Friday, May 03, 2024

 american dream eye dollar greed

Will The Golden Age For Corporate Shareholders Ever End? – OpEd


By 

Shareholders have assumed enormous influence over U.S. corporations over the last few decades. Despite their firm hold, shifts are underway that could alter the domestic corporate landscape.

Disney CEO Bob Iger officially fended off the attempt by institutional investor Nelson Peltz and his hedge fund Trian Partners to secure two board seats. During the affair, Disney faced pressure from proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services to support Peltz’s initiative. While Iger prevailed, the costliest board fight in history underscores the significant influence of shareholders in shaping the fates of corporations.


Historically, U.S. corporate power was concentrated among executives, though with varying degrees of influence held by workers and other stakeholders. However, over the last century, U.S. corporations increasingly oriented themselves around their stock price and the imperative to maximize shareholder value. This mindset has now firmly entrenched itself within U.S. corporate culture and continues to shape their decisions and priorities.

Until the early 20th century, shareholders wielded minimal influence over U.S. corporations, with notable changes instigated by industries such as railroad conglomerates. To sidestep antitrust accusations and manipulate competition, for example, railroad companies created “communities of interest” by buying shares in one another, frequently installing their financiers and bankers on targeted companies’ boards. However, increased antitrust enforcement from the Supreme Court discouraged these practices by 1912.

Investors remained undeterred. Throughout the 1920s Merger Wave, shareholders amassed large stakes in various companies, eroding the traditional influence of company founders, executives, families, as well as other stakeholders like employees, trade unions, suppliers, customers, and local communities. The momentum of the shareholder rights movement surged following the stock market crash in 1929, which prompted legislation aimed at increasing transparency granting shareholders increased authority and information access.

During World War II, U.S. industrial power was centralized under government control. This trend, however, waned after the conflict concluded, leading to a resurgence of privatization that benefited shareholders as control shifted away from government oversight. Despite initially dominating the post-WWII economic landscape, U.S. companies began encountering tougher competition from global rivals by the 1960s, hindering their growth.

During the 1970s, prioritizing stock price growth for shareholders gained traction. However, it was the 1980s when this mindset became institutionalized, with legal rulings such as Smith v. Van Gorkom, (1985) and Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews and Forbes Holding, Inc. (1986) affirming corporations’ duties to shareholders.


Amendments to corporate laws aimed to enhance shareholder rights, enabling actions like director nominations, and voting on executive pay. Executive stock rewards thus began to increase, incentivizing risk-taking for short-term gains. Additionally, the 1986 Tax Reform Law cut the individual top tax rate and fueled heightened interest in short-term stock trading.

The evolution of institutional investors also played a pivotal part in reshaping the financial landscape. The growing role of hedge funds, 401(k) pension plans managed through mutual funds, and the introduction of other major asset management firms like Vanguard and BlackRock began to herald a new era in the stock market and corporate governance.

In the decades up to the 1980s, corporate raiding had become increasingly common. However, regulatory changes during the 1980s lifted restrictions on mergers and acquisitions, leading to the peak of the U.S. corporate raiding era. During this time, riskier, higher-return bonds called “junk bonds” and leveraged buyouts involving a large amount of borrowed money to purchase a company evolved into crucial financial tools for funding corporate takeovers. Companies often targeted struggling companies or undervalued firms, acquiring them with the intention of privatizing operations, slashing costs, divesting assets, and eventually reintroducing them to the public market.

In response to these attempts, entrenched corporate management networks implemented defensive strategies. They issued new shares to existing shareholders as poison pills, diluting the ownership stake of prospective buyers. Dual-class share structures allowed company insiders to maintain their control even with a minority of shares. Staggered boards meanwhile divided boards into different classes to make it difficult for outside entities to gain control. However, many still found themselves compelled to yield to the demands of institutional investors.

While corporate raiding declined in the early 1990s, the concept of stock prices as the primary measure of a company’s performance, thereby ensuring shareholder loyalty, was established. With more individuals and pension funds investing in the stock market, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average becoming an even more important economic indicator, increasing shareholder value had become the prevailing corporate imperative by the close of the 20th century.

Criticism of the shareholder value system and its repercussions, such as job outsourcing and soaring CEO pay, continued into the 2000s and remains widespread. Boeing’s diversion of pandemic relief funds for stock buybackshighlights the issue of prioritizing immediate shareholder gains over long-term stability and growth.

Boeing’s actions, though legal due to a 1982 SEC ruling that legitimized buybacks, received public criticism without significant consequences. Nevertheless, Boeing’s ongoing troubles with the safety of its planes have been exacerbated by the lack of investment. Several incidents have led to a notable decline in its share price over the last few months, erasing the benefits achieved through short-termism policies.

The evolution of corporate culture toward shareholders has occurred globally but to a lesser extent in other capitalist countries. In South Korea and Japan, stakeholder consensus among customers, suppliers, and the community remains more prominent. Long-term relationships are common with employees and suppliers, facilitating trust and collaboration throughout the supply chain, though efforts to increase the influence of shareholders are ongoing.

Many European firms have traditionally been characterized by high levels of ownership by founding families and governments. While this has slowly changed, there remains a culture of “codetermination” in Germany and other European Union (EU) countries. This model grants greater rights to employees in the decision-making process, with a focus on stability and job preservation, and returned after Germany pursued more shareholder-friendly policies during the 1990s.

In contrast, the UK shares a corporate structure more akin to that of the U.S., and it remains Europe’s financial powerhouse even after Brexit. However, the UK only has 15 companies in the top 100 companies, compared to 27 for Germany, 31 for France, and 40 for Japan in 2023. China’s state-owned enterprises have meanwhile claimed the top spot from the U.S.

Nonetheless, advocates of U.S. corporate structure highlight the flexibility and adaptiveness of U.S. companies compared to European and Asian firms, which are often viewed as less innovative. Additionally, they contend that this system has contributed to higher GDP growth than other developed countries, while several EU states maintain high unemployment rates. It is also argued that U.S. companies have navigated recent challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine better.

U.S. companies have of course benefited from various factors such as the size of the domestic market, geopolitical influence, and status of the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency, attracting global investment. However, they have become enamored by short-termism driven by investors. By 2020, the average holding period of shares on the New York Stock Exchange had shrunk to roughly five months, compared to an average of eight years in the late 1950s. Shareholders can easily sell their shares without sacrificing any assets in the company, hindering long-term strategic planning.

Frustration with the persistent dominance of shareholders in the U.S. corporate world has prompted efforts to diminish their influence in recent years. In 2018, Democratic senators proposed the Reward Work Act and the Accountable Capitalism Act, which would require large companies to allocate 33 to 40 percent of board seats to worker-elected representatives. These proposals mirror the German concept of board-level codetermination, adopted in the post-WWII era and now popular in many European countries.

Some contend that the German-style codetermination model is a poor fit for U.S. corporations. Moreover, codetermination initiatives have primarily focused on facilitating discussions between workers and employers on immediate conditions, serving as a supplement to existing union representation and collective bargaining structures rather than radically strengthening worker influence.

One advantage is the flexibility granted by U.S. state law, enabling states to experiment with their own rules. On April 19, 2024, the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, voted to unionize after two failed attempts in 2014 and 2019. The decision not only brings representation to Volkswagen workers in the U.S. but also represents the first successful unionization effort at a non-Big Three (General Motors, Stellantis, and Ford Motor Company) auto plant in the South. And since the first unionization push in New York in 2021, 41 states now have at least one unionized Starbucks, reminiscent of a century ago when labor movements gained significant momentum.

Policy recommendations have also emerged. Corporate Social Responsibility emerged originally in the mid-20th century but then reemerged by the turn of the millennium. Environmental, Social, and Governance considerations then emerged by the 2010s, alongside Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives. At a 2019 American Business Roundtable resolution, 196 CEOs advocated for a change in business culture and to commit CEOs to “meeting the needs of all stakeholders.”

Despite increasing calls for corporate accountability, these endeavors often lacked enforceability. DEI initiatives in particular have become embroiled in political controversies, leading to companies backtracking on their commitments. Shell meanwhile faced pressure from activist shareholders in 2021 regarding its contributions to climate change, including from its largest institutional investors, Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street. But as economic considerations took precedence, minimal pressure was put on Shell, resulting in negligible advancements in climate change initiatives.

Nonetheless, just as the rise of communication networks in the 20th century allowed investors to gain influence over corporations, the rise of the internet and social media has equipped stakeholders and grassroots activists with their own tools. Public pressure to raise the minimum wage has resulted in dozens of cities and counties increasing their minimum wage in recent years and compelled companies like McDonald’s to stop lobbying against it. The GameStop stock saga of early 2021 meanwhile demonstrated how retail investors, fueled by social media hype, drove the company’s stock price upward, threatening institutional investors by disrupting established market dynamics.

Institutional investors like Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street, which all own major shares in one another, have helped lead to an immense concentration of corporate ownership. Failing to reduce their dominance, and shareholders in general, could inspire further reforms. Limited Liability Companies emerged partly in response to this dominance, with the first one established in Wyoming in 1977. Meanwhile, large companies like OpenAI and Stripe are opting to remain private, further reducing the power of shareholders.

Additionally, worker cooperatives, businesses owned and operated by employees who share in decision-making and profits, have experiencedrenewed interest in the U.S. Despite waning popularity after their initial risein the 19th century, they began to rebound in the 1970s and 1980s. The founding of the United Stated Federation of Worker Cooperatives in 2004 has since helped expand the number of worker cooperatives in the country.

Benefit corporations, for-profit companies that prioritize both their societal and environmental impacts, have also seen significant growth in recent years. Maryland became the first U.S. state to enact laws providing for public benefit corporations in 2010, and has since been joined by 36 other states and Washington, D.C.

The corporate era preceding the current one characterized by shareholder dominance was far from ideal. However, to foster a more equitable corporate landscape, public support for political initiatives that challenge the status quo and multi-stakeholder-focused business initiatives will be crucial to reducing the influence of shareholders. This may lead to major upheavals in pension systems and 401(k) plans invested in the stock market, yet it holds the potential to greatly improve worker rights, inspire long-term strategic planning, and promote a more equal distribution of corporate profits.


Titan sub might have imploded from ‘micro-buckling,’ new study suggests

Katherine Donlevy
May 2, 2024
NY POST

The mystery of the Titan submersible implosion may soon be solved.

The five people who perished aboard the OceanGate vessel as it plunged thousands of feet below sea level could have been victims of “micro-buckling,” a new study suggests.

Small imperfections in the thin-walled structure may have become more damaged with every trip the vessel took to visit the Titanic’s final resting place until it finally gave way to the immense pressure of the ocean on the doomed June 18, 2023 trip, researchers from the University of Houston theorized.
The Titan sub imploded during a June 2023 voyage to the Titanic’s final resting place.Becky Kagan Schott / OceanGate Expeditions

In a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences earlier this month, the experts examined how the “slenderness” of a hemispherical shell with random imperfections — much like the submersible itself — is extra susceptible to a buckling-induced collapse.

“Buckling in the simplest explanation: you take a long spaghetti and you push on it with two fingers. What’s going to happen? It’s going to buckle essentially, it’s going to snap,” Roberto Ballarini, one of the paper’s authors and the university’s department chair of Civil and Environmental Engineering, told The Post.

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“That’s what buckling is. It’s when you compress something and it deforms by a significant amount because it’s an instability.”

Ballarini emphasized that the study did not directly examine whether micro-buckling contributed to the Titan failure, but studied vessels of similar shape and material.
Five people were killed in the tragedy, which garnered nationwide attention.NTSB

There are still several other potential causes for the disaster — including issues with the hull’s carbon fiber composite material — but the buckling effect could be one.

Much like a car or a plane, the spherical shell of the submersible was designed to carry large loads, but small imperfections — even those invisible to the eye — provide a weak point for pressure to congregate, ultimately collapsing the thin walls of the vessel.

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Eerie ‘knocking’ sounds from Titan sub that gave rescuers hope heard in new audio


The Titan submersible had made more than 50 dives without any issues before its infamous implosion — but each trip may have caused more damage to the hull until it ultimately lost its integrity.

The possibility that the hull — made of carbon fiber composite — had degraded in some way is something for experts to consider, Ballarini told The Post.

The University of Houston team used computer simulations to determine the Titan’s susceptibility to micro-buckling based on its shape.

Although the simulations did not analyze whether micro-buckling caused the Titan implosion, the research may reveal what caused the disaster.
The cause of the Titan disaster is still under investigation, but micro-buckling could be one solution.YouTube @DALLMYD

The buckling may have begun at the point of the most severe imperfection, but since the flaws are randomly distributed around the shell of a vessel like the Titan, it’s still impossible to know where the failure might have occurred.

“This randomness has profound implications for the statistics of the critical buckling pressure of the shell,” said Ballarini.

Ballarini teased that his team might do a separate investigation into the cause of the Titan failure.
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What do you think? Post a comment.

OceanGate CEO and Titan pilot Stockton Rush, 61, French Titanic expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet, 77, British billionaire Hamish Harding, 58, prominent Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood, 48, and his 19-year-old son, Sulaiman Dawood were killed in the tragedy.

Officials are still investigating the evidence recovered from the sub wreckage.

TPP

Legal Advice Sought Over Canadian Backflip On Dairy Trade

Trade Minister, Todd McClay, has slammed Canada’s refusal to comply in full with a CPTPP trade dispute ruling over dairy trade as “cynical” and says New Zealand has no intention of backing down.

Mr McClay said he has asked for urgent legal advice in respect of the Government’s “next move” and says the Canadian Government still has time to honour its obligations to New Zealand both in the spirit and substance of the agreement.

New Zealand initiated the dispute because Canada was not complying with Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) rules, blocking dairy exporters’ access to its market, the Minister said.

A CPTPP arbitration panel ruled decisively in New Zealand’s favour. Canada had until 1 May to change how it administered its tariff rate quotas – to stop giving its own domestic industry priority access, and to allow exporters to benefit fully from the market access negotiated in good faith between Canada and New Zealand.

“The changes Canada has published today do not comply with the ruling. Canada’s ongoing failure to meet its legal commitments is disappointing, but we have no intention of giving in on this. We back our exporters and we will defend hard-won free trade agreement commitments,” Mr McClay says.

“New Zealand’s prosperity depends on international trade, making up 60% of the country’s total economic activity. It is only through a strong economy that we can reduce the cost of living and afford the public services Kiwis deserve."

“We continue to engage in good faith throughout this process and I’ve asked officials to provide advice on next steps. I will be making an announcement on that in due course.

“New Zealand supports trade rules and takes seriously its obligations to trade partners. We expect others to show us the same courtesy,” he said.

Government of Canada urged to take action on transnational repression of Hong Kongers in Canada

Today, Hong Kong Watch published a new briefing on the safety of Hong Kongers in Canada in the face of transnational repression and foreign interference.

This briefing warns about new threats expected to be faced by Hong Kongers with the passing of the new Safeguarding National Security Bill under Article 23 of the Basic Law of Hong Kong. It also includes case studies of transnational repression experienced by the diaspora in Canada, and recommendations for the Government and parliamentarians.

This briefing was presented to Canadian Parliamentarians in an online briefing session today. Among those in attendance were the offices of Senator Leo Housakos, Jean Yip MP, Tom Kmiec MP, Stéphane Bergeron MP, Jenny Kwan MP, and Greg McLean MP.

Hong Kong Watch’s key recommendations for the Government of Canada and Parliamentarians are as follows:

Condemn Hong Kong’s Article 23 legislation and clearly state that the extraterritorial provisions of the law will not be applied in Canada, and any attempts to do so will be duly prosecuted according to domestic law;


Create an interdepartmental agency to combat transnational repression;


Establish a foreign agent registry;


Relevant committees undertake a study on transnational repression in Canada; and


Establish a reporting hotline in Cantonese for Hong Kongers facing transnational repression in Canada.

The full briefing can be read here.

Katherine Leung, Hong Kong Watch’s Policy Advisor for Canada, commenting on the briefing, said:

“With the passage of new security legislation under Article 23 in Hong Kong and its extraterritorial implications, it is increasingly important for the Government of Canada to take seriously the issue of transnational repression faced by the Hong Kong community in this country. The rights and freedoms that Hong Kongers came to Canada for are under threat.

We urge the Government to implement a strong framework to protect Hong Kongers who now reside in Canada from transnational repression and foreign interference, ensuring that the long reach of Beijing cannot harm those who are now on Canadian soil for exercising their rights and freedoms.”

香港監察就在加港人安全發表簡報 促請加國政府採取行動應對跨國鎮壓

今天,香港監察就香港人在加拿大面對跨國鎮壓和外國干預時的安全問題發表新簡報。

香港當局最近通過根據《基本法》第23條所制訂的《維護國家安全條例》(俗稱23條),這份簡報就香港人在新法下料將面臨的新威脅作警告。此外,簡報載有加拿大離散社群所經歷的跨國鎮壓個案研究,以及給加拿大政府和國會議員的建議。

香港監察在今天舉行的網上簡報會上,向加拿大國會議員匯報這份簡報。與會者包括參議員Senator Leo Housakos、國會議員Jean Yip MP、Tom Kmiec MP、Stéphane Bergeron MP、Jenny Kwan MP、Greg McLean MP或其辦事處代表。

香港監察向加拿大政府和國會議員提出的主要建議如下:

譴責香港23條立法,並明確表示23條的域外條文不適用於加拿大,任何企圖這樣做的行為均將根據國內法律受到適當起訴;


成立跨部門機構打擊跨國鎮壓;


設立外國代理人登記處;


相關委員會就加拿大發生的跨國鎮壓展開研究;及


為在加拿大面對跨國鎮壓的香港人設立廣東話舉報熱線。

請在此處閱讀簡報全文。

香港監察加拿大政策顧問Katherine Leung表示:

「有見香港根據23條通過新國安法及其潛在域外影響,加拿大政府愈須認真對待香港社區面對的跨國鎮壓問題。香港人赴加所尋求的權利和自由現正受到威脅。

我們促請政府制訂穩固的框架,保護現居加拿大的香港人免受跨國鎮壓和外國干預,確保北京的長臂不會危害現時在加拿大國土上行使權利和自由的人。」


Bishop of Bondo, western Kenya: Lack of care for creation led to flooding

byREBECCA PAVELEY
03 MAY 2024

A family use a canoe after fleeing floodwaters in their village, Ombaka, near Kisumu, Kenya, in the middle of last month



A BISHOP in Kenya has blamed the torrential floods that have killed hundreds in East Africa on a lack of care for creation.

The Assistant Bishop of Bondo, western Kenya, Dr Emily Awino Onyango, said: “We have not cared for creation, and these are the effects. One of the biggest problems . . . is cutting down trees and the people settling on the banks of lakes and rivers. We all know that should not be allowed. As Christians, I think we need to come back urgently to the care of the creation.”

Kenya has been particularly badly affected, but torrential rain has also killed many and left thousands homeless in Tanzania and Burundi.

In central Kenya, many are still missing after flash flooding and mudslides last week swept people away as they slept in their homes. Survivors described an onslaught of water washing away houses and cars. Farmland has been submerged and livestock drowned. The President, William Ruto, has ordered the evacuation of areas at risk of further flooding, as the rain continues.

The rainy season has been much heavier than normal in the region, and comes in the wake of a prolonged drought described as the most severe in four decades.

The poorest were most affected, Dr Onyango said: residents of shanty towns saw homes and family swept away. “The people who do not have anything are most affected. Even if you give them food and blankets, that cannot replace homes.”

She called on the government to do more to prevent people settling in flood plains.

In Nairobi, the home of Tearfund’s operations lead for Southern and East Africa, Elizabeth Myendo, has been flooded. “Apart from feeling the fear of drowning in my own home, I am better off than most people,” she said. “The water flooded my house for two days, but at least we’ve now managed to drill a pathway for the water so that it goes outside now.

“People who were already living in much more difficult conditions are really badly affected, and many have lost everything. My church community is gathering resources to support those who were living in informal settlements, providing clothes, blankets, and the everyday basics.

“These floods follow ten years of drought; so the ground was hard, making heavy rain more dangerous. Even for an El Niño year, the rainfall has been triple what you would have anticipated. The flooding is much much worse than we’ve experienced before. It’s shocking how widespread across the country they are, affecting both urban and rural communities. We are really feeling the impact of climate change, and our work equipping the Church to be ready to respond in these times of crisis feels more necessary than ever.”

Religious leaders in Kenya issued a statement mourning the devastation caused by flooding, saying that places of worship were open for sanctuary, and worshippers were being mobilised to support those affected. The lives and livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of Kenyans has been affected, the statement said.
UN global plastics treaty in sight

byREBECCA PAVELEY
03 MAY 2024
A protest march in Ottawa, Canada, last week

NEGOTIATIONS for a global plastics treaty were said to be on a “knife edge”, as the penultimate round of talks at the United Nations ended in Ottawa this week.

Delegates have made a commitment to working together on remaining issues in the run-up to the final round of talks in November, in South Korea.

Tearfund, which is campaigning for a global treaty (News, 19 April), sent a delegation to the conference, including representatives from communities most affected by plastic pollution.

Richard Gower, who co-leads Tearfund’s policy and advocacy work on plastics and waste, said: “An ambitious and effective treaty is still possible, but negotiations are on a knife edge: time is short, and strong opposition remains from the petrochemicals industry and states connected with it, even as their products pile up on street corners and in water courses around the world.

“The global plastics crisis demands a strong treaty, and negotiators owe affected communities every effort to deliver it. This will require commitment and creativity, as negotiations continue before the final meeting in Busan, South Korea.”

The 66 nations, calling themselves the High Ambition Coalition — which includes the EU and the UK — are pushing for bold limits on plastic production, but the United States and other oil-producing nations, including Russia and Saudi Arabia, are resisting the inclusion of production controls in any treaty.

Among the thousands of delegates who attended the Ottawa conference were many lobbyists for the fuel and chemical industries.

A global plastics treaty would be the most significant deal relating to emissions and environmental protection since the 2015 Paris Agreement, activists said.
Patriarch Kirill accuses Ukrainians of religious persecution

byJONATHAN LUXMOORE
03 MAY 2024


Palm Sunday, which fell last weekend in the Orthodox calendar, was celebrated in Kyiv, Ukraine

PATRIARCH Kirill of Moscow has urged Orthodox leaders abroad to help prevent a projected Ukrainian ban on religious communities linked with Russia, as Christians in both countries prepared to celebrate Easter (according to the Julian calendar) against a backdrop of missile strikes and front-line fighting.

“The ever-increasing pressure on the Ukrainian Orthodox Church [UOC] has acquired the character of open religious persecution, forcing me to turn to you again for support,” Patriarch Kirill said in the weekend letter, which was also sent to the Pope and the Archbishop of Canterbury, as well as officials at the United Nations and Council of Europe.

“It is acquiring the features of total anti-religious terror — closure of churches and monasteries, illegal persecution of clergy and laity, and extra-judicial killings, as well as suppression of information sources revealing the truth.”

The Patriarch sent the appeal as Ukrainian parliamentarians prepared to renew debate on a long-planned law banning Moscow-affiliated church groups in their country.

In his latest clampdown on Russian Orthodox dissent, Patriarch Kirill also issued a decree unfrocking the Revd Dimitry Safronov, a Moscow priest, for conducting a brief memorial service in March for the deceased opposition leader, Alexei Navalny.

The Patriarch said that the Ukrainian security service, the SBU, had made several arrests during recent searches of premises belonging to the Moscow-linked UOC, in a series of “punitive measures” designed to “suppress any public testimony about religious persecution”.



















In a Russian Orthodox Palm Sunday sermon, however, the Primate of the independent Ukrainian Orthodox Church (OCU), Metropolitan Epiphany (Dumenko), said that his countrymen should feel confident that Christ would free them from suffering, and preserve their culture and identity against Moscow’s campaign of “conquest and assimilation”.

“Far from respecting the sanctity of fasting, this enemy desecrates our holy days with bloodshed, as the Russian aggressors sow death across our land,” the Metropolitan told a Kyiv congregation.

“But we believe the evil will be overcome, and the Kremlin tyranny fall ingloriously like so many tyrannies before. Truth will triumph, and a just peace be established by the power of Christ the Saviour.”

The exchanges took place as efforts were made to secure Christian sites and gatherings against attack this weekend, after the Russian government’s rejection of an Easter ceasefire was echoed by Vakhtang Kipshidze, from the Moscow Patriarchate’s Synodal Department, who told Russian media that a temporary truce would “fuel misunderstandings”.


















Fresh civilian deaths and injuries were reported during missile strikes against Kharkiv and Odesa, amid continued warnings of a large-scale Russian summer offensive to take advantage of faltering Ukrainian defences.

As the revised Draft Law 8371, banning religious organisations “affiliated with the centres of influence in a country carrying out aggression against Ukraine”, neared its Second Reading in the Ukrainian parliament, the abbot of the UOC’s Sviatohirsk monastery, near Donetsk, Metropolitan Arseny (Yakovenko), was arrested during a raid by the security services last week for allegedly assisting Russian occupiers.

Ukraine’s Religious Information Service said that another UOC Metropolitan, Ionafan (Yeletsky), who is appealing against a five-year sentence imposed on similar charges last August (News, 11 August 2023), had asked to be put on a list of possible POW exchanges with Russia.




A leader of the Union of Baptist Churches, Pastor Anatoly Kushnirchuk, said on Tuesday that he had signed a co-operation agreement with a charity in the United States which provides prosthetics and rehabilitation for amputees, and reminded Ukrainians to treat the mounting number of adult and child victims as “fully fledged and respected members of society”.

The Primate of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, appealed on Monday for a pre-Easter exchange of prisoners and detainees, prioritising women, medical workers, and clergy, and put the number of Ukrainians held by Russian forces at 9600.


Wildfires rage in Russia's Far East due to dry, hot weather

Authorities declare emergency situation in Khabarovssk region

Elena Teslova |03.05.2024 -


MOSCOW

Wildfires are quickly spreading in Russia's Far East due to dry and hot weather, with several dozens of fires registered on the territory of almost 65,000 hectares.

An emergency situation was declared on Thursday in the Khabarovsk region due to the worsening situation.

The area of wildfires increased by 17,000 hectares over the past day and exceeded 47,000 hectares, the regional administration said on Telegram.

At least 14 wildfires are raging the Khabarovsk forests, the statement said, adding that over the past day 11 fires were extinguished.

The Emergency Situations Ministry reported tense situation in six more Russian regions -- Zabaikalsk, Krasnoyarsk, Sverdlovsk and Amur regions, the Jewish Autonomous Region, and Buryatia. More than 19 wildfires engulfed some 17,000 hectares of forests in these regions, the ministry said.
PUTIN'S FASCIST YOUTH BRIGADES

New militant youth organisation opens center in Murmansk

May 2, 2024 The Independent Barents Observer

Regional government ministers and representatives of the Northern Fleet on the 16th of April took part in the official opening of the military training center run by VOIN (“Soldier”) in Murmansk.

The center is the 13th of its kind in Russia.

Its opening was announced in September 2023 by Director of VOIN (“Fighter”) Nikolai Yazynin.

The region of Murmansk has major importance for the Arctic and all of Russia, he explained.

“This is where the Northern Fleet is based. Under the northern light of the Arctic we will together with the regional government of Murmansk join forces in the education of a young generation of patriots,” Yazynin underlined.

The VOIN was established on an initiative from top Kremlin official Sergei Kirienko and developed in cooperation with Chechen hardliner Daniil Martynov. The first 12 centres opened in 2023.

Leader of the Murmansk center is Aleksei Chufyryev, the 49 year old man that until recently headed the local militant youth group Vympel – Polyarnye Volki (“Pennant – Polar Wolfs”).

“This is a new page in my life,” Chufyryev says in a comment on his VK social media page.

Aleksei Chufyryev has won high-level recognition for his efforts to militarise local children and youth. In December 2023, he was awarded a signed Letter of Gratitude by Vladimir Putin. The Vympel – Polyarnye Volki will from now on be headed by Chufyryev’s son Andrei.

It is believed that many of the teachers and trainers at the VOIN centres have undergone training at the Spetsnaz University in Chechnya. The VOIN center in Chechnya is among the most active in the organisation. It is located in the premises of the Spetsnaz University.

Valentin Kovtun (left) and Dmitry Ivanov are among the instructors of the new VOIN center in Murmansk. Photo: vk.com/crvsp51

In September 2023, Russian Ombudswoman for Children Maria Lvova-Belova paid a visit to the Chechen center. In a video, she is seen testing weapons and praising the Chechen military training.

The VOIN centres first of all train teenage boys in the age 14-18 for service in the Armed Forces. Secondly, they train reservist men aged 18-35 for combat in the war of aggression against Ukraine.

At the opening ceremony of the center in Murmansk were Deputy Governor Yelena Dyagileva, regional Minister of Sports Svetlana Naumova, as well as Deputy Commander of the Northern Fleet Yuri Tripolsky.

They reportedly all expressed words of gratitude to the leaders, instructors and young men at the center.