In meetings with the US State Department and members of Congress this week, Sviatlana Tsihanuskaya said she discussed both strengthening future sanctions and closing gaps in existing ones. He also said he had provided information to the US government about the involvement of Belarussian leader Alexander Lukashenko in the Russian-led war in Ukraine. Speaking to reporters on Friday, Tsikhanouskaya said the sanctions “should be the same in force” as those imposed in Russia “but different in structure” and should target state-owned banks and state-owned enterprises. The opposition leader said she had spoken to officials in Washington about ways to “make sanctions more effective, close the windows, freeze Lukashenko’s assets and freeze the money given to him by the International Monetary Fund.” Tsikhanouskaya said she suggested using secondary sanctions to close such gaps. “We are seeing Russia use Belarus to circumvent its own sanctions,” he said, citing the example of steel. He said the sanctions affected Lukashenko’s regime, however, citing letters from the foreign minister calling for a rapprochement in recent weeks. “I hope that Lukashenko will not be able to deceive democracies again, as he has done many times in the past,” he said. Tsikhanouskaya met with US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman – a meeting attended in part by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken – as well as Jim O’Brien, head of the State Department’s Office of Sanctions Coordination. Tsikhanouskaya told reporters that she had given O’Brien “documents with evidence of Lukashenka’s involvement in the war against Ukraine, as well as a list of companies and countries that helped circumvent the sanctions.” He said this included “huge evidence of rocket fire from our territory, movement of Russian equipment on Belarusian territory”. “This is confidential information about some internal orders for the development of different Russian military equipment in our territory,” he continued. “It simply came to our notice then. “They are well documented and we passed this information on to the government.” Tsikhanouskaya said she did not believe the Belarusian army was involved in launching the missiles, and instead Lukashenko gave the land to Russian President Vladimir Putin to use as he wished. “It’s already World War II. “We are so scared of World War III, but it is already going on.” “It is a war between democracy and empire.”


title: “Live Updates Russia S War In Ukraine Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-13” author: “Jeff Biggs”


In meetings with the US State Department and members of Congress this week, Sviatlana Tsihanuskaya said she discussed both strengthening future sanctions and closing gaps in existing ones. He also said he had provided information to the US government about the involvement of Belarussian leader Alexander Lukashenko in the Russian-led war in Ukraine. Speaking to reporters on Friday, Tsikhanouskaya said the sanctions “should be the same in force” as those imposed in Russia “but different in structure” and should target state-owned banks and state-owned enterprises. The opposition leader said she had spoken to officials in Washington about ways to “make sanctions more effective, close the windows, freeze Lukashenko’s assets and freeze the money given to him by the International Monetary Fund.” Tsikhanouskaya said she suggested using secondary sanctions to close such gaps. “We are seeing Russia use Belarus to circumvent its own sanctions,” he said, citing the example of steel. He said the sanctions affected Lukashenko’s regime, however, citing letters from the foreign minister calling for a rapprochement in recent weeks. “I hope that Lukashenko will not be able to deceive democracies again, as he has done many times in the past,” he said. Tsikhanouskaya met with US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman – a meeting attended in part by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken – as well as Jim O’Brien, head of the State Department’s Office of Sanctions Coordination. Tsikhanouskaya told reporters that she had given O’Brien “documents with evidence of Lukashenka’s involvement in the war against Ukraine, as well as a list of companies and countries that helped circumvent the sanctions.” He said this included “huge evidence of rocket fire from our territory, movement of Russian equipment on Belarusian territory”. “This is confidential information about some internal orders for the development of different Russian military equipment in our territory,” he continued. “It simply came to our notice then. “They are well documented and we passed this information on to the government.” Tsikhanouskaya said she did not believe the Belarusian army was involved in launching the missiles, and instead Lukashenko gave the land to Russian President Vladimir Putin to use as he wished. “It’s already World War II. “We are so scared of World War III, but it is already going on.” “It is a war between democracy and empire.”


title: “Live Updates Russia S War In Ukraine Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-04” author: “William Snead”


Some civilians have been evacuated from the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol following a ceasefire, according to a commander in the Azov regiment, one of the Ukrainian soldiers trapped in the plant. Captain Svyatoslav Palamar, deputy commander of the Azov Regiment, said the ceasefire, which was due to begin at 6 a.m. local time, ended at 11 a.m. local time. “From now on, it’s the truth, both sides are following the ceasefire,” he said. The evacuation escort was long overdue, he said. “From 6 in the morning, we waited for the evacuation convoy to arrive, which arrived at just 6:25 p.m.” “We have brought 20 citizens to the agreed meeting point, whom we managed to save from the rubble. These are women and children. We hope that these people will go to the agreed destination, which is Zaporizhzhia, the area controlled by Ukraine.” said Palamar. “As of now, the rescue operation is underway, which is being carried out by Azov’s soldiers – we are rescuing civilians under the rubble,” he added. “These are women, children and the elderly,” he said in a video message on the constitution’s Telegram channel. “We hope that this process will be further extended and we will successfully evacuate all civilians,” he said. “As for the injured – those people who need urgent medical attention – it is not clear to us why they are not being evacuated and their evacuation is not being discussed in the Ukrainian-controlled area,” he added. guarantees the evacuation not only for the citizens but also for our wounded soldiers who need medical treatment “. Russia’s state-run news agency TASS reported earlier on Saturday that a group of civilians had left the steel plant. A correspondent at the scene told TASS that a total of 25 people had come out, including six children under the age of 14. CNN can not independently verify the TASS report. Hundreds of people are believed to be inside the steel complex, including dozens injured during a heavy Russian bombardment in recent weeks. The latest satellite images of the factory show that many of its buildings have been reduced to rubble. Proponents of her case have been working to make the actual transcript of this statement available online. Here is what a part of the plant looked like about six weeks ago: A satellite image from March 22 shows an overview of the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine.