Tag: World War II

  • 95-year-old Chinese Aids whistleblower passes away in exile

    95-year-old Chinese Aids whistleblower passes away in exile

    Gao Yaojie, a famous doctor who spoke out about the Aids outbreak in rural China, has passed away at the age of 95.

    Dr Gao died in New York from natural causes. She had been living in exile there since 2009, according to a friend who spoke with the BBC.

    She found out that businesses selling blood caused HIV to spread in rural areas.

    She was a leader in fighting against Aids in China and traveled around the country to help sick people, sometimes using her own money.

    She was born in Shandong province in 1927. Her family had to run away to the central Henan province during World War II.

    She was a doctor for women’s health and met her first Aids patient in Henan province in 1996.

    A Chinese activist who was sent away from his country feels sad about his old life.

    In the 1980s and 1990s, many people in rural areas like Henan would sell their blood. Farming communities didn’t have many job choices, so they often sold their blood to make money. The government sometimes supported this. However, because only a small number of people in rural China were found to have HIV, and most people didn’t know much about Aids, blood from HIV+ patients was also collected, which caused the disease to spread.

    At the time, Chinese officials believed that HIV was spread through sex or from a mother to her baby during pregnancy. Gao had a sudden realization when she found out that one of her patients had a history of receiving a blood transfusion and didn’t fit into either category.

    She is called “Grandma Gao” and she went to Henan villages to look at how many people have Aids. It is said that she visited over 100 villages affected by AIDS and met with over 1,000 families. She would often give food, clothes, and printed resources about AIDS to people, usually using her own money.

    In the beginning, Henan officials hid the fact that people were selling their blood, but later on they closed down the businesses in the mid-1990s. However,Gao continued to talk about how HIV is spreading in the country.

    “It is larger. ” It’s all across the country, in all places. I have personally seen everything. Selling blood is against the law. In the old days, it was open for everyone to see. “In 2010, she talked to the BBC and said it’s now underground. ”

    DrGao said that 10 million people in China have HIV, which is a lot more than the 740,000 people the government says have it. But official disagreed about this.

    Although she wasn’t the first Chinese doctor to talk about the AIDS epidemic, she was the one who made people in the country and around the world aware of the situation.

    would clarify it with. Gao could not get the Henan government to notice AIDS spreading from blood stations. Instead, she told a New York Times reporter. Professor Nathan at Columbia University assisted her in moving to New York. The Henan blood-sales Aids epidemic was in the news and it became a big problem. This made the Chinese government take action.

    This made more news outlets talk about Dr. Gao’s discoveries in the early 2000s. She got many awards from her own country and from other countries too.

    At first, the Chinese government was easy on her. CCTV, China’s main TV station, praised her in 2003 for being a person who influenced China. They said she had a lot of knowledge and good thinking that helped people feel less afraid and prejudiced. They also said she had a motherly love and gave a lot of herself to help people who were vulnerable.

    Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that Dr. Gao is one of the bravest people she knows.

    But the Henan authorities started to feel uneasy with her complaints about government officials. She moved away from China in 2009 because the government was watching her and putting more and more pressure on her.

    She went to live in New York and stayed there until she passed away. Her husband Guo Mingjiu passed away in 2006. She has two daughters and a son who are still alive.

    Even though people admire Dr. Gao for being a doctor, she has no relationship with her children.

    Shiyu Lin wrote that Gao Yaojie’s oldest daughter said their mom helped others but made their family fall apart.

    “MsLin remembered when Grandma Gao told her that she was a good doctor, but not a good mother. ”

    Even though she was away from China for a long time, some Chinese people on the internet are sad about her death.

    She was an important person. “But nowadays, young people may not know about that history,” said someone on Weibo.

    “Our generation of people who work in news or read news know about her and remember her. ” Chinese journalist Li Weiao said on Weibo that the news reminded him of other Chinese doctors like Jiang Yanyong and Li Wenliang, who spoke out about the Sars outbreak and Covid pandemic.

  • Kofi Bentil, never again!

    Kofi Bentil, never again!

    In 1945, as the world began to emerge from the devastating aftermath of World War II, and the horrors of the Holocaust became painfully clear, humanity united with one voice, declaring, “Never again.”

    Never again would the civilized world subject itself to the horrors of war. With this haunting historical backdrop in mind, I invite readers to critically evaluate a recent statement by Kofi Bentil, the Vice President of Imani Ghana, a think-tank. This week, they suggested that Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia is a better choice than John Dramani Mahama.

    Initially, I dismissed this statement as nonsensical, but upon further reflection, I feel compelled to offer this cautionary response. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.

    In a manner reminiscent of the atrocities committed by the Nazis in 1945 Europe, the current administration led by Nana Akufo-Addo and Bawumia has brought our once-proud nation to its knees. This inept leadership duo has shattered our national pride and extinguished our hope, akin to being slammed on solid concrete ground. It is within this grim reality that Kofi Bentil asks us to believe in Bawumia’s leadership abilities.

    Reflecting on 2012, the same political strategists operating under the guise of think-tanks persuaded millions of Ghanaians, myself included, that Nana Addo and his economic whiz-kid, Bawumia, would lead us to political and economic prosperity. Regrettably, we find ourselves in the depths of economic despair, with no legacy to show for their time in power. In my assessment, Bawumia is an abject failure in every imaginable aspect of leadership.

    Upon deeper contemplation, I’ve come to realize that both the President and his Vice are afflicted by what political scientists term the “Hubris Syndrome,” characterized by a severe disconnect from reality. Bawumia was chosen as a running mate on the basis of his presumed economic expertise, yet there is not a single Ghanaian, except those benefiting from the current chaos, who views our present economic situation as normal, let alone a success.

    Our economy has deteriorated, and our national prospects are shrouded in perpetual gloom. The legacy of the Akufo-Addo-Bawumia administration is symbolized by the massive galamsey pit in the Ridge area. This neighborhood reflects the stark contrast between 2016 and the present. His election as the NPP’s flagbearer is in a nutshell their cue to dismissal.

    To Kofi Bentil, we were deceived seven years ago by your eloquent words, but rest assured, as the world declared in 1945, we, in Ghana, also declare that we will not be duped into buying Bawumia as a product again. We’ve learned from our mistakes.

    In Twi, we say, “Ya soa nsuo asua nsa,” which means we know the difference between water and alcohol. In conclusion, I propose to Kofi Bentil that they spare our nation and consider appointing Bawumia as the President of Imani, their think-tank. Perhaps he can excel there by giving speeches and embarking on lecture tours.

    Danke.

  • Caroline Kennedy reenacts the epic World War II swim of her father, JFK

    Caroline Kennedy reenacts the epic World War II swim of her father, JFK

    Future US President John F. Kennedy, then a lieutenant in the US Navy, bravely swam between Pacific islands eighty years ago to save the crew of his torpedo boat, which had been sunk by a Japanese battleship during World War II.

    Kennedy’s bravery as the PT-109 commander helped lay the groundwork for a military and leadership career that would help him become the 35th president of the United States in 1960.

    His daughter Caroline Kennedy, who is currently the US ambassador to Australia, replicated part of her father’s accomplishment on Wednesday by swimming between two tiny palm-fringed islets in the Solomon Islands for around 30 minutes.

    In a tweet on the US Embassy’s Twitter account, formerly known as X, the ambassador wrote, “It gave me a renewed appreciation of the heroism of my father and his crew.”

    Kennedy, 65, completed the swim alongside her son, Jack Schlossberg, the late president’s grandson.

    “I have a lot of appreciation and admiration for what my grandfather did, and the perseverance it must have taken to survive,” Schlossberg wrote on Twitter.

    In the early hours of August 1, 1943, a Japanese Imperial Navy destroyer attacked JFK’s PT-109. The Japanese ship tore through the little boat’s wooden hull, causing it to capsize. Kennedy gathered his remaining crew, 11 out of the 13, and sent them swimming 3.5 miles (5.6 km) to the tiny Plum Pudding Island, which bears his name.

    In the days that followed, JFK and his crew would swim to surrounding islands like Olasana and Naru in quest of food and rescue, according to a report from his presidential archive. On Wednesday, Ambassador Kennedy reenacted the several swims her father took between Olasana and Naru.

    Two islanders named Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana, who served as scouts for the Allies and connected Kennedy to the US Navy, would eventually offer assistance to the PT-109 crew.

    A week after the PT-109 was lost, on August 8, 1943, its surviving crew was once again in the care of the US Navy. Kennedy received the Navy and Marine Corps medal later on “for his courage and leadership,” the presidential archive reports.

    The late president’s daughter honoured her father, as well as Gasa and Kumana, whose families were there, in a speech on Kennedy Island on Tuesday.

    She thanked them in person, saying, “My son and I are honoured to be able to thank you in person for what your fathers did 80 years ago.”

    The US ambassador stated, “My father owes his life to their bravery, their willingness to put themselves in harm’s way, and to serve their country in the struggle for freedom.

    She also elucidated the significance of the Solomon Islands in her heart.

    “President Kennedy was the guy he was because of this area. It was then that he first learned what it meant to be a leader and realised how much his crew’s safety and life depended on him. He put his own life at danger to save theirs. He started living his life in that manner, Caroline Kennedy stated.

    In 1963, JFK was shot dead in Dallas; he was eventually laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

    On Monday, Caroline Kennedy recalled how she learned Kumana had created a monument that he wanted to be placed on the president’s grave 15 years earlier.

    It turned out to be a valuable and uncommon specimen of “kustom money” that had been passed down through the family for more than a century. The shells, which were carved from a massive clam shell in ways that Western anthropologists do not completely comprehend, are used in significant events, such as official tributes to honour one’s leader, the US ambassador added.

    She claimed that gestures like Kumana’s create ties that endure. She also had a present for the families of the islanders.

    The only two PT Boat pins that I possess, which belonged to President Kennedy, are being given to you as a modest symbol of our gratitude, she stated.

  • Russia warns US over missiles supply to Ukraine

    Russia warns US over missiles supply to Ukraine

    Russia has threatened the West with consequences if their long-range missiles touch down on its territory, especially Crimea, which it has occupied.

    Sergei Shoigu, the defence minister for the Kremlin, has today warned the US and the UK that if they use their weapons beyond international borders, they would be viewed as full-fledged combatants.

    Using such missiles “outside the zone of the special military operation would signify their full-fledged involvement in the conflict and will lead to immediate strikes on decision-making centres in Ukraine,” he emphasised.

    Shoigu said: ‘According to our information, the leadership of the Ukrainian Armed Forces is planning to launch strikes on the territory of the Russian Federation, including Crimea, with HIMARS and Storm Shadow missiles.

    ‌’The use of these missiles outside the area of the special military operation would mean a full-fledged involvement of the US and UK in the conflict entailing immediate strikes on the decision-making centres in Ukraine.’

    His comments come as Russian regions bordering Ukraine and Crimea have been hit by drones.

    Though Kyiv has not commented on its involvement, these attacks include one on Putin’s residency in Moscow.

    ‌Shoigu’s claim that Crimea is part of Russia is disputed by the West – and international law – which regards it as Ukrainian.

    ‌Putin invaded and forcibly annexed the Black Sea peninsula in 2014 – the biggest land-grab in Europe since World War II.

    The minister appears clearly rattled at the power of the British-supplied Storm Shadow with a range of 155 miles, which has been fired from Ukrainian Su-24 war planes.

    So far Ukraine has used the Storm Shadow and US-provided HIMARS to hit targets in Russian-occupied areas of mainland Ukraine, not including Crimea.

    ‌Russia admitted today that it had lost another colonel in an earlier Storm Shadow strike close to Crimea, on the Arabat Spit.

    ‌Col Sergei Postovalov, 53, is due to be buried tomorrow after he was fatally wounded in June 10 strike which hit a Russian command post close to Henichesk minutes after Putin’s deputy premier Denis Manturov had visited.

  • Lunatic dictator now controls Russian nuclear weapons – Exiled Belarus activist

    Lunatic dictator now controls Russian nuclear weapons – Exiled Belarus activist

    The leader of the exiled Belarusian opposition has warned of the risk of Russia giving nuclear weapons to “a crazy dictator.”

    In an interview with the BBC in Warsaw, Poland, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya made the disparaging remarks about Alexander Lukashenko, the president of Belarus.

    She charged that the west had been “staying silent” over the first nuclear weapon deployment outside of Russia since the fall of the USSR in 1991.

    Given that Belarus served as the launchpad for Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February, Lukashenko is regarded as a crucial friend by Russia.

    Lukashenko announced the first ‘missiles and bombs’ had arrived in the country on Russian state television, and when the presenter asked him to confirm if Belarus had received weapons sooner than expected, he replied: ‘Not all of them. Gradually.’

    He claimed the Russian bombs were ‘three times more powerful’ than those dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima in Japan during World War II.

    Lukashenko also said he hadn’t simply asked Putin for the weapons – ‘I demanded them back,’ he said, claiming he needed them to protect against external aggression.

    Belarus, like Ukraine and Kazakhstan, gave up its nuclear arsenal in the 1990s in return for security guarantees from post-Soviet Russia and the west.

    There isn’t any proof that nuclear weapons have been delivered to Belarus yet, but if they are, it marks a significant reversal.

    Moscow announced the move in March and says it will retain control of the missiles.

    ‘This deployment creates no new threat to Nato countries, so they don’t take it seriously,’ Ms Tikhanovskaya argued, believing that western countries see no difference between a missile fired from Russia or from Belarus.

    ‘But Belarus is our country and we don’t want nuclear weapons.

    ‘This is like the last step to keeping our independence. And they [in the west] are staying silent about that.’

  • Drained reservoir uncovers a horrifying secret

    Drained reservoir uncovers a horrifying secret

    As the water level recedes, the Ukrainian dam that fell as a result of bombing has exposed its grisly secrets.

    Both Russia and Ukraine have denied any responsibility for the dam’s collapse and have accused the other of using it to promote their respective military objectives.

    Following damage to the Nova Kakhova dam last Tuesday, thousands of homes were inundated, forcing a large-scale evacuation and resulting in at least 14 fatalities.

    The floods that followed has been called the worst environmental catastrophe since Chernobyl.

    72% of the water the dam contained has drained and flooded the Dnieper River – and the newly lowered shoreline has revealed human skulls.

    One skull appears to still be wearing a World War II-era German helmet – but others also seem to be wearing Soviet helmets.

    The area of Soviet Ukraine which contains the Nova Kakhova reservoir was liberated from the Nazis in 1943.

    The Battle of the Dnieper took place in 1943 and was one of the largest operations of World War II.

    Dark secrets emerge from Ukraine's Kakhovka reservoir emptied by ???Putin???s dam explosion??? as ???human skulls wearing military helmets from the Second World War??? are found.
    Multiple skulls were found (Picture: Social media/East2West News)
    Dark secrets emerge from Ukraine's Kakhovka reservoir ( pictured ) emptied by ???Putin???s dam explosion??? as ???human skulls wearing military helmets from the Second World War??? are found.
    The water line of the dam has reduced dramatically (Picture: Social media/East2West News)
    Dark secrets emerge from Ukraine's Kakhovka reservoir emptied by ???Putin???s dam explosion??? as ???human skulls wearing military helmets from the Second World War??? are found.
    It’s not known how many human remains are yet to be found (Picture: Social media/East2West News)
    Dark secrets emerge from Ukraine's Kakhovka reservoir emptied by ???Putin???s dam explosion??? as ???human skulls wearing military helmets from the Second World War??? are found.
    One skull was found still wearing a German helmet (Picture: Social media/East2West News)

    It involved almost four million troops and at one point stretched over an 870-mile front.

    Over four months the eastern bank of the Dneiper was reclaimed from German forces.

    The reservoir itself was built 15 years later, in 1956.

  • Malaysia probes potential plunder of World War II British wrecks

    Malaysia probes potential plunder of World War II British wrecks

    Based on report from the state-run Bernama news agency, Malaysian police have seized a Chinese-flagged cargo ship amid claims that World War II ships are being salvaged in Malaysia’s exclusive economic zone.

    The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency was referenced in the Bernama article, which stated that the ship was detained and boarded when it was discovered that it lacked permission to anchor in Malaysian territorial waters.

    Inspecting the ship “led to the discovery of old steel and cannon shells,” the report stated.

    Police, the Malaysian Marine Department and the National Heritage Department would investigate to see if the shells are from World War II, according to the report.

    It noted that media outlets around the region have recently reported that “a foreign salvage ship was conducting an illegal operation to salvage steel from a British warship that sank” in the area.

    The case was being investigated under Malaysia’s Merchant Shipping Ordinance, which covers underwater operations among other activities, according to Bernama.

    The area is the site of the wrecks of two British warships, the battleship HMS Prince of Wales and cruiser HMS Repulse, sunk in an attack by Japanese warplanes on December 10, 1941, just two days after Japan attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.

    The attack by dozens of Japanese aircraft armed with bombs and torpedoes left 842 men dead. The wrecks are classified as war graves under British law.

    Reports of the alleged salvaging of the wrecks brought condemnation in Britain.

    “We are distressed and concerned at the apparent vandalism for personal profit of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse,” said professor Dominic Tweddle, director general of the National Museum of the Royal Navy, in a statement.

    “They are designated war graves. We are upset at the loss of naval heritage and the impact this has on the understanding of our Royal Navy history,”

    John Bradford, senior fellow at the S. Rajaratman School of International Studies in Singapore said marine salvage “is an emotional business.”

    “To many people, this feels more like robbing the graves of national heroes rather than reclaiming scrap,” he said.

    Salvaging of sunken World War II wrecks around the Pacific is not a new problem.

    In 2017, Dutch, British and US authorities reported that naval vessels sunk in the World War II Battle of the Java Sea had been salvaged without permission.

    All traces of two Dutch cruisers and two British ships had disappeared, according to reports from 2017.

    Steel from World War II shipwrecks can have special value because it is was produced before the first nuclear explosions on Earth. Known as “low-background steel,” it is needed for some special scientific instruments because it contains no traces of nuclear fallout.

    But Bradford said there may be other reasons behind the alleged looting of the Prince of Wales and the Repulse.

    “The fact that intact gun shells were recovered by the Malaysian authorities suggests the salvagers are not just seeking scrap metal but may be looking for trophies with high resale value,” he said.

    International law on the salvage of sunken warships is murky, according to a 2017 report from the Peace Palace Library at the Hague in the Netherlands.

    “The legal regime appertaining to the wrecks of warships and State-owned ships remained complex, fractured, and in serious need of clarification,” the report said.

    Blake Herzinger, a research fellow from the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney, said registering nations must be the ones to stop salvaging of wrecks that are war graves.

    “Ultimately, the flag state is responsible for ensuring that vessels carrying its flag do not engage in illegal conduct. And if there is such a pattern of behavior, it is down to the flag state to take action,” he said.

    HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse, operating out of Singapore, sank after coming under a fierce attack from land-based Japanese warplanes while attempting to confront a Japanese amphibious landing on the Malaysian coast.

    Their sinking is considered one of the worst naval disasters in the history of the Royal Navy.

    It was also one of the first battles to show that even the most powerful of modern warships – the Prince of Wales was only commissioned less than a year before it sank – were vulnerable without supporting air power.

    The Japanese planes attacked the British ships from airstrips around the region, while there was no British air cover for the two surface ships, after an aircraft carrier that was supposed to accompany them in what was called “Force Z” had run aground during its voyage to the Pacific.

  • Manila’s iconic Central Post Office destroyed by fire

    Manila’s iconic Central Post Office destroyed by fire

    Late on Sunday, a sizable fire broke out at the famed Manila Central Post Office in the nation’s capital. Teams of firefighters battled the blaze for more than seven hours through the night until it was ultimately put out.

    Per the Bureau of Fire Protection, the fire broke out about 11:45 p.m. local time, was elevated to the highest fire alarm level just before 6 a.m. on Monday, and was then brought under control an hour later.

    Fire and thick smoke could be seen rising from the windows of the neoclassical structure, noted for its grand entrance flanked with elaborate columns, as firemen battled to contain the flames.

    Nahum B. Tarroza, director of the National Capital Region’s Bureau of Fire Protection, told reporters later Monday that the internal wooden structure of the building was burned all the way from the basement to the third floor.

    “It’s very saddening because this is such an important part of our history,” said Tarroza, adding that papers, books and mail possibly fueled the flames.

    He said an investigation will be launched into the fire, and investigators haven’t ruled out the possibility of an electrical fault or arson.

    The post office building sits within the historic old Manila town near other tourist landmarks along the Pasig River that flows through the capital.

    It was first built in 1926 and designed by Filipino architects Juan M. Arellano and Tomás Mapúa, and was severely damaged during World War II but rebuilt in 1946, preserving most of its original edifice.

    It was declared an “important cultural property” in 2018, meaning the country’s oldest post office was of “exceptional cultural, artistic, and historical significance to the Philippines,” according to CNN affiliate CNN Philippines.

    The building currently houses the Philippine Postal Corporation, the government-run postal service that handles everything from regular mail, parcels and special stamp collections.

    Mark Laurente, chief of staff of the postmaster general, said that national identification cards were spared from the fire as those were stored in another city, CNN Philippines reported Monday morning.

  • Russia to send museum artifacts into war

    Russia to send museum artifacts into war

    Under the brisk spring sun, a tanker train carries cargo along the track. A female voice can be heard saying, “Wow,” while pointing her camera phone at the convoy. This is the second train; there was one similar to it earlier.

    An outdated Soviet tank is seen being transported in the footage, which was apparently shot in late March. These items are different from the older weapons that Moscow has been known to retrieve from storage to aid in the conduct of the conflict in Ukraine.

    The tanks are T-55s, a design that was initially ordered by the Red Army of the Soviet Union in 1948, just after World War II came to a close.

    You can find them at museums because they are so old.

    “This was the first main battle tank used by the Soviet Union in the Cold War era,” said historian John Delaney, a senior curator at the Imperial War Museum (IWM) in Duxford, Cambridge, as he shows one to CNN.

    “Up until that point, you’d had three very distinctive types of tanks, light, medium and heavy, which had different roles on the battlefield,” Delaney said. “From the mid-50s onwards, there was this concept that tried to come up with a tank that could do a bit of everything and that became known as the main battle tank.”

    For the Red Army, that was the T-55 and its many variants, which later became the most widely produced tank in the world, with more than 100,000 units built. Cheap, reliable, easy to use and easy to maintain, it was a military mainstay from Egypt to China to Sudan, where they are still in use.

    In Eastern Europe, they were used to quash uprisings in the former Warsaw Pact countries, rolling through the streets of Hungary in 1956, and then Prague, capital of what was then Czechoslovakia, in 1968.

    But in following decades, when deployed against Western-built tanks – in some Arab-Israeli conflicts, and then in the Gulf War – they were no match.

    “In the first Gulf War, in 1991 for example, the American and British tanks were knocking out Iraqi T-55s from 23 kilometers,” Delaney said.

    The version inside the IWM’s Land Warfare hall was built in the 1960s and belonged to the East German army. It was snapped up by the museum after German reunification, with Berlin favoring NATO-standard versions, such as the Leopard 1 and then Leopard 2 — which it has recently sent to Ukraine — and side-lining outdated Soviet equipment.

    By the time Russia began decommissioning its own T-55s in the 1980s, there were still upwards of 28,000 of them, Delaney said, adding that they were mothballed rather than scrapped.

    “The Soviets never threw anything away,” he explained. “There’s probably a significant number of them sitting in sheds waiting to be reconfigured.”

    Russia seems willing to do exactly that.

    Satellite imagery indicates Russia has been taking dozens of tanks out of storage at a base in Arsenyev, in Russia’s far East. Publicly available photos show one of the tanks being stored at the base is the T-55.

    “They’ll have been sitting there for a decade or more,” Delaney says. “They’ll need a considerable amount of work to get them back into good running order.”

    After the footage of a trainload of tanks surfaced on social media in late March, the Conflict Intelligence Team (CIT), a team group of volunteers using open source intelligence to investigate conflicts in Ukraine and Syria, was the first to report these that T-54/55s were being brought out of storage at Arsenyev.

    Western officials then told CNN in April they had seen the elderly tank pop up close to the frontline.

    Russia hasn’t confirmed it is deploying the T-55 to the front line and the Ministry of Defense in Moscow did not respond to CNN’s request for comment. But, in recent weeks, well-connected pro-Kremlin bloggers have shared photographs showing these tanks, reportedly in Russian-occupied territories in Ukraine.

    The Netherlands-based open-source intelligence website Oryx says it has visual evidence Russia has lost more than 1,900 tanks since the beginning of the invasion, nearly two-thirds of an initial fleet of around 3,000. Beyond quantity, a big issue is the speed at which Russian armor is being taken down.

    “Overall Russia has lost a lot of equipment, it’s hard to build new equipment,” said Robert Lee, a former US Marine and senior fellow at the US-based Foreign Policy Research Institute.

    “They are producing some new tanks — they are still producing T-90s — but, at the scale (required), they need more equipment than they can produce so they’re relying on older and older tanks to compensate,” Lee added.

    Trevor Taylor, director of the Defence, Industries and Society Programme at the Royal United Services Institute, says Western sanctions are also slowing down Russia’s weapons production.

    “We’ve got multiple pieces of evidence that Russian industry, which had been given access to Western technology in the 90s, is really suffering from the restrictions,” Taylor said. “We’re hearing about them taking chips out of washing machines. And when you’re doing that, then you’re really obviously in quite a bit of difficulty.”

    Lee has been following the Russian invasion of Ukraine from the start, using open-source technology to gather information on the fighting in Ukraine. He has since visited the frontlines in Eastern Ukraine and, as Russia goes on the defensive, tank-on-tank battles have so far been rare and he believes the T-55s’ usage will be limited in scope.

    “Some of those systems are probably going to be used in a rear area initially,” he said. “So, not necessarily tanks going forward, but more kind of firing into a long distance.”

    If that is to be their purpose, Delaney believes the T-55 may still prove useful.

    “One of the things you can obviously use this [tank] for if you’re trying to avoid a tank versus tank engagement is to dig them in, in defensive positions, sit the tank in the pit so you can only see the turret and then that can be used to defend a front line against the counterattack,” he said. “If you’ve been the aggressor in a war and you’re suddenly about to be on the defensive, this would be effective for static defensive positions.”

    As Russian forces prepare to take the brunt of a widely anticipated, NATO-equipped Ukrainian offensive, they’re having to rely on a conscript army, less prepared than that of their opponent.

    And for under-trained soldiers, the T-55 provides something modern tanks don’t: ease of use.

    “If you’ve got a lot of conscripts coming into your army, which you have at the moment with the Russian forces, it’s going to be easier, quicker to train people to use these than it is to use a more modern model of battle tank,” Delaney said.

    “It’s really easy to maintain and with a conscript army, that’s what you’re looking for, you’re looking for the ability to keep these things operational.”

    Ukraine, in fact, also has a version of the T-55 in its arsenal – 28 highly-modernized M-55s supplied by Slovenia.

    As Ukraine gears up for its expected spring counteroffensive, Russia has dug in. Satellite imagery has revealed the extensive defensive lines built by Moscow’s forces across the regions they continue to occupy.

    Lee believes a successful counteroffensive will come down to Ukrainian intelligence finding the perfect location to push through.

    “It’s not impossible but a lot of it comes down to Ukraine finding weak points in a line and trying to narrowly penetrate,” he said.

    And that’s where modern, more advanced NATO equipment, with better armor, longer ranges and more maneuverability, could come into its own, especially when facing much older Soviet hardware.

    “I think faced with Western weapons, the Russians must expect very heavy casualties if they expect to move forward using the T-55 system,” Taylor said. “It’s a move of desperation to be using weapons of that vintage.”

    And though tank battles have been rare, Ukraine has an advantage if they do occur.

    “If you’ve got a big open country and you’re fighting a big, armored tank engagement over vast expanses of land, then this is at a very distinct disadvantage,” Delaney said of the Russians’ T-55s.

    “(Against a Leopard or a Challenger), if it’s a one-on-one tank engagement, this will lose every time.”

  • World War II shipwreck of SS Montevideo Maru, which sank with over 1,000 POWs, found in South China Sea

    World War II shipwreck of SS Montevideo Maru, which sank with over 1,000 POWs, found in South China Sea

    A Japanese merchant ship that sank during World War II while carrying over 1,000 prisoners of war in Australia’s largest loss of life at sea has been found.

    The Montevideo Maru was discovered off the northwest coast of the Philippines’ Luzon island at a depth of more than 4,000 meters (13,000ft) in the South China Sea, Australian Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles confirmed in a video he posted on Saturday from his Twitter account.

    The discovery brought to an end to “one of the most tragic chapters in Australia’s maritime history,” he said.

    The vessel was transporting approximately 1,060 prisoners from around 16 countries, including 850 Australian service members, from the former Australian territory of New Guinea to what was then the Japanese-occupied island of Hainan when an American submarine torpedoed and sank the ship – which had not been marked as transporting prisoners of war – on July 1, 1942.

    “The absence of a location of the Montevideo Maru has represented unfinished business for the families of those who lost their lives,” Marles explained.

    Australian authorities commended those who had taken part in the search, including deep-sea survey specialists and members of Australia’s armed forces, thanking them for providing closure to those who lost loved ones 81 years prior.

    “I want to thank the Silentworld team and the dedicated researchers, including the Unrecovered War Casualties team at Army, who have never given up hope of finding the final resting place of the Montevideo Maru,” Chief of the Australian Army Lieutenant General Simon Stuart said.

    “A loss like this reaches down through the decades and reminds us all of the human cost of conflict. Lest We Forget,” Stuart added.

    “The extraordinary effort behind this discovery speaks for the enduring truth of Australia’s solemn national promise to always remember and honor those who served our country. This is the heart and the spirit of Lest We Forget,” Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese wrote.

  • PE tutor, 101, awarded degree 60 years after graduating

    PE tutor, 101, awarded degree 60 years after graduating

    60 years after graduating, a 101-year-old PE instructor whose classes were disrupted by World War II missiles has finally received her diploma.

    retired educators
    When Madge Brown and Sheila Gordon, both 94, attended a teacher training institution in the 1930s and 1940s, they did not receive a degree; however, they have now been presented with the crucial document.

    Teachers at the period completed two- or three-year programs; later, a graduate- or postgraduate-level degree from a university was required.

    Since their courses were not recognized as the degree-level academics they are today when Madge and Sheila graduated from Nonington College of Physical Education in Kent, their degrees were not awarded.

    Now the University of London is awarding those who missed out with an honorary Bachelor of Education degrees to thank them for decades of service.

    The university was the awarding body of the college which closed in 1986.

    Madge, 101, now living in Isle of Wight, started her three-year course in 1938, but had to suspend it for a year to work as a nurse after the start of the war.

    Madge Brown & Sheila Gordon receive their honorary degrees. Two former PE teachers who studied during WW2 have finally recieved their degrees. See SWNS story SWMRcertificate. Retired teachers Madge Brown, 101, and Sheila Gordon, 94, never got a degree when they studied in the 1930's to 40's as their courses were not considered degree-level. Over 70 years later though both have been presented with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees from the University of London.
    Madge and Sheila Gordon finally received their honorary degrees (Picture: University of London / SWNS)
    Nonington College of Physical Education gym lesson - Madge Brown (pictured in centre of doorway). Two former PE teachers who studied during WW2 have finally recieved their degrees. See SWNS story SWMRcertificate. Retired teachers Madge Brown, 101, and Sheila Gordon, 94, never got a degree when they studied in the 1930's to 40's as their courses were not considered degree-level. Over 70 years later though both have been presented with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees from the University of London.
    Nonington College of Physical Education where – Madge Brown (pictured in centre of doorway) used to teach (Picture: University of London / SWNS)
    Madge Brown & Sheila Gordon. Two former PE teachers who studied during WW2 have finally recieved their degrees. See SWNS story SWMRcertificate. Retired teachers Madge Brown, 101, and Sheila Gordon, 94, never got a degree when they studied in the 1930's to 40's as their courses were not considered degree-level. Over 70 years later though both have been presented with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees from the University of London.
    The two retired teachers finally got to celebrate their graduation (Picture: University of London / SWNS)
    Sheila Gordon. Two former PE teachers who studied during WW2 have finally recieved their degrees. See SWNS story SWMRcertificate. Retired teachers Madge Brown, 101, and Sheila Gordon, 94, never got a degree when they studied in the 1930's to 40's as their courses were not considered degree-level. Over 70 years later though both have been presented with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees from the University of London.
    Sheila attended Nonington and later became a teacher there (Picture: University of London / SWNS)

    She graduated in 1942 – despite one of her hockey lessons being disrupted by a V2 missile flying overhead and exploding nearby.

    Sheila, also from the Isle of Wight, attended the college between 1946 and 1949, after the war was over.

    Madge said it had ‘been a long time coming’.

    She added: ‘I went to Nonington to train to be a PE mistress, and I can honestly say at the age of 101, that the three years at Nonington were the happiest days of my life.

    ‘I’m rather old to get a degree at 101, but it was the training at Nonington that has kept me going.

    ‘It’s all the physical exercise I’ve done all my life, and still do – I still swim every week.

    ‘I’m very grateful for this, but it has been a long time coming.

    ‘When I left college, they always said it should be a proper graduation because of the hard work we did.

    ‘Why they never made the diploma of physical education a degree I don’t know, because it was very intense – we did human dissection at the university, cutting up bodies, to teach gymnastics.

    ‘Teaching has been a great advantage. I think it gives you confidence, and the teaching profession does something to you – it makes you more self-assured at everything you do. I’ve loved every minute of it.

    ‘Whatever age you are, enjoy life to the full, and never stop exercising – and when you get to over 100, still exercise as much as you can, because it’s worthwhile.’

    During the war, Nonington College was evacuated to Avoncroft, and then to Grafton Manor, both in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire.

    Sheila Gordon & Madge Brown cutting the cake. Two former PE teachers who studied during WW2 have finally recieved their degrees. See SWNS story SWMRcertificate. Retired teachers Madge Brown, 101, and Sheila Gordon, 94, never got a degree when they studied in the 1930's to 40's as their courses were not considered degree-level. Over 70 years later though both have been presented with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees from the University of London.
    The pair celebrated with a special graduation cake in the Isle of Wight (Picture: University of London / SWNS)
    Nonington College of Physical Education photo album. Two former PE teachers who studied during WW2 have finally recieved their degrees. See SWNS story SWMRcertificate. Retired teachers Madge Brown, 101, and Sheila Gordon, 94, never got a degree when they studied in the 1930's to 40's as their courses were not considered degree-level. Over 70 years later though both have been presented with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees from the University of London.
    They both enjoyed looking back on memories from Nonington College of Physical Education (Picture: University of London / SWNS)
    Sheila Gordon. Two former PE teachers who studied during WW2 have finally recieved their degrees. See SWNS story SWMRcertificate. Retired teachers Madge Brown, 101, and Sheila Gordon, 94, never got a degree when they studied in the 1930's to 40's as their courses were not considered degree-level. Over 70 years later though both have been presented with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees from the University of London.
    Sheila said her favourite sport to teach were team sports (Picture: University of London / SWNS)

    Madge took a year out while the move took place to do nursing work.

    In her early teaching years during the war, she remembers teaching a hockey lesson and hearing a V2 rocket coming over.

    She blew her whistle, everyone dived for the floor and after the explosion she blew her whistle once more, and everyone jumped up and carried on with the lesson.

    Both Madge and Sheila were presented their degrees on February 22 by Professor Mary Stiasny, pro-vice chancellor.

    Sheila said: ‘I became a teacher because I was always fascinated by Nonington College.

    ‘We had family living nearby so I saw it quite often and thought ‘I wonder what goes on there’.

    ‘I’d just come back from being evacuated the first time when I saw it, and I thought, what a good idea – none of the horrible bits of war, it was enjoyable games.

    ‘I loved teaching people to win, and to lose – I think even today that’s very difficult to do.

    ‘Team games were really my thing. I liked people to be able to lose and take it.

    ‘I think it stands you in great stead for the future if you can take the knocks. It was quite a task getting some people who couldn’t lose to enjoy it!

    ‘When I was [at Nonington College] we didn’t talk about the teaching certificates – it was whether the war was over, and whether it was going to start again, and to get everything out of life that we possibly can.

    ‘The certificates really didn’t make much difference, I didn’t expect to get any brilliant certificate anyway – but if I could just keep going, and have enjoyable games, and pass on the fact that games are pleasant and not about fighting, I think I would have enjoyed it just as much.’

    The University of London is working to present those who hold teaching certificates from now non-existent London area teaching colleges, and where the University was the awarding body, with honorary Bachelor of Education degrees.

    Of the 26 former teaching colleges in London, all but seven have merged into other institutions, with Nonington College of Physical Education one of the exceptions.

  • The reality of life in Ukraine today after a year of conflict

    The reality of life in Ukraine today after a year of conflict

    After the greatest fighting to break out on European soil since World War II a year ago, an estimated 6,900 people have died and another 18,000 have been injured.

    Thousands of homes and businesses were destroyed as Russian tanks invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, and a startling 5.9 million people were forced to flee their homes due to shelling.

    More than 18 million Ukrainians now require humanitarian aid, and there are no signs that the violence will abate.

    Up to 50% of the country’s power has been affected, and vast swathes of the population have been left with limited heating or running water. 

    The International Rescue Committee has been working in Ukraine for the past year, distributing essential items, medical services, cash and legal support to those in need. 

    ‘Our field teams are reminded each day of the strength and resilience of Ukrainian people, both inside the country and those who have been forced to cross borders in search of safety,’ Marysia Zapasnik, Ukraine Country Director of the IRC tells Metro.co.uk.

    Despite their families and lives being torn apart, for many Ukrainians there is no other option than to try and carry on as best they can, as they learn to balance the brutality of conflict with every day life.

    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Lyuba and her dog, Lucky, in Kherson. The city continues to be shelled. Russian forces recently targeted a hospital, school, bus station, post office, bank and residential buildings, according to the Kherson regional military administration.
    Lyuba and her dog, Lucky, in Kherson. The city continues to be shelled. Russian forces recently targeted a hospital, school, bus station, post office, bank and residential buildings, according to the Kherson regional military administration (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Yulia with her kids Anastasiia and Kyrylo have received winter kits from the IRC containing blankets and sleeping bags. The charity has equipped 500 homes with fuel stoves, provided materials for almost 4,500 homes requiring emergency repairs and supplied 1,400 individuals with warm clothes.
    Yulia with her kids Anastasiia and Kyrylo have received winter kits from the IRC containing blankets and sleeping bags. The charity has equipped 500 homes with fuel stoves, provided materials for almost 4,500 homes requiring emergency repairs and supplied 1,400 individuals with warm clothes (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Svietlana holds her cat in her home, which was heavily damaged in the missile attack in September.. She and her husband, Sergii, were both injured that night, but they survived, and have since been slowly rebuilding their house. Their neighbours - two children, their mother and their grandmother - were killed in the attack.
    Svietlana holds her cat in her home, which was heavily damaged in the missile attack in September. She and her husband, Sergii, were both injured that night, but they survived, and have since been slowly rebuilding their house. Their neighbours – two children, their mother and their grandmother – were killed in the attack (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Annika is originally from a village in Donetsk, which she left in April due to the conflict. She and her 77-year-old mother, Anna, now share a small studio apartment in Dnipro.
    Annika is originally from a village in Donetsk, which she left in April due to the conflict. She and her 77-year-old mother, Anna, now share a small studio apartment in Dnipro (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Kherson citizen Nikolay shows the broken window in his kitchen. His apartment was heavily damaged by explosions in January and he?s waiting to install boards in place of glass.
    Kherson citizen Nikolay shows the broken window in his kitchen. His apartment was heavily damaged by explosions in January and he’s waiting to install boards in place of glass (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Sergiy Fyodorovych, 64, shows a picture of his cat on his phone. ?My wife went abroad with our son. And I have a cat, Michelle; it?s so beautiful! It?s my only happiness. I lay down next to it, and it starts meowing. I hear explosions in the background, but I don?t care. I?m used to it.?
    Sergiy Fyodorovych, 64, shows a picture of his cat on his phone. ‘My wife went abroad with our son. And I have a cat, Michelle; she’s so beautiful! It’s my only happiness. I lay down next to the cat and shestarts meowing. I hear explosions in the background, but I don’t care. I’m used to it.’ (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on The power, electricity, heating and water outages caused by ongoing attacks on civilian infrastructure are continuing to impact millions of people across Ukraine and severely impede humanitarian activities on the ground.
    The power, electricity, heating and water outages caused by ongoing attacks on civilian infrastructure are continuing to impact millions of people across Ukraine and severely impede humanitarian activities on the ground (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Maryna, Serhii and their son stand in front of their home that was destroyed in a missile strike in Dnipro. They have since been rebuilding it with limited access to supplies and power.
    Maryna, Serhii and their son stand in front of their home that was destroyed in a missile strike in Dnipro. They have since been rebuilding it with limited access to supplies and power (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on A woman and child walk through a residential building complex that was heavily damaged during a missile attack in Mykolaiv in October. Ukrainians have had to show real strength and resilience as they struggle daily to access food, water and power.
    A woman and child walk through a residential building complex that was heavily damaged during a missile attack in Mykolaiv in October. Ukrainians have had to show real strength and resilience as they struggle daily to access food, water and power (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Caption: 57-year-old Olga is battling cancer whilst volunteering by cooking and distributing bread to people in need. Olga has spent IRC financial support on much needed medication, and continues to help her community even as the war takes its toll on her physical and mental health.
    57-year-old Olga is battling cancer while volunteering by cooking and distributing bread to people in need. Olga has spent IRC financial support on much needed medication, and continues to help her community even as the war takes its toll on her physical and mental health (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Caption: Olga takes out jars of pickled vegetables from her cellar. When the Russians occupied her neighbourhood, she and her neighbours spent entire days and nights in the small cellar, using it as a bomb shelter and surviving from her supplies of vegetables.
    Olga takes out jars of pickled vegetables from her cellar. When the Russians occupied her neighbourhood, she and her neighbours spent entire days and nights in the small space, using it as a bomb shelter and surviving from her supplies of vegetables (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Denys, from Malynivka, has been given a winter kit and his family have registered for financial aid. More than 25% of internally displaced people lack access to sufficient heating and more than 60% of houses have been damaged, IRC analysis shows.
    Denys, from Malynivka, has been given a winter kit and his family have registered for financial aid. More than 25% of internally displaced people lack access to sufficient heating and more than 60% of houses have been damaged, IRC analysis shows (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on When the invasion began on February 24th, missiles flew over Nataliya?s home in Kramatorsk. She left with her two children, aged 3 and 11, and took refuge in Dnipro, further away from the border with Russia. Her husband stayed behind.
    When the invasion began on February 24th, missiles flew over Nataliya’s home in Kramatorsk. She left with her two children, aged 3 and 11, and took refuge in Dnipro, further away from the border with Russia. Her husband stayed behind (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on This theatre used to entertain locals in Dnipro. Now it is used for legal advice as the IRC provides free consultations to residents. Many lost vital documents when their homes were damaged or destroyed by the war.
    This theatre used to entertain locals in Dnipro. Now it is used for legal advice as the IRC provides free consultations to residents. Many lost vital documents when their homes were damaged or destroyed by the war (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Residential buildings in Mykolaiv were heavily damaged during a missile attack on 1 October last year. Repeated waves of shelling have severely impacted energy infrastructure and knocked out power in major cities across Ukraine, plunging vast parts of the country into darkness.
    Residential buildings in Mykolaiv were heavily damaged during a missile attack on 1 October last year. Repeated waves of shelling have severely impacted energy infrastructure and knocked out power in major cities across Ukraine, plunging vast parts of the country into darkness (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on A child?s shoe rests in the rubble of the Saltivka residential area in Kharkiv, Ukraine?s second-largest city. The UN is investigating claims that children are being sent from Ukraine and being forcibly deported to Russia where they are offered up for adoption.
    A child’s shoe rests in the rubble of the Saltivka residential area in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city. The UN is investigating claims that children are being sent from Ukraine and forcibly deported to Russia where they are offered up for adoption (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on A damaged car lies unused outside flats with boarded-up windows in Mykolaiv. Such scenes of destruction are common across Ukraine, where blackouts and dwindling resources leave local people vulnerable. Marysia Zapasnik, IRC Country Director, says: ?Over 18 million people in Ukraine are in need of humanitarian assistance, and millions of lives are facing ever-increasing risk.?
    A damaged car lies unused outside flats with boarded-up windows in Mykolaiv. Such scenes of destruction are common across Ukraine, where blackouts and dwindling resources leave local people vulnerable. Marysia Zapasnik, IRC Country Director, says: ‘Over 18 million people in Ukraine are in need of humanitarian assistance, and millions of lives are facing ever-increasing risk.’ (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on A crater from a missile impact that obliterated a house in Karolino-Buhaz in Odesa Oblast, Ukraine. Here, Russian missiles landed on local homes, killing civilians and hurting local tourism, the seaside community?s main source of income.
    A crater from a missile impact that obliterated a house in Karolino-Buhaz in Odesa Oblast, Ukraine. Here, Russian missiles landed on local homes, killing civilians and hurting local tourism, the seaside community’s main source of income (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Caption: Milana, 10, Natasha, 10 and Danil, 13, take refuge in an IRC Safe Healing Learning Space. During conflict, children are exposed to multiple and severe adversities, such as violence, abuse and displacement. Spaces like this provide social and emotional learning, as well as traditional academic lessons.
    Milana, 10, Natasha, 10 and Danil, 13, take refuge in an IRC Safe Healing Learning Space. During conflict, children are exposed to multiple and severe adversities, such as violence, abuse and displacement. Spaces like this provide social and emotional learning, as well as traditional academic lessons (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on An abandoned toy sits in the rubble at the Saltivka residential area in Kharkiv. Houses were severely damaged in shelling and the local school was bombed.
    An abandoned toy sits in the rubble at the Saltivka residential area in Kharkiv. Houses were severely damaged in shelling and the local school was bombed (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on Svitlana fetches drinkable water from a tap in her Mykolaiv neighborhood and carries it back to her home. The city has been without drinking water for months.
    Svitlana fetches drinkable water from a tap in her Mykolaiv neighborhood and carries it back to her home. The city has been without drinking water for months (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
    Snapshot - Ukraine 1 year on The Saltivka residential area lies in ruins. This neighbourhood, once home to around 300,000, was Kharkiv's largest residential area prior to the invasion. Russian artillery, mortars and rockets have left many high-rises dangerous, and they are now being dismantled by local rescue workers.
    The Saltivka residential area lies in ruins. This neighbourhood, once home to around 300,000, was Kharkiv’s largest residential area prior to the invasion. Russian artillery, mortars and rockets have left many high-rises dangerous, and they are now being dismantled by local rescue workers (Picture: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi/ International Rescue Committee)
  • A World War II-era American submarine discovered

    A World War II-era American submarine discovered

    On May 9, 1942, a photograph of the USS Albacore was taken in Groton, Connecticut.

    After going missing over 80 years ago, the remains of a World War II-era US submarine were discovered off the coast of Hokkaido in northern Japan.

    The USS Albacore, credited with sinking at least ten adversary ships throughout the conflict, was discovered by Tamaki Ura of the University of Tokyo and positively recognised by the Naval History and Heritage Command, the Navy announced on Thursday.

    Albacorewas long assumed to be lost forever. According to Japanese records, the submarine, with a crew of 85 men on board, likely struck a mine just off the shore of Hokkaido on Nov. 7, 1944, the NHHC said.

    “Most importantly, the wreck represents the final resting place of Sailors that gave their life in defense of the nation and should be respected by all parties as a war grave,” read the Navy’s press release.

    The NHHC said its archaeologists used underwater imagery provided by Ura’s team to confirm the remains were those of the Albacore. Data from the Japan Center for Asian Historical Records mentioning the loss of an American submarine steered Ura to the site of the wreckage. Ura’s team used data collected from a remotely operated vehicle to verify the historical records.

    Six of the Albacore’s enemy sinkings were enemy combat ships, making the vessel one of World War II’stop combat submarines, according to the Navy.

    Catch up on the latest headlines and unique NPR stories, delivered daily.0249469326

  • Poland to close its border crossing with Belarus after the latter jailed Polish journalist

    Poland to close its border crossing with Belarus after the latter jailed Polish journalist

    The announcement follows a Belarusian court’s eight-year prison sentence for a journalist with Polish ancestry.

    The Polish interior minister announced that Poland will close a crucial border crossing with Belarus until further notice as relations between Warsaw and Minsk reach new lows.

    Relations between Poland and Belarus, which were already tense, became even more tense on Wednesday when a journalist with Polish ancestry was given an eight-year prison sentence by a Belarusian court in a case that Warsaw claims was politically motivated.

    “Due to the important interest of state security, I decided to suspend until further notice from 1200 [11:00 GMT] on Feb. 10 this year traffic at the Polish-Belarusian border crossing in Bobrowniki,” Mariusz Kaminski wrote on Twitter.

    Bobrowniki, more than 200km (125 miles) northeast of Warsaw, is one of the main crossing points between Poland and Belarus.

    Anton Bychkovsky, a spokesman for the Belarus state border service, said the move was unwarranted and could cause the remaining crossings to become overloaded, Russia’s state TASS news agency reported.

    Bychkovsky told the Belarus STV channel only two of the six main border posts would be operational, which he said would hurt truckers and citizens, according to TASS.

    “The Belarusian side sees no objective reasons for taking such a decision given that there is no threat from the territory of Belarus,” TASS quoted him as saying.

    Kaminski also said that as a result of the jailing of journalist Andrzej Poczobut, he would apply for further people connected with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko to be added to sanctions lists.

    A Belarusian court on Monday sentenced Poczobut for “instigating hatred against religious and national groups, and rehabilitating Nazism”, the Polish state-run news agency PAP reported.

    Poland’s charge d’affaires in Minsk was summoned to the Belarusian foreign ministry, the Polish foreign ministry’s spokesman said on Thursday.

    Poland has become a key refuge for opponents of Lukashenko as well as one of Ukraine’s staunchest allies since Belarusian ally Russia invaded the country in February last year.

    Russia used Belarus as a staging post for its ultimately abortive advance on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv.

    In 2021, Poland and the European Union said Belarus had engineered a refugee crisis on its borders, an accusation Minsk denies. More recently, Poland has condemned the vandalism of Polish graves in Belarus.

    Thousands of people of Polish origin live in Belarus as the west of the country was Polish territory until borders were redrawn after World War II.

  • Russia pledges stronger military as Ukraine war drags on

    Russia pledges stronger military as Ukraine war drags on

    In response to criticism of military failures, top Russian generals promise to strengthen the Russian army.

    After a string of defeats on the battlefield in Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin’s defence minister promised to expand Russia’s arsenal of weapons, advance aviation technology to better evade air defences, and increase drone production.

    The smaller Ukrainian army, which is backed by the United States and its European allies, has repeatedly outwitted and outmanoeuvred the once-mighty army of a former superpower since Putin sent troops into Ukraine on February 24.

    The conflict has turned into a grinding war of attrition that has killed and wounded tens of thousands of soldiers on both sides, as well as Ukrainian civilians, though there is no end in sight, and both sides are re-arming as fast as they can.

    Defence minister Sergei Shoigu told top generals that to renew the army, they would have to take account of the experience of fighting in the Syrian civil war – where Russia intervened on the side of President Bashar al-Assad – and in Ukraine.

    Russian defence minister
    Russian defence minister Sergei Shoigu speaks during a meeting with Russian high-level officers in Moscow, Russia [Russian Defence Ministry Press Service via AP]

    “We need to constantly analyse and systematise the experience of our groups’ actions in Ukraine and Syria, and on that basis to draw up training programmes for personnel and plans for the supply of military equipment,” Shoigu said.

    Putin, after meeting the mothers of dead soldiers, ordered Shoigu on January 2 to prepare a report on how military units are supplied, with details about weapons and equipment as well as proposals on how to improve the defence ministry’s work.

    In this handout photo taken from video released by the Russian defence ministry on December 28, Russian troops take part in drills at an unspecified location in Belarus
    Russian troops take part in drills at an unspecified location in Belarus, December 28, 2022 [File: Russian Defence Ministry Press Service via AP]

    Nuclear guarantee

    Shoigu said Russia would continue to develop its nuclear triad of ballistic missiles, submarines and strategic bombers because such weapons were “the main guarantee of its sovereignty”.

    On conventional weapons, Shoigu gave a remarkably frank analysis of where Russia needed to improve.

    Nationalist critics of Shoigu have repeatedly asked why Russia failed to establish air superiority in Ukraine, why top generals made such grave tactical mistakes and why Russian soldiers were sent into battle without the right equipment, intelligence or even medical kits.

    Shoigu said Russia would pay particular attention to the air force, build up its overall attack capabilities and improve command, communication and training.

    Russia will “increase the combat capabilities of the aerospace forces – both in terms of the work of fighters and bombers in areas where modern air defence systems are in operation, and in terms of improving unmanned aerial vehicles”.

    “Our immediate plans are to expand the arsenals of modern strike weapons,” he said. “We need to improve the management and communication system.”

    Shoigu also said the military commissariats, which are responsible for drafting soldiers, needed to be modernised.

    After Putin ordered on September 21 what he cast as a “partial mobilisation”, Russia’s first since World War II, about 300,000 additional men were drafted, though several hundred thousand more Russian men fled abroad to avoid being called up.

    “It is necessary to digitalise databases, establish interaction with local and regional authorities, as well as industry,” Shoigu said of the commissariats.

    Source: Aljazeera.com
  • Prince Harry makes surprise visit to Pearl Harbor on Veterans Day: ‘He was very respectful’

    The Duke of Sussex served in the British Army for 10 years and completed two tours of Afghanistan.

    Prince Harry made a surprise stop on Veterans Day.

    The Duke of Sussex, 41, visited Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii, last Friday afternoon, touring the USS Arizona Memorial, PEOPLE confirms. A somber site in American history books, the battleship was bombed by Japanese forces in December 1941. Over 1,100 crew members died in the attack, which drove the U.S. to enter World War II.

    Harry visited the memorial in a personal capacity. The USS Arizona Memorial on the island of Oahu is a short flight from his home in Montecito, California, where he lives with his wife Meghan Markle and their two children, son Archie, 3, and daughter Lilibet, 1.

    “He kind of approached us,” Dan Conover, who was also touring the USS Arizona with his family on Friday, tells PEOPLE.

    “I moved out of his way because he’s royalty, I figured I’d let him do his thing. He basically gave me a greeting,” Conover, 23, explains. “He was very respectful and courteous and nice. I moved out of his way, and he kind of patted me on the back and said, ‘You’re all good mate.’ It was a simple interaction, but he was very nice and courteous and respectful.”

    <a href="https://people.com/tag/prince-harry/" data-inlink="true">Prince Harry</a> WWII memorial. Credit: Debbie Bishop Conover
    Prince Harry visits the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor. DEBBIE BISHOP CONOVER

    The eyewitness added that there was an expert “who was basically explaining things to Prince Harry — ‘This is what happened on this day, how the USS Arizona, etc.’ “

    The outing was likely emotional for Prince Harry, who served in the British Army for 10 years and completed two tours of Afghanistan. Before stepping back from his senior royal role, he held three honorary military titles — Captain General of the Royal Marines, Honorary Air Commandant of RAF Honington and Commodore-in-Chief, Small Ships and Diving, Royal Naval Command.

    <a href="https://people.com/tag/prince-harry/" data-inlink="true">Prince Harry</a> WWII memorial. Credit: Debbie Bishop Conover
    Prince Harry visits the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor. DEBBIE BISHOP CONOVER

    November 11 is Veterans Day in the U.S., and Remembrance Day in the U.K. In honor of the solemn holidays, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex released a new photo and simple statement on their Archewell Foundation website. In the black and white snap, taken by their wedding photographer Chris Allerton, the couple faced military personnel, including a serviceman holding an American flag.

    “On this Veterans Day and Remembrance Day, we honor service members across the world,” Harry and Meghan, 41, wrote. “These brave men and women, as well as their families, have made tremendous sacrifices and embody duty and service.”

    “We are proud to work with so many organizations that support veterans and military families, including The Invictus Games Foundation, The Mission Continues, Team Rubicon, Scotty’s Little Soldiers and The Greatest GENERATIONS Foundation. Today and every day, thank you for your service,” the statement wrapped.

    Last year on Veterans Day, the couple paid a surprise visit to a New Jersey military base. At a luncheon for service members and their spouses at the Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, Meghan and Harry discussed topics like mental health and the importance of community.

    <a href="https://people.com/tag/prince-harry/" data-inlink="true">Prince Harry</a>, <a href="https://people.com/tag/meghan-markle/" data-inlink="true">Meghan Markle</a>
    Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. LEE MORGAN

    The stop in N.J. came one day after attending the 2021 Salute to Freedom gala at the Intrepid Museum in New York City. In prepared remarks at the gala, Prince Harry discussed the isolation service members often feel when returning home and stressed the importance of supporting veterans.

    “My experience in the military made me who I am today, and I will always be grateful for the people I got to serve with — wherever in the world we were,” said Harry. “But in war, you also see and experience things you hope no one else has to. These stay with us, sometimes like a slideshow of images.”

    Harry said that he created the Invictus Games “to honor the legacy of those who have given so much” as well as to show “that the men and women who have experienced service injuries, as well as their families, are the strongest people in the world…and they deserve a platform to be seen, a platform to be recognized, and a platform to be truly celebrated.”

    The prince went on to welcome the 2021 Intrepid Valor Award honorees, who he said “are part of an everlasting bond. You are part of the team of teams. And we will always have your backs. You are not alone.”

    Source: People.com 

  • European far-right AfD anticipates a boost during crisis

    The nationalist Alternative for Germany party hopes to capitalise on economic unease to achieve similar electoral success as far-right groups do so across the EU. The results of the polls imply that the plan is effective.

    Earlier this month, during a Bundestag debate on the potentially devastating situation for businesses and families amid soaring inflation and an energy crunch, AfD lawmaker Harald Weyel was caught on a hot mic saying he hoped that the situation would continue to deteriorate.

    This harks back to 2015 when the far-right populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) utilized fears of a massive refugee influx to stage protests, especially in the east of the country. It went on to become the most successful far-right party in the country since World War II.

    Since then, however, the AfD has struggled to find a rallying cry that connected with as many voters. They took to the streets in protest against COVID-19 restrictions but failed to stop a decline in support, especially in the West of the country.

    The AfD was founded in 2013 as a euroskeptic party. And still, their position is that Germany should leave the EU, even as other nationalist parties, like the Sweden Democrats and the Brothers of Italy, have quietly abandoned such stances.

    “Now, they are focusing on the government’s sanctions against Russia,” Wolfgang Schroeder, a political science professor at the University of Kassel, told DW. “They are saying that corrupt lawmakers are ignoring the needs of the people. They’re arguing that elites in Moscow aren’t the victims of these sanctions policies, but the German people are.”

    The message that the AfD is trying to send to the governing coalition of the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), the Green Party and the neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP) is clear: “You are not in charge of Russia — you’re in charge of this country.”

    Indeed, AfD co-chair Tino Chrupalla has repeatedly accused Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government of fighting an “economic war” against Germans as inflation has risen to over 10%. The sanctions “are not in Germany’s interest,” Chrupalla has insisted, predicting that “throughout the fall, support for the government’s policies will continue to sink.”

    Chrupalla’s projections are echoed in opinion polls. According to figures published by research firm INSA, national support for Scholz’s party has fallen from 25.7% in last year’s federal election to 18% on Monday, the FDP has been reduced by half to 7% and even the Green Party is now experiencing a backlash against their plans to mitigate the gas shortage.

    The AfD, in the same time frame, has risen in the national polls from 10% to 15%, one of its highest levels ever.

    As households across Germany are shocked to receive their heating bills, the right-wing populists see golden opportunities ahead. The situation calls to mind another hot mic moment. In 2020, former spokesman Christian Lüth was caught by a documentary team saying “the worse things are for Germany, the better things are for the AfD.”

    AfD co-chair Tino Chrupalla wears a German-flag lapel pin
    Chrupalla has accused the government of being responsible for soaring energy costs

    Scholz’s communication problem

    Schroeder said the biggest mistake Scholz’s coalition had made was its lack of coherent communication.

    “They have not offered clear answers about what people are actually gaining from domestic relief packages,” Schroeder said, nor exactly how sanctions affect Russian President Vladimir Putin and his war machine. “The government has left communication gaps for right-wing populists like the AfD to jump into.”

    Schroeder feels that the SPD, Green Party, and FDP should put some of the principles aside that were enshrined in the 2021 coalition agreement.

    Last year’s plans have “become outdated since February 24, 2022,” the day Russia invaded Ukraine, the political analyst said. “The invasion has changed everything: It is now what is steering our policy” — and the parties need to recognize that priorities have shifted significantly.

    Police stand blocking people taking part in a right-wing protest against increasing energy prices and rising living expenses in Leipzig, Germany, September 5, 2022.
    Thousands have taken to the streets over the past few weeks, protesting against price hikes

     

    Deep divisions likely to stymie success

    Schroeder does not expect the AfD’s popularity to soar. He does not see the current situation panning out like the xenophobic sentiment in 2015, “when opposing a refugee influx was something that spoke to people across the entire country.”

    “The AfD is deeply divided between those who are pro-Russia and those who aren’t,” Schroeder said, “and this is creating a rift between their supporters in the west of Germany and the east, where they are more friendly to Moscow.”

    The party has indeed been hemorrhaging membership since 2020.

    For now, however, AfD leaders have seized the opportunity offered by Germany’s edging closer to a recession to foment discontent by encouraging protests throughout the fall.

    Under the slogan “a hot autumn against cold feet,” the AfD has announced plans to hold weekly anti-government marches in the coming months, alluding to mass protests that helped bring down the communist regime in East Germany at the end of the Cold War. Across eastern Germany, tens of thousands have taken to the streets to protest government policy.

    The AfD leader announced a concerted protest movement against the government’s energy and Russian policies. From October, the AfD wants to take to the streets with the rallying cry “Our country first!” Chrupalla declined to confirm that this was modeled on Donald Trump’s “America first” campaign.

    “Demonstrations are already taking place in many places. In this respect, Monday is a good time to stretch your legs after the weekend,” he said.