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www.pbs.org
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| | | | | A U.N. expert reports that repression in Russia is escalating, targeting civilians, journalists, and Ukrainian prisoners of war. | |
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meduza.io
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| | | | | At the end of August, Dmitry Klevtsov, the deputy chairman of the St. Petersburg Housing Committee, announced that since 2019, the waiting list for subsidized housing had halved, dropping from 146,700 to 78,600 families. "The reduction in the number of families on the housing register reflects the positive changes we've made," Klevtsov said. However, official reports don't seem to align with the reality on the ground. The independent outlet Bumaga spoke with lawyers and St. Petersburg residents who are struggling to even get on the list - all while veterans of the Kremlin's war in Ukraine receive priority housing. Meduza shares key insights from the outlet's reporting. | |
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checksandbalances.clio.nl
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| | | | | Two years ago, headline over headline with the newest developments, newest death numbers and newest information regarding Russia's invasion of Ukraine reached us over basically every news rep... | |
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www.themoscowtimes.com
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| | | President Vladimir Putin's first trip to meet his generals in Russian-occupied Ukraine publicized by the Kremlin earlier this week was an attempt to show he is in control of the military situation and compete with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, according to analysts. This is only the second time Putin has publicly traveled to the areas of Ukraine seized by Russia in its full-scale invasion launched last year. "They need to show that the Russian president is not inferior to the Ukrainian president," Oleg Ignatov, a senior analyst at International Crisis Group, told The Moscow Times. | ||