Russian politician says law needed to protect society from convicts who fought in Ukraine

Russian politician says law needed to protect society from convicts who fought in Ukraine
Ostanina told gazeta.ru that law enforcement should be obliged to keep regular tabs on the former soldiers. (FILE/AFP)
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Updated 21 June 2024
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Russian politician says law needed to protect society from convicts who fought in Ukraine

Russian politician says law needed to protect society from convicts who fought in Ukraine
  • Reports of Russian soldiers committing serious crimes including murder and rape after returning from Ukraine are widespread
  • Many of the offenders are men who had been released early from prison, where they were serving time for serious crimes

LONDON: A member of Russia’s lower house of parliament said law enforcement authorities need to do more to protect civilians from ex-convicts who have returned home from fighting in Ukraine.
Nina Ostanina, a Communist Party deputy who has been sanctioned by Western countries over Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, told the gazeta.ru newspaper in an interview that violent crimes involving decommissioned soldiers “will be even more numerous” if authorities do not act.
Reports of Russian soldiers committing serious crimes including murder and rape after returning from Ukraine are widespread and have posed problems for the Kremlin, which portrays those fighting in its “special military operation” as heroes.
Many of the offenders are men who had been released early from prison, where they were serving time for serious crimes, in exchange for fighting in the war. Some Russian prisons are set to close this year because so many of their inmates have gone to the battlefields in Ukraine.
The comments by Ostanina, published on Wednesday, amount to a rare admission from a Russian politician that returning soldiers are putting strains on local communities.
Ostanina told gazeta.ru that law enforcement should be obliged to keep regular tabs on the former soldiers, and also help them find jobs and reintegrate into society.
“In no case can we release law enforcement agencies from control over those who have returned from the special operation zone and were previously in prison,” Ostanina said. “This is, to put it mildly, to protect society from these people.”
Ostanina, who chairs a parliamentary committee on “family protection,” said she expected lawmakers to propose a bill on the matter in the near future, but advised them to “hurry up.”
She was speaking after authorities in Siberia said they arrested an ex-soldier for brutally murdering a 12-year-old girl and dumping her body into a well.
Local media in Russia is littered with stories of similar gruesome crimes. An ex-soldier was given seven years in April for kicking a man to death while drunk. Last week a former Wagner mercenary was handed a 14-year sentence for killing his four-year-old stepdaughter after a quarrel with his wife.


Indigenous Australian senator intensifies criticism of King Charles III

Indigenous Australian senator intensifies criticism of King Charles III
Updated 17 sec ago
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Indigenous Australian senator intensifies criticism of King Charles III

Indigenous Australian senator intensifies criticism of King Charles III
  • Sen. Lidia Thorpe’s comments follow an encounter with the monarch at a parliamentary reception on Monday
  • ‘I have decided to be a Black sovereign woman and continue our fight against the colony and for justice for our people’
CANBERRA, Australia: An Indigenous senator has intensified her criticism of King Charles III, again accusing the British monarch of complicity in the “genocide” against Australia’s First Nations peoples and declaring on Wednesday she will not be “shut down.”
Sen. Lidia Thorpe’s comments followed an encounter with the monarch at a parliamentary reception Monday where she was escorted out after shouting at him for British colonizers taking Indigenous land and bones.
Despite facing political and public backlash, Thorpe was resolute in a television interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and said she would continue to press for justice.
“The colonial system is all about shutting black women down in this country,” Thorpe said from Melbourne. “For those that don’t agree with what I have said and what I have done, I can tell you now there are elders, there are grassroots Aboriginal people across this country and Torres Strait Islander people who are just so proud.”
“I have decided to be a Black sovereign woman and continue our fight against the colony and for justice for our people,” she added.
Thorpe particularly highlighted the ongoing harm to Australia’s First Nations peoples, including holding on to the remains of Indigenous ancestors.
“I’m sorry, Charlie, but you can’t come here and think you can say a few nice words about our people while you still have stolen goods. You are in receipt of stolen goods, which makes you complicit in theft,” she said.
Thorpe also pressed on the endemic social disadvantage that Indigenous Australians continue to experience and that it was being papered over by platitudes that fail to address the systemic issues.
At the parliamentary reception, Charles spoke quietly with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese while security officials stopped Thorpe from approaching and ushered her from the hall.
Charles concluded his visit to Australia and traveled Wednesday to Samoa, where he will open the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

Stranded in Lebanon, Sierra Leone women shelter from war in warehouse

Stranded in Lebanon, Sierra Leone women shelter from war in warehouse
Updated 3 min 46 sec ago
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Stranded in Lebanon, Sierra Leone women shelter from war in warehouse

Stranded in Lebanon, Sierra Leone women shelter from war in warehouse
BEIRUT: Not far from Beirut’s heavily bombed southern suburbs, Jaiatu Koroma and her five-month-old daughter have taken refuge along with dozens of women from Sierra Leone in a dilapidated warehouse turned shelter.
After Israeli forces began heavily striking Lebanon around a month ago, Koroma, 21, from Freetown, said she strapped her young child to her back and fled her home in south Beirut, initially sleeping “in the streets.”
She eventually was taken to the volunteer-run shelter — an old concrete structure on the outskirts of Beirut now filled with mattresses, bed covers and hastily packed suitcases, as well as a donated baby crib and change table.
Wearing a red beanie, she expressed gratitude that she and her baby were now getting “food, water,” nappies and a place to sleep.
A year of deadly cross-border exchanges between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah over the Gaza conflict escalated to all-out war on September 23, with Israel heavily striking Hezbollah strongholds in south and east Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs.
The bombardment has sent more than one million people fleeing, according to Lebanese authorities, with at least 2,546 people killed in a year of violence, more than half of them in the past month.
At the graffitied building — an empty venue called The Shelter, usually hired out for events — women sat on mattresses talking, resting, praying or doing each other’s hair.
Others carried laundry in plastic tubs to and from a washing area, where lines of brightly colored clothes were hung up to dry in a dark, damp room.
Waiting to return home
“I want to return to my country,” said Koroma, as the sound of chatter echoed around the derelict space.
She said she worked for months but her employment agent took her earnings and she got “nothing,” adding that the agent also had her passport.
Jaward Gbondema Borniea from the Sierra Leone consulate in Beirut said that “a huge number of our citizens... have been stranded.”
Scores of migrants from Sierra Leone travel to Lebanon every year for work, with the aim of supporting families back home.
Migrant workers are employed under Lebanon’s controversial “kafala” sponsorship system, which rights groups have repeatedly said facilitates exploitation, with persistent reports of abuse, unpaid wages and long work hours.
Borniea said the consulate was working to provide emergency travel documents for the most vulnerable, and collaborating with the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to facilitate repatriations.
Mathieu Luciano, the IOM’s head of office in Beirut, said the United Nations agency had received “15,000 requests from migrants and their embassies for return assistance,” including 1,300 who hail from Sierra Leone.
The UN agency estimates that “approximately 17,500 migrants... have been displaced” by the war, Luciano told AFP, out of around 180,000 migrants residing in Lebanon before the crisis.
Dea Hage Chahine, among a handful of volunteers running the warehouse shelter, said that “when we started 21 days ago, we hosted 60 women. We are at 175 now.”
“We’re working non-stop,” she said, adding that some of the women require medical or psychological assistance.
“The hardest thing is... the number of women coming in every day is increasing.”
Life on hold
The volunteer said she secured the space after finding women camped outside the Sierra Leone consulate, who had later been kicked out of a government shelter to make way for Lebanese families.
The volunteers have set up a kitchen, subscribed to a patchy power generator system, installed some lights and arranged water deliveries for washing and showering.
The are also running an online fundraising campaign to help cover the women’s journeys home and associated expenses, Hage Chahine said, noting many “don’t have their passports.”
She blamed the kafala system and an “inherited education of racism” for the lack of support for migrant workers, saying they were often treated as “second-class humans.”
Among those hoping to leave is Susan Baimda, 37, who said she came to the shelter two weeks earlier “because of the fighting.”
“The situation is very rough,” said Baimda, but in the shelter, “it’s very fine now.”
“Everybody is taking care of us,” she added as she and others helped prepare large quantities of pasta salad for dinner.
She has four children back home in Freetown, and has only seen them via video call since she came to Lebanon three years ago.
“Let me go back to them” and “to our country,” she said.
“We are tired of the fighting... we want to save (our) lives,” Baimda added.

Two migrants die trying to cross Channel: French authorities

Two migrants die trying to cross Channel: French authorities
Updated 28 min 58 sec ago
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Two migrants die trying to cross Channel: French authorities

Two migrants die trying to cross Channel: French authorities
  • The small boat sank shortly after 8:00 a.m. around two kilometers from the port of Calais
  • Channel crossings to Britain by undocumented asylum seekers have surged since 2018

LILLE, France: Two people died while attempting to cross the Channel from northern France to Britain early Wednesday, French authorities said, adding that around 50 people more had been rescued from a sinking boat.
The small boat sank shortly after 8:00 a.m. (0600 GMT) around two kilometers (1.2 miles) from the port of Calais, the Channel prefecture said, adding that several nearby ships were called to help.
Channel crossings to Britain by undocumented asylum seekers have surged since 2018 despite repeated warnings about the perilous journey.
The Channel has heavy maritime traffic, icy waters and strong currents.
Wednesday’s sinking follows the death of a four-month-old baby last week in an overloaded boat headed for Britain, with the latest fatalities bringing the toll so far this year to at least 54 people.
More than 26,000 migrants have landed on British shores since January 1, according to UK Home Office figures.


Building collapses during heavy rains in southern India city, killing at least 5 workers

Building collapses during heavy rains in southern India city, killing at least 5 workers
Updated 56 min 23 sec ago
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Building collapses during heavy rains in southern India city, killing at least 5 workers

Building collapses during heavy rains in southern India city, killing at least 5 workers
  • Such accidents are common in India during the monsoon season from June to September

BENGALURU: A seven-story building under construction collapsed in southern India during heavy monsoon rains, killing at least five workers and trapping three others, police said Wednesday.
Police said in a statement that 13 people have been rescued so far by fire and disaster response teams. The entire building collapsed Tuesday in the Babusapalya area of Bengaluru, one of India’s information and technology hubs.
The cause of the collapse is still being investigated.
Such accidents are common in India during the monsoon season from June to September. Regulations are poorly enforced, and some builders cut corners, use substandard materials, or add unauthorized extra floors, leading to structural collapses.


German foreign minister warns Lebanon ‘on brink of collapse’

German foreign minister warns Lebanon ‘on brink of collapse’
Updated 17 min 41 sec ago
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German foreign minister warns Lebanon ‘on brink of collapse’

German foreign minister warns Lebanon ‘on brink of collapse’
  • Annalena Baerbock said the task was to find a viable diplomatic solution between Israel and Lebanon

BEIRUT: German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock warned on Wednesday that “Lebanon is on the brink of collapse” as she arrived in the war-torn country for a visit.

As Israel clashes with militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon, she also warned that “any deliberate attack on UN peacekeepers violates international humanitarian law.”

Baerbock arrived in Beirut for talks and said the task was to find a viable diplomatic solution between Israel and Lebanon after Israel succeeded in weakening Hezbollah.

“The task now is to work with our partners in the US, Europe and the Arab world to find a viable diplomatic solution that safeguards the legitimate security interests of both Israel and Lebanon,” Baerbock said in a statement.