion?

MORGAN WINSOR
Mon, March 28, 2022

The cost of direct damage to Ukraine's infrastructure amid Russia's ongoing invasion has reached almost an estimated $63 billion, according to an analysis by the Kyiv School of Economics.

Shocking images and videos have emerged in recent weeks showing just some of the devastation across Ukraine since Russian forces attacked on Feb. 24. Where businesses, homes, hospitals, schools and other infrastructure once stood, there are now massive piles of unrecognizable rubble and crumbling shells of concrete.

PHOTO: A child walks in front of a damaged school in Zhytomyr, northern Ukraine, on March 23, 2022, amid Russia's invasion. (Fadel Senna/AFP via Getty Images)

The KSE Institute, an analytical unit of the Kyiv School of Economics in Ukraine's capital, has been collecting and analyzing data from the "Russia Will Pay" project, launched in collaboration with the Ukrainian president's office and the Ukrainian Ministry of Economy.


Through the resource, Ukrainian citizens, government officials and local authorities can confidentially submit reports on the loss of or damage to physical infrastructure across the country as a result of the war, including roads, residential buildings, businesses and other facilities. Analysts at the KSE Institute then assess those reported damages and estimate the financial value.

PHOTO: A man recovers items from a burning shop following a Russian attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine, March 25, 2022. (Felipe Dana/AP)

"It is aimed at collecting information about all the facilities destroyed as a result of the war that Russia waged against Ukraine," the KSE Institute said in a recent statement about the "Russia Will Pay" resource. "The Ukrainian government will use this data as evidence in international courts for Russia to compensate for the intended damages."

PHOTO: Local residents sit on a bench near a destroyed apartment building in the besieged southern port city of Mariupol, Ukraine on March 25, 2022. (Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters)

The latest analysis shows that, as of March 24, at least 4,431 residential buildings, 92 factories and warehouses, 378 institutions of secondary and higher education, 138 health care institutions, 12 airports, seven thermal power plants and hydroelectric power plants have been damaged, destroyed or seized in Ukraine since the start of the Russian invasion on Feb. 24 -- totaling an estimated $62,889,000. Compared to the previous estimate published on March 17, net growth amounted to $3.5 billion, according to the KSE Institute.

Meanwhile, Ukraine's overall economic losses due to the war -- taking into account both direct losses calculated from the project as well as indirect losses, like GDP decline -- range from $543 billion to $600 billion, according to an estimate by the KSE Institute and the Ukrainian Ministry of Economy.

PHOTO: A heavily damaged apartment building is pictured at a front line discrict of Kharkiv, Ukraine, on March 27, 2022, amid the Russian invasion. (Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images)

Before updating its calculations, the KSE Institute said it received "detailed data" from the Ukrainian Ministry of Infrastructure on the destruction of its facilities, which allowed analysts to clarify and, in some cases, reduce the assessment of losses.

The KSE Institute said it has improved the methodology of assessing losses from the destruction of residential real estate "based on the World Bank’s experience in analyzing losses in Syria and Iraq, as well as the recommendations of the leading Ukrainian investment company Dragon Capital."

"These calculations are based on the analysis of several thousands of public notifications from Ukrainian citizens, the government, local authorities about losses and damages throughout the country, as well as indirect assessment methods such as calculating the estimated area of the war-damaged property in the most affected cities," the KSE Institute said. "These estimates are not exhaustive: information on numerous damages and destruction may be missing due to the inability of citizens, local and state authorities to promptly record the damage in each city and town."

Disinformation Endangering Red Cross Work In Ukraine: ICRC

By Nina LARSON
03/29/22 

A massive disinformation campaign targeting the Red Cross as it provides aid in the Ukraine conflict is putting its staff at risk, the organisation said Tuesday.

The International Committee of the Red Cross also condemned "abhorrent and unacceptable" levels of violence being inflicted on civilians.

The ICRC said it had faced a barrage of accusations over its efforts to try to facilitate evacuations from embattled cities in Ukraine, and over its communications with both sides in the conflict.

"We are seeing deliberate, targeted attacks using false narratives, and disseminating this information to discredit the ICRC," spokesman Ewan Watson told journalists in Geneva.

Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, there had been "a huge flow of misinformation and disinformation that we see as deliberate, targeted and orchestrated across social media channels... and occasionally appearing in the mainstream media.

"This has the potential to cause real harm for our teams... on the ground and for the people we serve."

One accusation circulating on social media was that the Geneva-based body helped organise forced evacuations of Ukrainians from the besieged city of Mariupol to Russia.

Watson insisted that the ICRC "would never support any operation that would go against people's will and our principles".

Another claim was that the organisation was setting up an office in Rostov, southern Russia, to "filter Ukrainians", a charge Watson described as "absolutely false".

The ICRC acknowledged it was discussing opening an office in Rostov, but stressed that this was part of a "huge regional scale-up to deal with a massive humanitarian crisis".

Watson insisted that the neutral organisation was merely seeking to fulfil its mandate to support and help victims of conflict wherever they are.

The ICRC condemned 'abhorrent and unacceptable' levels of violence being inflicted on civilians Photo: AFP / Sergey BOBOK

"It is not doing any of the parties' bidding: it is fulfilling our role as the International Committee of the Red Cross to come to the assistance of victims," he said.

Watson stressed that "our neutrality and our impartial humanitarian action must be respected."

"Neutrality and impartiality are not abstract concepts or lofty principles," he argued.

ICRC's neutrality is what allows it "to reach, help and, in many cases, save the lives of civilians".

As the caretaker of the Geneva Conventions, the ICRC has been striving to make both sides aware of their obligations under international humanitarian law, he said. That includes the legal obligation to protect civilians and limit military strikes in civilian areas.

The organisation said it had made detailed proposals to ensure safe passage and evacuations from Mariupol, where an estimated 160,000 people are remain trapped with little food, water or medicine.

"The humanitarian crisis is deepening in Ukraine," Watson said.

"The level of death, disruption and suffering that we are witnessing being inflicted on civilians is abhorrent and unacceptable.

"Time is running out for civilians in Mariupol and in other frontline areas who have now gone for weeks with no humanitarian assistance."

Parties to the conflict are also obligated to inform the ICRC of any prisoners of war captured and to allow ICRC staff to visit them.

"We expect the parties to fulfil their obligations under the Geneva Conventions without further delay," said Watson.

FRANCE 24 in Ukraine: Russian bombardment turns frontline Kharkiv into ghost town

Ukrainian forces on Monday recaptured a small village on the outskirts of Ukraine's second-largest city Kharkiv, as Kyiv's forces mount counterattacks against a stalling Russian invasion. FRANCE 24's Catherine Norris Trent reports from Kharkiv, Ukraine.

 

 Amnesty International accuses Russia of war crimes in Ukraine

Amnesty International on Tuesday slammed "war crimes" in Ukraine, as the civilian toll continues to rise after Russia's invasion, likening the situation to the Syrian war.

Russian forces are abducting Ukrainians in occupied territories

Lara BULLENS

Ukrainian journalists, public officials, civil rights activists and even civilians who are vocal against the invasion of their country are being arbitrarily detained by Russian forces. The tactic is being used to instil fear in local communities, some say, with forced detentions lasting anywhere from a day to two weeks.
© Serhii Nuzhnenko, Reuters

It was an icy cold morning on March 23 when Russian forces knocked on Svetlana Zalizetskaya’s front door in Melitopol in southeast Ukraine. Hoping to find her inside, they came face to face with her elderly parents instead. “I wasn’t home at the time,” she told FRANCE 24. The three armed men searched the place, turning the house “upside down”, and took her 75-year-old father to an unknown location.

Zalizetskaya, the director of local newspaper Holovna Gazeta Melitopolya and news website RIA-Melitopol, had fled the city days earlier. “I was intimidated by Galina Danilchenko,” she said, referring to the pro-Russian acting mayor who replaced Ivan Fedorov, who was himself abducted on March 11 and eventually released in exchange for nine Russian conscripts.

“[Danilchenko] asked me to become a propagandist for Russia and to start reporting in support of the occupation. She tried to convince me by promising a great career in Moscow,” said Zalizetskaya, who refused the proposal and packed her things to leave the city for fear of reprisal. A few days later, she received a call and found that her father had been taken hostage.

“Their demand was clear: he would be returned if I gave myself in.” But Zalizetskaya turned down the Russian proposal once again, “so they demanded that I shut down RIA-Melitopol”.

On March 25, two days after her father’s abduction, Zalizetskaya posted on Facebook announcing the transfer of her news website to third parties “in exchange for evacuation” and "in territory controlled by Ukraine" who, according to her, "provide objective information". She is still sharing articles by RIA-Melitopol on her Facebook page and said that she did not personally consent to cooperation beyond the statement.

Her father was released later that day, relatively unscathed but deprived of the medicine he needed and badly shaken up by his abduction. Though Zalizetskaya was relieved, the anger she feels is palpable. “I regard such actions of the occupying forces as terrorism,” she said, adding that she is determined to continue working as a journalist to document the horrors Ukrainians face in Russian-occupied territories.

This wasn’t the first time a journalist or a relative had been detained by Russian forces in Ukraine. The UN’s monitoring mission on the ground, which is documenting abductions, found that 21 journalists and civil society activists have been arrested since Russia began its invasion on February 24. Family members are often kept in the dark on the whereabouts of their loved ones, without any idea of what is happening to them. Of the 21 captured, only nine have been “reportedly released”, according to the UN.

International nonprofit Reporters Without Borders also published a handful of alarming accounts regarding the detention, torture, intimidation and threats media workers in Ukraine are facing.

Consequences of speaking out


The UN says many perpetrators of abductions come from the Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia regions, home to self-proclaimed “republics” allied with the Russian Federation and pro-Russian armed groups. Cases have also been reported in parts of Kyiv, Kheron, Donetsk, Sumy and Chernihiv.

“It’s becoming increasingly dangerous for journalists and editors to stay in regions occupied by Russia,” Sergiy Tomilenko, president of Ukraine’s National Union of Journalists, told FRANCE 24. “They are isolated in these territories. They can’t leave.”

Local officials are also being targeted for detention. Abductions have also been alleged in northern cities including Nova Kakhovka, where the secretary of the city council has vanished, and in Bucha, where six local council members were detained and eventually released following a Russia raid, according to the BBC.

The UN found that 24 public officials and civil servants of local authorities had been detained in Russian-controlled regions. Thirteen have reportedly been released, but the location and status of the remaining 11 are unknown.

Political analyst Mattia Nelles, who is normally based in Kyiv but now lives in Germany, has been tracking abductions in the east and south of Ukraine. He said Russian forces will target “anyone who is actively speaking out against the occupation” and are especially quick to detain those calling for protests.

“I even heard of two cases in Kherson where people were randomly picked up at checkpoints after Russian forces searched their phones and found many pro-Ukrainian channels open on their Telegram [app],” he explained. “My friend who lives there says he never takes his phone with him when he goes outside now.”

‘You could be next’


Nelles, his Ukrainian wife and her parents managed to flee the country early on, though a large part of their family is still living in Svatove, a city in the Luhansk Oblast. On March 26, neighbours informed his uncle that Russian forces had come looking for him. “It was unclear why, but we assumed it was because he is an army veteran. He served as a medic in 2016 and 2018 for the Ukrainian army in Donbas.”

His uncle went into hiding, but Russian forces found him shortly after and detained him for interrogation. “It lasted three hours,” Nelles said. “And it turned out that they were looking for his son-in-law, who is an active army soldier and is also registered at my uncle’s house. Hence the mix-up.”

Nelles’ uncle was released and, despite being deeply distressed, was unharmed. Others, like the Ukrainian fixer for Radio France who was tortured for nine days, were not as lucky.

“There are varying degrees of severity when it comes to how [Russian occupiers] treat people,” Nelles explained. “I imagine that it’s a case-by-case situation. It depends on how much the person resists, how involved they are with the Ukrainian army, or how much of a problem they were for the occupying forces.”

It also depends on what Russian forces want to get out of their detainees. When speaking about the abduction of Zalizetskaya's father, Tomilenko explained that the case was a clear example of Russia trying to neutralise Ukrainian media by using a carrot-and-stick method. “First, they arrest local journalists and editors, [and] try to intimidate them into saying they support the occupation,” he said. If this fails, Russian forces “simply demand that they stop covering the news”.

The goal of the abductions is crystal clear. They are an effective means of instilling fear in local populations, making it easier for Russian forces to exert control. And for some, it seems to be working. Tomilenko hears of new abductions on a daily basis and has an increasing number of journalist colleagues afraid to leave their houses. “Two colleagues in Kherson haven’t gone outside in two weeks,” he said.

In an effort to clamp down, human rights organisations in Ukraine are putting together missing persons lists and campaigning to shed light on what is happening on the ground. Ukraine’s National Union of Journalists has also published guidelines for journalists and editors in occupied territories, urging them to refrain from posting anything on social media and to use pseudonyms if working as local correspondents for international or national media outlets.

But the sense of intimidation left behind by the abductions can be felt by even the most courageous souls. “The message being sent out is: ‘If you dare to speak out, you could be next’,” Nelles explained. “That is terrifying. Especially for those who hold any official position.”
Ukraine’s other fight: Growing food for itself and the world

By CARA ANNA and AYA BATRAWY

1 of 15
Maria Pavlovych weeps as she remembers her 25-year-old soldier son, Roman Pavlovych, who was killed near the besieged city of Mariupol, in his bedroom, in Hordynia village, western Ukraine, Friday, March 25, 2022. The Pavlovych family knows a second front line in Russia's war runs through the farmland here in western Ukraine, far from the daily resistance against the invasion. It is an uphill battle for farmers to feed not only their country but the world.
 (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)

HORDYNIA, Ukraine (AP) — Planting season has arrived in Ukraine. Boot marks stamped in the frozen earth have thawed. But the Pavlovych family’s fields remain untouched in a lonely landscape of checkpoints and churches.

Over a week ago, the family learned their 25-year-old soldier son, Roman, had been killed near the besieged city of Mariupol. On Tuesday, the father, also named Roman, will leave for the war himself.

“The front line is full of our best people. And now they are dying,” said the mother, Maria. In tears, she sat in her son’s bedroom in their warm brick home, his medals and photos spread before her.

The Pavlovych family knows a second front line in Russia’s war runs through the farmland here in western Ukraine, far from the daily resistance against the invasion. It is an uphill battle for farmers to feed not only their country but the world.

Ukraine and Russia account for a third of global wheat and barley exports, leaving millions across North Africa, the Middle East and parts of Asia facing the potential loss of access to the affordable supplies they need for bread and noodles. The war has raised the specter of food shortages and political instability in countries reliant on Ukrainian wheat, including Indonesia, Egypt, Yemen and Lebanon.

It is unclear how many farmers will be able to plant or tend to their harvests with the war raging, forcing those like Pavlovych to the front lines. And the challenges keep growing.

Infrastructure — from ports and roads to farm equipment — is snarled and damaged, meaning critical supplies like fuel are difficult to get and routes for export almost impossible to reach. Fertilizer producers are paralyzed by nearby fighting, and a prolonged winter may disrupt spring yields.

“How can we sow under the blows of Russian artillery? How can we sow when the enemy deliberately mines the fields, destroys fuel bases?” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a recent address. “We do not know what harvest we will have and whether we’ll be able to export.”

An airport not far from the Pavlovych home was bombed in the early days of the war, sending unexploded ordnance into nearby fields now planted with warning signs instead of corn.

The thudding sounds of efforts to safely dispose of the ordnance could be heard last week beside the younger Pavlovych’s flower-strewn grave.

There is no time to lose, even as families mourn. The northwestern Lviv region near the border with Poland, far from the heart of what is known as Ukraine’s breadbasket in the south, is being asked to plant all the available fields it can, said Ivan Kilgan, head of the regional agricultural association.

Still, the region won’t be able to reach its pre-war levels.

“We are expecting to produce more than 50 million tons of cereals. Previously, we produced more than 80 million tons. It’s logical. Less land, less harvest,” Kilgan said.

Standing in a frigid barn containing more than 1,000 tons of wheat and soy, Kilgan vowed to send tons of flour to feed Ukraine’s army. He’s planting 2,000 hectares (nearly 5,000 acres) this year, up from 1,200 hectares (around 3,000 acres).

And yet he’s short on fertilizer. For the extra production he plans, he needs more than double the 300 tons of fertilizer he has.

“If the world wants Ukrainian bread, it needs to help with this,” Kilgan said. In his office, he showed blueprints for more grain elevators and put them aside with frustration: “Now, these are just paper.”

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has urged the world to avert “a hurricane of hunger” from the disruption to Ukrainian grains, which the World Food Program relies on for about half of its wheat supplies.

Alternative wheat supplies will be more expensive and hit poor households elsewhere in the world, said Megan Konar, an associate professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign whose research focuses on the intersection of food, water and trade.

“Winter wheat is the biggest wheat crop in Ukraine and Russia, which was planted last fall and due to be harvested early this summer,” she said. “This crop would be impacted if people are not available to work in the fields to harvest.”

Corn, which is planted in the spring, also will be affected if fighting impedes farmers, she added.

That’s true of those whose fields have been mined or bombed in parts of the heavily hit southern and central key growing areas, said Tetyana Hetman, head of the agriculture department in the Lviv region.

“We have already been approached by farmers from other regions to find land plots that they can cultivate” in the Lviv region to try to ensure the country’s food security, she said.

Concerned about feeding its own people, Ukraine’s government has limited exports of oats, millet, buckwheat, sugar, salt, rye, cattle and meat. Under specific licensing, wheat, corn, chicken meat and eggs, and sunflower oil can be shipped.

Ukraine does have sufficient food reserves, deputy minister of agrarian policy and food Taras Vysotsky told local media.

He said Ukraine consumes 8 million tons of wheat per year and has about 6 million tons on hand. It also has a two-year supply of corn, a five-year supply of sunflower oil and enough sugar for 1½ years.

Many Ukrainians have more immediate worries than harvests, with their country at stake.

An estimated 500 residents have gone to war out of 14,500 in the largely agricultural villages in this part of the Lviv region, said Bogdan Yusviak, who leads the local territorial council.

In his village, Pavlovych was the first to die.

His parents don’t know how it happened. The first hint that something had gone terribly wrong was the arrival of their son’s belongings by mail. Thirty minutes later, someone called about his death, his mother said.

Roman loved farming, his parents said, the way he loved to take in stray animals. Even at the front, he would advise his parents on questions like whether to plant potatoes this year. He told his father, in training for battle, that he’d be more useful at home and in the fields.

Now, those fields lay empty. “We have no time,” his father said, his hands clasped before him.

Standing outside near the gate of their home, his mother looked up at the evergreen trees nearby.

“Those trees grew up with him,” Maria Pavlovych said of her son. Now, she said, she and his girlfriend go to the cemetery and take turns crying.

___

Aya Batrawy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

___

Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
Respect Your Cat Day might have origins in King Richard II's 1384 edict

Photo by laurenta_photography/Pixabay.com

March 28 (UPI) -- Respect Your Cat Day, celebrated annually on March 28, is a day of showing regard for one's feline companions, and the holiday might have had its origins in a 1384 edict from England's King Richard II.

The holiday -- not to be confused with Oct. 29's National Cat Day, Aug. 8's International Cat Day and July 10's National Kitten Day -- is a day for cat owners to revere their pets as they were once worshiped 4,000 years ago in ancient Egypt.


The origins of Respect Your Cat Day reportedly date back to March 28, 1384, when King Richard II of England issued an edict banning his subjects from eating cats.


Other holidays and observations for March 28 include National Hot Tub Day, National Triglycerides Day, National Black Forest Cake Day and Children's Picture Book Day.


Great Cat Massacre. ROBERT DARNTON, "THE GREAT CAT MASSACRE," HISTORY TODAY (AUGUST 1989). In the Paris of the 1730s a group of printing apprentices tortured and ritually killed all the cats they could find – including the pet of their master's wife. Why did this violent ritual cause them so much amusement?

Aug 8, 1984 — In Paris in the 1730s, a group of printing apprentices tortured and ritually killed all the cats they could find.
The Story and its Context: THE FUNNIEST THING that ever happened in the printing shop of Jacques. Vincent, according to a worker who.

PRIMATE

Endangered black lion tamarin born at Jersey Zoo



March 29 (UPI) -- An endangered, black lion tamarin named Grace was born at the Jersey Zoo in Jersey, which is fighting to keep the species from going extinct.

Grace arrived in December but needed to be hand-reared as she was too weak to hold onto her mother.

Grace was then taken care of by a team at the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust and will soon be re-integrated back into her family group.

The Jersey Zoo is the only location in the world where black lion tamarins can be found outside of the Atlantic Forest in Brazil. There is only roughly 1,000 black lion tamarins left remaining.

"Her mother is the only breeding female outside of Brazil, and now Grace too will play a very important part in the breeding program to help safeguard the future of her species," head of the mammal department Dominic Wormell told BBC.








Deer can transmit COVID-19 for five days after infection, study suggests

By HealthDay News

Researchers also found that the virus develops and replicates in the deer's respiratory tract, lymphoid tissues (including tonsils and several lymph nodes) and in the central nervous system. 
File Photo by Bill Greenblatt/UPI | License Photo

White-tailed deer can shed and transmit the COVID-19 virus for up to five days after they're infected, according to a study that also identified where the virus develops and replicates in deer.

Five days is "a relatively short window of time in which the infected animals are shedding and are able to transmit the virus," said co-author Dr. Diego Diel, director of the Cornell University Virology Laboratory in Ithaca, N.Y.

For the study, Diel and his team analyzed data from 2021 surveys of five U.S. states. Their findings were recently published in the journal PLOS Pathogens.

The researchers also found that the virus develops and replicates in the deer's respiratory tract, lymphoid tissues (including tonsils and several lymph nodes) and in the central nervous system.


"Virus replication in the upper respiratory tract -- especially the nasal turbinates [nose structures] -- is comparable with what is observed in humans and in other animals that are susceptible to the infection, and I think that's probably one of the reasons why the virus transmits so efficiently," Diel said in a university news release.

As with humans, the virus spreads between deer through nasal and oral secretions and aerosols, he said.

The findings add to ongoing research investigating whether deer are reservoirs of SARS-CoV-2 in nature. Last year, scientists identified a number of cases in which the virus was transmitted from people into deer in several states.


And more recent research reported that the spread of a virus from animals to people and back again is not unique to COVID-19 and has occurred at least 100 times.

Pinpointing tissues in deer where the virus replicates during infection could be important for hunters, according to Diel's team.

There is no evidence yet that people have caught COVID-19 from deer, but some experts are concerned hunters could get the virus from infected deer.

"Given the broad practice of deer hunting in the U.S., knowing the sites of virus replication is important to minimize the risks of exposure and transmission from these wild animals that could potentially transmit the virus back to humans," Diel said.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on animals and COVID-19.

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