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How the hunt for evidence of Russia’s war crimes forced a family in Ukraine to bury a beloved son and husband twice

May 19, 2022 by www.cbsnews.com Leave a Comment

Kharkiv — The first Russian soldier convicted of war crimes in Ukraine asked his victim’s family to forgive him in a Kyiv courtroom on Thursday.

“I know that you will not be able to forgive me, but nevertheless I ask you for forgiveness,” Sergeant Vadim Shishimarin, 21, told the wife of the 62-year-old whom he admitted on Wednesday to killing in the early days of the war. Shishimarin faces up to life in prison.

Teams of war crimes investigators are hard at work across Ukraine gathering evidence they hope will lead to more prosecutions of Russia’s invading forces. CBS News went with one of those teams to a village near Ukraine’s decimated second city of Kharkiv and saw first-hand the heartache that both Vladimir Putin’s war, and the effort to document its grim realities, are inflicting on ordinary Ukrainian families.

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Tamara clawed at the coffin inside the van. The mother’s naked grief was matched only by her daughter-in-law’s anguished tears. The women were gathered with other friends and family in their village of Malaya Rohan to bury the man they loved, for a second time.

“Why did you take my son?” Tamara, 83, railed against God. But there were no answers for her there by his coffin.

Just two days earlier, war crimes investigators came to Lyudmila Yerchenko’s home to exhume her husband’s body. They’re building a case to bring the people who killed him to justice.

  • U.S. resumes operations at embassy in Kyiv

Mikhayl Yerchenko, 60, was killed when Russian troops aimed their tank cannons at his village. He and Lyudmila’s humble backyard is now a crime scene.

The widow showed investigators where Mikhayl lay dying after both of his legs were blown off. He’d come out to feed their animals when he was hit by shrapnel, some of which still lay on the ground in their yard.

When Mikhayl died, the shelling was so intense that Lyudmila and her neighbors had to leave him there, alone in the yard for 24 hours. The next day they buried him hastily in a shallow grave.

As Lyudmila watched the investigators exhume her husband’s body, we found her grief almost unbearable to witness. It’s a scene playing out for countless families across Ukraine, but watching it without the filter of a television screen is utterly gut wrenching.

It’s hard to describe an exhumation. The smell of death lingers long after you’ve left the scene. But even worse is the heartbreak.

Beneath the blanket pulled from the earth lay Lyudmila’s husband of nearly 30 years. She adored him. His family said he was a big bear of a man with an easy smile and a good heart.

Leading the war crimes investigation team was Oleksandr Illenkov, the head of a nerdy team of civil prosecutors who’ve swapped their suits and ties for body armor.

“Sometimes it is dangerous,” he told CBS News. “Even now we heard some shelling from here… It’s not a problem. It’s our job.”

It was his 14th exhumation in nearly as many days.

They try to do their forensic examination quickly, so the families aren’t left waiting.

Two days after he was exhumed, at Mikhayl’s funeral, Tamara implored her son to wake up and come home. She spoke to him as if he was still alive.

She didn’t want to leave the graveside. No mother should ever have to see their child die.

Lyudmila remained brave and dignified as her husband was lowered into his final resting place, but neither of the women were ready to accept that he’s gone.

    In:

  • Ukraine
  • Russia
  • War Crimes
  • Vladimir Putin

Filed Under: EUNews Ukraine, Russia, War Crimes, Vladimir Putin, yugoslavia war crimes, serbia kosovo war crimes, al assad war crimes, pakistan russia war, france russia war 1805, france russia war, war crimes genocide and crimes against humanity, evidence at a crime scene list, separatist forces in ukraine, bear hunting dogs russia

McGregor return to ‘Star Wars’ inspired by love for ‘difficult’ prequels

May 20, 2022 by www.thejakartapost.com Leave a Comment

Andrew Marszal (Agence France-Presse)
Los Angeles, United States   ● Fri, May 20, 2022 2022-05-20 12:22 0 53ea05b5fe2e13733519dbf4e3105bbd 2 Entertainment Ewan-McGregor,Star-Wars,Obi-Wan-Kenobi,Movie,Hollywood-actors,science-fiction,Disney-Plus,series Free

When Ewan McGregor first played a lightsaber-wielding Jedi hero in the much-maligned Star Wars prequel trilogy, he didn’t feel much love from the fans.

Initial audience excitement about returning to a galaxy far, far away in 1999’s The Phantom Menace was quickly doused by the prequels’ corny dialogue, arcane inter-galactic politics and Jar Jar Binks.

But as he steps back into his role for Disney+ series Obi-Wan Kenobi , out next Friday, McGregor says he has been pleasantly surprised by a major re-evaluation of the prequels, particularly among younger viewers.

“One of the difficult things about being in the prequels was that when they came out, they were not seemingly well received,” McGregor told a virtual press conference on Thursday.

“Because there was no social media, there was no direct avenue to the fans at the time. And also, the fans were kids.”

McGregor added: “Gradually, I started realizing that people really liked them, and that they meant a lot to that generation.”

“So that warmed my feelings about them, I guess, or my experience of being in the Star Wars world.”

As a result, McGregor and Hayden Christensen — who played Anakin Skywalker — are back for a six-episode limited series, set in between the events of the prequel trilogy and the original Star Wars .

Taking place a decade after the tragic finale of Revenge of the Sith , which saw the evil Emperor seize power and turn Kenobi’s apprentice into Darth Vader, Obi-Wan Kenobi finds its hero leading a lonely, broken existence.

“For 10 years Obi-Wan has been in hiding, he can’t communicate with any of his old comrades, and he is living a pretty solitary life,” said McGregor.

“He’s not able to use the Force. So in a way he’s lost his faith. It’s like somebody who stepped away from their religion or something.

“The only responsibility to his past life is looking over Luke Skywalker.”

Kenobi must also fend off the Inquisitors, a terrifying new set of villains charged with eradicating the remaining Jedi.

‘Feel him’

Obi-Wan Kenobi is a product of Disney’s recent decision to pivot Star Wars resources from movies to television.

The wildly popular sci-fi franchise has been assigned a key role in growing streaming platform Disney+.

The most star-driven Star Wars show so far, Obi-Wan Kenobi will be closely followed by Andor — a prequel to movie Rogue One — and another season of smash hit The Mandalorian .

Other new Star Wars series in the works include Ahsoka and The Acolyte.

But Disney decided to slow down its big-screen output after the disappointing box office performance of 2018’s Solo , a movie that angered some fans by recasting Harrison Ford’s Han Solo character with a younger actor.

“There should be moments along the way when you learn things,” Lucasfilm head Kathleen Kennedy said in a recent Vanity Fair interview.

“Now it does seem so abundantly clear that we can’t do that.”

Shows such as The Mandalorian have instead used computer technology to de-age the original stars, or even artificially generate the appearances of actors who have passed away.

Of course, the role of Kenobi was itself first played by veteran thespian Alec Guinness in 1977’s Star Wars — a performance that McGregor still regularly refers back to.

“Just being closer to Alec Guinness in age [this time] was interesting […] my Obi-Wan now is just a bit closer to his,” said McGregor, now 51.

He added: “It all comes from Alec Guinness — Alec Guinness had this wit behind his eyes all the time.

“He had a twinkle […] I always try and think of him, and try to feel him somewhere, hear him saying the lines.”

Obi-Wan Kenobi premieres on Disney+ from May 27.

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Opinion: Even Russia’s ruthless war in Ukraine can’t get Trump to give up his Putin fixation

March 31, 2022 by edition.cnn.com Leave a Comment

Michael D’Antonio is the author of the book ” Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit of Success ” and co-author, with Peter Eisner, of the book ” High Crimes: The Corruption, Impunity, and Impeachment of Donald Trump .” The opinions expressed in this commentary are his own. View more opinion on CNN.

(CNN) Former President Donald Trump is resorting to a desperate, yet painfully familiar strategy in a bid to hurt President Joe Biden — and he’s trying to enlist the help of Russian President Vladimir Putin to do it.

Trump never changes, it seems. He only gets worse, and closer to the extreme point where his gross insensitivity could make him politically irrelevant.
In an interview with Just The News, the former President pushed an unproven claim about alleged business dealings in Russia by Biden’s son, Hunter. Trump also urged Putin to release any information he might have on the younger Biden’s business transactions — even though it’s far from clear that the Kremlin has access to any.

Seeking Russian help to attack a political foe is a familiar maneuver by Trump. He tried and failed to manufacture a scandal involving Biden’s son in 2019. The difference this time, though, is that Putin now is a reviled figure around the world due to his scorched-earth invasion of Ukraine.

Finally, a road map to hold Trump accountable

Finally, a road map to hold Trump accountable

Trump could not have chosen a worse moment to remind us that, for years, he cozied up to the Kremlin leader while alienating America’s allies and intelligence services. The former President’s latest misinformation scheme involves the same target, the Bidens. It also involves an old Trump ally, Putin, who Biden has recently called both a ” war criminal ” and a ” butcher .”
Read More

The entire charade can’t help but remind us of the earlier scandal in July 2019, when Trump attempted to strong-arm Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky into investigating then-candidate Joe Biden and his son, Hunter.
Though Trump denied there was any “quid pro quo” in his ask of Zelensky, he then delayed the transfer of promised military aid, which Ukraine needed for its ongoing war with pro-Russian separatists in the eastern region of the country.

John Solomon, the journalist who reported on Trump’s most recent Putin comments to Just The News, played a key role in the 2019 scheme. He used his platform at The Hill to inspire Trump’s effort to use a foreign power to smear Hunter Biden.
By reprising his role as an outlet for Trump’s new anti-Biden scheme, Solomon demonstrates that Trump is up to his old tricks.
Is there any reason for the former President to make such risky moves at this time? It’s possible that he’s so hungry for attention that he’ll do anything to get it. However, it’s more likely that he wants to divert the gaze of the news media, which is currently focused on his worsening troubles with the courts and with the congressional committee investigating the January 6 insurrection at the Capitol.
The double standard with Hunter Biden's laptop is worse than you think

The double standard with Hunter Biden’s laptop is worse than you think

This week, The Washington Post and CBS News reported that official records show an over seven-hour gap in the White House phone logs on the day of the riot. The gap in the logs, which are supposed to note all of the President’s phone calls, suggests that someone might have tried to hide evidence of Trump’s activities on that bloody day. (A spokesperson for Trump told the Post and CBS News that the former President was not involved in maintaining the White House records and assumed all of his calls has been preserved.)
As CNN previously reported , Trump called Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy during the attack. None of these calls were present in the shared White House records.
In addition to the news about the suspicious records gap, Trump has been vexed this week by bad news from the courts.
In California, a judge hearing a case related to the January 6 attack declared that Trump ” more likely than not ” committed crimes in attempting to disrupt the congressional certification of the election. He also said that the Trump team’s effort to stop Congress’ certification of the 2020 election, which Biden won, constitutes “a coup in search of a legal theory.”
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And in another development this week, a New York judge demanded the Trump Organization quit stalling and release documents sought in a civil investigation headed by the state attorney general.

Throughout his political life, Trump has sought to gain power in part by dominating the news agenda and demonstrating that he could defy convention. “I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose voters,” was how he once put it.
Now, with the American people largely united against Russia, Trump’s appeal to Putin with yet another anti-Biden ploy seems tone-deaf. One cannot help but wonder if this is the moment when he begins to lose his once-iron grip on his loyal political base.

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New pandemic warning issued after 250m die of monkeypox in horror war game simulation

May 19, 2022 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

Monkeypox: Rare disease explained

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The damning assessment comes from the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response. A year ago, the panel reported to the World Health Organization (WHO)’s main annual assembly that poor coordination and bad decisions had allowed the COVID-19 pandemic to evolve to such a catastrophic scale. The experts also presented a long list of measures needed both to overcome Covid and ensure that the world is better prepared for similar threats in the future.

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One year on, however, the panel’s follow-up assessment is that global reform efforts in this area have been too slow and fragmented.

The world, they said, is still “tinkering” with the necessary changes and that the resultant inaction was laying “the groundwork for another pandemic”.

Panel co-chair and former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark said: “We largely have the very same tools and the same system that existed in December 2019 to respond to a pandemic threat.

“Those tools were not good enough.”

A monkeypox virus, left, and health checks, right

The world is still unprepared for future pandemics, a report has warned (Image: Getty Images)

Helen Clark and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

The panel was chaired by Helen Clark, left, and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, right (Image: Getty Images)

The assessment is not all bleak, however — with Ms Clark pointing to how mechanisms established in response to Covid have allowed the world to deliver some 1.5 billion vaccine doses to poorer countries.

The politician also praised the efforts that are presently underway to diversify the production of both vaccines as well as antivirals.

An agreement is expected to soon be reached for more secure and flexible funding for the WHO, alongside plans to establish a dedicated fund for addressing future pandemics.

Experts are also looking to make relevant changes to International Health Regulations, while negotiations are also underway to develop a treaty or other form of legal tool to help streamline the global approach to preparing for and reacting to future pandemics.

READ MORE: Monkeypox hits the US – deadly virus crosses Atlantic after two UK

The World Health Organization logo

An agreement is expected to soon be reached for more secure and flexible funding for the WHO (Image: Getty Images)

An infographic on COVID-19 vaccines

Ms Clark praised the efforts that are presently underway to diversify the production of vaccines (Image: Express.co.uk)

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Ms Clark said: “Transformative work required at the global level to prevent the next pandemic has begun.”

However, she cautioned, these changes are coming at a far-too-glacial pace.

The WHO budget change, for example, is not expected to come into effect for almost a decade.

Ms Clark added: “At its current pace, an effective system is still years away — when a pandemic threat could occur at any time.

“If there were a new pandemic threat this year, next year, or the year after, at least, we will be largely in the same place as we were in December 2019.”

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The warnings come as experts have flagged the increasing risks posed by the creation of deadly pathogens in laboratory settings — which could be released out into the world either by accident or deliberately by bad actors.

Last year, biosecurity and public health experts war-gamed what might happen in the event that terrorists released a genetically engineered, smallpox vaccine-proof monkeypox strain.

This exercise was a collaboration between the WHO, the US National Security Council, both the African and Chinese centres for disease control and prevention and representatives from various biotechnology and pharmacy firms

The scenario was imagined playing out for 18 months, during which more than three billion people were infected with the disease and more than 250 million died as a result.

While the fictional pandemic was just that, experts said that the exercise helped them to reach a number of useful, if grim, predictions about how the next pandemic might play out.

A monkeypox lesion

Monkeypox causes chills, fatigue, fever, and muscle aches and can lead to rashes and lesions (Image: Getty Images)

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Their report warns: “The next global catastrophe could be caused by the deliberate misuse of the tools of modern biology or by a laboratory accident.”

When it comes to lab safety and oversight of risky research, they added, the current system “Is neither prepared to meet today’s security requirements, nor is it ready for significantly expanded challenges in the future.”

Fortunately for humanity, the recent outbreaks of monkeypox — which include, as of today, nine cases in the UK — do not appear to have the benefit of being genetically augmented.

The disease causes chills, fatigue, fever, and muscle aches initially, with more severe cases often presenting with a rash on the face and genitals. It is spread by close contact.

International public health expert Jimmy Whitworth of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said: “This isn’t going to cause a nationwide epidemic like Covid did.

“But it’s a serious outbreak of a serious disease — and we should take it seriously.”

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Late winner against Malaysia sends Việt Nam into SEA Games final

May 19, 2022 by vietnamnews.vn Leave a Comment

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Tiến Linh takes off his shirt to celebrate as the whole Việt Trì stadium burst into joy after his only goal for Việt Nam. VNA/VNS Photo

Peter Cowan

PHÚ THỌ — Việt Nam left it late, but managed to defeat Malaysia 1-0 after extra time tonight in Phú Thọ Province to advance to the SEA Games men’s football final.

Nguyễn Tiến Linh headed in the winner in the 110th minute to send Việt Nam U23s into Sunday’s final against bitter rivals Thailand.

While his charges were far from convincing against a dogged Malaysian side, coach Park Hang-seo won’t care as he stands one win away from defending the coveted SEA Games crown.

Park named his strongest side after resting several key players for the final match of the group stages against Timor Leste, with overage players Nguyễn Hoàng Đức, Linh and Đỗ Hùng Dũng all recalled.

Despite the raucous support from the home fans, Việt Nam struggled to impose themselves in the first half as both sides felt each other out.

The first decent chance fell to striker Tiến Linh in the 27th minute after he was slipped through on goal, but his shot drifted agonisingly wide of the goal.

Malaysia came close in the 39th minute via a deflection at a corner, but goalkeeper Nguyễn Văn Toàn got down sharply at his near post to smother the effort.

Three minutes later Việt Nam had two glorious chances to pull ahead, but Tiến Linh’s shot was saved by Malaysian goalkeeper Azri Ghani, and Nhâm Mạnh Dũng’s effort on the rebound from a tight angle went wide.

The second half of normal time was markedly short on quality, with the biggest incident of note Việt Nam’s Lê Văn Xuân suffering what appeared to be a serious knee injury.

As extra time began both young sides appeared to be suffering from exhaustion after a grueling tournament, but it was the home side who were able to push through the pain.

In the 97th minute defender Bùi Hoàng Việt Anh should have scored for Việt Nam after the ball fell to him after a corner, but he poked his effort wide of the post.

It took until the second half of extra time, but Việt Nam’s winning goal was well worth the wait.

Captain Dũng curled in a free-kick delivery and Linh rose superbly to nod the ball home, redeeming himself after spurning earlier chances.

With Malaysia exhausted Việt Nam were able to ride out the final minutes with little drama and set up a showpiece final at My Dinh Stadium.

In the other semi-final earlier in the day in Nam Định Province, Thailand also needed extra time to defeat Indonesia by a goal to nil.

Weerathep Pomphan fired home a thunderous winner in the 94th minute to send his side through to the final as they attempt to claim their 17th gold medal.

Việt Nam will be gunning for their second ever gold in the decider on Sunday and it would take a brave man to bet against them riding home advantage all the way to victory. — VNS

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