Post by account_disabled on Feb 11, 2024 15:05:15 GMT 4
The year on the issue year page. Why the Left Should Support Ukraine’s Right to Self-Defense Dalia Sabrova For some on the left the countries ultimately responsible for all wars are the United States and NATO. Their neglect of specific processes in the post-Soviet space provides a geopolitical analysis that ignores the right to self-defense. Behind certain pacifist greetings lies a more or less open invitation to surrender. Why the Left Should Support Ukraine’s Right to Self-Defense I am not an expert in Russian-Ukrainian relations or geopolitical issues in an academic sense. I'm writing a philosophy paper. But I was born in Kiev and before coming to France I lived there for years. My family is currently in Ukraine. My mother left Kiev last year but many friends and relatives of friends remain in the Ukrainian capital.
All either because they take Bahamas Telemarketing Data care of the elderly and sick or because they decide to defend their city and help those who remain there. Other friends who have escaped are processing asylum applications in Poland, Germany or France. Since the first day of the invasion I have followed local information mainly through Ukrainian media and different channels or directly through the testimonies of my relatives. This is the reason why I decided to write this article to discuss the extent of the damage to the current living and survival conditions of the local people and the network of solidarity and resistance in which the Ukrainian people are embedded. Lots of participation. After the failure of the blitzkrieg, the Russian army intensified its shelling of urban centers, especially civilian infrastructure such as Kharkov, Mariupol and Kiev residential areas, schools and hospitals were not spared. What's happening is looking more and more like a field.
This can be proven by photos of the northwest suburbs of Kiev, Irpinborojankabuchagostomel and several villages along Kiev Tomyr that have been half destroyed. In the suburbs where fighting continues, people have been without electric heating and telephone connections since the first day of the war. They had to stay for days on end in cold, damp basements that were unprepared to protect themselves from the Golla or Iskander-type missiles used by the Russian military. Even the Red Cross does not dare venture into areas where Russian military equipment is installed and circulated. Despite the humanitarian corridor agreement, Russian forces have barely adhered to the ceasefire. Troops often fire on the cars of civilians trying to flee these war zones.
All either because they take Bahamas Telemarketing Data care of the elderly and sick or because they decide to defend their city and help those who remain there. Other friends who have escaped are processing asylum applications in Poland, Germany or France. Since the first day of the invasion I have followed local information mainly through Ukrainian media and different channels or directly through the testimonies of my relatives. This is the reason why I decided to write this article to discuss the extent of the damage to the current living and survival conditions of the local people and the network of solidarity and resistance in which the Ukrainian people are embedded. Lots of participation. After the failure of the blitzkrieg, the Russian army intensified its shelling of urban centers, especially civilian infrastructure such as Kharkov, Mariupol and Kiev residential areas, schools and hospitals were not spared. What's happening is looking more and more like a field.
This can be proven by photos of the northwest suburbs of Kiev, Irpinborojankabuchagostomel and several villages along Kiev Tomyr that have been half destroyed. In the suburbs where fighting continues, people have been without electric heating and telephone connections since the first day of the war. They had to stay for days on end in cold, damp basements that were unprepared to protect themselves from the Golla or Iskander-type missiles used by the Russian military. Even the Red Cross does not dare venture into areas where Russian military equipment is installed and circulated. Despite the humanitarian corridor agreement, Russian forces have barely adhered to the ceasefire. Troops often fire on the cars of civilians trying to flee these war zones.