
Flooding in the occupied town of Novaya Kakhovka after destruction of a large dam part of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant in Ukraine.
👋 გეგაჯგინას*
Welcome to Tuesday, where evacuations are underway after a large dam was destroyed near Ukraine’s Kherson, at least 42 are killed in Haiti floods, and a word is being auctioned off in Paris. Meanwhile, Mykhailo Kriegel in Ukrainian online newspaper Ukrainska Pravda writes about Russia’s USSR-like blue-and-yellow paranoia.
[*Gegacginas - Laz, Turkey and Georgia]
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• Dam destroyed near Kherson: A large Soviet-era dam has been blown up on the Dnipro river near Kherson, Ukraine. Kyiv and Moscow are blaming each other for the attack, which is flooding nearby war zones. The dam, located in the Russian-occupied part of Kherson, supplied water to Crimea and the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. Experts say that there is no immediate nuclear safety risk, and evacuations are underway as catastrophic flooding could affect 16,000 people.
• Haiti floods kill 42: Flooding and landslides in Haiti over the past several days have killed at least 42 people. Already suffering from a long-term humanitarian crisis, seven of the island nations’ 10 departments were hit by deadly weather. The UN reports that the severe rains affected 37,000 people and displaced 13,400 across the country.
• Iran unveils its first hypersonic ballistic missile: Iran has presented what it described as its first domestically-made hypersonic ballistic missile today. The missile named Fattah was revealed in a ceremony attended by high ranking officials, including President Ebrahim Rahisi. Hypersonic missiles can fly at least five times faster than the speed of sound on complex trajectories, making them hard to be detected and shot down by anti-aircraft weapons.
• Fighting intensifies as Sudan fighting enters eighth week: Sudan's capital was hit with shelling and heavy clashes as conflict between rival military factions enters its eighth week. Khartoum has been heavily damaged by battles, air strikes and looting, while a second consecutive day of fighting has also plagued neighboring Omdurman and Bahri. This violence has displaced 1.2 million people within Sudan, with 400,000 more fleeing to neighboring countries.
• Mike Pence joins 2024 Republican presidential race: Former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence has filed the paperwork for his bid in the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. He will face off against the man he served, ex-President Donald Trump, as well as Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. Pence is slated to formally announce his candidacy on Wednesday.
• Prince Harry’s rare court testimony, in case against tabloids: In the first court testimony by a British royal in 130 years, Prince Harry suggested that the UK press has blood on its hands in a London court appearance as a part of a case against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN). More than 100 people are suing the tabloid publisher – accused of phone-hacking and other unlawful activities. Prince Harry asked "How much more blood will stain their typing fingers before someone can put a stop to this madness?"
• Word auction: Following the passage of a law last February that allows auctions to sell intangible works, the Paris’ Drouot auction house will put up for auction a word chosen by Italian artist Alberto Sorbelli, to be revealed to the buyer only. This is the first time in art history that a word will be auctioned off for ownership as it now has legal validity.💬 LEXICON
Хоробра Гуска
A Ukrainian music teacher has created an illustrated book to help children cope with the war. The book’s hero, Brave Goose(Хоробра Гуска), puts on disguises throughout the story and plays several roles, such as a medic or a volunteer. Nadia Sadoviak, who was born in western Ukraine and now lives in Berkshire, UK, said she created the book to “help children cope with a situation they can barely understand” and will launch her book at her local library on June 14.
🗞️ FRONT PAGE
“Unsustainable,” titles Portuguese daily Jornal I, reporting on potential solutions “to end the drought” that is plaguing several countries around the world. In southern Europe, Spain and Portugal have experienced record-breaking spring temperatures, pushing the countries’ governments to ask for support from the European Union.
#️⃣ BY THE NUMBERS
$3,499
Tech giant Apple has unveiled the Apple Vision Pro, its much-hyped new augmented reality headset which CEO Tim Cook said would "seamlessly blends the real world and the virtual world" — that is, if you can afford the $3,499 price tag.
📰 STORY OF THE DAY
Blue-yellow visions, bioweapon warnings: the face of Russian paranoia
Today's Russia is similar to Stalin's USSR in more and more ways, including the constant search for enemies and the paranoia of betrayal. Some examples of this panic may be funny, but also help inform what Moscow might do next, writes Mykhailo Kriegel in Ukrainian online newspaper Ukrainska Pravda.
🇺🇦🚨 Take Olga Z., a resident of the Moscow neighborhood, who was taking the metro when a neighbor caught her eye. He wore a yellow jacket with a blue sweatshirt peeking out from underneath. She was also concerned that a man who was a lookalike of Ukrainian nationalist Dmytro Yarosh was sitting beside the suspicious citizen in yellow and blue. She immediately informed the police.
🇷🇺 What is happening today in the Russian world is not a temporary dizziness but a time-tested national idea of the Soviet world. Conspiratorial searches for disguised enemies and denunciations have been the norm since at least the 1930s. However, back then, it was not the yellow and blue colors, but Nazi swaztikas.
☣️ But it's not just colors and symbols. News about secret biological warfare laboratories on the territory of Ukraine is coming off the Russian propaganda conveyor belt all the time. Ukraine is portrayed as a testing ground for developing biological weapons commissioned and funded by the Americans. At some point, it was supposed to rise into the air and bring ethnic Russians to their knees with a buzz and a squawk.
➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com📣 VERBATIM
“Brazil has resumed its leading role in tackling climate change.”
— Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva unveiled his plan to prevent and control deforestation in the Amazon by 2030, as part of an international commitment to environmental protection made at the COP26 climate negotiations in Glasgow, Scotland, in 2021. Aimed at breaking with the policies of his predecessor Jair Bolsonaro, which he described as “four years in which the environment was treated as an obstacle to the immediate profit of a privileged minority,” Lula’s plan to combat deforestation also comes at a time when Brazil has reached record deforestation levels.
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