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      ‘Get on a plane’: Danish minister urged to meet Greenland coil scandal women

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 29 March, 2024

    Exclusive: Territory’s government calls for visit to listen to those thought to be living with consequences of forced fitting of IUDs

    The Danish health minister should “get on a plane and visit” some of the thousands of women thought to be living with the consequences of being forcibly fitted with the contraceptive coil as children, Greenland’s gender equality minister has said.

    In an attempt to reduce the population of the former Danish colony, at least 4,500 women and girls are believed to have undergone the medical procedure, usually without their consent or knowledge, at the hands of Danish doctors between 1966 and 1970 alone.

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      ‘He’s not broken’: a year later, Evan Gershkovich is still in Russian prison

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 29 March, 2024

    The US journalist was seized by officials and charged with espionage, and friends and family say he has kept his spirits up

    Friday marks the grim first anniversary of the day when masked Russian officers grabbed Evan Gershkovich, an American journalist, at a steakhouse in Yekaterinburg where he was waiting to eat on a reporting trip.

    Gershkovich, a 32-year-old reporter for the Wall Street Journal, has not seen a day of freedom since. He has been held in the infamous Lefortovo prison on the outskirts of Moscow, where the Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn was once detained.

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      Ireland’s smoking ban 20 years on: how an unheralded civil servant triumphed against big tobacco

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 29 March, 2024

    Tom Power led an alliance that brought about the pioneering health initiative which has since been adopted by more than 70 countries – and has saved countless lives

    Exactly 20 years ago an Irish civil servant named Tom Power won a remarkable battle against the tobacco industry when Ireland enacted the world’s first ban on smoking in bars, restaurants and workplaces.

    TV crews from Japan, the US and elsewhere flocked to Dublin to record the events of 29 March 2004. No one knew what would happen. Would smokers revolt? Would pubs flout the law? Would a bold experiment go up in smoke?

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      Russian police detain journalist who filmed last video of Alexei Navalny alive

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 29 March, 2024

    Rights groups say Antonina Favorskaya is accused of links to Alexei Navalny’s ‘extremist organisation’ and is one of six journalists held this month

    A journalist who filmed the last video of Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny before he died, Antonina Favorskaya, has been detained by authorities.

    Favorskaya covered the trials of Navalny for several years and media freedom organisation Reporters Without Borders said on Thursday she was one of six journalists across the country held this month.

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      Ukraine war briefing: Russian fighter jet crashes off Crimea

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 29 March, 2024 • 3 minutes

    US pushes exporters to cut off clients who might sell weapons parts on to Russia; Zelenskiy insists Putin a threat to Nato countries. What we know on day 765

    A Russian SU-35 Flanker fighter jet has crashed into the sea off Sevastopol, Crimea . Footage online showed a jet on fire, spiralling into the ocean and exploding. The Russian-installed governor of the illegally occupied region, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said on Thursday the pilot ejected and was picked up by rescuers but gave no details as to the cause of the crash. Maria Avdeeva, a Ukrainian security expert, claimed that it had been shot down, while other pro-Ukraine Telegram channels speculated that the cause was friendly fire. Ukrainian officials have not commented on the claims, which cannot be independently verified. The region has come under frequent Ukrainian attack during the two-year conflict.

    Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the Ukrainian president, told the speaker of the US House of Representatives during a phone call on Thursday that it was vital for Congress to pass a new military aid package for Ukraine . Mike Johnson, the speaker, has held up a bill for months that would supply $60bn in military and financial aid .
    “We recognise that there are differing views in the House of Representatives on how to proceed, but the key is to keep the issue of aid to Ukraine as a unifying factor,” Zelenskiy said.

    Zelenskiy said he briefed Johnson about the situation on the battlefield and also spoke about “the dramatic increase in Russia’s air terror” . The Ukrainian military later said that its top commander, Oleksander Syrskyi, spoke to the US chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, Charles Brown, about battlefield issues .

    Zelenskiy, in a CBS interview, has warned that Vladimir Putin will push Russia’s war “very quickly” on to Nato soil unless he is stopped in Ukraine. Zelenskiy acknowledged that his troops are not prepared to defend against another imminent major Russian offensive, and highlighted the urgency for American Patriot missile defence systems and more artillery .

    The US is telling American companies making and selling parts that can be used in missiles and drones to stop shipping their goods to more than 600 foreign parties who might divert them to Russia . The parts have been found in Russian munitions recovered in Ukraine. “In the last several weeks, we’ve sent letters to more than 20 American companies , each containing a list of more than 600 foreign parties,” said Matthew Axelrod, assistant secretary at the commerce department. Axelrod said senior US officials have also been contacting company bosses directly to discuss further steps to prevent their products ending up inside Russia.

    A Russian court on Thursday sentenced journalist Mikhail Feldman to two years in prison for denouncing Moscow’s full-scale military offensive on Ukraine . Police in Moscow detained five other reporters over a 24-hour period.

    Against the backdrop of war in Ukraine, several central and eastern European countries began marking on Thursday the 20th anniversary of the largest expansion of Nato when formerly socialist countries became members. Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia joined Nato on 29 March 2004. Other former Soviet satellites including Poland and the Czech Republic had been admitted several years earlier.

    Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, on Thursday hosted his Ukrainian counterpart, Denys Shmyhal, for talks designed to ease friction over Ukrainian farm imports and border blockades by disgruntled Polish farmers . On Thursday, Polish prime minister welcomed his counterpart to Warsaw.

    “We are close to a solution,” Tusk said. “This applies to the amount of products that can flow into Poland, once we determine it, we are close to ensuring that transit does not disturb the Polish market. ” Shmyhal said the talks were “extremely constructive” and intensive. “Today I can say that we definitely have progress regarding lifting of the blockade .”

    Poland’s Internal Security Agency (ABW) has carried out searches as part of an investigation with other European security services into alleged Russian espionage , the agency said on Thursday.

    French authorities uncovered a website containing a fake recruitment drive for French volunteers to join the war in Ukraine , the defence ministry said on Thursday. The site was taken down by French services, said a government source, who asked not to be named.

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      Macron rekindles France-Brazil relationship in widely memed Lula visit

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 28 March, 2024

    Photos of French president’s three-day trip to Brazil to reaffirm countries’ partnership delight internet observers

    If the official photos are anything to go by, Emmanuel Macron’s three-day trip to Brazil has been more romantic getaway than international diplomacy.

    The French president, who ended his tour of the South American country on Thursday with a state visit to the capital, Brasília, prompted online hilarity after the publication of photos showing him being particularly chummy with his Brazilian counterpart, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

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      Latvia’s top diplomat steps down after flights scandal

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 28 March, 2024

    Krišjānis Kariņš allegedly spent up to €1.3m on private jet rentals for official trips

    Krišjānis Kariņš, the Latvian foreign minister, has said he will step down after a scandal over his use of state funds to pay for private flights during his time as prime minister.

    Last week, Latvia’s prosecutor general opened an investigation into the misuse of state funds after it was revealed that Karins had allegedly spent up to €1.3m (£1.1m) on private jet rentals for official trips.

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      US repeatedly warned Russia ahead of Moscow attack, White House says

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 28 March, 2024

    National security spokesperson says US passed on warnings and dismissed Russian allegations Ukraine was involved as ‘nonsense’

    The US repeatedly alerted Russia that extremists were planning to attack large gatherings in Moscow ahead of last week’s concert hall attack that claimed more than 140 lives, the White House has said.

    The national security spokesperson, John Kirby, said on Thursday that US officials passed on warnings – including one in writing – and dismissed Russian allegations that Ukraine was involved as “nonsense”.

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      France assesses Paris Olympics terrorist threat in light of Moscow attack

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 28 March, 2024

    Minister meets with intelligence services to discuss security for Games that includes opening ceremony on the Seine

    The French interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, has met with intelligence services to assess the terrorist threat to the country, after the Moscow concert hall attack claimed by Islamic State raised fresh security fears over the Paris Olympics.

    One of the biggest security challenges facing the organisers of the Games in the French capital is to protect the opening ceremony on 26 July. It is planned to be an unprecedented, open-air extravaganza, which for the first time in Olympic history will not take place within the confines of a stadium, but instead involve a flotilla of 94 boats carrying thousands of waving athletes down a 6km (3.7-mile) stretch of the Seine, followed by a further 80 boats carrying media and security, while an estimated 222,000 people gather along the river’s edge and 200,000 more watch from buildings.

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