Sunday, 26 March 2023

The U.S. Volunteers in Ukraine Who Lie, Waste and Bicker

The U.S. Volunteers in Ukraine Who Lie, Waste and Bicker

The U.S. Volunteers in Ukraine Who Lie, Waste and Bicker




Axel Vilhelmsen trained Ukrainian soldiers last year as part of the Mozart Group, which two former Marines established to help Ukraine. It disbanded after one founder sued the other, alleging theft and harassment.
©Laura Boushnak for The New York Times






They rushed to Ukraine by the thousands, many of them Americans who promised to bring military experience, money or supplies to the battleground of a righteous war. Hometown newspapers hailed their commitment, and donors backed them with millions of dollars.





Now, after a year of combat, many of these homespun groups of volunteers are fighting with themselves and undermining the war effort. Some have wasted money or stolen valor. Others have cloaked themselves in charity while also trying to profit off the war, records show.


One retired Marine lieutenant colonel from Virginia is the focus of a U.S. federal investigation into the potentially illegal export of military technology. A former Army soldier arrived in Ukraine only to turn traitor and defect to Russia. A Connecticut man who lied about his military service has posted live updates from the battlefield — including his exact location — and boasted about his easy access to American weapons. A former construction worker is hatching a plan to use fake passports to smuggle in fighters from Pakistan and Iran.


And in one of the more curious entanglements, one of the largest volunteer groups is embroiled in a power struggle involving an Ohio man who falsely claimed to have been both a U.S. Marine and a LongHorn Steakhouse assistant manager. The dispute also involves a years-old incident on Australian reality TV.


Such characters have a place in Ukraine’s defense because of the arms-length role the United States has taken: The Biden administration sends weapons and money but not professional troops. That means people who would not be allowed anywhere near the battlefield in a U.S.-led war are active on the Ukrainian front — often with unchecked access to weapons and military equipment.


Members of an experienced unit that included volunteers from the United States, Canada, Britain and Australia in Bakhmut in December. Foreigners have rescued civilians, aided the wounded, raised money and fought alongside Ukrainians.
©Tyler Hicks/The New York Times


And in one of the more curious entanglements, one of the largest volunteer groups is embroiled in a power struggle involving an Ohio man who falsely claimed to have been both a U.S. Marine and a LongHorn Steakhouse assistant manager. The dispute also involves a years-old incident on Australian reality TV.


Such characters have a place in Ukraine’s defense because of the arms-length role the United States has taken: The Biden administration sends weapons and money but not professional troops. That means people who would not be allowed anywhere near the battlefield in a U.S.-led war are active on the Ukrainian front — often with unchecked access to weapons and military equipment.


Many of the volunteers who hurried to Ukraine did so selflessly and acted with heroism. Some have lost their lives. Foreigners have rescued civilians, aided the wounded and fought ferociously alongside Ukrainians. Others raised money for crucial supplies.


But in Europe’s largest land war since 1945, the do-it-yourself approach does not discriminate between trained volunteers and those who lack the skills or discipline to assist effectively.


The New York Times reviewed more than 100 pages of documents from inside volunteer groups and interviewed more than 30 volunteers, fighters, fund-raisers, donors and American and Ukrainian officials. Some spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive information.







The interviews and research reveal a series of deceptions, mistakes and squabbles that have hindered the volunteer drive that began after Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, when President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine called for help. “Every friend of Ukraine who wants to join Ukraine in defending the country, please come over,” he said. “We will give you weapons.”


Thousands answered the call. Some joined military groups like the International Legion, which Ukraine formed for foreign fighters. Others took roles in support or fund-raising. With Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, under attack, there was little time for vetting arrivals. So people with problematic pasts, including checkered or fabricated military records, became entrenched in the Legion and a constellation of other volunteer groups.


Malcolm Nance in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv last year. He is a counterterrorism expert and former MSNBC analyst who joined Ukraine’s legion of foreign fighters.
©Finbarr O'Reilly for The New York Times


Asked about these problems, the Ukrainian military did not address specific issues but did say that it was on guard because Russian agents regularly tried to infiltrate volunteer groups. “We investigated such cases and handed them over to law enforcement agencies,” said Andriy Cherniak, a representative for Ukrainian military intelligence.



‘A Million Lies’



One of the best-known Americans on the battlefield is James Vasquez. Days after the invasion, Mr. Vasquez, a Connecticut home-improvement contractor, announced that he was leaving for Ukraine. His local newspaper told the tale of a former U.S. Army staff sergeant who left behind his job and family and picked up a rifle and a rucksack on the front line.


Since then, he has posted battlefield videos online, at least once broadcasting his unit’s precise location to everyone, including the opposing side. He used his story to solicit donations. “I was in Kuwait during Desert Storm, and I was in Iraq after 9/11,” Mr. Vasquez said in a fund-raising video. He added, “This is a whole different animal.”


Mr. Vasquez, in fact, was never deployed to Kuwait, Iraq or anywhere else, a Pentagon spokeswoman said. He specialized in fuel and electrical repairs. And he left the Army Reserve not as a sergeant as he claimed, but as a private first class, one of the Army’s lowest ranks.


Still, Mr. Vasquez had easy access to weapons, including American rifles. Where did they come from? “I’m not exactly sure,” Mr. Vasquez said in a text message. The rifles, he added, were “brand-new, out of the box and we have plenty.” He also tweeted that he should not have to worry about international rules of war while in Ukraine.


He fought alongside Da Vinci’s Wolves, a Ukrainian far-right battalion, until this past week, when The Times asked about his false military service claims. He immediately deactivated his Twitter account and said that he might leave Ukraine because the authorities had discovered that he was fighting without a required military contract.


Mr. Vasquez said he had been misrepresenting his military record for decades. He acknowledged being kicked out of the Army but would not talk publicly about why. “I had to tell a million lies to get ahead,” Mr. Vasquez said in an interview. “I didn’t realize it was going to come to this.”









Public Quarrels



The International Legion, hastily formed by the Ukrainian government, spent 10 minutes or less checking each volunteer’s background early in the war, one Legion official said. So a Polish fugitive who had been jailed in Ukraine for weapon violations got a position leading troops. Soldiers told The Kyiv Independent that he had misappropriated supplies, harassed women and threatened his soldiers.


Ukrainian officials initially boasted of 20,000 potential Legion volunteers, but far fewer actually enlisted. Currently, there are around 1,500 members in the organization, say people with knowledge of the Legion.


Some are experienced fighters working as part of the Defense Intelligence of Ukraine. But there have been high-profile problems. A former Army private first class, John McIntyre, was ejected from the Legion for bad behavior. Mr. McIntyre defected to Russia and recently appeared on state-run television, which said he had provided military intelligence to Moscow.


A photograph of Lt. Col. Hunter Ripley Rawlings IV from his biography on the Marines’ official website.
©Provided by The New York Times


Internal documents show that the Legion is struggling. Recruitment has stagnated. The Washington-based Counter Extremism Project wrote in March that the Legion and affiliated groups “continue to feature individuals widely seen as unfit to perform their duties.”


Malcolm Nance, a former Navy cryptologist and MSNBC commentator, arrived in Ukraine last year and made a plan to bring order and discipline to the Legion. Instead, he became enmeshed in the chaos.


Mr. Nance, whose television appearances have made him one of the most visible Americans supporting Ukraine, was an experienced military operator. He drafted a code of honor for the organization and, by all accounts, donated equipment.


Today, Mr. Nance is involved in a messy, distracting power struggle. Often, that plays out on Twitter, where Mr. Nance taunted one former ally as “fat” and an associate of “a verified con artist.”


He accused a pro-Ukraine fund-raising group of fraud, providing no evidence. After arguing with two Legion administrators, Mr. Nance wrote a “counterintelligence” report trying to get them fired. Central to that report is an accusation that one Legion official, Emese Abigail Fayk, fraudulently tried to buy a house on an Australian reality TV show with money she didn’t have. He labeled her “a potential Russian spy,” offering no evidence. Ms. Fayk denied the accusations and remains with the Legion.


Mr. Nance said that as a member of the Legion with an intelligence background, when he developed concerns, he “felt an obligation to report this to Ukrainian counterintelligence.”


The dispute goes to the heart of who can be trusted to speak for and raise money for the Legion.


Mr. Nance has left Ukraine but continues fund-raising with a new group of allies. One of them, Ben Lackey, is a former Legion member. He told his fellow volunteers that he was once a Marine and wrote on LinkedIn that he had most recently been an assistant manager at LongHorn Steakhouse. In fact, the Pentagon said he had no military experience (and he worked as a server, the steakhouse said).


In an interview, Mr. Lackey said that he had lied about being a U.S. Marine so he could join the Legion.


With Legion growth stalling, Ryan Routh, a former construction worker from Greensboro, N.C., is seeking recruits from among Afghan soldiers who fled the Taliban. Mr. Routh, who spent several months in Ukraine last year, said he planned to move them, in some cases illegally, from Pakistan and Iran to Ukraine. He said dozens had expressed interest.


“We can probably purchase some passports through Pakistan, since it’s such a corrupt country,” he said in an interview from Washington.


It is not clear whether he has succeeded, but one former Afghan soldier said he had been contacted and was interested in fighting if it meant leaving Iran, where he was living illegally.



Misdirected Donations



Grady Williams, a 65-year-old retired engineer with no military experience and a methamphetamine conviction from 2019, was a volunteer tour guide at Ronald Reagan’s Santa Barbara ranch when he heard Mr. Zelensky’s plea for volunteers.


“I shot rifles since I was 13,” he said in an interview. “I had no excuse to say, ‘Well, I shouldn’t go.’”


He said he had flown to Poland, hitchhiked to Ukraine and taken a train to Kyiv. He bumped into two Americans in military-looking gear. “They said, ‘Dude, come with us,’” he said.


The volunteers brought Mr. Williams to a base near the front and gave him a gun. Days later, he said, he was nearly blown up while fighting alongside Ukrainian soldiers from a trench near Bucha. Within a week, the military realized that he had not registered to fight and sent him back to Kyiv.







From there, he took a circuitous path that ended in raising money for volunteers from the Republic of Georgia. He raised about $16,000, telling donors that their money would buy electric motorcycles for fighters. But the Georgians kicked him out after he got into a conflict with another volunteer. He said he had spent about $6,900 of the contributions on down payments for motorbikes and the rest on his travel and other expenses.


He has since linked up with a new group, which he said had promised him command of a motorcycle unit if he raised enough money. So he moved this month to Odesa, Ukraine, he said, and expects to deliver a single motorbike soon.


Examples of wasted money in the hands of well-intentioned people are common. Mriya Aid, a group led by an active-duty Canadian lieutenant colonel, spent about $100,000 from donors on high-tech U.S.-style night-vision devices. They ended up being less-effective Chinese models, internal documents show.


“We experienced a problem with the night vision,” said Lubomyr Chabursky, a volunteer on Mriya Aid’s leadership team. But he said the purchase represented only 2 percent of the aid the group had provided.


Earlier this year, the Mozart Group, which two former Marines established to help Ukraine, disbanded after one sued the other, alleging theft and harassment.



Absent Paper Trail



Last spring, a volunteer group called Ripley’s Heroes said it had spent approximately $63,000 on night-vision and thermal optics. Some of the equipment was subject to American export restrictions because, in the wrong hands, it could give enemies a battlefield advantage.


Frontline volunteers said Ripley’s delivered the equipment to Ukraine without required documentation listing the actual buyers and recipients. Recently, the federal authorities began investigating the shipments, U.S. officials said.


In his defense, the group’s founder, a retired U.S. Marine named Lt. Col. Hunter Ripley Rawlings IV, provided deal documents to The Times. But those records show that, just as the volunteers said, Ripley’s was not disclosed to the State Department as the buyer.


Ripley’s says it has raised over $1 million, some of it thanks to the former Connecticut contractor, Mr. Vasquez, who claimed to be the group’s chief strategy officer and promoted Ripley’s to his online audience.


Ripley’s spent about $25,000 on remote-control reconnaissance cars last year, but they never arrived, shipping records show. Colonel Rawlings said the Polish authorities had held them up over legal concerns.


Colonel Rawlings has said that his group is awaiting American nonprofit status. But he has not revealed his spending or proof of a nonprofit application to The Times or to donors who have asked. So it is not clear where the money is going. “I believed these guys,” said Shaun Stants, who said he had organized a fund-raiser in October in Pittsburgh but was never shown the financial records he asked for. “And they took me for a fool.”


Corporate records in Poland and the United States show that Colonel Rawlings also started a for-profit company called Iron Forge. In an interview, he said he expected his charity and others to pay Iron Forge for transportation, meaning that donor money would be used to finance his private venture. But he said no conflict of interest existed because Iron Forge would ultimately send money back to the charities. Details are being worked out, he said.


In the days after The Times approached Mr. Vasquez and others, members of the squabbling groups — Ripley’s, the Legion, the dissident Legion members and more — escalated their feud. They accused one another of misappropriating funds and lying about their credentials.


After a former ally turned on Mr. Vasquez, Mr. Nance came to his defense.


“James was NOT fake, he was troubled,” Mr. Nance said on Twitter. “He did a lot for Ukraine but has challenges to face.”














Russia will place nuclear weapons in Belarus – Putin

Russia will place nuclear weapons in Belarus – Putin

Russia will place nuclear weapons in Belarus – Putin




Russian President Vladimir Putin
©Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov






Russian tactical nuclear weapons might arrive in Belarus as early as this summer, Russian President Vladimir Putin revealed on Saturday. Moscow is completing the construction of a specialized storage facility for such arms, amid repeated calls by Minsk to deploy them on its soil, he added.







The site in Belarus will be ready by July 1, Putin told Russia 24 TV. The president also said that Moscow does not plan to hand over control of any tactical nuclear weapons to Minsk and that it would only deploy its own arms to Belarus. He did not specify when exactly the weapons would be transported to the new site.


The move was prompted by the UK’s decision to provide Kiev with depleted uranium munitions, Putin explained. The UK announced earlier in March that it plans to send the shells to Ukraine for use with Challenger 2 battle tanks. Moscow blasted the move as a sign of “absolute recklessness, irresponsibility and impunity” on the part of London and Washington.


The US dismissed Russia’s concerns by calling depleted uranium shells a “commonplace type of munition” that has “been in use for decades.” The Russian Defense Ministry then warned that their use could trigger nothing short of a radioactive disaster in Ukraine, citing the aftermath of the use of such munitions by NATO in Iraq.


Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has repeatedly raised the issue of threats posed to his nation by nuclear weapons deployed by the US to EU countries. In October 2022, he pointed to “nuclear sharing” talks between Washington and Warsaw, warning that nuclear weapons could be placed in Poland, which borders Belarus.


Minsk needs to take “appropriate measures” to address this threat, Lukashenko said at that time, adding that he would discuss the matter with Moscow.


Currently, US nuclear weapons are deployed in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Türkiye. In 2021, Russia called on the weapons to be repatriated as part of its security proposals, but the US and NATO refused.



Putin: West's Weapons Supply to Ukraine Won't Be Enough to Outgun Russia



The United States and its European allies have sent tens of billions of dollars-worth of military equipment to Kiev to fuel a proxy war against Russia in Ukraine. Moscow has warned repeatedly about the consequences of these actions for regional and global security.







Western countries won't be able to deliver enough weapons in Ukraine to outgun Russia, President Vladimir Putin has assured.


"Threats exist, of course. When weapons are supplied to a country we are in conflict with, this is always a threat. As far how they can be assessed, of course we know about the plans to supply them," Putin said in an interview with Russian TV on Saturday, responding to a question about whether Moscow considers Western arms deliveries to Kiev a "threat" to national security.


"We see, hear about and know about these delivery plans. You mentioned one million shells, about the delivery of tanks. One million - is it a lot or a little? This is a significant amount. First of all, the leading NATO countries, let's say the United States of America, according to our information, produce about 14,000-15,000 shells per month...Ukraine's Armed Forces, according to our military's estimates, use up to 5,000 shells per day of hostilities," Putin said.


"Russian production, the military-industrial complex, is developing at a very fast pace - at a pace that many did not expect. And over the same period, Russian industry will produce three times more ammunition - even more than three times," Putin said.


Russia knows about NATO's plans to ramp up shell production to 42,000 per month by this year, and to 75,000 per year by 2025, Putin said. "We don't know yet what will happen in 2025, but right now, this year, 14,000-15,000 shells are being produced, despite the fact that Ukraine's military is spending up to 5,000 per day," he reiterated.


"We are concerned about [weapons deliveries] from the perspective that this is an attempt to prolong the conflict," Putin said, noting that "from the point of view of the logic of those who provoked this conflict and are trying to preserve it at any cost, [the supply of weapons] is probably the right decision. But in my opinion, this will only lead to a greater tragedy," he said.


Emphasizing that Russia will not allow for the "excessive militarization" of its economy to match Western arms aid being sent to Kiev, Putin said that to date, Moscow hasn't reduced civilian construction, health care, education and infrastructure development, but the West will be forced to do so.








"The [NATO] arsonists plan to send between 420 and 440 tanks to Ukraine. Here it is the same thing as with ammunition. During this period, we will produce and modernize over 1,600 tanks," Putin said. "The total number of tanks of the Russian Army will be three times greater than the number of tanks of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. Even more than three times," he added.



Depleted Uranium



Putin disagreed with the claim being made by Western officials and media that the depleted uranium weapons being sent to Kiev won't result in any health-related issues or other negative consequences.


"This, of course, is not the case. The fact is that they do not belong to the category of weapons of mass destruction. That's true. But the core of the projectile with depleted uranium (different materials can be used, it is used for armor-piercing purposes) still generates so-called radiation dust, and in this sense it of course amounts to a weapon of the most dangerous kind," he said.


Russia has the means to respond, Putin warned. "Without exaggeration, we have hundreds of thousands, literally hundreds of thousands of such rounds. We haven't used them yet."


The Russian president didn't rule out that the UK's announcement of DU munitions deliveries to Kiev were "deliberately" timed to coincide with this week's talks between himself and Chinese President Xi Jinping, including to discuss Beijing's much-talked about 12 point Ukraine peace plan.


"On the same day that President Xi Jinping told me about the positive aspects of the Chinese plan to resolve the Ukrainian [crisis] by peaceful means, we learned about the supply of millions of shells to Ukraine from the Western countries which served as the instigators of the conflict. The next day, right before our meeting with the press, we learned about this story that the UK is planning to send depleted uranium shells," Putin said. "It's as if the West did this on purpose to somehow disrupt our negotiations or influence them somehow."


The UK's announcement of plans to send DU munitions to Kiev this week have sparked fears that wide swathes of Ukraine could become another depleted uranium-contaminated wasteland similar to parts of the former Yugoslavia and Iraq, where cancers and other illnesses have shot up dramatically in the aftermath of US and British DU use in the 1990s and 2000s. The Russian military's chief of Radiation, Chemical and Biological Defense Troops warned Friday that the use of such arms would "cause irreparable harm to the health of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and the civilian population."



'Russia and China Complement One Another'



On the broader subject of cooperation with China, Putin said the two countries will strive to "combine our efforts in the most promising high-tech industries," with this issue said to be one of the things he talked about with President Xi.







Commenting on the four-hour long informal negotiations he held with the Chinese leader on Monday, Putin said his colleague proved "a very interesting interlocutor," demonstrating that he was "deeply immersed in all the issues, in world affairs, the economy of his country and in our relations. He knows everything down to the smallest details. And was very well prepared. It was interesting speaking to him. I think we were both satisfied from these conversations." Xi devoted "quite a lot of attention" to outlining and explaining the Chinese settlement plan for Ukraine, according to Putin.


"China and Russia complement one another. I'm talking about the high rates of development of the Chinese economy and its demand for energy resources. China needs stability of these supplies. Of course, Russia is able to provide such stability," the Russian president said. "Here we are talking about the use of national currencies. If we use yuan when selling energy resources to third countries, this will be a very serious step. Since we don't really need dollars, because imports are closed, there's no point for us to cling to the dollar. We will not rush anywhere in this regard," Putin said.


Tactical Nukes in Belarus Putin also commented on matters of strategic security, saying Moscow and Minsk had agreed in principle that, without violating its obligations under the New START Treaty, Russia will be able to deploy tactical nuclear weapons on Belarusian territory.


"We agreed that - in this sense, [Belarusian President] Alexander Grigorievich [Lukashenko] is right when he says 'listen, we are your closest allies. Why do the Americans place nukes on their allies' territory?' They also engage, by the way, in the training of their pilots to use these weapons if necessary. We have agreed that if necessary, we will do the same thing, without violating our obligations - I would like to emphasize - without violating our international obligations on the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons," Putin said.


"The United States has been doing this for decades. They have long placed their tactical nuclear weapons on the territory of allied countries, NATO countries, in Europe. In six states, if memory serves: Germany, Turkey, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and Greece. There are no nukes in Greece right now, but there is a storage facility," Putin said.


Nord Stream Terrorism Asked to comment on the investigations surrounding last year's sabotage attacks against Russia's Nord Stream natural gas pipelines, Putin expressed "full agreement" with the conclusion that the blasts were the handiwork of US intelligence.


"An American journalist who has become quite famous in the world now, conducted...an investigation and came to the conclusion, as you know, that this explosion of the gas pipelines was organized by the special services of the United States. I absolutely agree with such conclusions," Putin said, referring to the investigative work conducted by Seymour Hersh.














Mississippi tornado and storms kill at least 23

Mississippi tornado and storms kill at least 23

Mississippi tornado and storms kill at least 23




Law-enforcement officers climb through the debris of a diner looking for survivors early Saturday, Mar. 25, 2023, in Rolling Fork, Miss. Rogelio Solis/AP






At least 23 people were killed and dozens injured after thunderstorms spawning high straight-line winds and tornados ripped across Mississippi late on Friday, leaving hundreds without shelter, state officials said on Saturday.







Four people were missing following the storms, which left a trail of damage for more than 100 miles (161 km). The tornados struck Silver City, a town of 200 people in western Mississippi, as well as Rolling Fork, with a population of 1,700, which was hardest hit. Parts of the state remain under tornado warning.


"At least twenty three Mississippians were killed by last night's violent tornados," Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves wrote on Twitter. "We know that many more are injured. Search and rescue teams are still active. The loss will be felt in these towns forever."







Reeves declared a state of emergency in the affected areas, which he said would remain in effect "until such time as this threat to public safety shall cease to exist."


President Joe Biden described the images from Mississippi as "heartbreaking," and said in a statement that he had spoken with Reeves and offered his condolences and full federal support for the recovery.


"To those impacted by these devastating storms, and to the first responders and emergency personnel working to help their fellow Americans, we will do everything we can to help," Biden said. "We will be there as long as it takes. We will work together to deliver the support you need to recover."


Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) director Deanne Criswell told CNN that she would be traveling to Mississippi on Sunday. Criswell pledged to process quickly an anticipated request from Mississippi for a major disaster declaration to enable full federal support now and over the long term.


FEMA was already on the ground, she said, adding that the American Red Cross was setting up shelters.







Search and rescue teams combed through the destruction looking for survivors in Silver City and Rolling Fork.


"My city is gone, but we are resilient," Rolling Fork Mayor Eldridge Walker said on CNN. "We are going to come back strong."


Walker said several people were trapped in their homes, adding that rescue efforts were under way.


He said 12 of the people who died were in Rolling Fork. Television images showed uprooted trees, houses ripped apart and damaged motor vehicles. Many areas were without electricity.


Humphreys County Sheriff Bruce Williams told CNN that "this town has been destroyed like a bomb hit it."


Williams said there were no missing persons reported, but three deaths had been confirmed in the county.



GRIM SITUATION



Yazoo Constable Jeremy McCoy, who had gone to Rolling Fork to assist with rescue efforts told CNN of the grim situation on the ground and stepping on nails.


"I've never seen anything like that," said McCoy. "You hope to hear somebody call, a baby crying, a dog barking or something, but hear nothing."








Tracy Harden, owner of Chuck's Dairy Barn, told the network that she and her husband sought shelter in a cooler. Others hunkered down in their homes, finding refuge in bathtubs.


The organization Volunteer Mississippi, through the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency, asked citizens not to self-deploy, but welcomed donations of water, canned food and other resources.


It said unaffiliated volunteers would be matched with affiliated groups on the ground when the time was right.


A Rolling Fork resident, Brandy Showah, also told CNN that the town was gone. "I've never seen anything like this," she said, adding that her grandmother's house suffered damage.


"My friend was trapped in her home a few houses down, but we got her out," Showah said, adding that people who lived next to her grandmother were still trapped in their houses.


Todd Terrell, who heads a volunteer rescuers group called United Cajun Navy, told ABC News that Rolling Fork was "pretty much devastated" and many people remained trapped in their homes. Terrell compared the destruction to a tornado in Joplin, Missouri, that killed 161 people in 2011.


At least 24 reports of tornadoes were issued to the National Weather Service on Friday night and into Saturday morning by storm chasers and observers.


The reports stretched from the western edge of Mississippi north through the center of the state and into Alabama. Unconfirmed reports said one person had died in Alabama.


Photographs of the destruction published by news networks showed entire buildings left in rubble and cars turned over on their sides as people climbed through the debris in darkness.


"Many in the MS Delta need your prayer and God's protection tonight," the governor, Reeves, said late on Friday in a tweet. "We have activated medical support - surging more ambulances and other emergency assets for those affected."














Video Viral Security KA Ottawa Kanada Larang Seorang Pria Muslim Shalat Di Kereta

Video Viral Security KA Ottawa Kanada Larang Seorang Pria Muslim Shalat Di Kereta

Video Viral Security KA Ottawa Kanada Larang Seorang Pria Muslim Shalat Di Kereta




Seorang pria Muslim diancam oleh keamanan setelah berdoa di stasiun kereta Ottawa, tayangan video. Perusahaan kereta api meminta maaf atas diskriminasi. Tangkapan layar dari TikTok @ a.p416






Seorang Petugas Keamanan yang disubkontrakkan untuk bekerja di Via Rail Kanada telah ditangguhkan menunggu penyelidikan setelah meminta seorang pria Muslim untuk tidak sholat di stasiun kereta Ottawa.







CTV News Ottawa pada hari Kamis melaporkan bahwa jemaah, yang mengidentifikasi dirinya hanya sebagai Ahmad, baru saja selesai sholat di lorong kosong ketika penjaga mendekatinya dan berkata, "jangan sholat di sini ... Sholat di luar lain kali."


Ahmad mengatakan kepada saluran berita bahwa insiden tersebut terjadi pada hari Senin di stasiun di ibukota Kanada.


Menurut situs berita Ottawa Citizen, sebuah video insiden yang menjadi viral menunjukkan Sekuriti dengan rompi keamanannya memberi tahu pria itu bahwa sholatnya mengganggu pengguna stasiun lainnya.


Via Rail mengeluarkan permintaan maaf tanpa pamrih kepada pria itu dan seluruh komunitas Muslim dan menjanjikan penyelidikan penuh dan “tindakan yang tepat” berdasarkan temuannya.


Menyusul pertemuan untuk membahas apa yang digambarkan sebagai "insiden yang disesalkan dan menyedihkan," Via Rail dan Dewan Nasional Muslim Kanada, sebuah kelompok advokasi dan hak-hak sipil, mengeluarkan pernyataan bersama yang mengatakan bahwa kedua pihak telah mengadakan pembicaraan yang konstruktif dan bahwa operator bekerja untuk meningkatkan kebijakan keragaman dan inklusi.







“Pembicaraan terfokus pada tujuan bersama, yaitu untuk memastikan bahwa Via Rail menyediakan lingkungan yang inklusif di mana penumpang dan karyawan merasa aman menjalankan kebebasan beragama, termasuk kemampuan untuk beribadah,” tambah pernyataan itu.


Menurut situs berita Ottawa Citizen, sebuah video insiden yang menjadi viral menunjukkan penjaga dengan rompi keamanannya memberi tahu pria itu bahwa sholatnya mengganggu pengguna stasiun lainnya.


Via Rail mengeluarkan permintaan maaf tanpa pamrih kepada pria itu dan seluruh komunitas Muslim dan menjanjikan penyelidikan penuh dan “tindakan yang tepat” berdasarkan temuannya.


Menyusul pertemuan untuk membahas apa yang digambarkan sebagai "insiden yang disesalkan dan menyedihkan," Via Rail dan Dewan Nasional Muslim Kanada, sebuah kelompok advokasi dan hak-hak sipil, mengeluarkan pernyataan bersama yang mengatakan bahwa kedua pihak telah mengadakan pembicaraan yang konstruktif dan bahwa operator bekerja untuk meningkatkan kebijakan keragaman dan inklusi.




“Pembicaraan terfokus pada tujuan bersama, yaitu untuk memastikan bahwa Via Rail menyediakan lingkungan yang inklusif di mana penumpang dan karyawan merasa aman menjalankan kebebasan beragama, termasuk kemampuan untuk beribadah,” tambah pernyataan tersebut.


Satpam itu juga dilaporkan memberi tahu Ahmad, “kami tidak ingin kamu sholat di sini. Anda mengganggu pelanggan kami yang lain, oke?


Ahmad mengatakan kepada CTV News bahwa dia merasa terkejut, terluka, dan tidak dihargai.


Dia berkata: “Dia membuatku merasa malu. Saya hanya merasa jijik. Seperti, ini kanada? Ini ibu kota negara? Ini Ottawa?”








Pejabat Via Rail mencatat bahwa perusahaan akan membagikan kebijakan keragaman dan inklusi dengan NCCM dan akan bekerja dengan grup tersebut dalam "perbaikan apa pun yang dapat dilakukan untuk membantu mencegah insiden ini di masa mendatang."


Perusahaan kereta api juga menunjukkan bahwa mereka mengutuk keras Islamofobia dan perilaku diskriminatif apa pun.


Satpam itu bukan karyawan Via Rail, tetapi seorang juru bicara mengatakan perusahaan telah meminta subkontraktornya untuk mengeluarkannya dari semua kontrak Via Rail sambil menunggu hasil penyelidikan.


NCCM sejak saat itu telah melakukan kontak dengan Ahmad.





@a.p416 I was at the via rail station in Ottawa. I went to pray. I go to this empty hallway and I’m in the corner minding my own business praying my 2 before leaving back home because I’m travelling. I now finish praying, come back to where I left my stuff and my coworker tells me that the security said you cant pray here. And I’m like wtf? I thought she was trolling. But then the security guard came yelling “dont pray here”. I mentally said.. “wtf? are we not in canada? why am i not allowed to pray here? He said “no praying allowed here. Go outside and pray” By this time i noticed 3-4 people recording, and so was my coworker. I said “that’s really all you have to say?” He said “dont pray in this building, we dont allow that you’re bothering our customers”. I just had to keep my cool and not lose my mind. Im just thinking and saying out loud we’re in Canada’s capital in ottawa and you’re being racist because i was minding my own business and praying? #ottawa #viarailstation #racism ♬ original sound - A.P















Saturday, 25 March 2023

Bansos Beras 10 Kg Akan Disalurkan

Bansos Beras 10 Kg Akan Disalurkan

Bansos Beras 10 Kg Akan Disalurkan




Warga membeli beras murah dalam gelaran Operasi Pasar Beras Medium yang diselenggarakan Pemerintah Kota Bandung di Kantor Bulog Cabang Bandung, Jalan Cipamokolan, Kecamatan Rancasari, Kota Bandung, Jawa Barat, Selasa (14/2/2023). Cara cek penerima bansos beras 10 kg jelang Ramadan 2023 via cekbansos.kemensos.go.id. Bansos beras disalurkan kepada 21,6 juta warga mulai Maret 2023.






Pemerintah akan menyalurkan bansos (bantuan sosial) beras 10 kilogram per masing-masing ke Keluarga Penerima Manfaat Program Keluarga Harapan dan Bantuan Pangan Non Tunai (KPM, PKH dan BPNT).







Kepala Badan Pangan Nasional (Bapanas) Arief Prasetyo Adi mengatakan, beras bansos tersebut sudah mulai disalurkan dengan tenggat waktu paling lama akhir Maret 2023.


"Sudah, kita bisa mulai salurkan 10 kilogram per masing-masing penerima. The latest 30 Maret 2023," ujarnya saat, pada hari Sabtu, 25/03/2023.


Arif menuturkan jumlah penerima beras bansos tersebut tercatat ada sebanyak 21,3 juta penerima. Nantinya beras tersebut akan disalurkan selama 3 bulan.



Syarat Penerima Bansos Beras 10 Kg



Menko Perekonomian Airlangga Hartarto mengatakan, bansos itu diberikan, karena memasuki periode Ramadhan dan Idulfitri 2023 akan terjadi peningkatan harga pada pangan dan aneka tarif angkutan.


Airlangga menjelaskan, penerima bansos jelang Ramadhan dan Idul Fitri itu akan dibagikan kepada keluarga miskin yang memperoleh Program Keluarga Harapan (PKH) dan Bantuan Pangan Non Tunai (BNPT).


"Akan diberikan untuk 3 bulan terutama kepada desil yang mendapatkan PKH dan bantuan pangan non tunai. Nah, ini diharapkan dalam 3 bulan ini bisa berjalan,” ujar Menko Airlangga.







Merujuk pada persyaratan penerima PKH, berikut persyaratan penerima beras bansos:


  • Program PKH ditujukan pada keluarga miskin dan sudah masuk dalam Data Terpadu Kesejahteraan Sosial (DTKS)


  • Memiliki NIK yang sudah online pada sistem Dukcapil dan ditetapkan oleh Kementerian Sosial sebagai penerima PKH


Kementerian Sosial (Kemensos) yang memegang data resmi KPM PKH dan BPNT telah menyerahkan 21,3 juta data penerima Bansos Pangan ke Kementerian Koordinator Bidang Perekonomian (Kemenko Perekonomian).


Daftar nama KPM PKH dan BPNT yang akan menerima Bansos Pangan tersebut diambil Kemensos dari Data Terpadu Kesejahteraan Sosial (DTKS).



Jadwal Penyaluran Bansos Beras



Terkait penyaluran, pihak Pemerintah memberikan wewenang kepada perum Bulog untuk menyalurkan bansos beras 10 kg kepada KPM PKH dan BPNT.


Dirut PT Bulog Budi Waseso mengatakan Bansos Pangan beras 10 kilogram akan disalurkan secara door to door untuk 3 bulan selama Ramadhan hingga setelah Idul Fitri, yakni Maret, April, dan Mei 2023.


Untuk Maret 2023, Bulog akan menyalurkan bansos beras 10 kilogram ini kepada 2,3 juta KPM PKH dan BPNT.


“Mulai bulan ini, tinggal nunggu daftar namanya dari Kemensos. Itu akan disalurkan ke masyarakat langsung, Bulog hanya menyalurkan beras saja," kata Budi Waseso di Cempaka Putih, Jakarta Pusat pada 15 Maret 2023 lalu.


Sementara itu, PT Pos Indonesia juga menyampaikan bahwa pihaknya telah menyiapkan 10 ribu armada logistik untuk menyalurkan Bansos Pangan beras 10 kg kepada 21,3 juta penerima manfaat.








“Seluruh armada Pos Indonesia akan dilibatkan dalam pendistribusiannya. Kami punya lebih dari 10 ribu, mulai dari fuso, truck, hingga mobil seperti grand max dan yang lebih dan roda dua,” kata Direktur Bisnis Kurir & Logistik Pos Indonesia Siti Choiriana, sebagaimana yang dikutip Lampungnesia.com dari Antara.


PT Pos Indonesia menjamin bahwa penyaluran bansos beras ini mampu menjangkau seluruh wilayah penerima manfaat bahkan hingga ke daerah 3T.


“Kami pernah 1 minggu itu sudah tersalurkan ke 10 juta penerima. Salah satu yang dipastikan dikirim oleh Pos itu sukses, karena jangkauan Pos itu sampai ke 3T. Jadi, bisa dipastikan kalau yang mengirim Pos itu sampai ke daerah 3T itu pasti tersalurkan,” lanjutnya.



Cara Cek Penerima Bantuan Beras 10 Kg



Bila merujuk pernyataan Airlangga, maka bagi masyarakat yang terdaftar sebagai penerima PKH dan BPNT, ada kemungkinan akan mendapatkan bansos beras 10 kg.


Cara mengecek apakah nama kita terdaftar sebagai penerima PKH dan BPNT dapat melalui situs cekbansos.kemensos.go.id.


Situs cekbansos.kemensos.go.id dapat diakses melalui HP, laptop, dan komputer.


Masyarakat akan diminta mengisi sejumlah data, yaitu nama dan alamat.


Cara cek penerima PKH dan BPNT di situs cekbansos.kemensos.go.id (cekbansos.kemensos.go.id)