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Desertions spark panic, and pardons, in Ukraine’s army

Desertions spark panic, and pardons, in Ukraine’s army
Ukrainian soldier ‘Buch’, center, who left his unit without permission and later returned, takes part in a training exercise in the Dnipropetrovsk region on Dec. 12, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 27 December 2024

Desertions spark panic, and pardons, in Ukraine’s army

Desertions spark panic, and pardons, in Ukraine’s army
  • Manpower problems present a critical hurdle for Ukraine, which is losing territory to Russia at the fastest rate since the early days of the February 2022 invasion

UNDISCLOSED, Ukraine: Oleksandr deserted from the front line in eastern Ukraine after watching his fellow servicemen being pulverized by Russian bombardments for six months. Then, those remaining were ordered to counterattack.
It was the final straw for Oleksandr, 45, who had been holding the line in the embattled Lugansk region in the early months of the war. Even his commanding officer was reluctant to send his men back toward what looked like certain death.
So when Oleksandr saw an opening to save his life, he did.
“We wanted to live. We had no combat experience. We were just ordinary working people from villages,” the soft-spoken serviceman, who declined to give his last name, said.
His decision is just one of many cases plaguing the Ukrainian military, which has already suffered at least 43,000 losses in nearly three years of fighting, President Volodymyr Zelensky revealed this month.
The government is also struggling to recruit new troops.
Together, these manpower problems present a critical hurdle for Ukraine, which is losing territory to Russia at the fastest rate since the early days of the February 2022 invasion.
The issue was put under the spotlight in September when 24-year-old serviceman Sergiy Gnezdilov announced in a scathing social media post that he was leaving his unit in protest over indefinite service.
“From today, I am going AWOL with five years of impeccable soldiering behind me, until clear terms of service are established or until my 25th birthday,” he wrote.
The state investigation service described his statement as “immoral” and said it played into Russia’s hands. He was detained and faces up to 12 years in prison.
Figures published by the Ukrainian general prosecutor’s office show that more than 90,000 cases have been opened into instances of soldiers going absent without leave or deserting since Russia invaded in 2022, with a sharp increase over the past year.
Oleksandr said that after leaving the frontline, he remembered little from the year he spent at home in the Lviv region owing to concussions he suffered while deployed.
He recounted “mostly drinking” to process the horrors he witnessed but his guilt was mounting at the same time.
He ultimately decided to return after seeing young Ukrainians enlist or wounded troops return to battle — despite pleas from his family.
His brother was beaten during the historic Maidan protests in 2013 that toppled Ukraine’s pro-Kremlin leader, and later died.
His sister was desperate. “They’re going to kill you. I would rather bring you food to prison than flowers to your grave,” he recounted his sister telling him during a visit from Poland.
It was guilt, too, that motivated Buch, who identified himself by a military nickname, to return to battle.
The 29-year-old deserted after being wounded in fierce fighting in southern Ukraine in late 2022 during the liberation of Kherson city.
“Just staying under constant shelling gradually damages your mental state. You go crazy step by step. You are all the time under stress, huge stress,” he said of his initial decision to abscond.
In an effort to address manpower shortages, Ukrainian lawmakers in August approved an amnesty for first-time offenders who voluntarily returned to their units.
Both the 47th and 53rd brigades in December announced they would welcome back servicemen who had left the front without permission, saying: “We all make mistakes.”
Prosecutors said in early December that 8,000 servicemen that went absent without leave or deserted had returned in November alone.
Still, Siver, commander of the 1st Separate Assault Battalion, known as Da Vinci, who also identified himself by his military nickname, said the number of Ukrainian troops fleeing the fighting without permission was growing.
That is partly because many of the most motivated fighters have already been killed or wounded.
“Not many people are made for war,” said Siver, describing how his perceptions of bravery had been reshaped by seeing those who stood their ground, and those who fled.
“There are more and more people who are forced to go,” he said, referring to a large-scale and divisive army mobilization campaign.
But other servicemen interviewed by AFP suggested that systemic changes in military culture — and leadership — could help deter desertions.
Buch said his military and medical training as well as the attitudes of his superiors had improved compared to his first deployment, when some officers “didn’t treat us like people.”
Siver suggested that better psychological support could help troops prepare for the hardships and stress of battle.
“Some people think it’s going to be like in a movie. Everything will be great, I’ll shoot, I’ll run,” he said.
“But it’s different. You sit in a trench for weeks. Some of them are knee-deep in mud, cold and hungry.”
He said there was no easy solution to discouraging desertion, and predicted the trend would worsen.
“How do you reduce the numbers? I don’t even know how. We just have to end the war,” he said.


UN rights chief warns nations inaction on Gaza could amount to complicity in war crimes, ahead of high-Level Palestine conference

UN rights chief warns nations inaction on Gaza could amount to complicity in war crimes, ahead of high-Level Palestine conference
Updated 22 sec ago

UN rights chief warns nations inaction on Gaza could amount to complicity in war crimes, ahead of high-Level Palestine conference

UN rights chief warns nations inaction on Gaza could amount to complicity in war crimes, ahead of high-Level Palestine conference

NEW YORK CITY: United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk on Sunday issued a stark appeal ahead of the High-Level Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine, urging governments to exert maximum pressure on Israel to end what he described as a “carnage” in Gaza and warning that inaction could amount to complicity in international crimes.

In a video statement released from Geneva, Türk called for “immediate steps by Israel to end its unlawful continued presence in the occupied Palestinian territory,” and urged all parties to work towards tangible progress on implementing a two-State solution.

The event, co-chaired by Ƶ and France and officially titled the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution, is being described as both urgent and historic.

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher on Sunday warned that humanitarian crisis in Gaza is dire, with widespread hunger, children wasting away, and people risking their lives just to access food. While Israel’s recent move to ease restrictions and allow more aid through is a step forward, Fletcher said it is not nearly enough. Vast quantities of aid, safe access routes, consistent fuel supplies, and protection for civilians are urgently needed to prevent further catastrophe. A sustained, immediate humanitarian response and a permanent ceasefire are critical.

Turk said: “This Conference must deliver concrete action,” he said, appealing to participating governments to “put all possible pressure on the Israeli government to end the carnage in Gaza — permanently.” Turk cautioned that “countries that fail to use their leverage may be complicit in international crimes.”

Describing the situation in Gaza and the West Bank as an “unspeakable tragedy,” Türk said that daily violence and destruction were fueling the “dehumanization of Palestinians.”

He condemned Israeli plans that he said amounted to consolidating the annexation of the West Bank and forcing Palestinians out of Gaza. “Every day, we see actions and hear about plans (to) crowd extremely exhausted and hungry people into ever-smaller areas of the territory, after repeated displacement orders by the Israeli military,” he said.

“These steps put the two-state solution even further out of reach.”

“Children are starving and dying in front of our eyes,” Turk said, calling Gaza “a dystopian landscape of deadly attacks and total destruction.”

He strongly criticized what he described as the failure of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, supported by the United States and Israel, saying its chaotic, militarized distribution centers “are failing utterly to deliver humanitarian aid at the scope and scale needed.”

According to figures from Gaza’s Health Ministry, Turk said, over 200,000 Palestinians have been killed or injured since October 7, about ten percent of the territory’s population. He also noted that more than 1,000 people have died since May while trying to access food, and that over 300 humanitarian workers have been killed by Israel.

“All countries have an obligation to take concrete steps to ensure that Israel, the occupying power in Gaza, complies with its obligations to ensure that sufficient food and lifesaving necessities are provided to the population,” he said.

Turning to the occupied West Bank, Türk accused Israeli security forces and settlers of “continuing to kill Palestinians, demolish houses, cut off water supplies, and consolidate systems of oppression and discrimination.”

While condemning the October 7 attacks by Hamas and other Palestinian groups and recognizing the trauma inflicted on Israel, Turk reiterated his long-standing condemnation of the scale of Israel’s military response in Gaza. He said he has warned repeatedly of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and the need to prevent genocide, echoing concerns raised by the International Court of Justice.

“The people of the world will judge this Conference on what it delivers,” he warned.

Turk renewed calls for an “immediate, permanent ceasefire,” the “unconditional release of all hostages and all others arbitrarily detained,” and for “massive” humanitarian aid to be delivered to Palestinians “wherever they are.”

He concluded by expressing the UN human rights office’s readiness to support Palestinian state-building efforts grounded in human rights and the rule of law, and emphasized the future importance of victim support and accountability.


Starmer to press Trump on Gaza, trade in Scotland talks

Starmer to press Trump on Gaza, trade in Scotland talks
Updated 25 min 26 sec ago

Starmer to press Trump on Gaza, trade in Scotland talks

Starmer to press Trump on Gaza, trade in Scotland talks
  • Starmer himself faces domestic pressure to follow France’s lead and recognize a Palestinian state
  • The meeting comes after the UK PM backed efforts by Jordan and the UAE to air drop aid to Gaza

TURNBERRY, Britain: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer will press Donald Trump on ending “the unspeakable suffering” in Gaza, and also talk trade, when they meet Monday at the US president’s golf resort in Scotland.
The talks will come a day after the US and the European Union reached a landmark deal to end a transatlantic standoff over tariffs and avert a full-blown trade war.
Starmer is expected to push Trump on urging a revival of stalled ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas as a hunger crisis deepens in the besieged Palestinian territory.
The meeting at Turnberry, southwestern Scotland, comes as European countries express growing alarm at the situation in Gaza, and as Starmer faces domestic pressure to follow France’s lead and recognize a Palestinian state.
The leaders will also discuss implementing a recent UK-US trade deal, as well as efforts to end Russia’s war against Ukraine, according to a British government statement issued late Sunday.
But it is the growing threat of starvation faced by Palestinians in Gaza that is set to dominate the talks, on the third full day of Trump’s trip to the land where his mother was born.
Starmer is expected to “welcome the president’s administration working with partners in Qatar and Egypt to bring about a ceasefire in Gaza,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.
“He will discuss further with him what more can be done to secure the ceasefire urgently, bring an end to the unspeakable suffering and starvation in Gaza and free the hostages who have been held so cruelly for so long.”
Trump told reporters Sunday that the US would give more aid to Gaza but he wanted other countries to step up as well.
“It’s not a US problem. It’s an international problem,” he said, before embarking on crunch trade talks with EU chief Ursula von der Leyen at the resort south of Glasgow.
Starmer and Trump’s meeting comes after the UK PM backed efforts by Jordan and the United Arab Emirates to air drop aid to Gaza. Humanitarian chiefs remain skeptical such deliveries can deliver enough food safely for the area’s more than two million inhabitants.

On Sunday, Israel declared a “tactical pause” in fighting in parts of Gaza and said it would allow the UN and aid agencies to open secure land routes to tackle the hunger crisis.

Last week, the United States and Israel withdrew from Gaza truce talks, with US envoy Steve Witkoff accusing Hamas of blocking a deal — a claim rejected by the Palestinian militant group.
Starmer held talks with French and German counterparts on Saturday, after which the UK government said they agreed “it would be vital to ensure robust plans are in place to turn an urgently-needed ceasefire into lasting peace.”
But the Downing Street statement made no mention of Palestinian statehood, which French President Emmanuel Macron has announced his country will recognize in September.
More than 220 MPs in Britain’s 650-seat parliament, including dozens from Starmer’s own ruling Labour party, have demanded that he too recognize Palestinian statehood.
Number 10 said Starmer and Trump would also discuss “progress on implementing the UK-US trade deal,” which was signed on May 8 and lowered tariffs for certain UK exports but has yet to come into force.
Trump said Sunday the agreement was “great” for both sides and that Starmer was doing “a very good job.”
After their meeting they will travel together to Aberdeen in Scotland’s northeast, where the US president is expected to formally open a new golf course at his resort on Tuesday.
Trump played golf at Turnberry on Saturday and Sunday on his five-day visit that has mixed leisure with diplomacy, and also further blurred the lines between the presidency and his business interests.
 


North Korea says South Korea’s overtures ‘great miscalculation’

North Korea says South Korea’s overtures ‘great miscalculation’
Updated 28 July 2025

North Korea says South Korea’s overtures ‘great miscalculation’

North Korea says South Korea’s overtures ‘great miscalculation’
  • Powerful sister of leader Kim Jong Un jeers South’s peace moves
  • Lee’s US alliance pledge shows new South Korea leader no different from predecessor, Kim Yo Jong says

SEOUL: North Korea has no interest in any policy or proposals for reconciliation from South Korea, the powerful sister of its leader Kim Jong Un said on Monday in the first response to South Korean liberal President Lee Jae Myung’s peace overtures.
Kim Yo Jong, who is a senior North Korean ruling party official and is believed to speak for the country’s leader, said Lee’s pledge of commitment to South Korea-US security alliance shows he is no different from his hostile predecessor.
“If South Korea expects to reverse all the consequences of (its actions) with a few sentimental words, there could be no greater miscalculation than that,” Kim said in comments carried by official KCNA news agency.
Lee, who took office on June 4 after winning a snap election called after the removal of hard-line conservative Yoon Suk Yeol over a failed attempt at martial law, has vowed to improve ties with Pyongyang that had reached the worst level in years.
As gestures aimed at easing tensions, Lee suspended loudspeaker broadcasts blasting anti-North propaganda across the border and banned the flying of leaflets by activists that had angered Pyongyang.
Kim, the North Korean official, said those moves are merely a reversal of ill-intentioned activities by South Korea that should never have been initiated in the first place.
“In other words, it’s not even something worth our assessment,” she said.
“We again make clear the official position that whatever policy is established in Seoul or proposal is made, we are not interested, and we will not be sitting down with South Korea and there is nothing to discuss.”
There has been cautious optimism in the South that the North may respond positively and may even show willingness to re-engage in dialogue, particularly after Pyongyang also shut off its loudspeakers, a move Lee said was quicker than expected.
Still, Lee, whose government is in the midst of tough negotiations with Washington to avert punishing tariffs that President Donald Trump has threatened against a string of major trading partners, has said US alliance is the pillar of South Korea’s diplomacy.
“Through efforts in the areas of politics, economic security and culture, we will strengthen the South Korea-US alliance that was sealed in blood,” Lee said in remarks commemorating the anniversary of the Korean War armistice on Sunday.
North Korea also marked the anniversary which it calls victory day with events including a parade in Pyongyang, although state media reports indicated it was at a relatively lesser scale compared to some previous years.
The two Koreas, the United States and China, which are the main belligerents in the 1950-53 Korean War, have not signed a peace treaty.


Russia’s air attack on Kyiv leaves five people injured, Ukraine’s military says

Russia’s air attack on Kyiv leaves five people injured, Ukraine’s military says
Updated 28 July 2025

Russia’s air attack on Kyiv leaves five people injured, Ukraine’s military says

Russia’s air attack on Kyiv leaves five people injured, Ukraine’s military says

MOSCO: A Russian air attack on Kyiv has left at least five people injured and damaged a residential building, the head of the military administration of the Ukrainian capital, Tymur Tkachenko, said on Monday on the Telegram messaging app. 

 


US and EU strike deal with 15 percent tariff to avert trade war

US and EU strike deal with 15 percent tariff to avert trade war
Updated 28 July 2025

US and EU strike deal with 15 percent tariff to avert trade war

US and EU strike deal with 15 percent tariff to avert trade war
  • Deal includes $600 bln EU investments in US, more EU energy, defense purchases
  • EU says rate extends to cars, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors
  • 15 percent tariff better than threatened 30 percent, in deal mirroring Japan’s

TURNBERRY, Scotland: The US struck a framework trade agreement with the European Union on Sunday, imposing a 15 percent import tariff on most EU goods — half the threatened rate — and averting a bigger trade war between the two allies that account for almost a third of global trade.
US President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced the deal at Trump’s luxury golf course in western Scotland after an hour-long meeting that pushed the hard-fought deal over the line.
“I think this is the biggest deal ever made,” Trump told reporters, lauding EU plans to invest some $600 billion in the United States and dramatically increase its purchases of US energy and military equipment.
Trump said the deal, which tops a $550 billion deal signed with Japan last week, would expand ties between the trans-Atlantic powers after years of what he called unfair treatment of US exporters.

Von der Leyen, describing Trump as a tough negotiator, said the 15 percent tariff applied “across the board,” later telling reporters it was “the best we could get.”
“We have a trade deal between the two largest economies in the world, and it’s a big deal. It’s a huge deal. It will bring stability. It will bring predictability,” she said.

The deal, which Trump said calls for $750 billion of EU purchases of US energy in coming years and “hundreds of billions of dollars” of arms purchases, likely spells good news for a host of EU companies, including Airbus, Mercedes-Benz and Novo Nordisk, if all the details hold.
The baseline 15 percent tariff will still be seen by many in Europe as too high, compared with Europe’s initial hopes to secure a zero-for-zero tariff deal, though it is better than the threatened 30 percent rate.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz welcomed the deal, saying it averted a trade conflict that would have hit Germany’s export-driven economy and its large auto sector hard. German carmakers, VW, Mercedes and BMW were some of the hardest hit by the 27.5 percent US tariff on car and parts imports now in place.
But Bernd Lange, the German Social Democrat who heads the European Parliament’s trade committee, said the tariffs were imbalanced and the hefty EU investment earmarked for the US would likely come at the bloc’s own expense.
Trump retains the ability to increase the tariffs in the future if European countries do not live up to their investment commitments, a senior US administration official told reporters on Sunday evening.
The euro rose around 0.2 percent against the dollar, sterling and yen within an hour of the deal’s being announced.

Mirror of Japan deal
The deal mirrors key parts of the framework accord reached by the US with Japan, but like that deal, it leaves many questions open, including tariff rates on spirits, a highly charged topic for many on both sides of the Atlantic.
Carsten Nickel, deputy director of research at Teneo, said it was “merely a high-level, political agreement” that could not replace a carefully hammered out trade deal: “This, in turn, creates the risk of different interpretations along the way, as seen immediately after the conclusion of the US-Japan deal.”
“We are agreeing that the tariff ... for automobiles and everything else will be a straight-across tariff of 15 percent,” Trump said, but he quickly added that a 50 percent US tariff on steel and aluminum will remain in place.
Von der Leyen said that tariff would be cut and replaced with a quota system.
Von der Leyen said the rate also applied to semiconductors and pharmaceuticals, and there would be no tariffs from either side on aircraft and aircraft parts, certain chemicals, certain generic drugs, semiconductor equipment, some agricultural products, natural resources and critical raw materials.
Trump initially appeared to suggest pharmaceuticals would not be covered, but a senior administration official later confirmed to reporters that the tariff deal applied to pharmaceuticals.
Officials also said EU leaders had accepted that the US would keep its 50 percent steel and aluminum tariff in place while the two sides continue to discuss it.
“We will keep working to add more products to this list,” von der Leyen said, adding that spirits were still under discussion.
The deal will be sold as a triumph for Trump, who is seeking to reorder the global economy and reduce decades-old US trade deficits, and has already reached similar framework accords with Britain, Japan, Indonesia and Vietnam, although his administration has not hit its goal of “90 deals in 90 days.”
He has periodically railed against the EU, saying it was “formed to screw the United States” on trade.
Arriving in Scotland, Trump said the EU wanted “to make a deal very badly” and said, as he met von der Leyen, that Europe had been “very unfair to the United States.”
Trump has fumed for years about the US merchandise trade deficit with the EU, which in 2024 reached $235 billion, according to US Census Bureau data.
The EU points to the US surplus in services, which it says partially redresses the balance. Now he argues, his tariffs are bringing in “hundreds of billions of dollars” of revenues for the US, while dismissing warnings from economists about the risk of inflation.
On July 12, Trump threatened to apply a 30 percent tariff on imports from the EU starting on August 1, after weeks of negotiations with the major US trading partners failed to reach a comprehensive trade deal.
The EU had prepared countertariffs on 93 billion euros ($109 billion) of US goods in the event there was no deal, and Trump made good his 30 percent tariff threat.
Some member states had also pushed for the bloc to use its most powerful trade weapon, the anti-coercion instrument, to target US services in the event of a no-deal.