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Messages - chandna rani

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 ItOn the morning of a sunny Easter Sunday in kyiv, the first warm day in weeks, two middle-aged men sort through their belongings in a secluded spot in Solomensky Park. Oleh and Misha are homeless and have been living in a shelter in this park for a week. They moved here together after the metro reopened at kyiv's central train station, where they had been living. Misha, who comes from the western region of Transcarpathia, once helped install the park's central fountain, which is why she knew what is now her new temporary home.

 Oleh, 58 years old and originally from the Phone Number List region, is a maintenance worker currently without work or a place to live. The Russian invasion found him in Stoyanka, a town near the E40 highway, which leaves the city to the west. He and 16 other people lived in a “religious rehabilitation center,” where homeless people worked in exchange for shelter and three meals a day. «He was lying on a sofa; it was around noon.



A missile hit our building and a piece of wall fell on my legs. Some men helped me get out, and I did it quickly with just a pinched nerve in my knee," he said. After the missile attack, Oleh and other survivors hid in a nearby church. His passports and other documents, kept in the center's safe, were probably burned in the explosion, he said. The next day, men with blue armbands – most likely a local defense unit or volunteers of some kind – took them to another village. From there they headed to Boyarka, a town southwest of kyiv, and then took a train to the capital.

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General Discussion / Limits on custom channel groups
« on: September 03, 2023, 12:55:58 am »
But the war also entails enormous risks for China: against its own foreign policy principles, China has already lost, with its vague attitude towards Russia's war offensive, a great deal of credibility as a future ordering power of the world. Beyond the influence of China, the reasons and motives of the States that support – or at least do not condemn – Russia are very varied: they range from strategic and economic interests and dependencies, through historical relations, to anti-Western reflexes.

However, it must be said that the emerging India Email List order cannot simply be reduced to a confrontation between liberal democracies and autocracies. History shows that phases of radical change in political power are often particularly unstable and crisis-prone. One of the few exceptions remains the peaceful end of the East-West conflict in 1989-1990, due mainly to Willy Brandt's policy of peace and détente, as well as years of negotiations within the framework of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) - precisely those agreements and institutions that Moscow is seriously damaging today.




It remains highly doubtful that it will ever be possible to restore trustworthy relations with Russia under Putin's regency. The European order will probably be marked for the next few years, if not decades, by a phase of confrontation or, at best, of coexistence. At the same time, the "change of era" must not be exhausted exclusively in the military. The war in Ukraine does not change in any way the need for a comprehensive security concept that not only includes military aspects, but also political, economic, ecological and humanitarian aspects.

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