6-year-old Ukrainian girl recovering after missile strike moves into South Florida home

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

6-year-old Ukrainian girl recovering after missile strike moves into South Florida home A 6-year-old girl on the road to recovery after she survived a missile strike in Ukraine has taken another major step forward in her journey: she and her family have moved to their new home in South Florida.7News cameras on Friday captured Alisa Kulvhynska and her parents as they addressed reporters.“Thank you,” she said.It has been months since the young survivor lost her home in Ukraine.“This family has been going through such a tragic situation,” said Soraya Rivera-Moya with the Ronald McDonald HouseAlisa and her family were brought to South Florida after a missile destroyed their home in Kherson, Ukraine, on Dec. 23.The strike left Alisa with life-threatening injuries.“Too hard for me, because my daughter was wounded in this war,” said her father,.“This is what a war crime looks like. There have been 70,000 war crimes reported to date,” said Andrew Duncan with the Romulus T. Weatherman Foundation.Alisa and her family were brought to the U.S. by the Romulus T. W...

How to U-turn and get away with it

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

How to U-turn and get away with it Listen on Spotify Apple Music Google Play EN_Google_Podcasts_Badge Created with Sketch. Stitcher .st0{fill:#EB8A23;} .st1{fill:#FAC617;} .st2{fill:#612368;} .st3{fill:#3792C4;} .st4{fill:#C33727;} Acast Host Aggie Chambre explores the best and worst political U-turns of recent times — and ponders how and why certain politicians get away with abrupt changes of heart.Former Lib Dem Cabinet Minister David La...

Zelenskyy digs in against calls to quit Bakhmut

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

Zelenskyy digs in against calls to quit Bakhmut Doubts are growing about the wisdom of holding the shattered frontline city of Bakhmut against relentless Russian assaults, but Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is digging in and insists his top commanders are united in keeping up an attritional defense that has dragged on for months. Fighting around Bakhmut in the eastern region of Donbas dramatically escalated late last year, with Zelenskyy slamming the Russians for hurling men — many of them convicts recruited by the Wagner mercenary group — forward to almost certain death in “meat waves.” Now the bloodiest battle of the war, Bakhmut offers a vision of conflict close to World War I, with flooded trenches and landscapes blasted by artillery fire. In the past weeks, as Ukrainian forces have been almost encircled in a salient, lacking shells and facing spiking casualties, there has been increased speculation both in Ukraine and abroad that the time has come to pull back to another defensive line — a retrenchme...

Brussels should join the dots between Qatargate and Manchester United

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

Brussels should join the dots between Qatargate and Manchester United David Goldblatt is is a British sports writer and author of “The Ball is Round: A Global History of Football and “The Age of Football.” Nicholas McGeehan is co-director of FairSquare Projects.The idea that politics should be kept out of sports is, on its face, appealing.Sports are our break from the daily grind, an escapism that helps us tune out bad news. And should we not keep this as far away from meddling politicians as possible?But sports have never been apolitical — that fallacy was exposed long ago, when Roman emperors fed unrepentant Christians to underfed lions. And yet, over two millennia later, politicians of all stripes now shrink from the idea that sports should be regulated almost as quickly as they rush to sit at the executive boxes at a football World Cup or Champions League final.There’s also no sport as political as football — the world’s most popular sport. The Gulf states know this, even if European politicians pretend not to.And those in Europe need to care abou...

Oranges on pizza is the final straw for Hungary

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

Oranges on pizza is the final straw for Hungary Welcome to Declassified, a weekly humor column.DISCLAIMER: The opening section of this week’s column contains descriptions of foodstuffs that some readers (especially Italians) may find disturbing.Enough is enough, it’s time to kick Hungary out of the European Union! Why, I hear you ask? Is it the flagrant disregard for the rule of law, its treatment of the LGBTQ+ community, Viktor Orbán’s too-cosy relationship with Vladimir Putin? No, it’s the hate crime that is oranges on pizza! On a visit to the town of Kiskőrös, Orbán paid a visit to a pizzeria that has made a dish in his honor. Among the toppings are chicken breast, jalapeño peppers and slices of orange! Orbán dutifully posed for picture with the pizza (although, tellingly, wasn’t snapped actually eating the thing), thus cementing his position as Europe’s most problematic leader.Older readers may remember Italy declaring war on Hawaii in the mid-1960s, so who knows where this incident will le...

Urgent: A ‘Zeitenwende’ for the Western Balkans

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

Urgent: A ‘Zeitenwende’ for the Western Balkans Ambassador Wolfgang Ischinger represented the EU in the Troika negotiations in 2007. He chaired the Munich Security Conference From 2008 to 2022 and currently serves as President of the Munich Security Conference Foundation.Russia’s war against Ukraine has caused existing European security architecture to fall apart, provoking fundamental changes in foreign and defense policies across the Continent.Confronted with terminating its long-standing energy and commercial ties with Russia as a result, Germany was probably more deeply affected than most. And it had to adapt to the new era by adopting a Zeitenwende, or turning point — a radical departure from its past policies and principles.A similar Zeitenwende is urgently needed right now in the southeast of Europe too.Western Balkan countries have had to live with their unresolved issues and disputes for far too long. The time for bold decisions to overcome past obstacles has come, leading the way toward regional cooperation and future m...

David Blunkett says Labour should consider decriminalizing drugs

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

David Blunkett says Labour should consider decriminalizing drugs LONDON — A Labour grandee has urged Keir Starmer to launch an inquiry into the decriminalization of drugs, in a split with current party policy. Labour peer and former U.K. Home Secretary David Blunkett told an episode of POLITICO’s Westminster Insider podcast that there should be an “open debate” about how victims of drugs are treated. Starmer, a former senior prosecutor, has made repeatedly clear that he is not in favor of changing the law to decriminalize drugs. “I don’t think we should decriminalize drugs,” the Labour leader said last month. “I’ve seen first hand the damage that drug taking has and does to people’s lives.”He added: “We are not in the business of decriminalizing drugs.”When Blunkett was home secretary in the early 2000s, he downgraded cannabis from a Class B to Class C drug. It was later upgraded back to B. Blunkett told Westminster Insider he thinks that U-turn was wrong, but that “it was marginal” ...

UK ministers welcome Qatari bid for Manchester United

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

UK ministers welcome Qatari bid for Manchester United LONDON — U.K. government figures say they would privately welcome Qatari investment into Manchester United, as the club’s owners consider a £4 billion bid from a member of the Middle East state’s ruling class.A senior U.K. trade envoy told POLITICO that Britain should “absolutely be embracing foreign investment into this country from the Middle East, whether it’s in football or green energy,” when asked about the potential sale of one of the world’s most famous football clubs into Qatari ownership.Another key U.K. government figure, a minister with a close interest in the proposed deal, said the bid by Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al-Thani — the chairman of the Qatari Islamic Bank — would be “good investment” if it came with assurances that the wider community would benefit.Both senior figures were speaking on condition of anonymity. An official from the Department for Business and Trade said the U.K. government was not actively involved in Manchester United’s ...

The great EU subsidy shakedown  

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

The great EU subsidy shakedown   BRUSSELS — Will it ever be enough? Brussels officials are growing increasingly exasperated with businesses demanding more state cash, and threatening — if they don’t get it — to quit Europe and relocate to America. “These demands just keep on coming,” said one frustrated EU diplomat. “Sometimes we genuinely wonder: Are they legitimate concerns or are companies just seizing on the moment and testing how far they can go?”The first problem is that U.S. President Joe Biden has used a vast package of government subsidies under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) to tempt many big European industrial players — like VW and battery supplier Northvolt — into considering a shift in operations to the U.S.The second problem is how the EU has responded to the first. Amid fears that European industry is facing existential decline, the Brussels fightback against Biden’s reforms involves more leeway for EU countries to pour more state aid into their economies and targets fo...

Giants sign Colts WR Parris Campbell, re-sign WR Darius Slayton and DE Jihad Ward: sources

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:44:38 GMT

Giants sign Colts WR Parris Campbell, re-sign WR Darius Slayton and DE Jihad Ward: sources The Giants signed Indianapolis Colts free agent wide receiver Parris Campbell on Thursday to a one-year contract worth up to $6.7 million on Thursday, sources told the Daily News.It’s a $4.7 million contract that includes a $3 million base amount and $1.7 million in per game roster bonuses, plus $2 million more available in incentives, sources said.GM Joe Schoen also re-signed two key players from last season’s playoff team: wide receiver Darius Slayton and edge rusher Jihad Ward.Slayton, last season’s leading Giants receiver, got a reported two-year, $12 million contract worth up to $16.5 million. Ward, who was the life of last season’s locker room, is back on a one-year contract, a source said.Campbell, a former second-round draft pick from Ohio State, is a speedy and versatile wideout who can play both outside and inside in Brian Daboll’s offense.He is coming off a career-best season with 63 catches for 623 yards and three touchdowns.“Fast, phy...