As the war enters its 12th day, Ukraine is set to ask the United Nationsâ highest court on Monday to intervene to halt Moscowâs invasion. Ukraineâs suit argues that Russia relied on false claims of genocide in two separatist regions in eastern Ukraine, where Russian-backed rebels have battled Kyiv for years, in an attempt to justify its invasion.
The International Court of Justice, also known as the World Court, is based in The Hague and adjudicates legal disputes between states. Its rulings are legally binding, although it has no real way of enforcing them. Separately, Ukraine is dispatching teams to bombed sites to make a potential case that Russia committed war crimes at another international tribunal.
Hereâs what to know
China ready to mediate Ukraine conflict, says top diplomat
Return to menuChina is ready to act as mediator between Ukraine and Russia, the countryâs foreign minister said on Monday, as he defended Beijingâs continued rhetorical support of Moscow while claiming neutrality.
âChina is willing to continue playing a constructive role in urging peace talks and is willing when necessary to work together with the international community to launch required mediation,â Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters at his annual news conference, part of the yearly meeting of parliament underway in Beijing.
Josep Borrell, the European Unionâs foreign policy chief, said in an interview published Friday that, when it came to mediating a peace deal, âit must be China.â He told Spanish newspaper El Mundo, âWe have not asked for it nor have they asked for it, but since it has to be a power and neither the U.S. nor Europe can be [mediators], China could be.â
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Saturday that Chinese diplomacy had âsufficient tools to make a difference.â
China officially maintains a position of noninterference in other countriesâ domestic affairs, making it traditionally reluctant to play an active role beyond disputes that touch on core Chinese interests.
In recent years, China has adopted a more active foreign policy stance and positioned itself as a broker in several disputes, including those between Pakistan and Afghanistan or between North and South Korea.
Russian President Vladimir Putinâs invasion of Ukraine has tested Chinaâs deepening strategic partnership with Russia. Beijing speaks of respecting territorial integrity and remaining neutral, while blaming NATO and the United States for instigating the conflict, which it refuses to call an invasion.
On Saturday, in a phone call with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Wang called on the United States, the E.U. and NATO to âengage in an equal-footed dialogue with Russia, face up to the frictions and problems accumulated over the years.â
Analysis: SNLâs cold open lampoons Fox Newsâ changing tune on Russia and Ukraine
Return to menuLast week, âSaturday Night Liveâ set aside a funny cold open for a moving one, beginning with the Ukrainian Chorus Dumka of New York singing âPrayer for Ukraine.â Music played a big role this week as well, though SNL was back to its usual business: skewering Fox News and â still, somehow â Donald Trump.
The conceit pulling it all together: a âFox News Ukrainian Invasion Celebration Spectacular,â live from Mar-a-Lago, a telethon designed to raise money for suffering oligarchs, hosted by Alex Moffat as Tucker Carlson (âIâm like if a pair of boat shoes came to lifeâ) and Kate McKinnon as Laura Ingraham (âWhen I read Harry Potter, I root for Voldemortâ).
Ukraine to contest Russian âgenocideâ claims in international court
Return to menuUkraine will ask the United Nationsâ highest court on Monday to intervene to halt Russiaâs invasion, arguing it relies on false claims of genocide in two separatist regions in eastern Ukraine where Moscow-backed rebels have battled Kyiv for years.
The International Court of Justice, also known as the World Court, is based in The Hague and adjudicates legal disputes between states. Its rulings are legally binding, although countries donât always adhere to them, and it has no real way of enforcing them. (The International Criminal Court, also based in The Hague, is responsible for holding individuals accountable for war crimes â such as those leveled by Ukraine against Russia; teams have been dispatched to bomb sites in pursuit of evidence for a potential case.)
Russian President Vladimir Putin declared he was launching a military operation on Feb. 24 for the âdemilitarization and denazificationâ of eastern Ukraine â claiming it was necessary âto protect people who have been subjected to bullying and genocide.â
Ukraine emphatically denies the genocide claims and is calling on the International Court of Justice to order Moscow to âimmediately suspend the military operations.â
Legal experts say Ukraineâs goal is for Russia to halt its military invasion, not simply for Russia to cease claiming, as a false pretext for the invasion, that Ukraine has committed genocide. The first step in its court case will be to establish that the situation qualifies as a âdisputeâ under the Genocide Convention.
The International Association of Genocide Scholars has accused Putin of âmisappropriating and misusing the term âgenocideâ to justify invading a sovereign state.â In doing so, he âserves to diminish the experience of genuine victims and survivors of genocide,â the associationâs board said in a recent statement.
âThere is no evidence of genocide being committed by Ukraine against Russian-speaking citizens, and such claims have been exposed by independent observers as baseless and even fabricated,â the scholars said.
New Zealand proposes sanctions to stop Russian super yachts, aircraft from entering its waters and airspace
Return to menuNew Zealand, long heralded as a billionaireâs hideaway at the far end of the world, is introducing a sanctions bill that, according to Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, could prevent Russian super yachts, ships and aircraft from entering its waters or airspace.
Although it wonât deliver the same scale of economic consequences to Russia as sanctions enacted by big global powers, including the United States, New Zealandâs move is symbolic in that it is a first of its kind for the nation, which usually follows the lead of the United Nations when applying sanctions against belligerent powers.
âA bill of this nature has never been brought before our Parliament, but with Russia vetoing UN sanctions we must act ourselves to support Ukraine and our partners in opposition to this invasion,â Ardern said in a statement Monday, referring to Moscowâs veto power as a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council. âDespite international condemnation and the resilience and resistance of the Ukrainian people, Russiaâs assault continues, and so must our pressure.â
The bill will target those of economic or strategic relevance to Russia, including oligarchs, and a public register will list every individual, entity, asset or service that is sanctioned.
The sanctions will freeze assets located in New Zealand. They will also prevent those who are sanctioned from moving assets to New Zealand or using the countryâs financial system as âa back doorâ to get around sanctions elsewhere, the government said.
âNew Zealand continues to call on Russia to do what is right and immediately cease military operations in Ukraine and permanently withdraw to avoid a catastrophic loss of innocent life,â Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta said.
The government also published a list of dozens of Russian officials and others associated with the invasion who are banned from entering New Zealand, including President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
Ardernâs center-left Labour Party has a majority in Parliament, and the bill is set to pass this week.
Big swath of Ukraine cut off from natural gas after damage to pipeline, operator says
Return to menuAbout a million consumers in southeastern Ukraine will be cut off from natural gas after Russian shelling damaged a main pipeline, according to the countryâs Gas Transmission System Operator.
The blow to a key source of heating and cooking fuel came as Ukrainians in besieged Mariupol were already cut off from water, heat and electricity. Natural gas accounts for almost a third of Ukraineâs energy consumption, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
The operator said Sunday that the pipeline was closed after dispatchers ârecorded a sharp jump in pressure,â indicating damage. A huge swath of people in southeastern Ukraine â in the regions of Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia â âwill be left without a gas supply,â it said in a statement.
âGas companies are looking for technical solutions to minimize losses and return gas supply to consumers,â the statement said. âIt is impossible to start eliminating the accident due to the high intensity of hostilities.â
It also said âgas distribution stationsâ in the regions of Kharkiv, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Kyiv, Luhansk, Mykolaiv and Kherson are shut down.
Israel to open field hospital in Ukraine
Return to menuIsraelâs Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Sunday that the country will open a field hospital in Ukraine, as well as refugee centers at border crossings.
The field hospital will be established in coming days, with assistance from Israelâs Health Ministry; Sheba Medical Center, Israelâs largest hospital; and the Clalit Health Fund, an Israeli health-care provider, a ministry spokesperson said in a statement.
Israel will also send âsix giant generators to the Lviv Hospital that will allow its continuous operation during power outages,â as well as other aid including medicine and medical equipment.
The trucks finally made it to #Lviv today, bringing much needed humanitarian package into #Ukraine. I was happy to get the pictures: after a long journey, the cargo arrived, soon to be followed by further assistance. @MASHAVisrael @IsraelinUkraine @IsraelMFA pic.twitter.com/WTM3fJQD1Y
— Eynat Shlein (@EynatShlein) March 6, 2022The refugee centers will be placed at border crossings, âwhere Israeli representatives are operating,â and will provide winter coats and other aid to Ukrainians fleeing in the cold. The ministry noted that the centers will assist âJews and non-Jews alike.â
The ministry also said it had launched an effort called âMatatâ â a name meaning gift â to streamline donations, volunteer work and other aid from Israeli civilians.
A consortium of Jewish groups aiding evacuations at six border crossings has brought at least 3,000 Jewish Ukrainians into neighboring Moldova and another estimated 3,000 into Poland, Hungary and Romania, according to Michael Geller, a spokesman for the New York-based American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, one of the relief organizations involved in the effort.
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said Sunday that it is âour moral obligation to make every effortâ to help the people of Ukraine â the only country other than Israel to have a Jewish leader.
Calls for U.S. to ban Russian oil gain momentum despite inflation concerns
Return to menuA growing number of U.S. officials are calling for a ban on Russian oil and gas imports to pressure that countryâs economy despite concerns that such a move could raise already high gas prices for American consumers.
Officials including Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.) and Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.) called Sunday for a U.S. ban as part of the ongoing bid to hinder the Russian economy over its invasion of Ukraine.
Blinken told CNN host Jake Tapper that the United States is talking to allies about âthe prospect of banning the import of Russian oil, while making sure that thereâs still an appropriate supply of oil on world markets.â He noted in Sunday morningâs âState of the Unionâ interview that the discussion was taking place âas we speak.â
Bethenny Frankel of âReal Housewivesâ organizes $25 million in aid for Ukraine
Return to menuBethenny Frankel, a philanthropist who gained fame through âThe Real Housewives of New Yorkâ reality television show, said she has raised about $25 million to assist those affected by the crisis in Ukraine.
Frankel said that through her disaster relief initiative, âBStrong,â in collaboration with the nonprofit Global Empowerment Mission, more than $10 million had been donated to relocate refugees in Poland and other European Union countries. Her organization also has committed to providing $15 million in other aid, including medical supplies and hygiene kits, she said.
She said her effort focused, in part, on refugees fleeing Ukraine who are not Ukrainian citizens, with needs that were âmuch more complicated due to visa situations and language barriers.â
Some African and South Asian immigrants fleeing Ukraine have faced problems when trying to exit the country, according to the U.N. refugee agency and other authorities.
Frankel, who founded the Skinnygirl drink brand, has also organized aid and donations for earthquake victims in Haiti, those affected by the Texas blackout last winter and the Surfside condo collapse in Florida.
Australian prime minister: Ukraine invasion a âwake-up callâ of dangers posed by others, including China
Return to menuSYDNEY â Australiaâs prime minister called the invasion of Ukraine a âmajor wake-up callâ for liberal democracies as he urged them to stand together in the face of âautocratic regimes,â such as Russia and China.
âA new arc of autocracy is instinctively aligning to challenge and reset the world order in their own image,â Scott Morrison said Monday in a video address from his Sydney residence, where he is isolating after testing positive for the
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