Tag Archives: column

Throwing soup at Mona Lisa is legitimate ‘in-your-face’ strategy on climate change: Column – Fox News

  1. Throwing soup at Mona Lisa is legitimate ‘in-your-face’ strategy on climate change: Column Fox News
  2. From throwing soup to suing governments, there’s strategy to climate activism’s seeming chaos − here’s where it’s headed next The Conversation
  3. A cunning plan to save the planet and museums all at once Financial Times
  4. Do socially disruptive climate protests actually work? Energy Monitor
  5. From throwing soup to suing governments, there’s strategy behind climate activism’s seeming chaos − here’s where it’s headed next The Caledonian-Record

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Column: Bizarre standoff with Wagner Group’s Prigozhin weakens Putin. But don’t count him out – Yahoo News

  1. Column: Bizarre standoff with Wagner Group’s Prigozhin weakens Putin. But don’t count him out Yahoo News
  2. Putin`s claims of funding Wagner group likely makes it easier to try him for war crimes: Experts WION
  3. Russian TV Propagandist Says Wagner Group Received Nearly $10 Billion From Russian Authorities Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  4. Putin in a ‘heightened emotional state’ and ‘bordering on euphoria’ following failed Wagner mutiny, Russia analyst says Yahoo News
  5. Mutiny Provided Glimpse of a Post-Putin Russia. Is the Window Still Open? The New York Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Column: Texas A&M basketball got screwed by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee – 247Sports

  1. Column: Texas A&M basketball got screwed by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee 247Sports
  2. Tipsheet: Selection committee rewards Missouri, punishes Texas A&M with No. 7 seeds St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  3. How is Penn State a #10, matched against powerful Texas A&M as a #7? I asked Jerry Palm, Jay Wright | Jones PennLive
  4. Tyler’s Morning Tidbits (3/13): New Crystal Ball pick for Penn State + Breaking down Texas A&M 247Sports
  5. A running list of non-Aggies acknowledging Texas A&M got screwed by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee Good Bull Hunting
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Harry And Meghan Call The Sun’s Apology For Jeremy Clarkson Column A ‘PR Stunt’

A spokesperson for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle blasted The Sun’s apology for its recent publication of a column in which Jeremy Clarkson made hateful comments about Meghan ― dismissing the apology as “nothing more than a PR stunt.”

“The fact that the Sun has not contacted The Duchess of Sussex to apologize shows their intent,” the representative for the Susssexes said, in a statement shared with HuffPost on Saturday.

“While the public absolutely deserves the publication’s regrets for their dangerous comments, we wouldn’t be in this situation if The Sun did not continue to profit off of and exploit hate, violence and misogyny,” the spokesperson added. “A true apology would be a shift in their coverage and ethical standards for all. Unfortunately, we’re not holding our breath.”

Last week, the former “Top Gear” host wrote in a column that he hates Meghan “on a cellular level,” and described a lurid and debasing scenario he said he fantasizes about.

“At night, I’m unable to sleep as I lie there, grinding my teeth and dreaming of the day when she is made to parade naked through the streets of Britain while the crowds chant ‘Shame!’ and throw lumps of excrement at her,” Clarkson wrote.

After major backlash to the column, the “Clarkson’s Farm” personality offered a non-apology, writing on Twitter that he’d “rather put my foot in it” with “a clumsy reference to a scene in Game of Thrones.”

Clarkson said he was “horrified to have caused so much hurt” and vowed to “be more careful in future,” but did not make an actual apology.

The Sun offered an apology, and the article was taken down. It became the most complained-about article in the history of the U.K.’s Independent Press Standards Organization.

“Columnists’ opinions are their own, but as a publisher we realise that with free expression comes responsibility,” a statement from the newspaper read. “We at The Sun regret the publication of this article and we are sincerely sorry. The article has been removed from our website and archives.”

The Sun did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for comment.

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Jeremy Clarkson Responds To Meghan Markle Column Backlash – Deadline

Jeremy Clarkson has said he is “horrified” his incendiary comments about Meghan Markle in a newspaper column have “caused so much hurt.”

The Grand Tour and Clarkson’s Farm star caused outraged over the weekend in an article for The Sun in the UK, in which he said the Duchess of Sussex should be “made to parade naked  through the streets of every town in Britain while the crowds chant, ‘Shame!” and throw lumps of excrement at her.”

Clarkson added that, “Everyone who’s my age thinks the same way.”

The line was a clear reference to a pivotal scene in HBO’s Game of Thrones, when — spoilers follow — Cersei Lannister is forced to make a ‘walk of atonement’ after the Faith Militant find her guilty of several crimes.

Clarkson also wrote he “hated” [Markle] on a cellular level,” with his comments coming after the launch of the final three episodes of Markle’s Netflix documentary Harry and Meghan last week, which contained several explosive barbs directed at the British media and the Royal Family.

The Sun article broadly suggests Prince Harry is constantly manipulated by Markle — a line often directed at the Duchess by detractors in Britain.

Independent press regulator Ipso has so far received 6,000 complaints and even Clarkson’s own daughter Emily Clarkson wrote a message on Instagram Stories distancing herself from her father’s views.

Today, Jeremy Clarkson wrote on Twitter: “Oh dear. I’ve rather put my foot in it. In a column I wrote about Meghan, I made a clumsy reference to a scene in Game of Thrones and this has gone down badly with a great many people. I’m horrified to have caused so much hurt and I shall be more careful in future.”

The statement appears to stop short of a full apology but acknowledging how far he had gone could go some way in saving face.

Clarkson, considered a prickly but entertaining character in the UK and beyond, has fronted several popular shows such as the BBC’s Top Gear and Prime Video’s The Grand Tour and presented many other shows, including weekly satire program Have I Got News For You.

There has been no statement from Prime Video owner Amazon.



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Fetterman debate fiasco proves journalists ‘lied’ to cement Democratic power in the Senate: JNS column

Jewish News Syndicate editor-in-chief and National Review contributing writer Jonathan Tobin claimed that journalists who pushed the narrative that Democratic U.S. Senate candidate John Fetterman was completely healthy to run for office “lied” in order to ensure that Democrats “maintain control of the Senate.”

In his column for The Jewish News Syndicate, Tobin declared that these “team blue journalists” “were prepared to cover up or falsify the facts about his health in order to advance his candidacy.”

Additionally, he noted that this is part of a “trend that has become commonplace in legacy media outlets.”

SCHUMER, ON HOT MIC, ADMITS TO BIDEN THAT FETTERMAN HURT HIS CHANCES IN OZ DEBATE

FILE – Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, speaks during a campaign event at the Steamfitters Technology Center in Harmony, Pa., Oct. 18, 2022. Fetterman is releasing a new doctor’s note saying that he’s recovering well from a May stroke as he vies for Pennsylvania’s pivotal U.S. Senate seat. 
(AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

Tobin’s piece, titled, “The painful truth about media bias: Some journalists lie,” began with the observation that the debate between Fetterman and his Republican opponent, Dr. Mehmet Oz, was the “most bizarre such encounter in living memory.”

Tobin said that Fetterman, who is still suffering lingering side effects from his stroke in May, “was clearly incapable of understanding many of the questions or articulating a coherent response. This was in spite of the fact that he was aided by a closed-captioning system.” 

He added, “It was a painful spectacle and should inspire sympathy for his plight. One can only hope that he is eventually able to completely recover.”

The author then went after the journalists defending Fetterman, though not so much the ones spinning his debate performance as “acceptable,” but the “number of prominent liberal reporters” who “interviewed Fetterman in the months since his stroke and then assured the public that he was fine.”

He targeted all those who went after the “only” journalist willing to call out Fetterman’s health issues prior to the debate, NBC News reporter Dasha Burns. Burns courted outrage by reporting that Fetterman had trouble with small talk ahead of their formal interview, which was closed-captioned so he could understand her questions.

Tobin wrote, “In response, team blue journalists performed a gang tackle on Burns, denouncing her as insensitive or as somehow bolstering the Republicans.”

FETTERMAN’S LINGERING STROKE EFFECTS WOULD CLEARLY HANDICAP HIM AS SENATOR, GOP SENATE EXPERTS SAY

Pennsylvania Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman participates in a debate with his GOP challenger Dr. Mehmet Oz on October 25 in Harrisburg, PA.
(NewsNation)

He pointed specifically to The Atlantic and Vogue contributor Molly Jong-Fast, New York Magazine’s Rebecca Traister and Kara Swisher of Vox and New York Magazine, as among those who trashed Burns in defense of Fetterman. He noted that the debate revealed that these “team blue journalists” were lying. 

Tobin wrote, “Anyone who watched the dismal spectacle now knows who told the truth about Fetterman and who didn’t. Burns was following the ethical standards of her profession and, regardless of her personal views about the election, gave the public important information.”

He added, “As for Jong-Fast, Traister and Swisher, there’s no nice way to characterize their claims. They lied.

NBC correspondent Dasha Burns told NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie that Democrat Senate candidate John Fetterman has ‘difficult’ time understanding small talk. 
(NBC)

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The columnist described their motives for doing so: “The same goes for all those who seconded their objections to Burns’s reporting. They want the Democrats to maintain control of the Senate. This means Fetterman must win. They were prepared to cover up or falsify the facts about his health in order to advance his candidacy.”

Tobin further described this defense of Fetterman as “sacrificing the truth in order to advance a political agenda,” which, he added, was “just one example of a trend that has become commonplace in legacy media outlets.”

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NASCAR at Atlanta column, Part One: First, the Good and the Bad — the UGLY is up next

Editor’s note: Full results, race notes and updated driver standings are at the bottom of this file. And don’t forget to check out Part Two — the UGLY part of Sunday’s race.

If Sunday’s NASCAR Cup race would have been made into a movie, it would have been an updated version of a reel classic, with a title that would be a no-brainer: “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.”

Instead of starring Clint Eastwood, the 2022 version would star Chase Elliott (the Good), Corey LaJoie (the Bad) and the Ugly (Ross Chastain).

We’re going to give you two columns about Sunday’s race here at AutoRacingDigest.com. First will be about the good and the bad. The second column will be about the ugly – and it definitely was and likely will lead to even more ugliness as the season goes on.

Enjoy:

First, was the good.

Sunday’s Quaker State 400 was a finish that was as good as it gets, as Elliott emerged with the win, holding off runner-up Chastain, who was deprived of one more last-second bid for the lead when a last-lap caution froze the field and gave Elliott the win.

There’s even more good news for Chase: he joined his father, NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott, as only the second father-son combo to win at Atlanta Motor Speedway, the other being Dale Earnhardt and son Dale Jr.

And, Elliott became the first Cup driver this season to earn a third win, with four others having two wins each and eight drivers who have won just once thus far. Sunday’s race was the 19th of the season, meaning just seven races remain to reach the end of the 26-race “regular season” – in other words, the run-up to the 10-race, 16-driver playoffs.

It wasn’t a perfect race for Elliott, but it was darn near there. He not only won the race, he also captured each of the first two stages.

“This one’s up there, for sure, man,” Elliott replied when asked by NBC/USA Network where his first-ever Cup win on his home racetrack – he grew up about 90 miles north of Atlanta Motor Speedway in tiny Dawsonville, Georgia – ranked among the other 15 races he’s won in his Cup career.

“To win at your home track is really a big deal to any race car driver,” the younger Elliott said. “I’ve watched a lot of guys do it (winning on their home track) over the years, like Jimmie (Johnson) in California. We haven’t really had a very good run here, so I felt like today was a great opportunity for us.

“This is obviously home for me, home to a lot of great fans who made a lot of noise today, home for NAPA, right down the road in Atlanta. I couldn’t be more proud of our team

“What a car. I’m not sure we’ve ever had a speedway car that good. If we had, I probably wrecked it down at Daytona. Man, what a few weeks it’s been. I feel like I gave one away last week and to come back and put on a performance like that, I’m really proud of that.”

And tiny Dawsonville was proud of Elliott in return, as its infamous pool hall sounded its well-known emergency warning siren after Elliott’s win, a tradition that dates back to when Bill was driving and the siren would go off in his honor with each Cup win. It’s a tradition that has continued since Chase reached the Cup level full-time in 2016.

Atlanta Motor Speedway, which was reconfigured and repaved following last season, was outstanding from a racing standpoint. In fact, several individuals I spoke with both during and after the race all said the same thing or a derivative thereof: If you didn’t know it, you’d think the race was run on a shorter version of Talladega Superspeedway, the racing was that close and competitive.

And yes, we even had a big one — but we’ll cover that in column Part 2.

Then there was the bad.

Corey LaJoie drove the race of his Cup career, leading 19 laps and appeared as if he was the only driver left with much of a chance to overtake Elliott on the final lap.

But that’s when the bad stuff happened – bad luck, that is.

Unfortunately, LaJoie washed up the track after being blocked by Elliott, lost control of his Chevrolet Camaro, sideswiped the outer wall and then bounced back into traffic, collecting several other drivers. NASCAR immediately threw the caution and Elliott was anointed the winner.

“Closest I’ve ever been, for sure (to winning),” LaJoie said after the race. “It was fun. It was nice to have that thing out in the wind for once.

LaJoie went from what appeared to be an almost guaranteed runner-up or third-place finish – if not a win – and ultimately finished a very disappointing 21st due to the wreck.

“I made my move and it didn’t work out,” he lamented. “(Chase) made a good block and the sirens are (going off) in Dawsonville, unfortunately. … I wish the 7 car was in victory lane. But if we keep running like this and more consistently, our time will come.”

In a sense, Corey – the son of former Busch Series champion Randy Lajoie – was in completely uncharted territory. Up until this season, he had led a grand total of just 27 laps over the previous 2 ½ seasons.

But he learned some valuable lessons Sunday that will help him down the road.

“I was going to school,” he said. “That was the first one I’ve been leading a restart at one of these superspeedway style racetracks, and how much you have to drag back, time your runs, cover the lanes, it’s all new to me.

“When it get myself in that position again next time, I’ll be a little more prepared and hopefully we can do a little better job and can throw the blocks as opposed to make the one who makes that late-race move because the guy usually in that position is in the catbird seat. I was having fun, I know that, and hopefully we can have that 7 car up front more often.”

LaJoie admits his bid to overtake Elliott – if the race-deciding crash had not happened – was a longshot at best.

“Obviously, I knew he was going to have a big run,” LaJoie said. “I really didn’t want to give him the bottom. I tried to give it one good real aggressive block. I felt like I had enough room to kind of give it a second one.

“And he was right there on the right side of my back bumper, far enough on the back side of the bumper to launch me forward. I hate we tore up some cars, but I don’t know what you do. You either go for the win or don’t. I’m going to go for Option A every day of the week.

“We almost caught that Hail Mary we tried to throw today, but unfortunately we came up a little short. Nonetheless, I’m proud of my guys here at Spire (Motorsports) and we’ll keep running.”

Next, read Part Two, all about the Ugly part of Sunday’s race



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Steven M. Sipple: Why Ochaun Mathis’ mom trusted NU; Chinander’s wisdom; and Toure’s rise | Column

Steven M. Sipple, Parker Gabriel and Chris Basnett break down impending decisions from Nebraska football transfer portal targets, plus hoops and Baylor Scheierman.

Things I know, and things I think I know:  

Ochaun Mathis, the gifted pass rusher who starred at TCU, soon will live full time outside of the state of Texas for the first time in his 23 years of existence. 

As he narrowed his list of potential new places to play, his mom, Ochana Daniels, looked for people whom she could trust with her son’s well-being. 

She saw that in Nebraska’s football program. 

“They were so attentive about every little aspect of the program,” Daniels said of the family’s April 7-9 visit. “I mean, the entire staff met us and I was like, ‘Wow, this is totally different than any official or unofficial visit we’ve ever had.’

“It was the whole program. We were overwhelmed.” 

Overwhelmed in a good way, obviously, because the 6-foot-5, 260-pound Mathis, of Manor, Texas, ultimately picked Nebraska over Texas. In mid-February, he also had USC, Ole Miss and Penn State on his list of finalists. 

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Bottom line, Nebraska did an excellent job of recruiting one of the most coveted players in the transfer portal. 

By the way, during our 15-minute interview Sunday, Daniels never once mentioned the name, image and likeness element of her son’s decision. For those who portray Mathis’ situation as a bidding war between Nebraska and Texas, her words suggest there were other key factors. 

“Ochaun’s big brother (Bruce) is on the autism spectrum, and Nebraska was so accommodating to that fact,” Daniels said. “They included him in everything with Ochaun. I was like, ‘Wow, no other program has ever done that.’ I could see the happiness it brought Ochaun because him and his brother are so very close.”

Daniels teared up as she spoke. Thing is, she made it clear that this was Mathis’ decision. But he wanted to make sure his family was OK with it, she said. She emphasized the spiritual part of his journey and assured Mathis that she and the rest of the family would be fine with him playing relatively far from home. She thinks he felt relief and comfort to hear her say that. 

Along those lines, some people used Texas’ proximity to Manor — the campus is about 20 minutes away — as part of their pitch to try to keep Mathis in the state. There’s no doubt that his Texas roots created pressure on her son to attend UT, Daniels said.

“That’s why I had to sit down with him and have that conversation (about potentially leaving),” she said. “I told him, ‘Honey, I’m going to be fine and the family’s going to be fine.'”

She liked Lincoln’s friendly feel and how safe it felt. Also, get this: Mathis’ entire family was on hand for a film session with Nebraska defensive line coach Mike Dawson. The coach pointed out a few shortcomings in Mathis’ game. He appreciated it because he uses critiques to improve, Daniels said. 

She really enjoyed the film study. 

“Quiet, looking, observing,” she said of the scene in the room. “Bruce looked at Ochaun and was like, ‘This is what you need.’

“That Friday, I saw a sparkle, and Ochaun started asking questions,” she added. “We were having one-on-one discussions that were really serious. I was like, ‘OK, let me sit up and give him some eye contact.’ I saw that he internalized the information that was given to him and turned it into something positive. 

“There was a strong positive about the program. He was like, ‘Mama, this is it.'” 

* Something Nebraska defensive coordinator Erik Chinander told me recently rolled through my mind as Mathis’ big decision loomed.  

The Big Ten — perhaps more so than any other conference — resembles the NFL in a few different ways.  

“I’m not saying you can walk a Big Ten team right into the NFL,” the 42-year-old coach said. “But body-type wise, the way the game’s played, the way the game’s coached — it resembles a lot of the NFL.” 

If Mathis can put excellent play on film in the Big Ten, it may mean more to NFL personnel officials than it would mean in the Big 12. 

Put it this way, the Big Ten had 48 players drafted this year, 23 more than the Big 12.

Of course, the SEC led the way with 65.

* Here’s hoping former Nebraska receiver Samori Toure gets a long look in Green Bay. He was the third receiver taken by the Packers in the draft (seventh round, 258th overall), and will have to overcome long odds to make the roster. But the Pack quickly will find that Toure approaches his work like a professional. He immediately made an impression on his Husker teammates in that regard last spring. He also has excellent hands and speed. 

He’s a prime example of how the transfer portal can benefit a player. He arrived in Lincoln from Montana wanting to prove he could excel at the Power Five level. Mission accomplished. Now, a new mission.

I’m guessing Aaron Rodgers will like this guy. 

Impress the boss, Samori. Always try to impress the boss. 

* There is no doubt Nebraska coach Scott Frost deserves ample credit for the idea to switch Cam Jurgens to center (from tight end) early in his college career. There was risk, and it clearly paid off handsomely for the young man from Beatrice.

In fact, both Jurgens and Cam Taylor-Britt are prime examples of players who developed their craft in Nebraska’s program with the help of strong coaching. Hard to argue otherwise. Especially now. 

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Column: Australian alumina ban will squeeze Rusal and aluminium: Andy Home

LONDON, March 21 (Reuters) – Australia’s decision to ban exports of alumina to Russia tightens further the raw materials squeeze on Russian aluminium giant Rusal . read more

The company’s four million tonnes of smelter capacity each year processes eight million tonnes of alumina, which sits between bauxite and refined metal in the aluminium production chain.

Rusal’s domestic alumina plants accounted for only 37% of its smelter needs last year. The balance was imported. The top two suppliers were Ukraine, where Russia’s invasion has closed Rusal’s Nikolaev refinery, and Australia.

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The company said it is “currently evaluating” the loss of its number two raw material supplier but the market has already reacted to the potential resulting loss of Russian metal.

London Metal Exchange (LME) three-month aluminium jumped more than 5% at its opening to $3,554 per tonne on Monday morning and was last trading around $3,545.

Russia’s imports of alumina in 2021

RAW MATERIALS SQUEEZE

Rusal has so far escaped direct Western sanctions thanks to the deal that was done to lift U.S. sanctions in 2019. Rusal’s oligarch owner Oleg Deripaska remained blacklisted but Rusal was excluded after he reduced his controlling stake in the EN+ holding company.

That may just have changed, though.

The Australian government’s ban, expedited to stop a Russian-bound alumina shipment leaving this week, doesn’t explicitly name Rusal but it is a de-facto sanction on the company that dominates Russian aluminium production.

The status of Rusal’s 20% stake in the QAL refinery in Queensland is highly moot since it now can’t export its offtake share and its partner Rio Tinto (RIO.L) is committed to disengaging from all Russian joint ventures. read more

Rio has already suspended a tolling arrangement with Rusal’s Aughinish alumina refinery in Ireland, forcing the Russian producer to redirect bauxite shipments from its Guinea mines.

Such self-sanctioning limits Rusal’s room for manoeuvre in terms of replacing lost Australian feed.

The sea-borne alumina market is dominated by Rio Tinto, U.S. producer Alcoa (AA.N) and Norway’s Hydro . All three have said they will reduce exposure to Russia or, in the case of Hydro, not enter into new contracts with Russian entities.

The biggest question mark of all hangs over the Irish refinery, Rusal’s largest overseas alumina plant with production last year of 1.9 million tonnes.

Only a quarter of its output flowed to Russia in 2021, meaning there is plenty of potential to redirect shipments from Europe to Russia.

The Irish government is understandably keen to keep Aughinish operating but the European Union is already extending sanctions into the metals arena with a ban on Russian steel imports and will have no doubt noted Australia’s upping of the sanctions ante.

With or without its Irish lifeline, however, Rusal is facing a raw materials squeeze.

China may be its answer but China has itself been importing significant amounts of alumina in recent years to keep up with demand.

Even assuming the political will to supply Rusal with alumina, the market incentive may not be there, given expectations of rising domestic alumina demand as Chinese smelters lift output after an easing of power controls.

ALUMINIUM SQUEEZE

The aluminium price’s reaction to news of the Australian ban tells you how concerned it is about the potential loss of Russian metal production.

As the Australian Foreign Ministry helpfully pointed out in its statement, “aluminium is a global input across the auto, aerospace, packaging, machinery and construction sectors”.

Which is a real problem if the West is losing access to Rusal’s four million tonnes of annual production.

The aluminium supply chain was already creaking. Power-efficiency constraints have turned China, the world’s largest producer, into a net importer of unwrought aluminium to feed its massive downstream products sector.

Production at Europe’s power-hungry smelters has been falling due to high energy prices, a phenomenon that has only gotten worse since Russia launched on Feb. 24 what it calls a “special military operation” to disarm and “denazify” Ukraine.

Visible aluminium stocks have been sliding steadily for over a year to plug the supply-chain gaps. Total LME inventory stands at 704,850 tonnes, the lowest level since 2007.

The global aluminium market is tight, the Western European market particularly so, both because of the recent smelter cuts and its dependence on Russian supply.

Europe accounted for 41% of Rusal’s sales last year and disruption to Russian shipments will only widen the region’s existing supply deficit.

Moreover, Rusal is a critical supplier of “green” – low-carbon – aluminium from its hydro-powered Siberian smelters.

While global aluminium trade flows may eventually adjust in the wake of the Ukraine crisis, automakers keen to use only the greenest metal in their next-generation electric vehicles may find a far more challenging supply landscape.

TIGHTENING THE SANCTIONS SCREW

The complexity of Rusal’s raw material supply web was exposed back in 2018 when U.S. sanctions set off a chain reaction that spanned Ireland, Guinea and Australia and ended with European car companies lobbying the European Commission to intercede with the United States.

Those U.S. sanctions were a bolt from the blue.

This time around the effect has so far been more incremental as supply, logistics and financing avenues dwindle due to self-sanctioning.

The Australian government’s move to add alumina to the sanctions list marks a significant escalation in this process.

Critical for Rusal and aluminium market alike is whether other countries follow suit.

The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

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Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

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Russian column stalled for days outside Kyiv

  • Ukraine president says defence lines holding
  • Eastern city of Kharkiv suffers further heavy bombardment
  • Moscow says it has seized Kherson, mayor says troops in streets
  • UN votes overwhelmingly to censure Russia’s invasion
  • Refugee total exceeds 1 million – UNHCR

BORODYANKA, Ukraine, March 3 (Reuters) – Russia’s invasion of Ukraine entered its second week on Thursday an apparent tactical failure so far, with its main assault force stalled for days on a highway north of Kyiv and other advances halted at the outskirts of cities it is bombing into wastelands.

The number of refugees who have fled Ukraine rose to more than 1 million, the United Nations said. Hundreds of Russian soldiers and Ukrainian civilians have been killed, and Russia itself has been plunged into isolation never before experienced by an economy of such size. read more

Despite an initial battle plan that Western countries said was aimed at swiftly toppling the Kyiv government, Russia has captured only one Ukrainian city so far – the southern Dnipro River port of Kherson, which its tanks entered on Wednesday.

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“The main body of the large Russian column advancing on Kyiv remains over 30 km (19 miles) from the centre of the city having been delayed by staunch Ukrainian resistance, mechanical breakdown and congestion,” Britain’s defence ministry said in an intelligence update. read more

“The column has made little discernible progress in over three days,” it said. “Despite heavy Russian shelling, the cities of Kharkiv, Chernihiv and Mariupol remain in Ukrainian hands.”

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has remained in Kyiv, releasing regular video updates to the nation. In his latest message, he said Ukrainian lines were holding. “We have nothing to lose but our own freedom,” he said. read more

In Borodyanka, a tiny town 60 km (40 miles) northwest of Kyiv where locals had repelled a Russian assault, burnt out hulks of destroyed Russian armour were scattered on a highway, surrounded by buildings blasted into ruins. Flames from one burning apartment building lit up the pre-dawn sky. A dog barked as emergency workers walked through the rubble in the darkness.

“They started shooting from their APC towards the park in front of the post office,” a man recounted in the apartment where he was sheltering with his family. “Then those bastards started the tank and started shooting into the supermarket which was already burned. It caught fire again.

“An old man ran outside like crazy, with big round eyes, and said ‘give me a Molotov cocktail! I just set their APC on fire!… Give me some petrol, we’ll make a Molotov cocktail and burn the tank!’.”

SECOND ROUND OF TALKS

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov characterised the Western response to Russia’s actions as “hysteria”, which he said would pass. He said he expected a second round of peace talks with a Ukrainian delegation would take place on Thursday. A first meeting on Monday in Belarus yielded no progress. read more

Only Belarus, Eritrea, Syria and North Korea voted against an emergency resolution at the U.N. General Assembly condemning Russia’s “aggression”. In Beijing, organisers sent Russian and Belarusian athletes home from the Paralympic Games.

“To the Para athletes from the impacted countries, we are very sorry that you are affected by the decisions your governments took last week in breaching the Olympic Truce. You are victims of your governments’ actions,” they said.

In Russia itself, where nearly all major opposition figures have been jailed or exiled in a crackdown over the past year, the authorities have banned reporting that describes the “special military operation” launched by President Vladimir Putin on Feb. 24 as an invasion or war.

The last two major independent broadcasters, Dozhd TV and Ekho Moskvy radio, were taken off the air. TASS reported on Thursday Ekho Moskvy would be shut down for good. Anti-war demonstrations have been small and quickly shut down by police who have arrested thousands of people. Riot police snatched peaceful protesters off the streets in St Petersburg late on Wednesday.

Having failed to capture major Ukrainian cities, Russia has shifted tactic in recent days, escalating its bombardment of them. Swathes of central Kharkiv, a city of 1.5 million people, have been blasted into rubble.

Mariupol, the main port of eastern Ukraine, has been surrounded under heavy bombardment, with no water or power. Officials say they cannot evacuate the wounded. The city council compared the situation there to the World War Two siege of Leningrad, calling it the “genocide of the Ukrainian people”. read more

“In just seven days, one million people have fled Ukraine, uprooted by this senseless war. I have worked in refugee emergencies for almost 40 years, and rarely have I seen an exodus as rapid as this one,” said Filippo Grandi, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.

“Hour by hour, minute by minute, more people are fleeing the terrifying reality of violence.”

STALLED ADVANCE

Military analysts say the Russian advance has been a tactical fiasco so far, stalled by failures of logistics and equipment maintenance, with columns now confined to roads as the spring thaw turns Ukrainian ground into mud. Each day the main attack force remains stalled on the highway north of Kyiv, its condition deteriorates further, said Michael Kofman, an expert on the Russian military at the Wilson Center in Washington DC.

“The longer Russian forces sit forward, the lower their readiness and performance will be. Everything from state of tires, to supply availability, and in the end morale,” he tweeted.

But the great fear is that, as the likelihood of any rapid victory recedes, Russia will fall back on tactics it used in Syria and Chechnya, which left the large cities of Aleppo and Grozny in shattered ruins before they were finally overcome.

Russia has already acknowledged nearly 500 of its soldiers killed. Ukraine says it has killed nearly 9,000, though this cannot be confirmed. Ukrainian authorities have offered to release any Russian prisoners if their mothers come to fetch them.

Kherson, a provincial capital of around 250,000 people, was the first significant urban centre to fall. Mayor Igor Kolykhayev said late on Wednesday that Russian troops were in the streets and had entered the council building.

“I didn’t make any promises to them … I just asked them not to shoot people,” he said in a statement.

The U.S. State Department called on Putin and the Russian government to “immediately cease this bloodshed” and withdraw forces from Ukraine.

The International Criminal Court said it would open an investigation into potential war crimes in Ukraine following requests by 39 of its member states. Russia denies targeting civilians and says its aim is to “disarm” Ukraine and arrest leaders it falsely calls neo-Nazis. read more

Russia is one of the world’s largest energy producers and both Russia and Ukraine are major exporters of food. Oil and commodity prices spiralled ever higher on Thursday in a grim omen for global inflation. read more

(This story was refiled to add dropped word “to” in paragraph 2)

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Reporting by Pavel Polityuk, Natalia Zinets and Aleksandar Vasovic in Ukraine, David Ljunggren in Ottawa and other Reuters bureaux; Writing by Costas Pitas, Stephen Coates, Simon Cameron-Moore and Peter Graff; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Alex Richardson

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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