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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War

Makiikva, The Makings Of A Watershed In Ukraine War

The killing of likely hundreds of Russian troops has set of a spiral of recriminations that could change the way Moscow approaches its 10-month-old invasion of Ukraine

Photo of a Russian Defense Ministry spokesman

A Defense Ministry spokesman makes a statement about the Makiikva attack

Russian Ministry of Defense
Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

PARIS — Since the start of the Ukraine invasion ten months ago, the Russian army has suffered its fair share of setbacks. But none, so far, had generated as strong a reaction as the Makiikva missile strike on Russian troops in occupied Ukraine, which undoubtedly claimed hundreds of lives. We may even ask ourselves if there won’t be a before and after Makiikva.

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The Russian general staff raised its official death toll Wednesday, from 63 to 89 dead, but Ukrainian and Russian sources have been citing between 300 and 400 victims. The building hit by Ukrainian missile fire was destroyed, probably because it also housed an weapons depot.

Vladimir Putin remained silent seeing what is being experienced in Russia as a tragedy. But even while being isolated in the Kremlin, he can’t avoid the strong emotion and virulent criticism circulating for the past 48 hours. The vitriol spares him directly, because the "Tsar" is still unassailable — but the demands are for clear accountability, and revenge.


The main target of the criticism is the military hierarchy, from top to bottom judged responsible for the accumulation of failures that led to this week’s disaster.

Risk of impunity

The reaction of Margarita Simonyan, head of the RT propaganda television network, close to Putin, is typical: she welcomes the army's commitment for investigating on responsibilities and adds: "it must be understood that impunity does not lead to social harmony but to new crimes, and therefore to public disorder.” Pro-war Russian bloggers express their anger towards the hierarchy even more bluntly.

For two days, the main reactions have come from Samara, an industrial city on the Volga River, where some of the killed conscripts came from. A very tightly orchestrated ceremony took place that included a speech of a soldier’s mother quite in line with the Kremlin. But she also asked Putin to decree general mobilization, to win this war.

More brutal, a local politician asked what lessons would be learned from this dramatic event, and who would be held responsible.

Blaming the victims

In the immediate future, the army is shifting blame. The Russian general staff declared Wednesday that the conscripts had been spotted by the Ukrainians because of their mobile phone data. But on social media, the public accuses the generals of blaming the victims, and points out that officers are ultimately responsible for the mistakes of their men.

This debate over who is responsible takes place against the backdrop of a rivalry between different clans, with one personality becoming ever more visible: Yevgeny Prigozhin, the founder of the Wagner paramilitary group, who is increasingly visible in videos shot on the front lines, surrounded by his men.

What these videos mean is that Prigozhin is on the terrain, supporting his men in the face of difficulties in the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, while we have not seen much of Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu or Army Chief General Valery Gerasimov on the front lines for the past 10 months.

These clan rivalries inside Russia’s power circles intensify with each failure. Makiikva may turn out to matter more than the rest.


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Society

How This Colombian "Throuple" Made Social And Legal History

The throuple of three gay men married together has challenged the standard vision of a family in traditionally conservative Colombia.

Image of three men taking a selfie

The three husbands

Guadalupe Rivero

MEDELLÍN — In 1999, Colombians Manuel José Bermúdez Andrade and Alejandro Rodríguez Ramírez met and began a loving relationship. They barely imagined their soon-to-evolve couple would come to alter perspectives on what constitutes a family in their conservative homeland. In 2003, they met Álex Esneyder Zabala, and soon formed a ménage à trois.

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The arrangement was a working example of polyamory — a word unfamiliar to them in those years. In 2012, the trio became a quartet, as they opened their household to Víctor Hugo Prada Ardila. Sadly for them, Alex died a year later (or in 2014) of cancer, leaving again a family of three.

They recently spoke about their 20 years together in the Colombian city of Medellín. Manuel said that being older when he met Alejandro in 1999, he insisted from the start that he did not expect Alejandro "to deprive himself" of encounters.

Manuel says he has always been "very free in terms of sexuality... it seemed unfair he should deprive himself of the pleasures of the flesh" by being locked up in monogamy early in life. "Your body is yours, you can enjoy it, it's not my property. And if you meet someone and feel more than just desire, if it's love, we'll talk about it and see what happens," he says he told Alejandro.

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