🇵🇪PERU - farmers & citizens against the government & the cost of living.
A nation rich in copper ore concentrates, gold, refined copper & refined petroleum oils, is not poor! …unless made so by its government.
🇵🇪PERU - farmers & citizens against the government & the cost of living.
A nation rich in copper ore concentrates, gold, refined copper & refined petroleum oils, is not poor! …unless made so by its government.
NARVA, Estonia (AP) — For weeks Natalya Zadoyanova had lost contact with her younger brother Dmitriy, who was trapped in the besieged Ukrainian port city of Mariupol.
Russian forces had bombed the orphanage where he worked, and he was huddling with dozens of others in the freezing basement of a building without doors and windows. When she next heard from him, he was in tears.
“I’m alive,” he told her. “I’m in Russia.”
Dmitriy Zadoyanov was facing the next chapter of devastation for the people of Mariupol and other occupied cities: Forcible transfers to Russia, the very nation that killed their neighbors and shelled their hometowns almost into oblivion.
Dmitriy Zadoyanov, an evacuee from Mariupol, rests after his interview in Tbilisi, Georgia, Sunday, April 17, 2022. Natalya had lost touch with her younger brother, Dmitriy, as he tried to survive the Russian bombardment of Ukraine’s port city of Mariupol. After weeks of silence, he finally called. “I’m alive,” he told her, in tears. “I’m in Russia.” (AP Photo/Shakh Aivazov)
Dmitriy Zadoyanov, an evacuee from Mariupol, rests after his interview in Tbilisi, Georgia, Sunday, April 17, 2022. (AP Photo/Shakh Aivazov)
Nearly 2 million Ukrainians refugees have been sent to Russia, according to both Ukrainian and Russian officials. Ukraine portrays these journeys as forced transfers to enemy soil, which is considered a war crime. Russia calls them humanitarian evacuations of war victims who already speak Russian and are grateful for a new home.
https://apnews.com/article/Ukraine-Russia-refugees-Mariupol-war-investigation-31880d51ae29818b
In the final hours of the Trump presidency, the U.S. Justice Department raised privacy concerns to thwart the release of hundreds of pages of documents that Donald Trump had declassified to expose FBI abuses during the Russia collusion probe, and the agency then defied a subsequent order to release the materials after redactions were made, according to interviews and documents.
The previously untold story of how highly anticipated declassified material never became public is contained in a memo obtained by Just the News from the National Archives that was written by then-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows just hours before Trump left office on noon of Jan. 20, 2021.
Meadows' memo confirmed prior reporting by Just the News that Trump on Jan. 19, 2021 declassified a binder of hundreds of pages of sensitive FBI documents that show how the bureau used informants and FISA warrants to spy on the Trump campaign and misled both a federal court and Congress about flaws in the evidence they offered to get approval for the investigation.
https://justthenews.com/accountability/russia-and-ukraine-scandals/mystery-solved-doj-secretly-thw