التصنيف: أخبار

  • مسؤولان أمريكيان يوضحان لـCNN نتائج الغارات على كتائب "حزب الله" في العراق

    مسؤولان أمريكيان يوضحان لـCNN نتائج الغارات على كتائب "حزب الله" في العراق

    مسؤولان أمريكيان يوضحان لـCNN نتائج الغارات على كتائب "حزب الله" في العراق

    مسؤولان أمريكيان يوضحان لـCNN نتائج الغارات على كتائب "حزب الله" في العراق

    (CNN)– قال مسؤولان أمريكيان، لشبكة CNN، إن الغارات الجوية الأمريكية التي نفذت، الثلاثاء، أسفرت عن مقتل ما يصل إلى 7 من مقاتلي كتائب “حزب الله” في العراق.

     

    وأضافا أن الغارات دمرت أيضا مبنيين لمقر ومنشأة استخباراتية تستخدمها الجماعة المسلحة المدعومة من إيران والجماعات المرتبطة بها.

    وذكرت CNN سابقا أن الضربات التي استهدفت موقعين في غرب العراق، في منطقة القائم بالقرب من الحدود السورية، وكذلك منطقة جرف الصخر جنوب بغداد.

    وتأتي الضربات بعد أيام فقط من إصابة جنود أمريكيين في قاعدة عين…

    المصدر

    أخبار

    مسؤولان أمريكيان يوضحان لـCNN نتائج الغارات على كتائب "حزب الله" في العراق

  • A lost childhood: Inside the Ukrainian school shut by war where children’s drawings of the conflict line the walls | World News

    A lost childhood: Inside the Ukrainian school shut by war where children’s drawings of the conflict line the walls | World News

    A lost childhood: Inside the Ukrainian school shut by war where children’s drawings of the conflict line the walls | World News

    A lost childhood: Inside the Ukrainian school shut by war where children's drawings of the conflict line the walls | World News

    Invading Russian troops – arms up, faces scared – drown in a river in the frontline city of Kherson as a Ukrainian soldier watches on, rifle raised.

    The image, drawn by a child, is among a line of pictures, including of jets, tanks and corpses, that illustrates Ukraine’s lost childhood after almost two years of full-scale war.

    They hang on a wall inside a school – shut for normal lessons – where a charity offers support to the dwindling number of children in Kherson whose parents have yet to flee.

    One six-year-old boy, looking at the sketches, says his favourite is of a large Ukrainian tank.

    Ukraine war latest: Plane ‘downed in act of terrorism’

    “I like tanks,” says Ivan Rozsoha, clutching the hand of his grandmother, who brings him to the school for speech therapy.

    The little boy, dressed in a puffy winter coat and a woolly hat, says it is scary when Russian troops launch artillery, drone and missile strikes against his city – a daily occurrence.

    “When rockets fall, I try to hide my head under my toys,” Ivan says, gesturing with his hands.

    Image:
    In one image, drawn by a child, a Ukrainian soldier watches on as Russian soldiers marked with the “Z” that has become a symbol of its invasion drown in the water below

    He wants to become a soldier when he grows up and thinks Russia is bad, saying: “They are destroying Ukraine and I know how to destroy them.”

    Zina Rozsoha, 67, his grandmother, appears distressed to hear such heavy thoughts from a child. Asked how she feels, she just says: “Tears.”

    The speech therapy takes place in a classroom with more than a dozen other children, aged around four to seven, sitting at tables, clutching crayons and coloured pencils.

    Anastasia Andryushchenko, a therapist, encourages them to express themselves through art, by drawing sad and happy faces, and then to explain why they have chosen these expressions.

    She says a growing number of children in Kherson struggle with speech. Some no longer talk at all, terrorised by the fighting and with little chance to socialise.

    Image:
    In another drawing, a tractor pulls away a Russian tank, in what has become a real-life symbol of Ukraine’s resistance to the invasion

    “War has affected them profoundly in terms of their mental health,” the therapist says.

    She adds: “In the last lesson, we were drawing Christmas trees with the children.

    “Everyone had to draw a Christmas tree from their imagination. A lot of children drew a Christmas tree with explosions, with grenades. There was even a nuclear Christmas tree, which soldiers were defending.”

    Loss of innocence

    The loss of innocence is hardly surprising given everything that Ukraine’s children have endured since Russia launched its full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022.

    Russian troops occupied Kherson, in southern Ukraine, from the early days of the war. Ukrainian forces managed to push them out just over eight months later.

    Image:
    Kherson’s regional state administration building in the city centre

    However, efforts to surge deeper into Russian-held territory have faltered and the frontline remains on the eastern side of the Dnipro river that marks the southern edge of the city.

    Air raid sirens and artillery are the soundtrack for the few thousand children who still live in Kherson – their parents unwilling or unable to leave.

    Schools and nurseries are shut, so all lessons take place online at home – whenever there is power and an internet connection.

    In a small, single-storey house on a modest residential street, six-year-old Yeva Lykhenko plays alone with her doll house in her bedroom – it is too dangerous to play outside.

    The fair-haired girl with a shy smile does not like online learning and rarely has the chance to mix with other children.

    “She does not have a childhood. They just took it away,” says her mother, Emma Lykhenko, 37.

    Read more from Sky News:
    At least 18 killed as Russia carries out air strikes
    Two high-value Russian planes ‘shot down’, Ukraine claims

    At night, Yeva is often kept awake by explosions.

    “When it is very loud, I always come to her and say: ‘Do not be afraid, mummy is with you’,” the mother says.

    “I try not to show I am worried or nervous, but inside I am just praying.”

    The mother says she does not want to move away, in part because of the cost but also because there is no guarantee that other cities would be completely safe.

    “I am telling myself all the time: just a little bit longer and victory will happen,” she adds.

    Rare access to the most dangerous part of Kherson

    Sky News has been given rare access to an island that lies between the two banks of the Dnipro river.

    It is effectively a dividing line between Ukrainian and Russian troops, though further along some Ukrainian forces have made it across to the east bank amid fierce fighting.

    The island is the most dangerous part of Kherson. Yet a few families, with young children, still live here as well.

    Image:
    Concrete apartment blocks frame an empty playground in a residential section of an island in the Dnipro

    We approach some dreary-looking, concrete apartment blocks that frame an empty playground of rusty climbing frames and swings in a residential section of the island.

    On the ninth floor of one of the buildings, a young couple live with their two small daughters, Varvara, two, and Arina, who is just 18 months old.

    Their apartment is tiny, filled with blankets and cushions to keep the family warm whenever the power cuts off – it has just come back on when we meet them after a three-week outage following an attack on a local energy facility.

    The temperature outside is freezing.

    The mother, Anastasia Tatarinova, who looks to be in her early 20s, says life is hard and the threat from Russian forces is growing.

    Image:
    Anastasia Tatarinova and Arina

    “There are very huge explosions,” she says, sitting on a sofa and cuddling her youngest child on her lap.

    “Yesterday there was a drone flying overhead. It is really worrying. All the time we are stressed.”

    She was pregnant with Arina when the full-scale invasion started. The little girl, her hair pulled into a mini ponytail on the top of her head, has known nothing but war.

    “She heard bombing from my tummy so has never seen normal life,” Ms Tatarinova says.

    “We are afraid to play on the playground so we are staying home. It is very dangerous outside because there is shelling all the time.”

    Asked whether the family will leave if the situation worsens, she says: “If it continues like that, of course, why would we stay here? We will have no choice then.”

    Click to subscribe to Ukraine War Diaries wherever you get your podcasts

    Football ‘too important’ to surrender

    Despite the danger, some children back towards the centre of Kherson are still clinging to one passion – football.

    Boys take aim towards a goal inside a well-used sports hall in a metal hanger with a curved roof, tucked in between residential blocks and deserted market stalls.

    A coach blows a whistle as the children race around, kicking footballs.

    Image:
    Despite the danger, some children back towards the centre of Kherson are still clinging to one passion – football

    Sitting in a changing room pulling up his sports socks, 12-year-old Rostislav Semenyuk says his dream is “to become a second Lionel Messi”.

    He would also like to be a politician when he grows up.

    The boy says he can barely remember what life was like before the war.

    Asked if he can think of anything that he misses, he says: “More games – football games. There are fewer matches now.”

    The head football coach says his boys and girls – the girls are due to train the next day – are not able to play matches in the Kherson region because it is too risky.

    Instead, they travel to areas further away from the frontline to take on other teams.

    Vyachslav Rol says the opportunity to train is “very important”.

    Image:
    Kyrylo Tsyvilskiy

    “Children are suffering from the war so they need to distract themselves,” the coach says.

    “The only opportunity for them to communicate with each other is at our training.”

    A second boy, in a maroon-coloured kit, says football is his life.

    “I love to train,” says Kyrylo Tsyvilskiy, 12, taking a brief pause to chat.

    “My dream is I want my friends to come back, for the war to be over and for all these Russians never to exist.”

    المصدر

    أخبار

    A lost childhood: Inside the Ukrainian school shut by war where children’s drawings of the conflict line the walls | World News

  • ‘We don’t need easy words – they need to listen’: Protesting French farmers determined to make their voices heard | World News

    ‘We don’t need easy words – they need to listen’: Protesting French farmers determined to make their voices heard | World News

    ‘We don’t need easy words – they need to listen’: Protesting French farmers determined to make their voices heard | World News

    'We don't need easy words - they need to listen': Protesting French farmers determined to make their voices heard | World News

    We are standing in the middle of a motorway – the Eurotunnel is only a junction away, but nothing is moving.

    Next to me, Damien Delattre, an arable farmer from near Calais, is showing me his tractor.

    “It has been used for 6,000 hours, so it is middle-aged,” he says. “Just like me.”

    Damien, along with dozens of other farmers, has parked his tractor on the carriageway and climbed out, blocking the traffic.

    Image:
    Damien Delattre, an arable farmer from near Calais

    On the brow of the hill, about a quarter of a mile away, the traffic is stacked up – lorries waiting to get through, drivers battling to get to the Eurotunnel terminal.

    But here, standing on the road, everything feels remarkably calm.

    A brazier is lit and drinks are handed out. It’s like a thousand other picket lines from history, except this one is in the middle of a motorway.

    The police, positioned to the side, watch and wait. They have clearly worked with the farmers to ensure that most traffic can find a way through and that the blockades, while aggravating, do not become a more serious problem.

    Image:
    Traffic queues in Calais amid a roadblock by protesting French farmers

    Read more:
    Protests by farmers in France spread to Brussels

    But the imagery is what matters here, and the farmers’ protest is becoming a mosaic of blockades across the nation. The message is also clear – that farmers have the power to paralyse France.

    There are a variety of complaints that you hear, but they boil down to one theme – that they feel left behind, forgotten and disadvantaged. That their role – in feeding the nation – is taken for granted while their problems are ignored.

    “For years we have been silent,” says Damien. He is 51 years old and has been a farmer for half his life, but says that his job is becoming ever more difficult.

    “All we do is work and you know what – I lost a very good friend of mine last week. I’m sorry, but he hanged himself. It’s common now in our profession.

    “What do you want from the politicians who are watching these protests,” I ask.

    “They need to understand our problems – we don’t need any more easy words. They need to really listen.

    “Look – three years ago, nitrogen fertiliser costs €180 (£153) per ton. Last year, the price had gone up to €700 (£598).

    “How can we deal with that?”

    Image:
    French farmers block the N12 road in Brittany. Pic: Reuters

    Image:
    Pic: Reuters

    He got a call from friends yesterday inviting him to join the protest, and didn’t hesitate.

    As we speak, there are hoots of support from lorries passing by on the other carriageway.

    There are many people who feel sympathy for the plight of the farmers, even more so after the death of a mother and her daughter, who were killed when a car drove into a blockade in southwestern France.

    Among the farmers we spoke to, there was a determination to make the most of this moment.

    They take support from the impact made by farmers’ protests in Germany, Poland, the Netherlands and elsewhere.

    Image:
    French farmers block the A61 highway with their tractors
    Pic: Reuters

    There is talk of columns of tractors arriving in Paris to bring the capital to a standstill.

    “Would you join that?” I ask Damien. “Yes, of course. It’s easy to get to Paris.”

    For the moment, it goes day by day. Some protest movements, like the Gilets Jaunes, go on for years. Some burn brightly and then fade away.

    The farmers are resolute, but part of their problem is that their jobs really are demanding.

    Image:
    A cow figure hangs from a vehicle, as French farmers stage a protest near the European Parliament in Brussels. Pic: Reuters

    Read more from Sky News:
    Paris honours David Bowie with his own street
    Avalanche kills British mother and son skiing on Mont Blanc

    Breaking away to block a motorway is not something you can do all the time without hurting your livelihood even more.

    However, this isn’t just about the plight of the farmers, but also about a rumbling, widespread discontent against authority.

    The protests are being seized upon by various groups, most notably the Rassemblement National (RN), Marine Le Pen’s right-wing political party, as another lever with which to bash Emmanuel Macron’s presidency.

    Image:
    Marion Marechal, Marine Le Pen’s niece and executive vice president of French far-right party Reconquete, joins a demonstration in Brussels

    They have applauded the farmers, claiming Macron is happy to see French agriculture wither away.

    European elections loom later this year and the RN, along with populist and anti-Establishment groups across Europe, is tipped to prosper.

    As the tractors drove off at the end of the day, we saw a tall figure applauding the farmers – an RN politician, waving at the tractors.

    And tomorrow, the farmers will protest again. Their anger is simmering. The question is whether, when and how it might boil over.

    Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email [email protected] in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK

    المصدر

    أخبار

    ‘We don’t need easy words – they need to listen’: Protesting French farmers determined to make their voices heard | World News

  • ماذا قالت أمريكا عن حادثة "تحطم" الطائرة العسكرية الروسية؟

    ماذا قالت أمريكا عن حادثة "تحطم" الطائرة العسكرية الروسية؟

    ماذا قالت أمريكا عن حادثة "تحطم" الطائرة العسكرية الروسية؟

    ماذا قالت أمريكا عن حادثة "تحطم" الطائرة العسكرية الروسية؟

    (CNN)–  أعلن البيت الأبيض، الأربعاء، أنه على علم بالأنباء عن تحطم طائرة عسكرية روسية في منطقة بيلغورود الروسية، بالقرب من الحدود الأوكرانية، لكن ليس لديه معلومات أخرى لتقديمها.

     

    ورد المتحدث باسم مجلس الأمن القومي الأمريكي جون كيربي عندما سئل عما إذا كان لدى الولايات المتحدة المزيد من المعلومات: “لا، لا يوجد لدينا، لقد رأينا التقارير، ولكننا لسنا في وضع يسمح لنا بتأكيدها.”

    وأضاف: “من الواضح أن الإدارة (الأمريكية) تبذل قصارى جهدها لمحاولة الحصول على مزيد من المعلومات حول هذا…

    المصدر

    أخبار

    ماذا قالت أمريكا عن حادثة "تحطم" الطائرة العسكرية الروسية؟

  • بسبب "الإساءة العنصرية" ضد حارس نادي ميلان.. منع 5 مشجعين من دخول الملاعب مدى الحياة

    بسبب "الإساءة العنصرية" ضد حارس نادي ميلان.. منع 5 مشجعين من دخول الملاعب مدى الحياة

    بسبب "الإساءة العنصرية" ضد حارس نادي ميلان.. منع 5 مشجعين من دخول الملاعب مدى الحياة

    بسبب "الإساءة العنصرية" ضد حارس نادي ميلان.. منع 5 مشجعين من دخول الملاعب مدى الحياة

    (CNN) — أعلن نادي أودينيزي الإيطالي، الأربعاء، حظر 5 مشجعين من دخول ملعب “بلوينرجي”، معقل الفريق، مدى الحياة، بعد هُتافات عنصرية موجهة نحو حارس مرمى نادي إسي ميلان، مايك ماينان، وهو صاحب بشرة سمراء، خلال مواجهة الفريقين في الدوري الإيطالي، السبت الماضي.

     

    وفي البداية تمت معاقبة أحد المشجعين، قبل أن يعلن النادي أنه حدد هوية 4 أشخاص إضافيين “على صلة بالحادث”.

    وقال النادي الإيطالي: “كما كان الحال منذ البداية، واصل النادي عمله جنبا إلى جنب مع الشرطة”، مؤكداً عزمه المطلق على “معاقبة…

    المصدر

    أخبار

    بسبب "الإساءة العنصرية" ضد حارس نادي ميلان.. منع 5 مشجعين من دخول الملاعب مدى الحياة