Thursday 11 April 2024

Voters in many countries sceptical of democracy, poll shows

Voters in many countries sceptical of democracy, poll shows

Voters in many countries sceptical of democracy, poll shows





Indian polling officials prepare election materials and electronic voting machines at a distribution centre in Bhopal. (AFP file photo)






Voters in many countries are suffering a crisis of faith in their democracies and institutions, a survey by a governance watchdog showed, painting a bleak picture in a year in which more than half of the world’s population holds elections.







With the United States, India, Britain and the European Union going to the polls in 2024, the report published on Thursday by the International Institute of Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) offers a sombre snapshot of the perceived health of many democracies.


The results show that voters in 11 of the 19 countries surveyed, which included the U.S. and India, fewer than half of the people believed the most recent election was free and fair.


Only voters in Denmark believed courts 'always' or 'often' provide access to justice, while in 8 of 19 countries, more people had favourable views of "a strong leader who doesn't have to bother with parliament or elections" than had unfavourable views.


"Democracies must respond to the scepticism of their public, both by improving governance and by combating the growing culture of disinformation that has fostered false accusations against credible elections," International IDEA Secretary-General Kevin Casas-Zamora said in a statement.


This year's presidential election in the United States is likely to see incumbent Democrat Joe Biden face off again against ex-president Donald Trump, who falsely claimed widespread voter fraud when he lost the presidency in 2020.


The survey showed that only 47 per cent of respondents in the United States expressed faith that the country had credible electoral processes.


Elections for Europe's parliament which take place in June could see big gains for the far-right and impact policy from support for Ukraine in its war against Russia's full-scale invasion to measures to address climate change.


In February, the parliament condemned what it called Russian attempts to undermine European democracy.


The survey, conducted between July 2023 and January 2024, polled about 1,500 people in each of 19 countries including Brazil, Chile, Colombia, The Gambia, Iraq, Italy, Lebanon, Lithuania, Pakistan, Romania, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Korea and Tanzania.



Modi eyes a third win in India election. Who is he and how did he come to power?



Narendra Modi often says he likes to think big, dream big and act big.


Having sold tea at a railway station as a boy while his mother washed dishes to make ends meet, the man who looks set to be only the second Indian to win three national elections in a row has come a long way from his humble beginnings. And, he is still thinking big.


Opinion polls ahead of the election starting on April 19 predict he will equal the three-term record of India's first prime minister, the Western-educated and wealthy Jawaharlal Nehru, who famously called India's independence in 1947 a "tryst with destiny".


If he wins, it may be the 73-year-old Modi's last term in office and he wants to cement a legacy of setting India on the path to abolishing poverty and becoming a fully developed nation by 2047, the 100th year of independence from British colonial rule.


He has set a tentative target of increasing the size of the economy by about eight times to $29 trillion by then and the per-capita income by about seven times to nearly $18,000, apart from securing a permanent seat at the U.N. Security Council.


Line charts showing projections for various indicators "I am dedicating every moment to making India a developed country," Modi said at a campaign rally this month. "That's why I am working 24X7 for 2047."


The opposition says another term for Modi could severely damage India's secular and democratic traditions, arguing his Hindu nationalist agenda has polarised the country. He has also been accused of authoritarian rule, a clampdown on dissent and politically motivated arrests of key opposition leaders for alleged corruption.


In a relentless pursuit of votes for nearly 23 years, beginning in 2001 when he became chief minister of his native Gujarat state, Modi has not shied away from using his modest upbringing to build a following in a country where hundreds of millions of its 1.42 billion people are poor.


"I know the pain of living under a weak roof," he said this week in Bastar, one of the most underdeveloped regions in India.


"I know what a mother goes through when there is no food at home. I know how helpless one feels when there is no money to buy medicine. Therefore, I decided that I will not rest until I remove every worry of the poor."


He regularly ridicules the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty for what he sees as its entitled control of the main opposition Congress party despite heavy defeats in the last two elections, while he himself has kept his family at a distance - and out of politics.


"I have left my family. Not for myself, not for fun, but for my country. This is my country, this is my family," he told a rally last month.



TOO SUCCESSFUL?



Modi has not visited his family since his mother, who used to live in Gujarat with one of her four other sons, died in late 2022, said his younger brother Pankaj. Modi's estranged wife Jashodaben lives separately in the western state.


"My brother has always maintained a very clear boundary between his work and family," Pankaj Modi, a retired Gujarat government official, told Reuters in Gandhinagar, the state capital.


Modi's ability to overcome a difficult childhood has made him successful, but he may be too successful, said Surendra Kumar Dwivedi, a former head of the Department of Political Science at Lucknow University.


"My sole issue with Modi today is that he has become larger than the party itself," he said. "In a democratic system... a party should always supersede an individual."



HINDU FERVOUR



Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have consistently wooed the majority Hindu community, including by shepherding the building of a Hindu temple on the site of a razed mosque, igniting a wave of religious fervour.


Modi was once a pariah in the Western world because of deadly religious riots when he was chief minister of Gujarat in 2002. But he is now courted, thanks to India's world-beating economic growth and its position as a counter-balance against China.


At least 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, were killed across Gujarat in the riots, although activists put the toll at more than twice that number. Critics accused Modi of failing to protect Muslims, but he denied the charges and a Supreme Court-ordered investigation found no evidence to prosecute him.


The United States, nevertheless, has raised concerns over the treatment of Muslims, underprivileged Hindus, Christians and other religious minorities in India in his rule. Modi says his government works for the welfare of all without discriminating.


Modi has not addressed a single press conference in the past decade, but the Indian media fawns over him, giving him wall-to-wall coverage as he tours Hindu temples or speaks at rallies.


He honed his oratory as a full-time propagandist for the Hindu nationalist Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the de facto parent of the BJP that he joined after school, distancing himself from his family.


With thinning white hair, a neatly trimmed white beard and immaculate Indian attire, Modi is the dominant face of election campaigns for the BJP.


In 2015, he was ridiculed for wearing a suit embroidered repeatedly with his name while meeting U.S. President Barack Obama.


The suit was later auctioned and sold to a Gujarat diamond merchant for over half a million U.S. dollars that was used on a project to clean the Ganges river.


Modi's aides and his ministerial colleagues say the demands on his time mean he sleeps little.


"I am working with a boss who practically works 20 hours a day and has not taken a single vacation in whatsoever number of years I have seen him," Ashwini Vaishnaw, minister for railways and electronics, told a recent event.





















How Latin America’s anti-Zionist Jews are standing against Israel’s war in Palestine

How Latin America’s anti-Zionist Jews are standing against Israel’s war in Palestine

How Latin America’s anti-Zionist Jews are standing against Israel’s war in Palestine





In Argentina, the Latin American country with the largest Jewish community, Judies X Palestina (Jews for Palestine) has been active since 2021 but gained momentum during the current conflict. (Supplied






The war in Gaza has generated unprecedented reactions in Latin America, with the consolidation of broad pro-Palestine coalitions.







As part of such movements, countries such as Brazil, Argentina and Mexico have seen the emergence of anti-Zionist Jewish groups, formed by activists who reject their Zionist upbringing.


In Argentina, the Latin American country with the largest Jewish community — estimated at 200,000 at least — Judies X Palestina (Jews for Palestine) has been active since 2021 but gained momentum during the current conflict.


“There are few anti-Zionist voices in Argentina. Most journalists who used to criticize Israel have been silenced by the Zionist lobby in the media,” group member Ivan Zeta told Arab News, adding that the power of Zionist institutions is high in Argentina so many pro-Palestine Jews are obliged to use aliases to avoid persecution, as he has done.


“The current government (led by right-wing President Javier Milei) is totally aligned with Israel.”


Although he was born and raised as a Roman Catholic, Milei has been studying the Torah, and declared on several occasions his intention to convert to Judaism. His first international trip as Argentina’s president was to Israel.


Demonstrators take part in a rally in support for the Palestinian people in front of the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires, on October 9, 2023, after Israel imposed a total siege on the Gaza Strip. (AFP)


Zeta said the 2001 economic crisis led many Argentinian Jews to move to Israel. That process further strengthened ties between Argentina’s Jewish community and Israel.


“We know people who used to criticize Israel’s stance on the Palestinians, but due to the fact that they have relatives there, they feared for their families on Oct. 7 (when Hamas attacked Israel) and have partially accepted the idea that Israelis are the victims now,” said Zeta, who has family members who live in Israel.


A distant cousin of his is among the Israelis kidnapped by Hamas.


“That doesn’t affect me in a direct way because I don’t know her, but part of my family supports a stronger Israeli offensive against Gazans because of her kidnap, and I had conflicts with them,” Zeta said.



INNUMBERS



  • 60,000 Jews living in Mexico.

  • 200,000+ Jews living in Argentina.

  • 120,000+ Jews living in Brazil.


Family quarrels are common for most members of Judies X Palestina. Some of them even had to cut ties with all their relatives after taking a pro-Palestinian stance.


Their colleagues try to help them and give them psychological support, Zeta said, adding that verbal abuse is common on social media as well.


The group — formed by more than 50 activists, mostly from Buenos Aires — has been enthusiastically welcomed by other pro-Palestine movements, most of them composed of people of Arab descent and left-wingers.


In Argentina, the Latin American country with the largest Jewish community, Judies X Palestina (Jews for Palestine) has been active since 2021 but gained momentum during the current conflict. (Supplied)


“They’re grateful for our presence. With us there, marching side by side with them, there are less accusations of antisemitism against them,” Zeta said.


In Brazil, a group called Vozes Judaicas por Libertacao (Jewish Voices for Liberation), formed in 2014, has been galvanized since the start of the current conflict.


The group — formed by more than 50 activists, mostly from Buenos Aires — has been enthusiastically welcomed by other pro-Palestine movements, most of them composed of people of Arab descent and left-wingers.


“They’re grateful for our presence. With us there, marching side by side with them, there are less accusations of antisemitism against them,” Zeta said.


In Brazil, a group called Vozes Judaicas por Libertacao (Jewish Voices for Liberation), formed in 2014, has been galvanized since the start of the current conflict.


“Those initial members met again during pro-Palestine marches at the end of 2023. We’re now well-organized, with weekly meetings and several activities,” member Daniela Fajer told Arab News.


About 30 Brazilian Jews are directly involved in the network, mostly in Sao Paulo. In Rio de Janeiro, there is another anti-Zionist Jewish movement.


“Since we released a statement in defense of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (who was condemned by Zionists after he criticized Israel’s military operations and compared the mass killing of Palestinians to the Holocaust), more and more people have been interested in joining us,” Fajer said.


Vozes Judaicas is part of Sao Paulo’s Front in Defense of the Palestinian People, and helps the committee organize pro-Palestine marches and public activities.


“Most members had a Zionist education and visited Israel during school. Most had to break up with Zionist relatives. I only talk to half of my family nowadays,” she told Arab News.


Some activists worked as teachers in Jewish schools and lost their jobs due to their criticism of Israel.


The Jewish community has been continuously attacking the group on social media. “They insult us and call us traitors. It’s like we can’t be Jews and anti-Zionist,” Fajer said.


Demonstrators carry the Venezuelan and Palestinian flags during a rally in support of Palestinians in Valencia, Carabobo state, Venezuela, on October 13, 2023. (AFP)


Brazilian journalist Breno Altman knows well how strong Zionist pressure can be. The son of a leftwing anti-Zionist, he saw when his late father’s car was set on fire in 1982 during a protest against the Sabra and Shatila massacres of Palestinian refugees.


“My father was leading a demonstration when that attack happened. The criminals were never identified, but we suspected they were far-right Zionists,” Altman told Arab News.


Since October, he has been continuously denouncing Israel’s atrocities in Gaza. The website he founded years ago, Opera Mundi, is hosted by a major Brazilian news portal and disseminates critical views about the Israeli operation — something that the South American country’s press generally fails to do.


Altman has been subjected to a hate campaign, and is being sued by a Jewish institution in Brazil for his comments. He has also received threats on social media, including death threats.


“I filed a police report about a threat discovered by a news website. They said they wanted to cut off my fingers and break my teeth,” Altman said.


Nevertheless, he thinks that more and more people, including Jews, are aware of the “genocide perpetrated in Gaza and of the problems of Zionism.”


Activists calling for a "Free Palestine" demonstrate in Cali, Colombia, on October 13, 2023, in support of Palestinians amid Israeli air strikes on Gaza in reprisal for a surprise Hamas attack on October 7, 2023. (AFP)


He added: “The groups of anti-Zionist Jews are still a minority, but they’ve been able to successfully express their dissenting stances on social media.”


Altman recently published a book called “Contra o Sionismo: Retrato de uma Doutrina Colonial e Racista” (“Against Zionism: A Portrait of a Colonial and Racist Doctrine”), and has been traveling to launch it in a number of cities.


“Many students are attending the events. Some Jews told me things like, ‘I used to be a Zionist, but I changed my mind after seeing your comments,’” he said.


In Mexico, where around 60,000 Jews live, the Zionist movement is not as strong as it is in Brazil and Argentina, Enrique Rajchenberg, a member of Jews for Palestine in Mexico, told Arab News. Nonetheless, he said, he and his colleagues face insults and threats.


Many anti-Zionist Jews are part of pro-Palestine collectives in Mexican universities, and academic movements have been very active in promoting marches, conferences and cultural activities, Rajchenberg said, adding: “We organize talks with students and labor unions.”


Mexican citizens take part in a demonstration outside the Israeli Embassy in Mexico City on October 12, 2023, to show their support to Palestinians and against Israel's military operations in Gaza. (AFP)


Jews for Palestine demands that all university presidents in the country cut ties with academic institutions in Israel


The group is also asking Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, and other progressive counterparts in Latin America, to cancel any military collaboration with Israel.


“Lopez Obrador is among the Latin American progressive leaders with the weakest stances on the genocide in Gaza,” Rajchenberg said.


“Mexico has strong economic ties with the US, and strong condemnation of Israel would certainly create problems for him.”


The new Jewish anti-Zionist movements in Latin America have been seeking and establishing connections with each other and with similar groups worldwide. “Our goal now is to create a Latin American network of anti-Zionist organizations,” Zeta said.


However, we can conclude that the Jewish people's protest against the Jewish Zionists over the massacre of Palestinians was only so that they would not become targets of mass anger. This is the Jewish way of saving themselves from crimes against humanity by Jews for 4000 years.





















Ex-CIA Veteran: Ukraine's Burisma Could be Used to Fund Covert Ops Under Biden's Watch

Ex-CIA Veteran: Ukraine's Burisma Could be Used to Fund Covert Ops Under Biden's Watch

Ex-CIA Veteran: Ukraine's Burisma Could be Used to Fund Covert Ops Under Biden's Watch











The Russian Investigative Committee has singled out Ukrainian gas company Burisma as an apparent vehicle to fund terrorist activities on the Russian territory. Could the allegation spell trouble for US President Joe Biden, given his son's ties to the company?







Funds received through commercial organizations, in particular the Ukrainian energy firm Burisma Holdings, have been used over the past few years to carry out terrorist acts in Russia, according to the Russian Investigative Committee.


Burisma's role in the alleged scheme turns the spotlight on US President Joe Biden and his son Hunter who served on the company's board of directors between 2014 and 2019.


It's potentially very dangerous for Joe Biden, according to Larry Johnson, a retired CIA intelligence officer and State Department official. The CIA veteran noted, however, that there's more to this story than just the Biden family's apparent influence peddling.


He drew attention to the fact that besides Hunter, a former top-level CIA official and ex-Blackwater vice chairman named Joseph Cofer Black also served on Burisma's board.


On February 15, 2017, Ukrainian press reported that Black, a former director of the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center and ambassador-at-large for counter-terrorism, joined Burisma's board as an independent director. In an interview with the Kiev Post, Black said that he was invited to join the board by Ukrainian oligarch Mykola Zlochevsky to provide guidance with respect to the company’s "security and strategic expansion."


"Prior to joining the board at Burisma, Mr. Black was also on the board of a Latvian bank, and they put him on the board, allegedly for what he described as his expertise with counter-terrorism finance, in other words, tracking money that goes to terrorists," said Johnson. "Two years later that Latvian bank was sanctioned for its role in failing to put in proper procedures to prevent terrorist financing."


Black became a new council member at Baltic International Bank (BIB) in November 2016, while on December 6, 2019, Latvia's financial regulator, the Financial and Capital Market Commission (FKTK), slapped a €1.5 million fine on the bank having conducted an onsite inspection.


According to the regulator, the bank's control system did "not fully comply with the regulatory requirements governing the prevention of money laundering and terrorism and proliferation financing." In 2019 the bank received a $2 million fine. It was eventually closed in 2022 over the failure to prevent chronic money laundering.


As per Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), BIB’s majority owner and chairperson Valerijs Belokons met with Hunter Biden in New York in 2014, according to emails from the younger Biden's 'laptop from hell.'


Remarkably, Burisma has also repeatedly come in the crosshairs of Western and Ukrainian regulators over non-transparent murky financial schemes and alleged money laundering. In 2023 the company ceased operations.


"One of the things to point out is that when investigators in the US Congress try to talk to a lawyer who works with Hunter Biden, they were prohibited from talking to him by the CIA," Johnson said. "That's unheard of. So, clearly, Hunter Biden's activities with Burisma alongside Cofer Black means that Burisma probably was being used by the CIA as one means of at least moving money."


According to Johnson, the latest revelations from the Russian Investigative Committee could take the Bidens' Ukraine saga into a "dramatically new direction."



Follow the Money to Find the Culprit



The CIA veteran pointed out that global companies and financial organizations are routinely used to conceal grey money transferals.


"Usually, false invoicing or one big way to pass money is to use trade," Johnson explained. "So, for example, I know that with tobacco companies, Philip Morris in particular. They would sell containers and sell master cases of cigarettes to Colombian drug traffickers and frankly, the criminal organizations in Russia and Ukraine as well. And, they would sell it to them at a higher price. And then the criminal organizations would resell it at a lower price. And that way they would be able to claim that the source of the money that they received came from the sale of cigarettes, and not from the sale of narcotics."


Johnson explained how traces connecting terrorist operators and global companies and financial institutions could be established. "You have to work backwards. So for example, the rifles, the firearms that were used - I'm sure those have serial numbers on them, or they should. And if they have a serial number, then you can trace back where that gun was manufactured. And then once you established where it was manufactured, then you can start tracking down who bought it. Who was it sold to?"


If a terrorist suspect was spotted making frequent trips abroad, investigators usually look into who paid for their tickets, and how the payment was arranged. When it comes to cyber currency such as Bitcoin, the source could still be established by tracking blockchain operations, according to the CIA veteran.


"I guess Burisma (was used) to pass money to a contractor, to somebody who was providing services to the company, and then that money that gets passed from that individual to the actual terrorists. So I doubt that they were directly passing it to these people. I'm pretty sure they were using a cutout," he suggested.


All eyes are now on Russia's investigation into the financing of terrorist activities, according to Johnson. Ample evidence connecting the dots and shedding light on high-profile perpetrators could become a disaster for some representatives of the US political elite.






















Wednesday 10 April 2024

Russia slaps sanctions on 22 UK government officials, members of IT sector, legal market

Russia slaps sanctions on 22 UK government officials, members of IT sector, legal market

Russia slaps sanctions on 22 UK government officials, members of IT sector, legal market





London
©Mike Hewitt/Getty Images






Moscow has blacklisted 22 British government officials, members of the IT sector and legal service market as a measure of retaliation, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.







"We can see that the British government continues to pursue its anti-Russian policy as London has declared the goal of inflicting a strategic defeat on our country on the battlefield. It is actively using the mechanism of sanctions and conducting a subversive information and propaganda campaign," the statement reads.


"In response to these hostile actions by the United Kingdom, a decision has been made to blacklist a number of British government officials, as well as IT sector and legal service market participants," the Russian Foreign Ministry added.


Those blacklisted particularly include employees of British companies, namely Micro Focus, providing Ukrainian forces with "software and cyber protection services necessary in the process of data collection for strikes on Russian troops and infrastructure." "The activities of such IT companies, which are accomplices of neo-Nazis, lead to the loss of life and can be directed against any country whose authorities may not suit the Anglo-Saxons," the Foreign Ministry said.


The list also includes people involved "in attempts to impose compliance with the West’s illegitimate unilateral sanctions on economic operators in Central Asian countries." "Stubbornly and fruitlessly trying to strangle the Russian economy, the British authorities are also dealing painful blows to the welfare of third countries and inventing repressive mechanisms for their own businesses, which have a pragmatic view of the situation and understand the futility of the collective West’s sanctions policy," the statement adds.



London’s policy bound to fail



The Russian Foreign Ministry reiterated that "London’s policy aimed at providing comprehensive support to Ukrainian neo-Nazis is bound to fail and will only prolong the conflict, leading to more civilian casualties." "The United Kingdom should also realize that it’s counterproductive to continue the policy of sanctions on Russia, which will be met with a harsh rebuff from us," the statement notes.


"Work to expand the Russian blacklist in response to hostile actions by the British authorities will continue," the Foreign Ministry emphasized.



NATO building up capabilities to carry out cyberattacks against Russia — MFA



NATO is busy building up its capabilities for cyberattacks and information operations against Russia, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.


Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova
©Russian Foreign Ministry/TASS


"NATO's military and political leadership continues to build up its military capabilities with an eye on the Russian information space to prepare and conduct cyber operations. The US and its allies are using a network of centers that sit along the perimeter of our country's borders - in Estonia, Latvia, Finland - and are controlled by the [US] National Security Agency," she said at a news conference. "In the future, they want to engage Moldova, and unfortunately, Georgia, where cyber laboratories are being created and will be created to provide operational and technical support to groups and personnel of the cyber command or the bloc's special operation forces."


According to the diplomat, these centers are used to monitor and collect intelligence data, process scenarios of delivering information-technology strikes against critical facilities of Russia's information infrastructure.


"All this serves as proof that Western countries, hiding behind slogans about the protection of so-called values, use information and communication technologies as one of the tools of the hybrid warfare that was unleashed against Russia," she said.


As a counterpoint to this Western policy, Zakharova said Russia and the majority of developing states of the Global South stand for other principles and approaches as they advocate on international negotiating platforms for the formation of a fair and equitable system of global information security, and the development of, and compliance with rules in this area that would be uniform for all.


"We are convinced that this is the only solution that will ensure compliance with the principles of sovereign equality of states and non-interference in their internal affairs, and will contribute to the prevention and peaceful resolution of conflicts in the use of information and communication technologies," Zakharova said.


As a counterpoint to this Western policy, Zakharova said Russia and the majority of developing states of the Global South stand for other principles and approaches as they advocate on international negotiating platforms for the formation of a fair and equitable system of global information security, and the development of, and compliance with rules in this area that would be uniform for all.


"We are convinced that this is the only solution that will ensure compliance with the principles of sovereign equality of states and non-interference in their internal affairs, and will contribute to the prevention and peaceful resolution of conflicts in the use of information and communication technologies," Zakharova said.



Cyberattacks employing Ukrainian hackers



Since the start of Russia’s special military operation, the scale and intensity of cyberattacks on critical facilities of Russia’s information infrastructure and Russian citizens have reached an unprecedented level, the diplomat said.


Behind many major cyberattacks are foreign special services, and they act mainly through Ukrainian hackers, Zakharova said.


"It's convenient," she said. "It is no secret that Ukraine has also become a foothold for aggression against Russia in the information space. Officials in Kiev openly say this, and they take pride in carrying out cyberattacks against our country, often trying even to take responsibility for fictitious operations."





















Watch Russian Su-25 Jet Fighter Vaporize Ukrainian Troops in Donbass

Watch Russian Su-25 Jet Fighter Vaporize Ukrainian Troops in Donbass

Watch Russian Su-25 Jet Fighter Vaporize Ukrainian Troops in Donbass











Sukhoi Su-25 jets serve as attack aircraft, offering vital air support to Russian infantry in the special military operation.







A squadron of Su-25 jets completed a sortie, hammering Ukrainian positions with unguided missiles.


Upon successfully fulfilling their combat mission, the crews executed evasive maneuvers and deployed false targets to confuse heat-seeking air defenses.


In an interview following the mission, one Su-25 pilot stated, "Our work is our direct mission. Victory will be ours." The footage of the operation was provided by the Russian Ministry of Defense.



Watch Russian Soldiers Unleash Inferno on Ukrainian Troops Near Kupyansk



Russian forces used the "Schmel" portable flamethrower (Bumblebee) to attack the Ukrainian outposts.






The Russian Ministry of Defense has released footage showing the soldiers using portable flamethrowers called "Schmel" (Bumblebee) against Ukrainian outposts in the special military operation zone.


The Russians fired thermobaric shells to level Ukrainian fortifications and returned safely to their positions, the ministry added.


The "Schmel" is a portable flamethrower capable of firing thermobaric projectiles, which consume all the oxygen in the area of the explosion and generate extreme heat of up to 3,000 degrees Celsius, half the temperature of the surface of the sun.



Bodies of American Mercs Slain in Ukraine Piling Up at US Cemeteries



The Russian Defense Ministry earlier said that Ukrainian commanders are not held accountable for losses among foreign mercenaries on the front line, and that almost 6,000 of them had already been eliminated since the start of the special military operation.


US cemeteries are full of graves of American mercenaries who died in Ukraine - hirelings described by Western press as the so-called “volunteer soldiers.”


One of them is retired Marine veteran Grady Kurpasi, who died two months after the start of the Russian special military operation. According to a Sputnik correspondent, the 50-year-old is buried in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, the most famous in the United States, where politicians, astronauts and even presidents, including John F. Kennedy, are buried.


A cemetery in California has become the final resting place for another US mercenary, Bryan Young, 51, who was killed by "Russian artillery fire" in the Donetsk region in July 2023, according to American media. In a bizarre sight, the epitaph on Young's gravestone reads "On to the next adventure".


Another American mercenary who was buried in California is “Marine Corps veteran” Ian Tortorici. The 32-year-old fought for the Foreign Legion of Ukraine and was eliminated in an attack by Russian forces on a Ukrainian unit stationed in the city of Kramatorsk.


US citizen Dane Partridge, 34, who had served in Iraq, fought on the side of the Kiev regime immediately after the start of Russia’s special operation, but was then seriously wounded and died a few months later. Partridge, who is survived by his wife and five children, is buried in Idaho.


American mercenary Paul Lee Kim was also 34, when he was killed in Ukraine last year and was buried in a Texas cemetery.


The Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) said that almost 6,000 foreign mercenaries, who came to Ukraine to fight on the side of the Kiev regime, have been killed since the beginning of the special operation. According to the MoD, at least 1,113 mercenaries came from the United States, 491 of whom have already been killed. The Defense Ministry earlier stressed in a statement that the Kiev regime uses foreign mercenaries as "cannon fodder" and that "their lives are not spared by anyone in the Ukrainian command."


"Therefore, they have only one choice - to flee Ukraine or to die. The Russian armed forces will continue to destroy foreign mercenaries in the course of the special military operation, regardless of their location on the territory of Ukraine," the statement read.





















Money From Ukraine's Burisma Used for Terrorist Attacks in Russia - Moscow

Money From Ukraine's Burisma Used for Terrorist Attacks in Russia - Moscow

Money From Ukraine's Burisma Used for Terrorist Attacks in Russia - Moscow





©Sputnik / Sergey Bobylev / Go to the mediabank






The Russian Investigative Committee announced on Tuesday that it has opened a criminal case against high-ranking officials from the US and other NATO countires for financing terrorism following the deadly Crocus City Hall attack in Mosco







"It has been established that the funds received through commercial organizations, in particular the Burisma Holdings oil and gas company that is operating in Ukraine, have been used over the past few years to carry out terrorist acts in Russia, as well as abroad, in order to eliminate prominent political and public figures and cause economic damage," the committee declared.


Moreover, the committee is investigating the sources and transfer of several million dollars as part of the opened criminal case, the statement read.


"The Main Investigative Directorate of Russian Investigative Committee has conducted an inspection after the appeal of a group of lawmakers … and other people about the financing of terrorist activities by top officials of the United States and NATO countries. As a result, a criminal case was opened on the grounds of a crime under part 4 of the article 205.1 of the Russian Criminal Code (financing of terrorism)," the committee wrote on its Telegram channel.


The statement comes as Russian investigators are discovering foreign states' links to the March terror attack on the Crocus City Hall concert venue near Moscow that claimed at least 143 lives.


The perpetrators of the shooting tried to flee the country in a car but were detained and charged with terrorism. Russian authorities believe their plan was to flee to Ukraine, where the masterminds of the attack had reportedly arranged a safe haven for them.


The Ukrainian-based oil company mentioned by the Russian Investigative Committee is also known for its participation in the scandal around US President Joe Biden's son Hunter.


Hunter held a leadership position in the company when his father - then vice president under Barack Obama - handled policy towards the new Kiev authorities.


While Joe Biden denied any involvement in his son's business deals, files from the notorious 'laptop from hell' suggested that Hunter organized a meeting between his father a representative of the company in 2015. Ukraine's former Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin was forced to resign after trying to investigate Burisma.


In February 2020, a Ukrainian court ruled to launch a probe on Joe Biden's pressure on Kiev, which forced then-Ukrainian president Poroshenko to fire Shokhin, but it was closed in November 2020 after Biden was elected as President of the United States.