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Russia orders Ukrainian forces in Mariupol to surrender by Sunday morning

A local resident sits next to a fire in a courtyard outside a building damaged in Mariupol, Ukraine, on April 14. (Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters)

In his latest Saturday video address to the people of Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky addressed the situation in the besieged port city of Mariupol and promised a better future once hostilities are over.

“The situation in Mariupol remains as severe as possible. Just inhuman,” Zelensky said. “Russia is deliberately trying to destroy everyone who is there in Mariupol.”

An estimated 100,000 people remain in Mariupol and its immediate surroundings, which are largely under Russian control, with Ukrainian troops confined to pockets of resistance.

“There are only two ways to influence this,” Zelensky said. “Either our partners will give Ukraine all the necessary heavy weapons, planes, and, without exaggeration, immediately… Or a negotiating path, in which the role of partners should also be decisive.”

Zelesnky said his government has tried every day to end the siege of Mariupol: “Military or diplomatic — anything to save people. But finding this solution is extremely difficult.”

“Although we have heard many intentions from those who wanted to help and who are really in positions of international influence, none of them have been realized yet.” he added.

French President Emmanuel Macron proposed on March 25 a mass evacuation by sea, but the plan went nowhere. Zelensky said every day either he or the armed forces chief or the head of Ukraine’s negotiating team had been “in touch with our defenders of Mariupol. Every day.”

Rebuilding the nation: Zelensky also said his government had begun to plan for a post-war future. 

“Today I held a meeting dedicated to the reconstruction of our cities,” he said. “Of course, this is a huge amount of work. But still less than defending the state in war.”

The President added, “Now it is a historic moment; the moment when we can solve many old problems of the whole environment of our life once and for all.”

Zelensky addressed the housing situation and what he called the “real modernization of our cities.”

“Millions of people know how difficult it is to get a home, earn money for their own apartment, build a house… Today, I set a task to provide temporary housing to all our IDPs [internally displaced.]…Those whose house was destroyed by war. Temporary housing until we rebuild their homes.”

A priority, he said, would be homes for veterans to “provide housing for all those who have defended or are defending the state, who have worked or are working in the interests of society, and do not have their own housing. It can no longer be the case that a person devotes his whole life to military service, but retires without having his own apartment.”

Zelensky also said memorials were being planned, one of which “will tell the story of the destroyed bridge in Kyiv region, which connected Irpin and Bucha with Kyiv. The story of people who escaped from Russian invaders to Kyiv using this bridge and this road.”

The bridge was the escape route for thousands of civilians escaping Russian bombardment in March.

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Dustin Thompson, US Capitol rioter who said he was following Trump’s orders, is found guilty

Dustin Thompson, a 38-year-old exterminator from Ohio, faced six charges — obstructing an official proceeding, theft of government property, illegally entering the Capitol, illegally protesting in the Capitol, and two counts of disorderly conduct in the Capitol.

After the verdict, federal Judge Reggie Walton blasted former President Donald Trump’s conduct.

“The insurgency, and it was in effect that, is very troubling,” Walton said. “I think our democracy is in trouble because unfortunately we have charlatans, like the former President, in my view, who don’t care about democracy and only care about power.”

The trial marked the first time a Capitol riot defendant tried to convince a jury that Trump was responsible for the violence on January 6, 2021. Thompson’s lawyer told the jury Trump was an “evil and sinister man” who had incited the riot with his incendiary speech at the Ellipse, where he told his supporters to march to the Capitol and “fight like hell.”

Thompson had testified that he believed he was acting at the behest of Trump.

“Besides being ordered by the President to go to the Capitol, I don’t know what I was thinking,” Thompson told the jury Wednesday. “I was caught up in the moment.”

“If the President is giving you almost an order to do something, I felt obligated to do that,” Thompson said.

Prosecutors ridiculed this idea, arguing that Thompson is an adult capable of making his own decisions, and told the jury that Trump was not the one on trial.

“This is not President Trump’s criminal trial,” prosecutor William Dreher said Thursday. “This sideshow about the defense attorney trying to make you mad” at Trump “is just that, a sideshow.”

Impact on future cases

The guilty verdict could have major implications for the numerous other defendants who have attempted to shift blame onto the former President. Judges have been largely skeptical of Trump-made-me-do-it arguments from defendants, but this is the first time a jury has formally rejected it as well.

It could also reverberate into Trump’s own legal challenges. Trump is facing numerous civil lawsuits for allegedly inciting the mob. A federal judge in California said last month that it was “more likely than not” that Trump had committed a crime by trying to influence then-Vice President Mike Pence to reject Electoral College votes.

The jury of seven men and five women deliberated for less than three hours on Thursday.

As he sent Thompson immediately to jail pending sentencing, Walton said, “You make your bed, you lie in it.” Thompson then took off his tie, belt and jacket, and was handcuffed behind his back by a deputy US marshal and escorted out of the courtroom.

The most severe charge that Thompson was convicted of — obstruction of an official proceeding, a felony — carries up to 20 years in prison. He will be sentenced in July.

Nearly 800 people have been arrested in connection to January 6, and more than 250 people have pleaded guilty to federal charges. Three people have been convicted by juries so far, with several more trials scheduled this spring.

This story has been updated with additional details.

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U.S. orders some personnel to leave Shanghai consulate amid COVID surge

A worker in a protective suit keeps watch next to barricades set around a sealed-off area, during a lockdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Shanghai, China April 11, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song

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WASHINGTON, April 11 (Reuters) – The U.S. State Department on Monday ordered non-emergency U.S. government workers to leave the consulate in Shanghai due to a surge in COVID-19 cases and China’s measures to control the virus.

On Friday, the State Department announced that non-emergency personnel could voluntarily leave the consulate. It is not clear why the departure of those workers has become mandatory.

China’s zero-tolerance approach to COVID-19, prescribing central quarantine for anyone testing positive even in the absence of symptoms, is increasingly strained by the highly infectious, though less deadly, Omicron variant.

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The most controversial of Shanghai’s practices had been separating COVID-positive children from their parents. Authorities have since made some concessions. read more

The State Department, which last week said it had raised its concerns about China’s COVID-19 policies with Chinese officials, cited the risk of parents and children being separated in Monday’s announcement.

The United States should “stop political manipulation under the pretext of the epidemic, and stop smearing China”, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a daily briefing on Tuesday in Beijing.

On Saturday, the ministry had expressed “strong dissatisfaction” with the United States after it raised concerns over China’s coronavirus control measures. read more

Shanghai, fighting China’s worst COVID outbreak since the virus first emerged in Wuhan in late 2019, locked down its entire population of 25 million but on Monday began easing movement curbs for some residents. read more

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Reporting by Eric Beech; additional reporting by Martin Quin Pollard in Beijing; editing by Dan Whitcomb, Kim Coghill and Alex Richardson

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Valve ‘ramping up’ Steam Deck orders in Q2

Shipments for Valve’s new handheld console, the Steam Deck, have been trickling out since its release, but the shipments are about to speed up. The company started “ramping up” fulfillment for the console on Monday, according to a Tweet from Valve, and those who pre-ordered the console will be getting more emails about order availability weekly.

When the Steam Deck launched, those interested in buying the console were able to do so through a pre-order system. Depending on how quickly you were able to get in, you may have had an order scheduled for Q1, Q2, Q3, or “after Q3.” Since then, Valve has been shipping purchases in the order customers placed their orders weekly each quarter.

In addition to more orders going out, the company added further clarification as to when each quarter could expect their console to ship. Per Valve’s update, Q2 started on Monday and the current Q3 dates are October 2022 or later. According to Valve, “no reservation windows have been changed or delayed,” and the company is simply providing further clarification as to when each quarter is.

The Steam Deck is a handheld console that allows you to play games on your Steam library. Valve released it in February. Leading up to the official release, the handheld was delayed multiple times, with Valve citing issues with the supply chain and other logistical challenges caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.



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Tory Lanez Violated Orders in Megan Thee Stallion Assault Case: Judge

Tory Lanez was handcuffed and remanded into custody in a Los Angeles courtroom Tuesday. A judge found he violated pre-trial protective orders in his felony assault case involving allegations he shot Megan Thee Stallion in her feet during a drunken dispute nearly two years ago.

The “Say It” rapper had a bondsman with him in the courthouse and was expected to gain a speedy release by posting his new bail of $350,000. Judge David Herriford set the new higher bail after hearing nearly an hour of argument and finding that Lanez had violated court orders prohibiting him from contacting or harassing Megan or sharing any discovery in the case.

Lanez, who has pleaded not guilty, appeared in court wearing a black tuxedo jacket over a black turtleneck. He was accompanied by his father and several friends.

His lawyer, Shawn Holley, argued that Lanez did not provide a third-party Twitter user and YouTube personality known as DJ Akademiks with any discovery in the case before Akademiks tweeted in February that “Tory Lanez DNA was not found on the weapon in the Meg Thee Stallion case.”

Holley confirmed in open court that the swab on the gun came back “inconclusive” with four contributors, so the Akademiks tweet was “incorrect.” “If he had seen this document, he presumably would have got it right,” she argued. Holley further confirmed that the swab on the gun’s magazine “excluded” Lanez.

“The DA requested no bail or, in the alternative, $5 million bail, and the court rejected those arguments and increased bail to $350,000. And that bail is being posted now,” Holley tells Rolling Stone.

The high-profile case is now speeding toward a tentative Sept. 14 trial after a prior judge decided at a preliminary hearing in December that prosecutors had enough evidence to warrant calling a jury.

At the December hearing, an LAPD detective testified that Lanez, whose legal name is Daystar Peterson, allegedly fired a semiautomatic 9mm handgun at the ground near Megan’s feet, injuring the “Savage” singer, during an argument that followed their departure from a pool party at Kylie Jenner’s house.

Detective Ryan Stogner said he was assigned to the case two days after the shooting and interviewed Megan over the phone on July 16, 2020, and then again on Nov. 12, 2020. He said Megan, whose legal name is Megan Pete, recalled witnessing Peterson pull the trigger.

“As she exited the vehicle, she heard Mr. Peterson yelling obscenities at her, and he stated, ‘Dance, bitch!’ And he then began firing a weapon at her,” Stogner testified.

“(Megan) observed Mr. Peterson holding a firearm, and then she observed him start to shoot,” Stogner said. “Megan immediately felt pain to her feet, observed blood, fell to the ground, and then crawled to an adjacent driveway of a residence…She described her injuries as bleeding profusely.”

Peterson’s high-powered lawyer Shawn Holley grilled Stogner over his interviews with Megan and suggested an alternate narrative where Megan was involved in a physical altercation with her friend and former assistant Kelsey Harris, who was another passenger inside the black Cadillac Escalade, shortly before the shooting.

Holley suggested Harris “had a romantic interest in Tory” and became jealous when Peterson allegedly claimed during the car ride home that he and Pete were in “an intimate relationship.”

Holley went on to suggest that Harris may have had possession of the gun when it fired because investigators found gunshot residue on her hand. The lawyer also said a man who witnessed the shooting from a nearby residence said he believed the muzzle flash was closest to the non-victim female at the time of the shooting.

Under questioning by Deputy District Attorney Kathy Ta, Stogner said gunshot residue can transfer to someone who’s “in the vicinity” of a gun that’s discharged. Stogner also raised questions about the credibility of the eyewitness testimony, saying the man reported seeing two men and a woman physically beating Pete.

“He believed that they were trying to kill her. He said it looked to him to be a severe beating,” Stogner testified. “He had mentioned that it was the two males beating the female on the ground.”

Peterson was taken into custody by officers who responded to a “shots fired” call near the 1800 block of Nichols Canyon Road the morning of the alleged shooting. Booked on suspicion of possessing a concealed firearm in a vehicle, he was released hours later after posting his $35,000 bail.

Pete didn’t publicly identify Peterson as her alleged assailant for weeks but finally named him more than a month later in an Instagram post.

“Tory shot me. You shot me, and you got your publicist and your people going to these blogs, lying and shit,” she said in the video posted Aug. 20, 2020. “Stop lying. Why lie? I don’t understand. I tried to keep the situation off the internet, but you’re dragging it.”

She said, “Even though he shot me, I tried to spare him. And ya’ll motherfuckers is not sparing me. That’s crazy.”

In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, Pete was vague on social media. Stogner testified she initially told responding officers that she cut her feet on glass. She did this because she was worried about how police might react if they knew Peterson, a Black man, had a firearm in the car, she purportedly told Stogner.

“She said that at the time, she was extremely scared and embarrassed, and due to the fact that she was friends with the defendant, she was scared that he was going to get in trouble, and she also expressed some concerns regarding the political climate regarding police and shootings,” he testified. “She was afraid that there had been recent police shootings, and she described her concern about the police possibly shooting the defendant since he had just committed a shooting.”

Peterson, 29, was formally charged on Oct. 8, 2020, with one count of assaulting the Houston-bred performer with a semiautomatic firearm in a manner that “personally inflicted great bodily injury,” and one count of carrying a concealed, loaded, and unregistered firearm in a vehicle.



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UK intelligence chief says Russian soldiers are low on morale and refusing to carry out orders

Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze, a member of the Ukrainian Parliament, listens during a meeting between the Senate Ukraine Caucus and members of the Ukrainian Parliament and Polish Parliament at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, March 30. (Eric Lee/Bloomberg/Getty Images)

A delegation of Ukrainian lawmakers visiting Washington, DC, on Wednesday said they believe Russia is just using peace talks with Ukraine as a “smokescreen” for their forces to regroup and re-strategize in Ukraine.

“At this particular moment, these peace negotiations are far from real negotiations,” Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze, who chairs Ukraine’s Parliamentary Committee on Integration of Ukraine to the European Union, told a small group of reporters at a roundtable hosted by the German Marshall Fund think tank.

“Definitely, I think that Putin is using this as a smokescreen, buying time to regroup … and sending false, lying messages to the whole world,” she said.

“We feel these are not real peace talks at this point,” said MP Anastasia Radina, who heads the parliament’s Committee on Anti-Corruption Policy. “We feel that what Russia is doing is trying to save face. They say they are withdrawing troops from Kiev region. That’s not true for one simple reason. They’re not withdrawing. … They were kicked (out).”

Radina said there is only “one way out of the war, and that is for Ukraine to win.”

Their remarks came one day after the Russian Ministry of Defense said that it had decided to “drastically reduce hostilities” around Kyiv and Chernihiv. US officials, including President Joe Biden, remain skeptical of the announcement.

“We’ll see,” Biden said on Tuesday when asked about Russia’s claims. “I don’t read anything into it until I see what their actions are. We’ll see if they follow through on what they’re suggesting.”

More weapons needed: Ukraine’s military is seeking foreign assistance obtaining reconnaissance and attack drones, tactical radars, electronic warfare anti-drone systems and close-air support aircraft, according to Ukraine’s most recent list of needs provided to Congress.

The list delivered to Capitol Hill on Tuesday, which was obtained by CNN, also includes help treating wounded troops and repairing equipment, including mobile military medical hospitals, the repairs of armored vehicles in neighboring countries and aircraft to help transport weapons.

Rep. Jason Crow, a Colorado Democrat, said at a House Armed Services Committee hearing on Wednesday that latest the list provided to Congress this week reflected Ukrainian military and civilian leadership’s “urgent needs.” At the top of the priority list of 17 items was reconnaissance and attack drones, including “switchblade” drones, which are small so-called kamikaze or suicide drones that carry a warhead and detonate on impact.

The list also included combat aircraft — specifically referencing the Su-25, a Russian-made ground attack plane similar to the US-made A-10 Warthog. The Ukrainian military is also seeking artillery systems, surface-to-air missile systems, anti-tank Javelin missiles, anti-ship missiles and optical surveillance equipment.

The all-female Ukrainian delegation — men between the ages of 18-60 are not allowed to leave Ukraine amid the war — traveled to Washington this week primarily, they say, to ask American lawmakers and administration officials for more military support, which they said is still falling far short of Ukraine’s needs.

“Proper action for Ukraine right now, for support to Ukraine right now, would be weaponry,” Radina said. “Ukraine is constantly asking for weaponry and not only defensive weaponry, but also offensive weaponry. In our situation, this distinction between defensive and offensive is, frankly speaking, humiliating. In our situation, all weapons are defensive because we are defending our lands.”

Radina reiterated that Ukraine needs fighter jets, “because this is how we can actually stop bombings. … And as of now this is the issue on the table, and while it is on the table, people will continue suffering.”

“Our ‘humanitarian aid’ is weapons,” said MP Maria Ionova. “Because to minimize these victims and casualties, we have to defend our air. Freedom has to be armed. And that is why our main message here is please, help us to defend our future and the future of the democratic world.”

“Neutrality is not an option for Ukraine”: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has signaled that Ukraine might be willing to forgo NATO membership and commit to neutrality if the West provides Ukraine with solid security guarantees. But such a move would have to be put to a referendum — and Klympush-Tsintsadze indicated that anything short of NATO membership should be rejected.

“Neutrality is not an option for Ukraine,” she said.

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Colorado wildfire: Evacuation orders for 8,000 homes are lifted after parts of the Boulder area torched

“With the exception of NCAR Road, all roads in the area are now open. Officials anticipate that NCAR Road will remain closed for several days,” the agency said Sunday evening.

“While it is now safe to return home, people in the area of the fire should remain vigilant. Fire officials do not anticipate fully extinguishing the fire for several days. It is possible that the (city may) issue new evacuation orders if conditions deteriorate. Continue to follow this Boulder Office of Emergency Management page for updates.”

The cause of the wildfire remains under investigation.

The inferno broke out Saturday afternoon and burned out of control Saturday evening — prompting evacuation orders for thousands of residents, officials said.
“Evacuation areas include 19,000 people and 8,000 homes,” the Boulder Office of Emergency Management tweeted Saturday evening.
By Monday morning, the blaze had charred about 189 acres and was about 35% contained, the office of emergency management said.

No injuries had been reported, and no structures had been damaged, the agency said late Sunday.

Officials said a combination of cooler temperatures and stellar firefighting efforts helped keep the wildfire from scorching properties and injuring residents.

Mike Smith of the Boulder Incident Management Team said he was “very happy” with the battle against the blaze.

“We had over 200 firefighters from over 30 agencies,” Smith told reporters Sunday. “That, combined with all of the fuel mitigation treatments that we’ve done in this area, is one of the reasons that we had such great success.”



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Russia orders cadets into Ukraine, sends more mercenaries after Zelenskyy: LIVE UPDATES

Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk dismissed calls by Russia for Ukraine to surrender Mariupol to the Russians, according to Pravda Ukraine.

“There can be no talk of any surrenders, laying down of arms,” Vereshchuk said, adding that they will “just open a corridor” for people to leave the city.

The comments come after Russia called on Ukraine to surrender the city as the two sides negotiated a humanitarian corridor that would allow civilians to depart the city if they choose.

Fallen Fox News cameraman Pierre Zakrzewski remembered

UN refugee agency: 10 million people displaced in Ukraine, or have left country

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said on Sunday that 10 million people have either been displaced from their home in Ukraine, or have left the country.

Over 3.5 million people have fled Ukraine since Russian President Vladimir Putin announced an invasion into the country, beginning a war that has already cost the lives of at least 902 people, but that figure is likely much higher because of unconfirmed deaths, according to the United Nations.

Officials in Europe have voiced concern that capacity is being reached in housing Ukrainian refugees.

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Russia was not prepared for the Ukrainian resistance: Fmr. State Dept. official

If NATO maintains solidarity, Putin ‘forced to back down’: Expert

Half of staff at Chernobyl NPP rotated after being held hostage for nearly 4 weeks: IAEA

Ukraine has informed the IAEA that many of the staff that were forced to stay at the Chernobyl nuclear power plan amid Russia’s takeover of the facility have been allowed to return home.

A group of 46 employees rotated into the facility and started a shift Sunday, according to reporting from Fox New’s NaNa Sajaia. It is unclear how long the new employees will stay to operate the plant.

Spoke to the family, whose father was at the plant since February 24. He is now home and resting.  According to him, the group of 46 employees started their shift today, however it is unclear how long the current group will operate the plant.  

“It is a positive – albeit long overdue – development that some staff at the Chornobyl NPP have now rotated and returned to their families. They deserve our full respect and admiration for having worked in these extremely difficult circumstances,” IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said of the news.

Russian forces took control of the facility on February 24, with the staff there having to stick behind and continue to operate the plant without the ability to go home to their families.

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3.3 million refugees have fled Ukraine since February 24: UNHCR reports

Zelenskyy evokes Holocaust as he appeals to Israel for aid

Ukraine’s president on Sunday called on Israel to take a stronger stand against Russia, delivering an emotional appeal that compared Russia’s invasion of his country to the actions of Nazi Germany.

In a speech to Israeli lawmakers over Zoom, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said it was time for Israel, which has emerged as a key mediator between Ukraine and Russia, to finally take sides. He said Israel should follow its Western allies by imposing sanctions and providing arms to Ukraine. 

“One can ask for a long time why we can’t accept weapons from you or why Israel didn’t impose sanctions against Russia, why you are not putting pressure on Russian business,” he said. “It is your choice, dear brothers and sisters.”

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Mariupol residents taken to Russian camps: reports

Russian Defense Ministry calls on Ukraine to surrender Mariupol by 5am on March 21

The Russian Defense Ministry has called for the surrender of Mariupol by 5am March 21, according to Russian state media, warning those authorities that remain will be  “with the bandits.”

The report also says that Russia will allow for a humanitarian corridor for civilians who wish to leave the city on Sunday, where food and medical attention will be provided to those looking to leave the city.

Russia doesn’t have the forces to mount an effective defense: Retired Lt. Gen. Tom Spoehr

Ukrainian troops on the ground collecting war crime evidence

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy warns of ‘third World War’ if peace talks with Russia fail

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned of a third world war if peace talks with Russia fail during a television interview that aired Sunday.

Zelenskyy said that “any format” should be used in order to have a possibility of negotiating with Russia, in particular Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“I think that we have to use any format, any chance in order to have a possibility of negotiating, possibility of talking to Putin. But if these attempts fail, that would mean that this is a third World War,” Zelenskyy said.

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Putin has ‘grown more risk tolerant’: Dan Hoffman

Putin may ‘settle for what he’s got and try to go for some sort of negotiation’: Retired Lt. Gen.

Another senior Russian military leader dies in Ukraine

Russian Deputy Commander Deputy Commander of the Black Sea Fleet Andrey Paliy died during fighting in Ukraine, Russian state media reported Sunday.

Paliy was killed during fighting in the Mariupol region, the report said. He joins a growing list of senior Russian leaders who have died during the invasion so far, with Ukrainian officials claiming that their forces have killed at least five Russian generals.

Every drop of oil from Russia is funding Putin’s war: Sen Blackburn

Zelenskyy: Israel must make stance clearer, Moscow seeking ‘final solution’

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke Sunday to Israel’s Knesset members, urging the government to take a clearer stance against Russia with more pressure and stronger sanctions.

Zelenskyy thanked Israel for playing such a vital role in mediation, but added that you can mediate between states but not between “good and evil.”

He also claimed that Moscow has used the same terminology of “final solution” and referenced the connection between Ukraine and the Jewish.

NATO chief declines to give chemical weapons redline in Russia-Ukraine war

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg sidestepped answering whether Russia potentially using chemical weapons in its invasion of Ukraine would spur NATO to rethink imposing a no-fly zone over Ukraine. 

“It does sound like what you’re saying is you don’t have an answer yet on what the use of chemical weapons would do to NATO’s stance about Ukraine,” “Meet the Press” host Chuck Todd told Stoltenberg Sunday morning. 

“Any use of chemical weapons will be a blatant and brutal violation of international law – the ban on the use of chemical weapons. At the same time we know that Russia has used chemical agents in Europe before against their own political opponents,” Stoltenberg told Todd. 

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UN: 902 civilians in Ukraine dead since Russian invasion started

The U.N. human rights office (OHCHR) reported Sunday that at least 902 civilians in Ukraine have been killed since the start of Russia’s invasion.

A further 1,459 civilians have been injured in that time.

The number for both is likely higher than what the U.N. has been able to record.

Biden to revisit Europe this week, no plans for Ukraine stop

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki announced Sunday that President Biden would visit Europe again this week.

Details of the trip, including stops, have yet to be revealed, but Psaki made clear that Biden will not visit Ukraine.

“The trip will be focused on continuing to rally the world in support of the Ukrainian people and against President Putin’s invasion of Ukraine,” Psaki wrote.

Ukraine warns more Russian Wagner Group mercenaries sent to ‘eliminate’ Zelenskyy

The Ukrainian defense ministry warned Sunday that another group of Russian Wagner Group mercenaries arrived in Ukraine on a mission to assassinate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and take out other high-ranking Ukrainian politicians on the fourth week since the invasion’s onset.  

“Another group of militants linked to Yevgeniy Prigozhin, a Russian propagandist close to Putin and owner of the Liga (Wagner), began arriving in Ukraine today,” the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine said in a Facebook post. 

“The main task of criminals is to eliminate the top military and political leadership of Ukraine.” 

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Ukraine warns Belarus planning ‘direct invasion’ to assist Putin’s forces

Ukrainian officials warned on Sunday that the Belarusian military was preparing to invade at the onset of the fifth week since Russian President Vladimir Putin’s forces first descended on Ukraine last month.  

In a statement shared to Facebook, Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense said there were signs that suggested the armed forces of the Republic of Belarus were preparing for a “direct invasion” of Ukrainian territory. 

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Russia deploys more Wagner personnel to Ukraine: defense officials

Ukraine’s Defense Ministry on Sunday claimed to have intelligence that suggested Russia has deployed more Wagner personnel in an effort to eliminate senior political and military leaders in Ukraine.

Officials said that Putin “personally” ordered the attack, which will target Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as well as Prime Minister Denis Shmigal.

But the Defense Ministry said “Ukrainian army, special services and law enforcement agencies are well-known Kremlin plans.”

“We are ready for the rest of the aggressor both in the front and in the back,” a press release said. “No terrorist attacks will succeed.”

Russia orders deployment of cadets: Ukrainian Defense Ministry

Ukrainian defense officials claimed Sunday to have obtained documents that indicate Russia has ordered the deployment of cadets to Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly told his people that the army is not utilizing cadets, but photos of the documents posted online indicate that Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has signed an order to the contrary.

The deployment will see Yunarmia cadets aged 17 and 18 pushed to the frontlines in Ukraine.

US official: Russia did fire more than one hypersonic missile

A Senior U.S. official confirmed to Fox News that Russia did deploy more than one hypersonic missile Saturday.

Fox News correspondent Jennifer Griffin reported that officials have stressed that the use of such a weapon is not part of an escalation towards nuclear weapons.

But officials have speculated that Putin may instead be running out of precision guided missiles.

Russia invasion: Putin becoming ‘pariah’ before world stage, experts say

Russian President Vladimir Putin is becoming a “pariah,” an outcast, before the world stage amid his ongoing invasion of Ukraine, foreign policy experts say.

While experts believe it’s too soon to determine whether Putin will be successful in his attempts to take control of Ukraine — acknowledging that there will likely be some form of a partial victory — it is clear that the Russian dictator has done irreversible damage to his own country with the invasion.

“I think Putin’s future is grim. I think, at home, he will be under the constant threat of opposition — possibly of a coup, some kind of power grab — to remove him because even his closest allies are now seeing the problem,” said Robert English, a professor of Central European Studies at the University of Southern California. “And if they gain less by staying loyal than they would if he’s replaced, it’s just a matter of how to do it.”

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New poll finds Ukrainians overwhelmingly believe Russia will lose war

A new poll by the Rating Group found that 93% of Ukrainians believe they will defeat Russia.

Almost half of Ukrainians polled believe the war will end in the next few weeks, The Kyiv Independent reported.

And Ukrainians do not support a ceasefire unless Russia fully retreats from the country.

Zelenskyy blasts Russian ‘terror’ as Mariupol art school sheltering 400 is struck

Russia’s “terror” unleashed on the city of Mariupol, Ukraine, this month will be “remembered for centuries to come,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy predicted Sunday.

Zelenskyy’s remarks came in his latest video statement to Ukraine’s citizens, The Associated Press reported.

The remarks coincided with Sunday reports that Russian forces had destroyed an art school building in Mariupol where as many as 400 people were believed to have sought shelter.

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Mariupol art school where 400 sheltered bombed; casualties unclear

The Russians bombed an art school in Mariupol where about 400 people were sheltering in the latest attack on the besieged port city, local authorities said Sunday.

It’s unclear if there were any casualties.

More than 100 children killed in war: Ukraine

At least 115 children have been killed by Russian forces during the war so far, Ukraine’s Prosecutor General’s Office said Sunday. Another 140 have been injured.

A 9-year-old boy died in Kharkiv on Sunday during a Russian artillery attack. It’s unclear if he was included in the count.

Putin’s war against Ukraine may have spiritual, religious foundations: ‘Good vs. evil’

The fuel behind Russian President Vladimir Putin’s rage against Ukraine probably has more spiritual and religious foundations than most pundits have acknowledged.

For religious leaders, the war in Ukraine is a top concern. 

For faith leaders in media, this conflict is not just about politics.

Dirk Smith is one of the thousands of faith leaders in media who met last week in Nashville, Tennessee, for the National Religious Broadcasters convention. 

He says Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is a simple spiritual matter. 

“It’s good versus evil … It is not Russians versus Ukrainians,” Smith says. “The Russian people — they don’t want this.”

Click here to read more on Fox News.

Civilians killed in Kharkiv

At laest five civilians were killed by a Russian artillery attack in the eastern city of Kharkiv Sunday morning, including a 9-year-old boy, local authorities said.

The city has faced relentless attacks since the start of the war.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Belarus leader Lukashenko lavishes Putin with praise: ‘Better shape than ever’

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has been derided by world leaders as a “dangerous” and “small, feral-eyed man” as he directs the invasion of Ukraine
. But don’t tell that to Belarus’ President Alexander Lukashenko.

In an interview with a Japanese media outlet, Lukashenko – a Putin ally whose country borders both Russia and Ukraine and was reportedly used as a staging area for the invasion that began Feb. 24 and is now in its fourth week – described the 69-year-old former KGB agent as “a completely sane, healthy person, physically healthy – he’s an athlete.

“As they say here,” Lukashenko added about Putin, “he’ll catch a cold at all our funerals.”

Click here to read more on Fox News.

Only people around Putin now are ‘yes men’: Former Army intelligence officer

Michael Pregent weighs in on Putin reportedly detaining top Russian general.

Zelenskyy suspends 11 political parties with Russian ties

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Sunday ordered the suspension of 11 political parties in Ukraine that have ties to Russia.

The Opposition Platform for Life is the largest with 44 out of 450 seats in parliament. The party’s leader Viktor Medvedchuk is friendly with Russian President Vladimir Putin who is the godfather of Medvedchuk’s daughter.

He also suspnded the Nashi Party led by Yevheniy Murayev who U.K. authorities previously warned Russia would try to install as the new president of Ukraine.

“given a large-scale war unleashed by the Russian Federation and links between it and some political structures, the activities of a number of political parties is suspended for the period of the martial law.” He added that “activities by politicians aimed at discord and collaboration will not succeed.”

Zelenskyy says war crimes in Mariupol will be remembered for centuries

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy early Sunday said Russia’s attack on the besieged city of Mariupol would be remembered for centuries for its “terror” on the residents and “war crimes” committed.

Mariupol is a strategic port city and its fall would mark a crucial advance for Russian troops who have yet to take control of a major Ukrainian city nearly a month into the war.

“To do this to a peaceful city, what the occupiers did, is a terror that will be remembered for centuries to come,” Zelenskyy said in a video address to the nation.

A Mariupol police officer in a separate video said children and the elderly are dying in the city, which has been largely without necessities like food and water since the war started.

“The city is destroyed and it is wiped off the face of the earth,” Officer Michail Vershnin said.

As war rages, Ukrainian-American couple with newborn, stranded in Kyiv, open bakery

A Ukrainian-American couple who traveled from New York to Kyiv for business say they could not escape the Ukrainian capital city before the war broke out Feb. 24 because they welcomed a new baby just days before the Russian invasion, which prevented them from leaving. Now they’re turning to the bread business to supplement their income.

International officials “were telling people you have to leave because there is the possibility of war but my wife being nine months pregnant [made that] impossible,” said Sergii Nosenko.

Click here to read more on Fox News.

Fox News correspondent recounts his view from the frontlines in Ukraine

Steve Harrigan describes what was different from most other war zones following his return from Ukraine.

Mariupol city council claims Russians have relocated its residents forcibly

The city council of the besieged city of Mariupol this weekend claimed that Russian troops have forcibly relocated thousands of residents, sending some to Russia.

Ukraine is still holding the key Black Sea port that has seen some of the worst of the war. The fall of Mariupol would mark a major battlefield advance for the Russians, who are largely bogged down outside major cities more than three weeks in.

Local officials report that more than 2,500 residents have been killed in the city.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Chinese official calls sanctions on Russia increasingly ‘outrageous’

A senior Chinese government official said on Saturday that sanctions imposed by Western nations on Russia over Ukraine are increasingly “outrageous”.

Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng also acknowledged Moscow’s point of view on NATO, saying the alliance should not further expand eastwards, forcing a nuclear power like Russia “into a corner”.

China has yet to condemn Russia’s action in Ukraine or call it an invasion, though it has expressed deep concern about the war. Beijing has also opposed economic sanctions on Russia over Ukraine, which it says are unilateral and are not authorized by the U.N. Security Council.

Click here to read more on Fox Business

US doesn’t ‘seem prepared’ for possibility that Putin uses nuclear weapons: expert

The United States’ reactionary moves to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine suggest that it does not have an adequate plan in place to respond if Russian President Vladimir Putin decides to use a nuclear weapon, a former U.S. intelligence officer told Fox News.

Rebekah Koffler, a former U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency agent and author of “Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America,” explained to Fox News that while the U.S. certainly has a strategic plan in place if Putin uses a nuclear weapon, recent responses to Russia’s aggression instill little confidence that the United States is doing the necessary preparation for such an outcome.

Click here to read more on Fox News

Putin targeting civilians is ‘incomprehensible’: Johnny ‘Joey’ Jones

The Big Weekend Show’ panelists react to Russia’s attacks on civilian targets in Ukraine.

Click here for Saturday’s live coverage.



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GE Cuts Larry Culp’s 2022 Pay After Shareholder Protest

General Electric Co. said Chief Executive

Larry Culp

agreed to reduce his potential compensation by about $10 million this year, responding to shareholder concerns over changes that

GE’s

GE 0.88%

board made to executives’ pay packages in 2020.

In August 2020, the GE board revised Mr. Culp’s contract, extending it until 2024 and awarding him a special stock grant during the year that was valued at more than $100 million by the end of 2020. Asset managers called the awards poorly linked to the company’s performance, which they characterized as trailing that of GE’s peers.

Nearly 58% of GE shares were voted against the board’s compensation practices at last year’s annual meeting. It is rare for shareholders to withhold their support for such say-on-pay votes at major companies.

For 2022, Mr. Culp stands to receive a $5 million equity award, instead of the $15 million set out in his revised contract, if he and the company meet performance targets. Exceeding those targets or falling short would increase or reduce the award, respectively.

GE reduced Mr. Culp’s potential 2022 pay following discussions with most of its major shareholders last year, the company said in its annual proxy statement.

“There was shareholder concern around the timing, size and structure of the 2020 retention grant made as part of the extension,” GE said in its filing, along with shareholder support for Mr. Culp’s leadership. The company also said it doesn’t plan to make similar changes to its CEO’s pay in future years.

On Thursday, GE reported paying Mr. Culp $22.7 million for 2021, including a cash bonus of $4.2 million and salary of $2.5 million as well as a $15 million equity award. The equity award was made before the 2021 annual meeting, GE said in the filing.

His 2021 pay trailed the $73.2 million that GE reported paying him in 2020, but it roughly matched the $24.6 million paid in 2019, Mr. Culp’s first full year heading the company, securities filings show.

GE said in its proxy that the board would also limit its use of discretion when determining executive bonuses, after shareholders expressed concerns that GE used discretion in 2020 to award bonuses rather than pegging them to performance measures.

The company said Mr. Culp’s bonus for 2021 paid out at 112% of target, reflecting better-than-target free-cash-flow and margin-expansion figures, and worse-than-target revenue growth, as well as a penalty based on companywide safety metrics.

A GE spokeswoman said the company spoke with investors holding about half the company’s shares, and three-quarters of those held by institutional investors, after the failed say-on-pay vote.

Write to Theo Francis at theo.francis@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the March 18, 2022, print edition as ‘GE Cuts CEO Pay After Shareholder Protest.’

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New York Schools Can Drop Mask Orders Starting Wednesday – NBC New York

What to Know

  • Gov. Kathy Hochul announced an end to the statewide indoor mask mandate in schools effective Wednesday, March 2
  • On the heels of her announcement, Mayor Eric Adams said he plans to lift the order for New York City schools the following Monday
  • These decisions follow new CDC guidance essentially saying most people don’t need to wear face masks in indoor public settings unless there’s a high level of severe disease

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul had a clear message for families and educators on Sunday: It’s time to ditch the masks in schools.

Appearing for a rare weekend press conference as many students and teachers prepared to return following mid-winter break, Hochul announced that the statewide order requiring indoor mask use in schools would be lifted on Wednesday.

The governor pointed to the latest advice from the CDC, which essentially says most people don’t need to wear face masks in indoor public settings unless there’s a high level of severe disease, as well as overwhelming evidence the omicron surge is in the rearview for New York.

A drop in new cases of COVID-19 by a whopping 98% since omicron’s peak in early January, whose highest single-day total skyrocketed past 90,000 cases, is one of several improving metrics that the governor says supports lifting restrictions. She also pointed to a drop in hospitalizations and “strong vaccination rates.”

Counties and cities, the governor stipulated, will still have the authority to require masks in schools after the statewide order expires this week. Parents and guardians can also still send their kids to school in masks regardless of the change.

Students and teachers returning from mid-winter break on Monday are guaranteed to have at least two more days of face coverings in the classroom until the statewide order lifts. But all eyes turn to local leaders now to see who will keep local orders in place beyond the state’s.

“We will lift the statewide requirement based on all the data that I’ve just outlined. However, there are some counties in the state that have a higher rate of transmission — we will allow them the flexibility to determine what’s best for their county. We would encourage them to take a look at this and follow the CDC, but this will no longer be a mandate,” Hochul explained.

Those waiting to hear word from the largest school district in the nation didn’t have to wait long. Hours after the governor’s announcement, Mayor Eric Adams announced his intention to end the city’s indoor mandate the following Monday, March 7. It comes just days after the city dropped mask requirements for students and staff while outdoors.

Education leaders in the city announced the slight change in masking on Friday, the same day the CDC eased federal mask guidance, essentially saying that most Americans needn’t wear masks in indoor public settings unless there’s a heightened risk of severe disease or health system strain.

New York City school kids will be able to unmask outdoors but the mandate for masks remain in place indoor for now. NBC New York’s Erica Byfield reports.

A statewide teachers union representing more than 600,000 members in New York released a statement Sunday reacting to Hochul’s announcement.

“We welcome this step toward normalcy. The governor is striking the right balance by empowering local officials to use data to determine if and when the mitigation strategies need to change in their areas,” Andy Pallotta, the union’s president, said. “As the guidance changes, one thing must remain constant: It’s essential that districts work closely with educators to ensure there is confidence in their health and safety plans.”


CDC

The CDC is looking at community-level risk in its latest mask guidance. People who aren’t overly vulnerable don’t need to wear masks in most indoor public settings in areas where the community level is low or medium.

A growing number of states have already eased mask guidance — or removed rules entirely — amid the rapid decline of omicron variant-linked new infections and continuous slowing of hospitalization and death rates connected to COVID.

Schools are one place in New York where the mandates have lingered, even as New Jersey looks to lift its indoor school mask rules early next month.



CDC

Over 70% of the U.S. population, including New York City, is now in a location with a COVID community level described as low or medium, the health agency said Friday, which means it wouldn’t advise masks indoors for nonvulnerable people.

The new recommendations are part of an overall shift in focus for the Biden administration, which is moving from an infection containment approach to mitigating severe illness and death linked to COVID-19, the AP has reported.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is “cautiously optimistic” about the downward trend in omicron-fueled COVID cases. CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said they were considering new benchmarks for masking, based on levels of severe illness and hospital capacity.

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