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In The News

A Cruel Summer For Ukrainian Kids

And see the contrast with kids in Russia...

A Cruel Summer For Ukrainian Kids

Ukrainian children play territorial defense fighters patrolling in the village of Stoyanka, Kyiv region.

Bertrand Hauger, Anna Akage, Lisa Berdet and Emma Albright

With the summer break around the corner and heat taking over most of Europe, Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza is running, as part of its “photo of the day” section, a picture of children splashing about with their parents in a river. A refreshing photo, in stark contrast with the caption chosen by the Warsaw-based newspaper: “These children don’t have to be afraid of bombs.” The river in question is the Moskva, and these are Russian kids cooling off near the Kremlin.

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The same Gazeta Wyborcza has also reported on a Poland-based hotline, open to Ukrainian children (an estimated 500,000 of whom have found refuge in Poland) to be able to talk to a psychologist about their traumatic experiences — or simply looking for a chat in their native tongue.


The same need for psychological support for Ukrainian youth is echoed in Kyiv daily Ukraïna Moloda which reports on a very different kind of “summer camp,” specifically designed to welcome children affected by the war. For 12 days, educators who received training from a psychologist are trying to give traumatized children some semblance of normal childhood again.

An Eye On September

Russian children playing in the water

Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza


Come September 1, all 422 schools in Ukraine's capital are expected to re-open, the city's authorities said Friday, having gone online immediately after the Russian invasion on Feb. 24.

But it won’t be school as usual: As announced by the director of the Department of Education and Science, Olena Fidanyan, quoted by Kyiv city’s portal, "The most important task for the new academic year is the safety of students and teachers. [...] For those schools where there is no shelter, a storage facility within walking distance has been prepared and will be tested. At the beginning of the school year, all schools will conduct the necessary training with teachers and children on actions during an air raid."

Russia Continues Assault In East, Shells Kharkiv

Shelling in Sumy

Michal Burza/ZUMA


Russian troops continue massive artillery shelling of eastern Ukraine. Overnight, seven rockets were fired in the Dnipropetrovsk region, artillery fire was directed at Sumy and neighboring villages, and an improvised explosive device was dropped on one of the region's cities, writesLivy Bereg.

The number of dead and injured from the explosions is not yet known with certainty. Shelling also continues in Kharkiv and throughout Donbas. However, the most difficult situation remains around Kherson, where Russian troops are hitting with low-accuracy cassette shells, causing heavy casualties among the civilian population.

Putin Praises Russian Forces For Taking Full Control Of Luhansk Region

Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a face-to-face meeting with Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu following the capture of the key city of Lysychansk

Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin Pool/Planet Pix/Zuma


A meeting between Vladimir Putin and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu was broadcast on Channel One, where the Russian president congratulated his defense chief on the liberation of the Luhansk People's Republic and asked him to reward the troops' command.

"My congratulations and words of gratitude also apply in full to the fighters of the second army corps of the LNR People's Militia,” Putin said, according to Russian public news agency TASS. “I also know that they acted decisively, competently, showing courage and heroism in the truest sense of the word, showed heroism in liberating their native land."

Earlier, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Lieutenant General Igor Konashenkov said that the town of Lysychansk had been encircled, and that Russian troops seized Verkhnekamenka, Zolotarevka, and Belogorivka settlements and reached the Seversky Donets River.

Le Monde (French Daily)

Russia takes over the Donbas region

Le Monde front page

Ukraine To Hold Talks With Turkey And UN For Secure Grain Exports

An employee is seen at the Melitopol Elevator grain storage.

Alexei Konovalov/TASS/Zuma


Ukraine is holding talks with Turkey and the United Nations to secure guarantees for grain exports from Ukrainian ports. President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed the talks, which news reports say are likely to take place in Turkey.

Up to 60 million tons of grain could be stuck in Ukraine by the fall if the country continues to face blocked exports, Zelensky said. The President also said he was working with the United Nations to try to open a safe corridor that would allow Ukraine to export grain from its Black Sea ports, “from our side, the Ukrainian state is not wasting time and we are working on various ways of railway and river ports for the export of our grain, and we are increasing this export every day.”

This comes as Ukraine also repeatedly accuses Russia of stealing grain from its warehouses and exporting it out of the country to Russian occupied areas or Russia itself as well as other potential countries. A Turkish official was quoted by Reuters on Monday, saying that Turkey had halted a Russian-flagged cargo ship off its Black Sea coast and was currently investigating a Ukrainian claim that it was carrying stolen grain.

In Donbas, Many Locals Remain But Face Limited Access To Basic Goods

A view of a building destroyed by shelling in the embattled city of Mariupol.

Vladimir Gerdo/TASS/Zuma


French daily Les Échos published a reportage from the Donbas region, where many Ukrainian residents have chosen to stay put despite the Russian army progressing in the region.

According to the UN refugee agency, nearly 7 million civilians have fled within the country, and 13 million are stranded to their homes because of the bombings and infrastructures destroyed, among other things.

For those who have decided or are forced to stay in their besieged towns in the contested Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, they have to deal with limited access to basic products as only 20% of grocery stores and 10% of drugstores are still open. A Ukrainian civilian declared, “The major problem is gasoline: just a few stations are still open, and those that are quickly run out of fuel.”

Bulgaria: Spreading Russian Propaganda For Money

Lena Borislavova during interview with Darik Radio

Screenshot of interview with Darik Radio


In Bulgaria, Russian propaganda is spread in exchange for money, reports spoke with Darik Radio. Lena Borislavova, head of the cabinet of the outgoing Prime Minister, Kiril Petkov, and spokesperson for the government, spoke with the Bulgarian radio station about how some politicians, journalists, and “opinion makers” spread propaganda in exchange for financial reward.

Minimum wage is around $300 per month but public figures and influencers can earn up to around $2,000 just for defending Russia in the context of the war in Ukraine, French weekly Courrier International reports.

Borislavova also added that the “secret services have not been very reliable" for the work of the government, alluding to the fact that their erroneous predictions regarding the war in Ukraine were probably dictated by the Kremlin.

On July 3, Bulgaria expelled 70 Russian diplomats and consular employees accused of espionage. The Russian ambassador, Eleonora Mitrofanova, threatened the Bulgarian capital, Sofia, with the closure of the embassies and, eventually, a break in diplomatic relations between the two countries.

Georgia To Belarus To Kazakhstan: How Ex-Soviet Republics See Putin’s Plans

Moldovan President Maia Sandu with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in January 2021

President office of Ukraine


Vladimir Putin has been upfront about his desire to rebuild Russia’s influence in the region. Former Soviet states are watching developments in Ukraine closely, with many trying to ensure futures free of interference by Moscow.

Anna Akage looks back, and forward, to see how the former republics are reacting to Putin’s ambitions, in a country by country analysis.

Ukrainian Prime Minister: Russia Billionaires Should Pay To Rebuild Ukraine


Ukrainian prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, stated during the two-day conference happening in Lugano, Switzerland that rebuilding his war-ravaged country would cost around $750 billion, and that Russian billionaires should pick up the bill

During the opening of the Ukraine recovery conference, he said that the confiscated assets of Russia and Russian oligarchs should be used to help Ukraine rebuild, “we believe that the key source of recovery should be the confiscated assets of Russia and Russian oligarchs,” Shmyhal said. “The Russian authorities unleashed this bloody war, they caused this massive destruction, and they should be held accountable for it.” Shmyhal estimated that Russia’s frozen assets amount to between $300 and $500 billion.

Leaders at the conference said the recovery plan had three phases: one focused on fixing things that matter for people’s daily lives like water supply, second is called “fast recovery” which includes temporary housing, hospital and school projects. It will launch as soon as fighting ends. And the third phase aims at rebuilding the country over the long term.

Representatives of over 40 countries along with organizations such as the European Investment Bank and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) signed onto the Lugano Declaration outlining a roadmap for Ukraine's recovery.


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Society

Sexual Violence In War: Listening And Healing — And Never Again

Three women who were victims of sexual violence during the Colombian Civil War recount their stories of struggle and survival. They speak up in the hopes that the judiciary will open a new case to bring justice to them and many more survivors of sexual abuse perpetrated during the conflict.

A gloved, raised fist contrasts against feminist artwork on a memorial monuement

Feminists protest against Colombian president Ivan Duque Maraquez and the police brutality that killed at least 45 during demonstrations in Bogota, Colombia on May 28, 2021.

Camilo Pardo Quintero

BOGOTA – Jennifer, Ludirlena and Diana suffered a living death at the hands of their aggressors. It was their self-love and resilience that saved them, after experiencing sexual violence during the nation’s civil war.

The Colombian government forgot about these women. But now, they are champions in a battle towards justice and dignity. With different perspectives, they manage to find a connection, something that will unite them forever: advocating so that no one else experiences what they endured.

All sides in the war perpetrated sexual violence. But in the case of these three women, it was specifically the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and United Self-Defences of Colombia (AUC) paramilitary groups who exerted power over their bodies, through the cruelty of their crimes.

These were not isolated incidents and, to the shame of our society, they remain a massive, forgotten outrage.

According to official records, during the war in Colombia there were 15,760 victims of sexual violence. Of that total, 61.8% were women, and another 30.8% were young girls and teenagers. Unfortunately, underreporting plays a significant role in these numbers. Organizations such as the Network of Women Victims and Professionals, the collective Focal Groups - Men Victims of Sexual Violence and the British organization All Survivors Project estimate that the real number may be as much as three times higher.

The three protagonists in our story show how armed conflict has marked the lives of thousands of women in Colombia. They are three voices among many that have come together to demand the opening of a "macro-case," or investigation into sexual violence through Colombia’s Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP), which would uncover the patterns of sexual and gender-based crimes among armed groups which have devastated entire communities.

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