Emirati airlines resume accepting Russian cards – media

Several airlines in the United Arab Emirates have resumed accepting Russian cards to pay for tickets, Izvestia reported on Sunday, adding that customers are able to use Russia’s Faster Payments System (SBP).

Flights carried out by Emirates, Air Arabia and Flydubai can reportedly be paid for by MasterCard and Visa cards issued by Russian banks. Turkish Airlines has reportedly been planning to provide a similar service to its customers.

After Visa and MasterCard pulled out of Russia nearly a year ago, the cards of international payment systems issued domestically were no longer accepted abroad or on foreign websites.

Russia’s domestic Faster Payment System (FPS) was launched by the country’s central bank in 2019. It allows customers to make transfers between banks using a phone number tied to an account. Card-to-card transfers are also available for transactions within a credit institution.

Tickets for Air Arabia flights can be paid for through the SBP system with a 6% commission charged on the total amount for each ticket issued. A reservation for tickets is taken on the carrier’s website, then after a call from support service the customer receives a link to finalize the operation.

Flydubai reportedly conducts transactions through an authorized agent with an additional fee of 2,000 rubles, while Emirates offers the opportunity to pay for tickets using a QR code system, but this can only be done for the purchase of tickets at least ten days prior to departure.

Source: Russia Today

Kosovo war crimes courts begins Hashim Thaci trial, who remains a hero to many

Former Kosovo President Hashim Thaci on Monday pleaded not guilty to 10 charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity as his trial opened at a special court in The Hague. Allegations of persecution, murder, torture and forced disappearance of people stem from the 1998-99 insurgency that eventually brought independence from Serbia and made him a hero among compatriots. FRANCE 24’s Clemence Waller tells us more about Thatchi, and how he remains a hero to many in Kosovo.

Source: France24.com

UK Home Secretary Braverman faces backlash over ‘racist’ comments

British Home Secretary Suella Braverman stereotyped British Pakistani men as members of grooming gangs who are involved in ‘pursuing, raping, drugging and harming vulnerable English girls’.

Suella Braverman’s comments regarding the overrepresentation of British Pakistani men in so-called grooming gangs have triggered controversy and drawn criticism from around the world.

Braverman, who’s slowly but surely gaining a reputation of being a loose cannon in the British cabinet, was interviewed by Sky News, in which she asserted that vulnerable white English girls, often in care or difficult circumstances, were being targeted and sexually exploited by gangs of British Pakistani men involved in child abuse rings or networks.

Critics were quick to call out the Tory MP, accusing her of stoking racial tensions and perpetuating harmful stereotypes.

In addition to highlighting British Pakistani men as a cause for concern regarding grooming gangs, Braverman also criticised authorities for failing to adequately address the issue out of fear of being labeled as “racist” or “bigoted.”

Her words were condemned by many including Robina Qureshi, CEO of the refugee charity Positive Action in Housing (PAiH).

She called upon the Home secretary to apologize for her “gross misrepresentation” of the British Pakistani community and defined her language as “unacceptable.”

Braverman further added that the “systematic and institutional failure to safeguard the welfare of children when it comes to sexual abuse” was one of the biggest scandals in British history.

“We’ve seen institutions and state agencies, whether it’s social workers, teachers, the police, turn a blind eye to these signs of abuse out of political correctness, out of fear of being called racists, out of fear of being called bigoted.”

The Red Collective, a British-based activist group, has condemned Braverman’s remarks saying it’s an act of “demonizing” the non-whites, especially pakistanis and called for greater accountability and action to address issues of racism and discrimination in British politics.

Controversial comments

“Her statements directly contradict the findings of her own department’s research, which revealed that the majority of child sex offenders tend to be white men under the age of 30,” stated Charity boss Qureshi.

During the interview, Sky presenter Sophy Ridge, mentioned a 2020 report from Braverman’s department which stated that grooming gangs were mostly white, and noted that there was no proven link between ethnicity and this type of offending, despite some high-profile cases.

However, the Home Secretary cited the shocking 2014 report on child grooming in Rotherham and the subsequent 2015 report by Louise Casey, both of which were “unflinching in their assessment of the problem” of ethnic grooming gangs.

“There have been several reports since about the predominance of certain ethnic groups and I say, British Pakistani males – who hold cultural values totally at odds with British values, who see women in a demeaned and illegitimate way and who pursue an outdated and frankly heinous approach in terms of the way they behave.”

Qureshi condemned Braverman’s comments saying it was “grossly offensive” to all the law-abiding British Pakistanis living in the UK, and highlighted that recently elected First Minister of Scotland Humza Yousaf is of Pakistani descent.

“Yet she displays all the tact of a bull in a china shop,” Qureshi added. “Her comments are tantamount to inciting racist violence, a criminal offence.”

The statement came following the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse’s report last year, which characterized child sexual abuse as a widespread and destructive “epidemic” that harms tens of thousands of victims.

According to the seven-year investigation into institutional failings in England and Wales, it was recommended that individuals in positions of trust be legally obligated to report instances of child sexual abuse.

The report discovered that there is currently a significant lack of comprehensive legislation and protocols in England and Wales mandating individuals working with children to report cases of child sexual abuse.

Source: TRTworld.com

RT News – April 3 2023 (09:00 MSK)

A Russian war correspondent has been killed in an explosion in Saint Petersburg, with at least 32 more people injured, including a 14 year old girl. We spoke to a victim of the attack. A woman is suspected of bringing the bomb into the cafe before the blast took place. Witnesses say she handed the explosive device – disguised as a statue – to the correspondent. ‘Russian journalists are constantly targeted by the Kiev regime’ – that’s the response from the Russian foreign ministry to the attack also condemning the West for turning a blind eye to the ‘witch hunt’ against war correspondents.

Source: Russia Today

Kosovo war crimes trial: Former president accused of crimes against humanity

Kosovo’s former president is on trial at The Hague today. Hashim Thatchi is accused of war crimes, dating back to Kosovo’s late 90s conflict with Serbia. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges. A former rebel leader, Thatchi fought for Kosovo’s independence and dominated the young nation’s democracy for years. But his image has been tarnished by accusations of links to organised crime, politically motivated murders and corruption. FRANCE 24’s correspondent Fernande Van Tets is in The Hague, and gave us more details about how Thatchi is viewed inside Kosovo.

Source: France24.com

Woman suspected of murdering Russian blogger put on wanted list

Darya Trepova, the suspect in Sunday’s bombing in St. Petersburg that killed prominent war blogger Vladlen Tatarsky, has been placed on the wanted list, the Russian Interior Ministry has said.

Tatarsky (real name Maksim Fomin) was hosting a live event with fans at a café in the city’s historical center, when a bomb went off, killing him and injuring over 30 people. A former fighter from Donbass, Tatarsky was extensively covering the Russia-Ukraine armed conflict on his Telegram channel.

According to police, Trepova is 26 years old. Media outlets have reported that security forces were conducting a search in her St. Petersburg apartment.

Multiple witnesses told Russian media that a young woman, who was one of the guests at Tatarsky’s event, gave him a figurine as a gift shortly before the explosion.

Trepova’s friends told news outlets that she was a medical student and worked several jobs, including as a designer and an administrator at a shop. One acquaintance told journalists that Trepova left Russia after Moscow launched its military operation in Ukraine last year, and spent several months in Georgia before returning to her home country. Another friend was quoted as saying that, while meeting in Moscow last month, Trepova told her that she was planning to leave Russia and travel to Ukraine through Turkey.

News outlet RBK cited a police source as saying that Trepova exchanged messages with Tatarsky and attended other events in which he took part. The source said investigators “can’t rule out” the possibility that Trepova was unaware that the figurine she gave Tatarsky was a bomb.

According to the source, Trepova was detained in 2022 at a protest in St. Petersburg against Russia’s military operation and sentenced to ten days of administrative arrest.

Source: Russia Today

Russian military blogger killed in blast: Moscow accuses Kiyv

Russia accuses Ukraine of masterminding the murder of a prominent war blogger. Vladlen Tatarsky whose real name was Maxim Fomin blown up by a figurine handed to him during a talk in a St Petersburg cafe. In a police video, a 26-year old Russian woman admitted to handing him the bomb but reportedly said it was a set up. FRANCE 24’s Camille Knight tells us more.

Source: France24.com

‘Hungary’ for (Samantha) Power

On this episode of The Modus Operandi, host Manila Chan speaks to former US diplomat Jim Jatras about Samantha Power, a controversial figure who has worked in several positions for Washington in the international arena. Manila discusses Power’s history of selective humanity and her new position as head of USAID, which has allowed her to expand her influence over foreign policy.

Source: Russia Today

Starting to sting? Putin denounces sanctions as oil revenues contract

Are those sanctions starting to bite? On the surface, it’s business as usual for a Russia that on Saturday took over the rotating presidency of the UN Security Council and still enjoys plenty of support from the likes of China. But last week, President Vladimir Putin for the first time told his cabinet to expect trouble ahead.

While Europe has now come out of a mild winter and only mild discomfort from the cut in Russian gas, oil prices have failed to meet Moscow’s expectations, with Russia already selling crude at a discount. We ask if that’s about to change and whether Moscow can benefit. The fact is that those oil exports have continued, much to the delight of the likes of India. What’s next on that score?

More broadly, how has the invasion of Ukraine affected Russia’s standing amongst a developing world impacted by inflation and supply chain disruptions? A lot hinges on what happens now on the battlefield.

Source: France24.com