Trauma of reason? Darcia Narvaez, Professor of Psychology Emerita at the University of Notre Dame

As above so below – this principle, central to many ancient belief systems and almost forgotten in this day and age – postulates that social conflicts will inevitably find their reflection in our individual souls and vice versa, and our daily joys and struggles invariably shape the societies we live in. With that in mind and at heart, what can truly make the world a better place? To discuss this, Oksana is joined by Darcia Narvaez, Professor of Psychology Emerita at the University of Notre Dame and co-author of Restoring the Kinship Worldview.

Source: Russia Today

Attempts to isolate Russia have failed – EU member

Western countries have failed in their efforts to make Russia a pariah on the global stage, as the country has assumed the rotating presidency in the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), Polish Deputy Foreign Minister Pawel Jablonski said on Saturday.

Speaking to Telewizja Republika TV, Jablonski was asked to comment on remarks by Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba, who spoke out against Moscow taking the leading role in the UNSC on April 1, describing it as “a bad joke.”

“This is not funny at all, because unfortunately, it serves as proof that in international organizations, this mechanism of isolating Russia does not work as it should,” Jablonski said, reiterating that Warsaw wants to strip Moscow of the opportunity to influence other countries.

He added that Russia’s presidency in the council does not bode well for anyone, suggesting that it should be “excluded or suspended” from the UN and UNSC. However, Russia is one of the council’s five permanent members and has the right of veto, making its exclusion virtually impossible.

Jablonski conceded that despite the Ukraine conflict, Moscow has many allies in other countries, especially those that once were Western colonies.

Russia assumed the rotating monthly UNSC presidency on Saturday, which passes from country to country among its 15 member states, following English alphabetical order since 1946.

While the development triggered condemnation from Ukraine, the US struck a different tone, with White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre urging Russia “to conduct itself professionally.” She added that there is “no feasible international legal pathway” to change the reality in which Russia is a permanent member of the Security Council.

On Saturday, Russia’s deputy permanent representative to the UN, Dmitry Polyansky, said the country’s UNSC presidency has “put to shame” Moscow’s “enemies and spiteful critics.”

He also vowed that Russia would “act as an honest broker” in the international organization. “Unlike our former Western partners, we play fairly in the international arena and do not promote double standards.”

Source: Russia Today

How EU leaders destroyed relations with Russia – and denied their citizens access to reliable cheap energy

The European Union has survived the first acute phase of its current energy crisis, but it is not over yet – and consumers are unlikely to see their bills as low as they once were any time soon.

The price of natural gas in Europe is at 18-month low – lower than before the military operation in Ukraine that triggered the EU’s drive to break away from Russian supplies. This is thanks to a combination of demand dropping as winter ends, increase in supply dirtier alternatives – such as coal – and vast amounts of money poured into topping up EU storage facilities with gas from other sources.

But the crisis has taken its toll, driving inflation to heights not seen in nearly 50 years and strangling the bloc’s consumers and businesses alike. Most importantly, unprecedented sanctions placed on Russia, the premier provider of affordable energy, coupled with the sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipelines, has alienated the EU’s most dependable energy partner irrevocably. Simply put – Russian energy is pivoting away from Western Europe.

Replacing it will not be easy and bringing Moscow back to the energy security table will be nearly impossible. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov made this clear last year when discussing the diplomatic situation, stating, “It is no surprise that these relations are absent today. But we never shut down. I will only say that we will never trust the United States or the European Union again.”

The key word here is “trust” and it isn’t ambiguous diplomatic speech. Rational people understand the importance of trust.

A ‘trust’ crisis

This brings us to Western Europe’s current crisis. The EU, overall, is a net importer of both fossil and nuclear fuels and has been for decades. Russia has been supplying large quantities of oil, gas, and petroleum products since the 1960s and 1970s under agreements first established between the West and the Soviet Union. Moscow inherited the bulk of the USSR’s resources and is an energy powerhouse.

Germans warned of gas shortage

In 2020, Russia’s oil and gas production were both ranked #2 in the world according to the 2021 International Energy Agency Key World Energy Statistics report. Russia ranks 6th in coal production and in the top ten of mined uranium. According to the European Council, it accounted for roughly half of all of the EU’s gas imports up until June of 2021. Norway is the only other European country that makes the top 15 in gas (#8) and oil (#11) in production.

EU member states are left with a daunting challenge in how they replace Russian energy, which will not completely stop, but it has and will continue to diminish in volumes. For oil, the task will not be as difficult since there are a plethora of oil producers in the world that can fill the demand while Russian oil will find its way to other markets.

Gas is more problematic and for several reasons. First, transporting gas is more difficult and more expensive. The only economical way to ship gas by sea is to convert it to liquefied natural gas (LNG) by freezing it. This system requires a special terminal at the point-of-origin to freeze it and another at the destination to convert it back to usable gas. This raises the cost significantly, by as much as 40% more than the price for pipeline gas typically, but even more when demand is greatest. Construction of these special facilities takes time and large amounts of capital.

Alternatively, pipeline gas requires an investment into building and maintaining a network from the origin to the destination. The greater the distance, the higher the costs for construction and maintenance. Still, compared to LNG terminals, pipelines are far more cost effective and profitable, provided you have a guaranteed customer on the receiving end.

This is where the EU’s trust problem comes into play.

The Soviet Union, and then Russia, laid out the capital to build all the necessary pipeline infrastructure to ship gas to the West. In the beginning, the energy was traded for technology and high quality materials like German steel, compressors, and machinery that was used in building and maintaining the pipelines. It was a win/win scenario for the partners, but still it began slowly and developed over time – decades.

Germany facing LNG shortage – official

The Western Europeans and the Soviets built upon that trust layer by layer with each year, bringing more trade between the two Cold War adversaries. Author Per Högselius details the evolution of this relationship in his book, ‘Red Gas: Russia and the Origins of European Energy Dependence’, and he notes how both sides worked diligently towards meeting their obligations to the other. Each of the partners was partly driven by ideological pride, and in the case of the Soviet Union, even sacrificed domestic needs on occasion in order to fulfill gas deliveries.

While Högselius does take a somewhat cynical view of the growing energy dependence of the EU, a more balanced review reveals that the West and the East began to develop a partnership based on trust and mutual benefit – one that transcended Cold War animosities.

For 50 years, that relationship endured, continuing after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Russia continued to meet its obligations to its Western partners nearly without fail. Ironically, the only interruption of gas deliveries that has ever occurred before now took place in the winter of 2008-2009, when the newly elected Orange Revolution government of Ukraine stopped transiting gas for a short period of time, cutting off supplies to its European neighbors due to a supply and payment dispute with Gazprom.

The trade relationship between Russia and its Western European partners weathered countless political storms, social upheavals, border changes, and saw the development of a gas network rivaled only by the extensive pipeline system in the US. The mutual investments into the various pipeline networks, including Nord Stream 1 and 2, are mammoth and include principals and actors throughout Eurasia.

EU households and businesses received affordable energy and Russian energy companies grew along with government tax revenues. Then Western leaders in the EU and US went to war against Moscow’s economy.

A separate article, maybe even a book, could be written on the herculean measures the EU and the US took to reduce and eliminate Russian energy supplies to Western Europe, but the bureaucrats’ war started in the 2000s and has led to where we are now.

In short, the EU began by making a series of regulatory changes named “energy packages” (sound familiar?) with a stated goal of improving the competitive nature of the gas business in the bloc. The key problem with most of this approach was the lack of significant competition from other gas producers, meaning that most of these reforms were directed at and endured by Russian gas.

Britain turns to coal to keep lights on

Russia companies made several attempts at bypassing Ukraine as a transit state, since Kiev continued to prove it was an unreliable partner. Both corruption, and the country’s poor economic performance encouraged theft from transit gas (as happened in 2008-2009). The EU (encouraged by the US) stopped or delayed several initiatives such as South Stream (through the Black Sea) and the Nord Stream pipelines, which were plagued by delays on “environmental impact” grounds.

By 2014, following the Maidan coup in Kiev, Russia was hit with sanctions on its oil and gas sectors in response to re-incorporating Crimea.

Where does that leave the EU populace?

How will the EU replace that flow of resources at affordable prices? The short answer is – it won’t. The numerous sanctions packages targeting Russia’s energy sector, the outright theft of Russian assets and holdings within the Western financial framework, and the ‘mysterious’ destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines with a completely opaque investigation by Denmark, Sweden, and Germany has reduced, if not erased, trust – both existing and potential.

Most of the reporting is focused solely on the economic consequences, such as the spike in energy prices in the EU and the inflationary pressure it has put on getting goods to markets, which exacerbated the challenges of consumers. Meanwhile, people throughout the EU were being encouraged to “suck it up” and support Ukraine by turning down the heat in the middle of winter. German factories were going bankrupt, British pubs faced closure, families were struggling to heat their homes, and US and EU leaders blamed Russia.

Price caps placed on oil and petroleum products have failed to devastate the Russian economy and have hurt EU citizens through higher prices, but greater damage has been done to the the bloc’s reputation as a reliable trading partner.

China and Brazil deal a blow to US dollar-powered bullying

Eyebrows were raised in OPEC+ countries and the mineral-rich Global South in response to the US, EU, and G7 measures against Russia. The biggest fallout from the West’s anti-Russia measures is that other trading partners have become wary of the ‘rules-based order’, which can change quickly and unpredictably. Contingency plans, if not already in place, have been quickly developed by resource-rich countries in case they find themselves in the West’s crosshairs next.

Where will the EU get its gas in the future?

The US won’t be able to ship enough LNG to cover the loss of Russian gas flows – not even close – and the gas the US does supply will come at three times the cost or more. According to energy consulting firm Timera Energy in a winter price outlook, “LNG alone cannot meet this volume, considering a lack of new global liquefaction capacity in the short-term, including in the US, limited further demand elasticity in Asia, and European regasification capacity constraints. Therefore, European demand will need to fall.”

Other countries aren’t going to line up to build billion-dollar pipelines to supply the EU knowing they might get sanctioned sometime in the future or the US might just destroy the pipeline altogether. They are well aware of what happens if you fall out with the US and NATO – see Iraq, Libya, and Syria for examples.

These circumstances are pushing the EU back towards coal to fill the gap, which moves the bloc in the opposite direction in meeting its ambitious clean energy goals. Germany, Poland, and Ukraine (which sells excess coal to the EU) have increased production of the “dirty fuel” to compensate. The EUs renewable energy initiatives have been admirable, but they still aren’t competitive on price despite huge subsidy infusions from some countries and they also don’t produce enough consistent energy.

The EU will survive this crunch and find solutions eventually, but at a high cost. The pity is that it had a dependable, trustworthy trading partner providing the cheapest and currently cleanest solution to meet its energy needs. But Western leaders chose to take extreme measures against Russia and have now passed the point of no return.

EU state asks citizens to restrict clothes-washing

For Moscow’s part, it is moving on. At his recent meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin said almost all parameters of the agreement on the new Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline had been settled. According to Russian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandr Novak, the deal is expected to be struck by the end of this year and the new pipeline will add an additional 50 billion cubic meters of gas to existing exports that “will completely replace the Nord Stream energy network.”

Trust is important. It is the foundation of civil society and of cooperation. Participants in the exercise of cooperation make decisions based on the previous decisions of their partners, as anyone familiar with basic game-theory is aware.

It’s even more vital in energy because of the long-term return on investment required. Companies need to know they have guaranteed sales and trust before investing tens of billions into developing energy sources and appropriate infrastructure. As such, contracts are made in terms of decades and not years for new projects.

In order to achieve the long-term results in cooperation, the EU will need to take less optimal decisions in energy relations in the short term going forward if it hopes to secure new partnerships. Unfortunately, that means the bloc’s citizens will bear the burden of cost until a point in time that trust and credibility can be reestablished.

Immediate solutions won’t come cheap, and affordable solutions won’t arrive in the foreseeable future. The bloc has finally run off the best energy partner it ever had.

So, while many Europeans freeze and spend more of their hard earned salaries on utility bills, they can look to the Americans with their relatively cheap heating and electricity and their own leaders with new heated pools and thank them for ‘standing with Ukraine’.

Source: Russia Today

Pope leads Palm Sunday prayers in first service after hospitalization

Pope Francis presided over Palm Sunday mass in St Peter’s Square, his first service after being discharged from the hospital the day before. He was successfully treated for a severe bout of bronchitis.

Thousands of people waved palm and olive branches as the Pope was driven into St. Peter’s Square, sitting in the back of a white, open-topped vehicle, before descending and starting the service from beneath an ancient Egyptian obelisk.

In his homily, the Pontiff urged the world to take better care of the poor, the lonely and the infirm.

The pope, 86, was taken to Rome’s Gemelli hospital on Wednesday after complaining of breathing difficulties, but recovered quickly following an infusion of antibiotics and returned to his Vatican residence on Saturday.

Palm Sunday marks the start of the Christian Holy Week, leading up to Easter Sunday on April 9 this year. Its numerous events will test the pope’s stamina.

Looking to allay concerns about his health, the Vatican has said he will take part in a full array of Easter events this week, the busiest period in the Roman Catholic Church calendar.

The pontiff, wearing red vestments, spoke with a quiet, but clear voice as he addressed a crowd of more than 30,000 faithful in the weak spring sunshine.

“Today their numbers are legion. Entire peoples are exploited and abandoned; the poor live on our streets and we look the other way; migrants are no longer faces but numbers, prisoners are disowned; people written off as problems,” he said.

The pope, who marked the 10th anniversary of his pontificate in March, has long highlighted the plight of the poor and of migrants.

Palm Sunday marks the day that the Bible says Jesus rode into Jerusalem to the cheers of the crowds, the week before Christians believe he rose from the dead following his execution on the Cross.

On Holy Thursday, Francis will celebrate Mass in a prison for juveniles in Rome. It is not yet clear if he will participate in the traditional Good Friday Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) procession around Rome’s ancient Colosseum.

The pope, head of the world’s nearly 1.4 billion Roman Catholics, will then preside over the Mass on Easter Sunday, the most important day on the Christian liturgical calendar, where he is expected to read his “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and the world) message.

Source: TRTworld.com

French minister in hot water over Playboy interview – media

French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne has reprimanded Marlene Schiappa, the secretary of state for social economy, for giving an interview to the magazine Playboy, several French media outlets reported on Saturday, citing a source close to the PM.

Borne reportedly spoke to Schiappa over the phone and told her that the interview was “not at all appropriate, especially at this moment.” France has been gripped for weeks by protests and strikes over a controversial pension reform pushed by the government. Some demonstrations have led to clashes with police.

Schiappa, who previously served as equality minister, appeared on the cover of the magazine’s French edition, whose new issue is set to hit newsstands on Thursday. According to Schiappa’s office, the 12-page interview “focuses mainly on women’s freedom but also on feminism, politics and literature.” The office added that the minister is dressed in all of the photos.

Schiappa said on Saturday that she was “defending the right of women to do what they want with their bodies.”

“In France, women are free. No matter what retrogrades and hypocrites say,” she wrote on Twitter.

Playboy was founded in the US in 1953 as a men’s lifestyle magazine known for nude and erotic photos of women, but also for its interviews with famous people and general articles.

Source: Russia Today

Nazi monument at Swiss cemetery sparks controversy

For decades the huge monolithic block of granite in the middle of the cemetery in the Swiss town of Chur was ignored by passers-by; no one seemed to know quite what it was.

But the 13-tonne (13,000kg) stone monument that dwarfs the nearby gravestones is now causing controversy – and embarrassment.

Research by a local journalist has revealed links to Nazi Germany, and to neutral Switzerland’s own awkward relations with its World War Two neighbours.

Chur’s cemetery is in the centre of town. Many people, like radio journalist Stefanie Hablützel, pass it every day on the way to work or out shopping.

Nowadays the monument at the cemetery, untended, is covered in moss. The engravings on it are difficult to discern.

“At first sight it looks like a war memorial,” says Stefanie, pointing out some faint lettering: “1914 – 1918; hier ruhen deutsche Soldaten… here lie German soldiers.”

Why, though, would German soldiers be buried here?

In fact, thousands of wounded prisoners of war, French and British as well as German, were treated and interned in Switzerland during World War One. Some died from their injuries, others during the 1918 flu pandemic.

But Chur’s monument was not built until 1938. “That’s 20 years after these men died,” says Stefanie. “It wasn’t built to mourn these dead soldiers, it was built for propaganda reasons, for the Nazi regime.”

Swiss historian, Martin Bucher, explains that, as the Nazis grew in power in Germany, their propaganda involved cult-like worship of their war dead. In the 1930s the German War Graves Commission became part of Hitler’s propaganda machine. Its task, to create visible signs of Nazi power in Germany’s neighbours as well as at home.

There were many thousands of Germans living in Switzerland at the time, and, Martin says, they were organised. “In Switzerland all these organisations you know from Germany existed. The National Socialist Party, the German Labour Front, the Hitler Youth. They were all here, but only for Germans, not for Swiss people.”

Germany’s War Graves Commission submitted ambitious plans to build a vast mausoleum in the Swiss town of St Gallen. This was rejected by Swiss authorities. But the monument in Chur was approved.

Polished and engraved in Munich, using the Fraktur font, a style regularly used in 1930s Nazi Germany, it was delivered to Chur on the eve of World War Two.

At the time Chur’s residents must have known what it was, Martin insists. “On Nazi holidays they put Swastikas on this monument… people would have seen it was a Nazi monument.”

Some were clearly unhappy. Stefanie Hablützel, who has reported on the story for Switzerland’s public broadcaster SRG, uncovered an indignant letter to the local newspaper, written in 1938, asking “why do we have a Nazi stone in our cemetery?”

But some will have been supportive.

Swiss sympathisers of Nazi Germany were well-documented in canton Graubünden, of which Chur is the capital. But homegrown Swiss fascist parties never really took off, getting only two seats in the Swiss parliament in 1935, and never standing again.

While Switzerland still has no official memorial to the Holocaust, parliament did approve plans for one in March last year. There are, however, around 50 unofficial monuments.

Throughout the war, Germans in Switzerland continued to be active in the Nazi party, and continued to display their Nazi sympathies. And the Swiss, hoping as usual to stay out of the fighting, made compromises with Berlin, banking Nazi gold, and turning away Jewish refugees.

Then, just one day after the war ended, neutral Switzerland got off the fence. “There was a huge purge,” says Martin. “The Swiss government tried to punish Swiss Nazis, there were trials.”

German Nazis, meanwhile, were expelled. “I think after that a lot of people were thinking it’s done now, the Nazis are away, no problem,” he says. “And I think they forgot this monument.”

So complete was this collective amnesia that today, among people like Stefanie Hablützel, born decades after the war, the origins of the monument, and the Nazi presence in Switzerland, were a revelation.

“I grew up here in Chur,” she says. “And I didn’t realise how many Nazi organisations were present in the 1930s, here in Chur.”

Even local member of parliament Jon Pult was taken by surprise. “Switzerland wasn’t Nazi free, and I knew that,” he says. “But I didn’t know about this monument.

“I live maybe 500 metres from the cemetery where this stone is, and I walked past that stone probably a hundred times, and I never realised that it is of course a Nazi stone. Now that I know it’s very clear. I get it, I see it.”

So, what should happen now?

Despite a certain embarrassment, very few people have suggested tearing down the monument. But even fewer say it should be left just as it is, Stefanie says.

Instead, consensus seems to be forming around a proposal to re-examine and publicise that period in Swiss history, just as Switzerland had to re-examine, and apologise for, its treatment of Jewish refugees during the war.

“I think it should stay in Chur,” says Martin.

“But I think it’s important to tell people why it is there,” he adds. “Maybe it can be a monument to remember all the people who died in the Second World War.”

Jon Pult agrees that Switzerland should “create a memorial” out of the monument “to remember the horrific crimes of the Nazis”.

But also, he says, the monument, and the information he expects to be placed in the cemetery with it, should serve as a warning.

“We should create a culture of knowledge about this, because as we know there is always a danger of fascist ideologies, totalitarian ideologies, as we see now for example in Russia.”

Source: BBC

The cost of world population

On this episode of The Cost of Everything, we take a closer look at the hotly debated topic of population growth. There are some who claim the world’s ecology is collapsing due to the strains of supporting over 8 billion people. Many point out, however, that lowered fertility rates put many countries at risk of extinction. Host Christy Ai digs into the topic with lecturer Dr. Heather Alberro.

Source: Russia Today

RT News – April 2 2023 (09:00 MSK)

As Moscow lays out its future foreign policy concept, it says Western powers are engaged in a hybrid war against Russia. Foreign Minister Lavrov says the country won’t isolate itself and is ready for dialogue in a new, multipolar reality. The US dollar is becoming overshadowed by other national currencies as global de-dollarization trends gain momentum in international transactions. A Ukrainian court confines the head of the country’s largest monastery to 60 days of house arrest, amid a clampdown on religious figures with traditional ties to Russia. Donald Trump becomes the first former US president to face criminal charges, as a grand jury in New York issues an indictment.

Source: Russia Today

Derry Boys: How a European trip changed two young lives of the Troubles

Northern Ireland in the 1970s was very different to the Northern Ireland of today.

The Troubles – the 30-year conflict that tore communities apart – was raging.

Londonderry was at the heart of many of the most infamous moments of those years, not least Bloody Sunday in 1972, when 13 people were shot dead by the Army after soldiers opened fire on civil rights demonstrators.

A city and a people – like the rest of Northern Ireland – split apart by bloodshed, where hope was in short supply.

In 1975, almost 260 people died in the Troubles.

But, for two young boys from Derry, one Catholic and one Protestant, that fateful year of 1975 was the start of an unlikely journey of friendship – a friendship that has come to light just as Northern Ireland is set to mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, the peace deal that brought the Troubles to an end.

Patrick O’Doherty and Raymond Hamilton were each from ‘the other side’.

But they came together, aged just 10 and 11, to travel to the Netherlands as part of an initiative offering vulnerable Catholic and Protestant children the chance to share an adventure away from the silos of hatred and bigotry that surrounded them.

What happened on Bloody Sunday?

What is the Good Friday Agreement?

Their hosts were Donna and Danny De Vries, a couple who signed up to the cross-community initiative after reading about the scheme in a local newspaper.

Donna knew this was something she and her family could take part in – and Patrick and Raymond were the first children to visit.

Donna also thought they would be a good match because the family all spoke English, but as Danny says: “Boy, did we have a hard time in the first days to figure out their heavy accents.”

Tears, pen pals and fate

Almost half a century later, Patrick and Raymond have come together to reflect on that journey – a trip that Raymond describes as “going from a world of black and white to a world of colour”.

It’s a story that emerged through a twist of fate.

In 2015, I made a radio documentary called Lacrimosa, in which I looked for a piece of art – a song, book, movie, poem or anything in between – powerful enough to make me cry.

This was how I first met Donna.

She was listening to the documentary in Belgium and, a few weeks after it went out, she contacted me to tell me about a piece of art that always brings her to tears – a sculpture in Rotterdam called De Verwoeste Stad, which commemorates the bombing of the city during World War Two.

Donna was terminally ill with cancer – coincidentally, the same type of cancer I had the previous year.

We became friends and I visited, making another documentary, Pen Pals, about how our friendship had come about via the power of storytelling. We took a trip to the sculpture to see if it would bring me to tears.

It was here that Donna told me about her strange connection to Northern Ireland – that in the 1970s, when she lived in the Netherlands, two young boys came to visit from Derry.

And that her husband Danny, a sound engineer, made archive recordings of Patrick and Raymond during their visit.

Donna, who has since died, was a remarkable woman.

She had a big heart and a lot of love to give, and it was suitably remarkable that it was via her – an American woman living in Belgium who happened upon a documentary – that Patrick and Raymond’s unusual story came to be known.

All that was left was to track down the pair.

Patrick was relatively easy, as he still lives in Derry.

Raymond, however, moved to Australia in the 1980s and was rarely home.

Having found him on social media, I messaged him in the hope of reuniting the pair but Raymond hadn’t been home in years and with Covid lockdowns, this delayed any chance of bringing Patrick and Raymond together even further.

But fate smiled once again – Raymond returned for a family wedding in February this year.

The opportunity was too good to miss, and it was possible to bring the Dutch travellers back together for the first time in nearly a decade.

After listening to the archive recordings – laughing in parts, cringing in others and getting quite emotional at the memories that came flooding back – Patrick and Raymond are transported back to the 1970s, describing what Derry and the Netherlands were like at the time.

‘Noise of bullets’

Reflecting on life almost five decades later, Patrick describes a memory of going to the shop at the top of the hill overlooking Derry.

“It’s like slow motion in my mind,” he said.

“This blue Escort driving past the shop quite fast.

“And there was someone with a submachine gun.

“And I remember the noise of the bullets and diving into the front door or the shop.”

Talking about the difference between the Netherlands and Derry, he said: “You were always cautious, always watching where you are going, watching where you were walking.

“Whereas in Holland, there was nothing like that. It was total freedom.”

‘Debt of gratitude’

Thinking about his time in with Donna and Danny, Raymond said: “Now looking back, I think it had quite a profound impact.

“Going away, going out of your normal everyday environment – from a housing estate to this family who were the ultimate, caring, loving, sort of Brady bunch of a family.

“And I feel a great debt of gratitude to Danny and Donna.

“Taking two kids from roughish areas and giving them this chance to experience a different kind of lifestyle.”

Through geography, history and circumstance, these were schoolboys who were never meant to be friends.

One trip changed all that.

Years later, this is a fascinating insight into how opening doors can open minds.

Derry Boys will be broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Monday 3 April at 11:00 BST and repeated on Wednesday 12 April at 20:30 BST.

Source: BBC

Wagner chief declares Artyomovsk ‘formally captured’

The head of Russian private military company (PMC) Wagner, Evgeny Prigozhin, has announced a milestone achievement in the battle for the city of Artyomovsk (known in Ukraine as Bakhmut), publishing a video allegedly taken in front of the town’s administrative building on Sunday evening.

“We hoisted the Russian flag with the inscription ‘Good memory to Vladlen Tatarsky’ and the flag of PMC Wagner on top of the city administration of Bakhmut,” Prigozhin said in the clip.

Prigozhin’s announcement comes just hours after prominent Russian military blogger Vladlen Tatarsky (real name Maksim Fomin) was killed in an apparent improvised explosive device blast in a café in St. Petersburg on Sunday afternoon.

“Legally speaking, Bakhmut is taken. The enemy is concentrated in the western districts,” the head of the PMC added.

The battle for Artyomovsk has emerged as one of the most intense and bloody engagements of the armed conflict in Ukraine, with both sides reportedly suffering significant casualties. Western officials have claimed that the city poses no strategic military value, but Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky pledged to defend it as long as possible after proclaiming the city a fortress.

Kiev’s attempts to hold on to Bakhmut, regardless of the losses, has “almost destroyed the Ukrainian army,” Prigozhin claimed earlier this week. However, Wagner fighters, who led the charge to capture the Donetsk People’s Republic city, also took “a serious beating,” he acknowledged.

Source: Russia Today