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‘This is no vacation’: young Poles do summer army bootcamp

‘This is no vacation’: young Poles do summer army bootcamp
A military instructor keeps an eye on volunteers during a military training that is part of the "Vacation with the Army" project, at a military shooting range on the outskirts of Warsaw, Poland. (AFP)
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Updated 28 sec ago

‘This is no vacation’: young Poles do summer army bootcamp

‘This is no vacation’: young Poles do summer army bootcamp
  • Nearly 10,000 men and women have volunteered for the month-long, paid “Vacation with the Army” program, which the defense ministry launched to promote military service among young people as Poland beefs up its security

WARSAW: Sweating and out of breath, young Poles throw grenades and practice evacuating the wounded at a training ground outside Warsaw.
Instead of relaxing at the beach, they have chosen to do army drills over the summer holidays.
Nearly 10,000 men and women have volunteered for the month-long, paid “Vacation with the Army” program, which the defense ministry launched to promote military service among young people as Poland beefs up its security.
The EU and NATO member — which borders Belarus, Russia and Ukraine — has been strengthening its defensive assets since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022 out of fear that it could be next.
“The training includes shooting and tactics classes, field studies, and general air defense,” said lieutenant Patrycja Adamska, spokeswoman for the army’s 10th Car Regiment, one of the units involved in the program.
“The recruits have an opportunity to experience the discipline of soldier life,” she told AFP.
The participants, most of them 18 to 20 years old, spend 27 days in a unit, after which they are awarded a rank and can continue service or become part of the reserve personnel.
Michal Piekut, a master’s student in international security, was surprised by the rigour of the drills. Sporting camouflage paint and in full uniform, the 29-year-old was barely standing from the exertion.
“This is no vacation, it’s intensive military training. I thought I wouldn’t make it,” he told AFP after dragging a heavy munition chest across many meters of sandy terrain.
“Nobody fainted yet, but the day is young,” he deadpanned.
Lt. Michal Gelej from the army recruitment office said the program “constitutes a wonderful alternative to summer jobs,” as a payout of 1,400 euros awaits those who complete it.
Goran Meredith, a 19-year-old American studies student at the University of Warsaw, said the money and summer timing allowed him to participate, otherwise he “wouldn’t have time to be here.”
The ongoing war in Ukraine was another incentive.
Piekut said he was considering a future military career: “I want to become a reserve soldier, and if need be, serve my homeland.”

Just after Russia’s Ukraine invasion, Poland adopted a homeland security law that included the goal of “enlarging military personnel.”
It also updated its voluntary conscription program in 2022 with an eye toward increasing the army reserve. It drew nearly 90,000 candidates over the years 2023 and 2024.
The defense ministry launched the “Vacation with the Army” program last year, along with exercises in schools and weekend boot camps for civilians, promoted by a large-scale social media campaign.
“The Ukrainian example teaches us that the professional army gets used up in about a year” if it cannot draw on adequate reserves, said Bartosz Marczuk, a Sobieski Institute expert who co-authored a report on the idea of introducing mandatory military training in Poland.
“We are the largest country on NATO’s eastern flank, and its keystone of security,” he added.
Marczuk said that any reintroduction of mandatory army service — which Poland ended in 2009 — would need to be preceded by voluntary programs.
“That’s why all initiatives of this sort have to be supported,” he told AFP.
In March, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced that by 2027, Poland will expand its voluntary military training program to accommodate 100,000 recruits per year, in order to create “an army of reservists.”
Piekut doubted whether his compatriots were up to the task.
“Most adults could not handle it. There are very high requirements, physically, psychologically, and in terms of discipline,” he said.
Meredith agreed: “We’re in our first week and 10 people have quit already, so it speaks for itself.”


Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says

Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says
Updated 1 min 38 sec ago

Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says

Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says
  • Russia carried out eight strikes on the Zaporizhzhia region, hitting the prison, according to Ivan Fedorov, the head of the military administration
  • The attack comes around the three year anniversary of an attack on another detention facility in occupied Ukrainian territory that Kyiv blamed on Moscow and that was reported to have killed dozens of captured Ukrainian soldiers

KYIV: A Russian strike on a prison in central Ukraine overnight killed more than 16 people and wounded dozens others, Kyiv said Monday, after Washington pressured Russia to end its war.
The attack comes around the three-year anniversary of an attack on another detention facility in occupied Ukrainian territory that Kyiv blamed on Moscow and that was reported to have killed dozens of captured Ukrainian soldiers.
It also comes just one day after US President Donald Trump issued Moscow with a new deadline to end its grinding invasion of Ukraine — now in its fourth year — or face tough new sanctions.
Russia carried out eight strikes on the Zaporizhzhia region, hitting the prison, according to Ivan Fedorov, the head of the military administration.
He said 16 people were killed there and that another 35 were wounded in the attack that he said destroyed the facility and damaged homes nearby.
“Putin’s regime, which also issues threats against the United States through some of its mouthpieces, must face economic and military blows that strip it of the capacity to wage war,” Andriy Yermak, a senior aide to Ukraine’s president wrote on social media in response.


Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets said the Zaporizhzhia attack was further evidence of Russian “war crimes.”
“People held in places of detention do not lose their right to life and protection,” he wrote on social media.
The Ukrainian air force said that Russia had launched 37 drones and two missiles overnight, adding that its air defense systems had downed 32 of the drones only.
People were also killed and more wounded in attacks on the Dnipropetrovsk region, according to regional government officials.
A missile strike on the town of Kamyanske killed two people, wounded five and damaged a hospital, Sergiy Lysak, head of the regional military administration said on Telegram.
Another person was killed and several wounded in an attack on the region’s Synelnykivsky district, he said.
In a separate attack on Velykomykhaylivska, Monday night, a “75-year-old woman was killed. A 68-year-old man was wounded. A private house was damaged,” he posted on Telegram.
In southern Russia, a Ukrainian drone attack killed one person, the region’s acting governor said Tuesday.
“A car was damaged on Ostrovsky Street. Unfortunately, the driver who was in it died,” Yuri Slyusar, acting governor of the Rostov region, said in a post on Telegram.
Kyiv has been trying to repel Russia’s summer offensive, which has made fresh advances into areas largely spared since the start of the offensive in 2022.
Over the weekend, the Russian army said its forces had captured a small settlement in the industrial Dnipropetrovsk region, weeks after it seized the first village in the territory.
Kyiv has contested those claimed Russian advances.
Both Ukraine and Russia blamed each other for the strike over the night of July 29 three years ago on the detention in the Russian-occupied Donetsk region, which the Kremlin says is part of Russia.
Ukraine says that dozens of its soldiers who laid down their arms after a long Russian siege of the port city of Mariupol were killed in that attack on the Olenivka detention facility.


India road crash kills 18 Hindu pilgrims

India road crash kills 18 Hindu pilgrims
Updated 28 min 52 sec ago

India road crash kills 18 Hindu pilgrims

India road crash kills 18 Hindu pilgrims
  • At least 18 people were killed in eastern India on Tuesday after a bus ferrying Hindu pilgrims collided with a truck loaded with cooking gas cylinders, officials said

NEW DELHI: At least 18 people were killed in eastern India on Tuesday after a bus ferrying Hindu pilgrims collided with a truck loaded with cooking gas cylinders, officials said.
Visuals from the site in Jharkhand state showed the mangled wreckage of the bus, with its rear portion almost entirely burnt.
Local lawmaker Nishikant Dubey said the pilgrims were traveling to a Hindu shrine to celebrate the sacred month of Shravan, coinciding with the onset of the monsoons in the subcontinent.
“18 devotees lost their lives due to a bus and truck accident,” Dubey said on social media.
The pilgrims were carrying holy water from the Ganges to offer to the Hindu god of destruction Lord Shiva.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his “deepest condolences to the families of the devotees who lost their lives.”
“The road accident in Jharkhand’s Deoghar is extremely tragic,” his office said on social media.
Tens of thousands of people die in road accidents in India every year, according to official data.
More than 172,000 died in road crashes in 2023, transport minister Nitin Gadkari told parliament.
Last November, a bus plunged into a deep Himalayan ravine in the northern state of Uttarakhand, killing at least 36 passengers and injuring several others.


Thailand-Cambodia border calm as military commanders hold talks

Thailand-Cambodia border calm as military commanders hold talks
Updated 31 min 4 sec ago

Thailand-Cambodia border calm as military commanders hold talks

Thailand-Cambodia border calm as military commanders hold talks
  • Southeast Asian neighbors announced a truce to end five days of fighting, after talks hosted by Malaysian leader Anwar Ibrahim
  • Commanders agreed to maintain the ceasefire, stop any troop movement, and facilitate the return of the wounded and dead bodies

BANGKOK: Military commanders from Thailand and Cambodia held talks on Tuesday, as calm return to their disputed border and displaced residents began trickling back, following the Southeast Asian neighbors announcing a truce to end five days of fighting. Thai and Cambodian leaders met in Malaysia on Monday and agreed to a ceasefire deal to halt their deadliest conflict in more than a decade that has killed at least 40 people, mostly civilians, and displaced over 300,000 in both countries. Although Thailand’s military said that there had been attacks by Cambodian troops in at least five locations early on Tuesday, violating the ceasefire that had come into effect from midnight, commanders from both sides met and held talks, a Thai army spokesman said.

This includes negotiations between the general leading Thailand’s second region army, which oversees the stretch of the frontier that has seen the heaviest fighting during the conflict, and his Cambodian counterpart, Thai Major Gen. Winthai Suvaree told reporters.

The commanders, who met at the border, agreed to maintain the ceasefire, stop any troop movement, and facilitate the return of the wounded and dead bodies, he said.

“Each side will establish a coordinating team of four to resolve any problems,” Winthai said.

In Bangkok, Thailand’s acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai, who traveled to the Malaysian capital to secure the truce deal, said he had spoken to Cambodia’s defense minister and calm had returned to border area.

“There is no escalation,” Phumtham told reporters. “Right now things are calm.”

Maly Socheata, a spokesperson for the Cambodian Defense Ministry, said at a briefing on Tuesday that there had been no new fighting along the border.

Vehicular traffic and daily activity resumed in the Kantharalak district of Thailand’s Sisaket province on Tuesday, about 30km from the frontlines, where Thai and Cambodian troops remain amassed.

Chaiya Phumjaroen, 51, said he returned to town to reopen his shop early on Tuesday, after hearing of the ceasefire deal on the news.

“I am very happy that a ceasefire happened,” he said. “If they continue to fight, we have no opportunity to make money.” In Cambodia’s Oddar Meanchey province, 63-year-old Ly Kim Eng sat in front of a makeshift tarpaulin shelter, waiting for directions after hearing of the ceasefire deal.

“So, if the authorities announce it is safe for all of the refugees to return home, I would immediately return,” he said.


Britain tries to tackle youth knife crime crisis

Britain tries to tackle youth knife crime crisis
Updated 46 min 11 sec ago

Britain tries to tackle youth knife crime crisis

Britain tries to tackle youth knife crime crisis
  • Some charities involved in classes and workshops aimed at young people are urging the government to make such education part of the national curriculum

HINDHEAD: A year after one of Britain’s most harrowing knife attacks, the government is urging young people to drop off bladed weapons at “amnesty” bins or mobile vans in a month-long campaign — part of efforts to control knife-related violence, particularly when it involves youths.
On July 29, 2024, teenager Axel Rudakubana, who was obsessed with violence and genocide, attacked a Taylor Swift-themed children’s dance event in the northern English town of Southport, killing three girls and stabbing 10 other people.
Since then, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government has pledged tougher age checks for knife buyers, warned social media firms they could face fines for failing to curb sales and promotion of weapons, and banned zombie-style knives and ninja swords.
Starmer launched a coalition in September last year aimed at tackling youth knife crime. Actor and anti-knife campaigner Idris Elba joined the conversation at a meeting this month, alongside King Charles.
Charities and experts interviewed by Reuters call the government’s efforts a step forward but say they largely fail to address the root causes. Some charities involved in classes and workshops aimed at young people are urging the government to make such education part of the national curriculum.
Overall, knife crime in England and Wales has risen 87 percent over the past decade, with 54,587 offenses last year alone, a 2 percent rise from 2023 and among the highest rates in Europe, figures from Britain’s interior ministry show.
It did not provide a breakdown of knife crime offenses by age group. But data from the justice ministry showed that in the year to March 2024 there were just over 3,200 knife or offensive weapon offenses committed by children (aged 10-17) resulting in a caution or sentence.
Of the 262 people killed with a knife or sharp object in the 12 months to March 2024, 57 were under 25. Kitchen knives were the most commonly used weapons.
A public inquiry into the Southport murders that opened this month will begin by looking into the specifics of Rudakubana’s case before a second phase examines the wider issue of children being drawn into violence, an increasing concern for British authorities.
Amanda Marlow, from the youth charity Safety Center, which runs knife crime awareness workshops in schools, says young people carry knives for a range of reasons. These include seeing it as a “quick fix” to make money when growing up in poverty, trying to gain status among peers, or being drawn into the wrong crowd, such as gangs, where they are often exploited.
Some police forces have launched dedicated knife crime units. In the West Midlands, one of the country’s worst-hit areas, the Guardian Taskforce focuses on reducing knife crime among under-25s.
In June alone, officers patrolled for over 3,000 hours, carried out 366 stop-and-searches, and seized 57 knives or offensive weapons. “Every knife seized is a life saved,” Inspector Kate Jeffries of the taskforce said in a statement.
After surviving the Southport stabbings, Leanne Lucas launched the “Let’s Be Blunt” campaign, calling for safer, rounded-tip kitchen knives instead of pointed ones.

POVERTY AND MENTAL HEALTH
Jade Levell, a researcher at the University of Bristol who studies masculinity, vulnerability and violence, said anti-knife crime efforts should focus on early intervention, such as mental health care, rather than short-term fixes like amnesty bins.
“Some boys see their only option is to be afraid or to make others afraid of them,” Levell said, referring to those growing up with violence, poverty or discrimination.
Some 4.5 million children are growing up in poverty in the UK, according to charities. In 2023, about 1 in 5 children and young people aged 8 to 25 years had a probable mental disorder, according to the National Health Service.
The government announced funding this month for hubs offering mental health and career support for young people at risk of gang involvement, violence or knife crime. The scheme, focused on high-risk areas, is starting with eight such centers and aims to have 50 open in the next four years.
EDUCATING YOUNG PEOPLE
The violent death of his son two years ago prompted Martin Cosser to found a charity dedicated to educating young people about knife crime, one of several such initiatives around the country.
Charlie’s Promise, named after 17-year-old Charlie who was stabbed multiple times in the chest by another teenager at a packed end-of-term party, has spoken to 41,000 young people in schools and elsewhere.
“Nothing brings my little boy home,” said Cosser, adding that far more must be done to stop the knife crime crisis spiralling out of control. “We need to understand the emotional drivers behind why people pick up knives.”
Charity Safety Center delivers workshops in schools, specifically designed for children aged 9 to 12. At a recent session in a school in the southern English town of Milton Keynes, staff from the charity explained what knife crime is and the dangers it poses, encouraging active participation through questions and games.
Safety Center and Charlie’s Promise are among several groups calling for such education to become a mandatory part of the national school curriculum.
Amani Simpson, who survived being stabbed in 2011 and now shares his story as a youth coach, believes societal pressures and some forms of entertainment such as violent video games also play a role in spawning knife crime.
“Young people feel displaced and disengaged ... those things need to be uprooted,” Simpson said after a talk at TCES North West London, a special education school, emphasising the importance of helping them believe in their own potential so they make better choices.
“Hope for me is the missing piece,” he said.


Extreme weather turns Beijing into rain trap, kills at least 30

Extreme weather turns Beijing into rain trap, kills at least 30
Updated 29 July 2025

Extreme weather turns Beijing into rain trap, kills at least 30

Extreme weather turns Beijing into rain trap, kills at least 30
  • Much of the rain inundated Beijing’s mountainous north near the Great Wall
  • Beijing experienced rainfall of up to 543.4mm in its northern districts

BEIJING: Extreme weather killed at least 30 people in Beijing after a year’s worth of rain fell in a matter of days, stretching the Chinese capital’s disaster management capabilities and prompting some experts to call the city a rain trap.

Much of the rain inundated Beijing’s mountainous north near the Great Wall, with 28 deaths reported in the district of Miyun and two in Yanqing, the official Xinhua news agency said on Tuesday. It did not say when or how the deaths occurred. Heavy rain started last Wednesday and intensified around Beijing and surrounding provinces on Monday, with the capital experiencing rainfall of up to 543.4 mm (21.4 inches) in its northern districts, Xinhua said. The average annual rainfall in Beijing is around 600 mm.

“The cumulative amount of precipitation has been extremely high – reaching 80 percent to 90 percent of the annual total in just a few days in some areas,” said Xuebin Zhang of the University of Victoria in Canada and CEO of the Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium (PCIC).

“Very few systems are designed to handle such an intense volume of rainfall over such a short period,” Zhang said.

The local topography – mountains to the west and north – “trapped” the moist air and forced it to rise, enhancing the extraordinary amount of precipitation, he said.

China’s usually arid north has seen record precipitation in recent years, with some scientists linking the rainfall to global warming.

In the summer of 2023, heavy rain and flooding killed at least 33 people in Beijing. Rainfall in the city of Xingtai in neighboring Hebei province exceeded 1,000 mm in two days – double the yearly average. Late on Monday, President Xi Jinping said there had been “heavy casualties and property losses” in Beijing and the provinces of Hebei, Jilin and Shandong, and ordered “all-out” search and rescue efforts.

More than 80,000 Beijing residents had been relocated, Xinhua reported, with roads and communication infrastructure damaged and power to 136 villages cut off overnight.

The most intense rain occurred on Saturday in Beijing’s hilly Huairou, which saw 95.3 mm of rain in one hour. In Miyun on Monday, some people were trapped at an elderly care center as water levels rose close to the roof. Emergency rescue services swam into the building and used ropes to pull out 48 people.

On Tuesday, parks, libraries and museums including the Palace Museum at the Forbidden City were closed. Train and bus services in the suburbs and along waterways were suspended. Hundreds of flights were canceled or delayed at Beijing’s two airports, state media reported.

‘Flood still coming’

Heavy rain also pounded the province of Hebei and the city of Tianjin neighboring Beijing, which are all part of the vast Hai river basin.

Four people were killed in a landslide in Hebei on Monday, with eight still missing, as six months’ worth of rain fell over the weekend.

In two villages in Tianjin on Monday, major roads were flooded, bridges damaged, with only the roofs of single-story houses visible, China Central Television (CCTV) reported. Heavy rain is expected to persist in parts of Beijing, Hebei and Tianjin on Tuesday, the emergency management ministry said Monday night, adding that “the disaster relief situation is complex and severe.”

Some residents in the region posted on social media platform Weibo calling on authorities to expedite rescue efforts.

“The flood is still coming, and there is still no power or signal, and I still can’t get in touch with my family!” a post on Tuesday morning said.