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Gaza: ‘People losing hope’ as aid access is refused to north, warns UNRWA

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Gaza: ‘People losing hope’ as aid access is refused to north, warns UNRWA

Briefing reporters in Geneva from central Gaza, UNRWA senior emergency officer Louise Wateridge warned that amid looming famine in the Gaza Strip and as winter approaches, those forcibly displaced are sleeping on the floor in makeshift shelters surrounded by sewage.

“We are extremely concerned when the rains come to the Gaza Strip, what will happen to 500,000 people who are in areas of flooding?” she said.

Ms. Wateridge stressed that the volume of aid currently entering the war-torn enclave is “the lowest in months”, with an average in October of only 37 trucks per day for the entire 2.2 million population.

According to UNRWA, this represents only around six per cent of the commercial and humanitarian supplies allowed in before the war.

US aid deadline expiring

Asked about a Tuesday deadline set last month by the United States for Israel to improve the aid situation in the enclave by 12 November, the UNRWA official said that instead, “aid supplies have lessened”.

The UN continues to be denied access to northern Gaza where people are “begging for pieces of bread, for water”, Ms. Wateridge said, noting that 1.7 million people in the enclave – a full 80 per cent of the population – did not receive their food rations in October.

Last Friday, food security experts from the UN-partnered Integrated Phase Classification (IPC) Famine Review Committee issued an alert over imminent famine in areas within the northern Gaza Strip.

As suffering continues to worsen, “people are losing hope”, Ms. Wateridge said.

Just this week, two missions to northern Gaza which she was due to take part in were denied; the aim had been to deliver chlorine tablets and assess the facilities for those sheltering.

“No one from UNRWA has been able to access the besieged north in over a month,” she insisted.

Every hour counts

The UNRWA official spoke of “pleas and testimonies” from UN colleagues and from doctors in the hospitals in the north, which have been bombed. “The doctors inform us that they have run out of blood supplies. They have run out of medicine… There are bodies in the streets,” she said, adding that ambulances have “stopped functioning” and that people can only get to hospital by themselves, on donkey carts.

“Colleagues are trapped in residential buildings,” unable to leave, Ms. Wateridge said, while the eight UNRWA-run water wells in northern Gaza’s Jabalia have all ceased operations, leaving people without clean water.

The UNRWA senior emergency officer reiterated the agency’s call to the Israeli authorities for access to the besieged areas, which is “more and more critical each hour now”.

Only a ceasefire will end the suffering

Late last month, the Israeli Parliament voted to ban UNRWA from operating in the country and prohibit officials from having any contact with the agency. The laws are set to come into force 90 days from their adoption.

Asked about any message that UNRWA may have for Hamas, Ms. Wateridge said: “Our call for Hamas as well as the Israeli forces is a ceasefire.” She underscored that the Palestinian militant group initiated “horrific attacks against Israeli civilians on 7 October”, adding that it was unacceptable that the war continued and civilians suffered.

“We have seen horrific suffering of Israeli civilians, the 7 October attacks, followed by horrific suffering of civilians in the Gaza Strip. There needs to be a ceasefire, a release and return of the hostages home and finally some respite to all the civilians, not just in the Gaza Strip, but the surrounding region,” she concluded.

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Lebanon: UN rights chief adds voice to immediate ceasefire call

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Lebanon: UN rights chief adds voice to immediate ceasefire call

The development follows dire assessments from UN aid teams about the cost of “relentless” Israeli attacks on Beirut’s southern suburbs since the weekend, resulting in extensive damage and significant casualties, and forcing more people to flee their homes.

“The High Commissioner reiterates his call for an immediate ceasefire to put an end to the killings and the destruction,” stressed Jeremy Laurence, spokesperson for the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR). 

“Israeli military action in Lebanon has caused widescale loss of civilian life, including the killing of entire families, widespread displacement and the destruction of civilian infrastructure, raising serious concerns about respect for the principles of proportionality, distinction and necessity.”

Civilians bear brunt

At the same time, Hezbollah rocket fire has continued into northern Israel, resulting in civilian casualties, the OHCHR spokesperson noted. “Most of these rockets are indiscriminate by nature” and have displaced thousands of Israeli civilians, “which is unacceptable. The only way to end the suffering of people on all sides is a permanent and immediate ceasefire on all fronts: in Lebanon, in Israel and in Gaza.”

The latest update from the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, reported that a deadly air strike on Saturday in Beirut “demolished a residential building, claiming nearly 30 lives and injuring more than 65 people. This is out of a total 84 people killed in the country that day alone, according to the authorities.”

Deadly toll rises

On average, 250 people have been killed every week in November in Lebanon, bringing the death toll to more than 3,700 since the escalation of hostilities in October 2023, OCHA said, while the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) condemned the killing of at least nine youngsters between 22 and 23 November, “including boys and girls who were sleeping in their beds”.

The UN agency said that the total number of child deaths has reached at least 240 since October 2023 when Hezbollah rocket fire escalated in response to Israeli bombardment of nearby Gaza.

Aid teams still delivering

Despite ongoing security concerns, the UN and humanitarian partners remain on the ground to try to scale up efforts to continue providing critical assistance.

As of 19 November, UNICEF reported carrying out 14 humanitarian convoys, reaching some 50,000 people in areas that are difficult to access, such as Tyre, Rmeich, Marjaayoun and Hasbaya. The UN agency has also supported displaced families living on the streets of Beirut, helping them find shelter amid a severe urban displacement crisis.

Meanwhile late Monday, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said that it had delivered 48 tons of medical supplies to support the Lebanese health authority’s chronic medication programme, ensuring that 300,000 people “have continued access to essential medicines”.

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One in three women in the EU have experienced violence

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woman in yellow and pink floral dress
Photo by Mika Baumeister on Unsplash

ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== One in three women in the EU have experienced violence

A third of women in the EU have experienced violence at home, at work or in public. Young women report having experienced higher levels of sexual harassment at work and other forms of violence than older women. Yet violence against women often remains invisible as only every fourth woman reports incidents to the authorities (the police, or social, health or support services). 

These are some of the findings of the EU survey on gender-based violence conducted from 2020 to 2024 by Eurostat (the statistical office of the EU), the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) and the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE).

The results from the EU gender-based violence survey represent women aged 18 to 74 from across the EU. The survey covers experiences of physical, sexual and psychological violence, including domestic and non-partner violence. It also reports on sexual harassment at work.

The survey findings concern issues such as:

  • The prevalence of violence: 1 in 3 women in the EU have experienced physical violence, sexual violence, or threats in their adulthood.
  • Sexual violence and rape: 1 in 6 women in the EU have experienced sexual violence, including rape, in their adulthood.
  • Violence at home: Home is not always safe for many women: 1 in 5 women have faced physical or sexual violence from their partner, a relative, or another member of their household.
  • Sexual harassment at work: 1 in 3 women have been sexually harassed at work. Younger women report a higher prevalence, with 2 in 5 having experienced sexual harassment in their workplaces.
  • The non-reporting of violence: Although a majority of women who have experienced violence have spoken to a person close to them about this, only 1 in 5 have contacted a healthcare or social service provider, and just 1 in 8 have reported the incident to the police.

The EU gender-based violence survey was carried out jointly by Eurostat, FRA, and EIGE—the three organisations which are responsible respectively for official statistics, human rights, and gender equality within the EU. The data collection took place between September 2020 and March 2024. The results of the survey provide data which will better enable policymakers across the EU to combat violence against women and give more effective support to victims.

The data can be found in the Eurostat’s gender-based violence dataset (available 25 November at 11:00 CET).

Eurostat’s Statistics Explained article (available 25 November at 11:00 CET) also describes some of the survey findings.

Quote from Eurostat Director-General Mariana Kotzeva:

Today, Eurostat, in cooperation with FRA and EIGE, has published the EU-country-level results of the EU gender-based violence survey. The statistics on the often-hidden phenomenon of gender-based violence are based on rigorous data collection methods across the EU member states, making these statistics a trusted foundation for public awareness and policy action. Eurostat thanks all those who courageously, safely, and anonymously shared their experiences with interviewers.

Quote from FRA Director Sirpa Rautio:

There are no safe spaces for women, free from violence and harassment. Back in 2014, with its first EU-wide survey on violence against women, FRA revealed the extent to which women experience violence every day and everywhere. A decade later, we continue to witness the same shocking levels of violence that affect 1 in 3 women. Rates of violence against women remain far too high. Policymakers, civil society and frontline workers urgently need to support and protect the rights of all victims of gender-based violence and domestic abuse no matter where it takes place.

Quote from EIGE Director Carlien Scheele:

When we face an alarming reality where one in three women experience violence in the EU, but just over 1 in 8 report it, it demands a serious look at the systemic issues getting in the way from shifting the dial. Today the results of our survey data release truly underscores the importance of my Agency’s work in ending gender-based violence. Violence against women is rooted in control, dominance and inequality. When a gendered perspective is integrated into prevention measures, services and authorities, then we can expect to see more women coming forward, trusting that they will receive the support they need. Because every woman has a right to be safe – everywhere.

Keep reading

Campaign: Every woman deserves to be safe. But one in three women still experience violence in the EU.

Focus paper: EU gender-based violence survey – Key results

Women are owed a life free from violence. What steps are you going to take?

Download this article in

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1,000 days of full-scale war on Ukraine: UNHCR urges solidarity with victims

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1,000 days of full-scale war on Ukraine: UNHCR urges solidarity with victims

Recent attacks on energy infrastructure have decimated 65 percent of Ukraine’s energy generation capacity, severely disrupting electricity, heating and water supplies across the country.

“The deepening emotional toll on innocent people became clear during my visit to the country last week,” Kelly Clements, UN Deputy High Commissioner for Refugees reported, noting that, “the intense attacks on critical infrastructure and civilian sites – constant war-raid attacks on critical infrastructure and civilian sites” and air raid warnings, “are exacting a grave toll on physical and mental health”.

Since August, approximately 170,000 people have been forced to flee their homes in Eastern Ukraine, adding to the nearly four million who remain displaced within Ukraine and 6.7 million more who have ought refuge outside the country.

This includes 400,000 new refugees who fled to other European countries, from the beginning of 2024 to the end of August.

Daily life under constant threat

In Kharkiv, one of the most war-affected regions of the country, the reality of conflict is starkly evident.

During a visit to a centre supported by UNHCR, Ms. Clements recalled that “explosions sounded in the background”.

During her visit, Ms. Clements met Svitlana, a 65-year-old woman whose apartment was destroyed by a glide bomb, describing her “quiet determination” as a powerful reminder of “Ukraine’s spirit, even as the trauma of war permeates daily life”.

The visit coincided with the season’s first snow, marking the start of what will be the third winter of full-scale war. With continued attacks on energy facilities and civil structure, civilians face severe challenges in the months ahead.

The impact of education has been particularly severe, with countless children missing out on social interaction and classroom experiences. In Kharkiv, children have been forced to study in underground shelters; “metro” schools which lack natural light and playgrounds, to avoid frequent air raids.

Recovery efforts continue amid funding shortfall

Despite these challenges, there are signs of resilience and recovery. The Government of Ukraine, has been “leading humanitarian and recovery efforts with impressive speed,” stated Ms. Clements. She added that “local responders quickly clear rubble and board up strike sites, symbolising Ukraine’s strength and determination”.

However, UNHCR’s 2024 appeal seeking $1 billion for 2024 is only just over half funded.

Now is not the time for partners to turn away,” warned Ms. Clements, emphasising the urgent need for continued support as Ukraine enters its third winter of full-scale war. 

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Police raids on Romanian yoga centers in France, one year later

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On 28 November, it will be one year since a SWAT team of around 175 policemen wearing black masks, helmets, and bullet proof vests, simultaneously descended at 6 am on eight separate houses and apartments in and around Paris but also in Nice where Romanian yoga practitioners had decided to go into spiritual retreat. The police forces were then brandishing semi-automatic rifles, shouting, making very loud noises, crashing doors and putting everything upside down.

The November 2023 raids were not an operation against a terrorist or armed group or a drug cartel. They were raids targeting eight private places mainly used by peaceful Romanian yoga practitioners, but the police suspected these places to be used for illegal activities: traffic in human beings, sexual exploitation and forcible confinement.

Misa Yoga Photo 2024 06 28 10.13.52

In fact, most of the yoga practitioners had chosen to combine the pleasant with the useful in France: yoga and meditation in villas or apartments kindly and freely put at their disposal by their owners or tenants who were also mainly yoga practitioners of Romanian origin and at the same time to enjoy picturesque natural or other environments.

They were IT experts, engineers, designers, artists, medical doctors, psychologists, teachers, university and high school students, and so on.

About the absence of victims and questions raised by the search warrant

The objective of the raid was not only to arrest criminals but also to save victims or survivors of such alleged illegal activities. The ‘problem’ is that the yoga practitioners interrogated by the police strongly denied being victims of anything during their stay and consequently, did not file any complaint against their hosts.

One year later, it is still not officially and publicly known which actors and which preliminary investigation elements convinced a prosecutor to launch raids of such a magnitude.

The law enforcement forces had just been told that the operation was based on a search warrant meant to catch criminals involved in “trafficking in human beings”, “forcible confinement” and “abuse of vulnerability” in organized gang.

Noteworthy is that the wording of the warrant shaped the minds of the interrogators on the search places and in police stations as well as of the lawyers hired for legal assistance and interpreters in their interaction with the arrested people, around 50. This is what emerged from the testimonies of numerous yoga practitioners placed in police custody collected by Human Rights Without Frontiers. In the eyes of all these actors, this was a very serious case and among them there might have been some traffickers in human beings, sexual abusers and mind manipulators.

In November 2023, six people were arrested and put in pretrial detention. Among them Gregorian Bivolaru, the spiritual master of MISA (Movement for Spiritual Integration into the Absolute), an esoteric yoga movement that he founded in 1990 in Romania and had 30,000 practitioners throughout the world before the COVID. He was the subject of an Interpol arrest warrant because six former disgruntled students of MISA lodged a complaint against him many years ago for trafficking in human beings, sexual abuse and forced confinement but as of end 2024, there has not been any trial and therefore any confirmation of such accusations.

The other detainees were the owners or the tenants of the searched places who were investigated about their possible involvement in the criminal activities mentioned in the French warrant.

The arrest of Mihai and Adina Stoian in Georgia

On 22 August 2024, Mihai and Adina Stoian, known as esoteric yoga teachers and trainers, were arrested when they entered Georgia, as part of a tourist trip, through the border with Turkey at Sarpi.

Misa 22 Nov 2024

Georgian media reported that the Stoians were arrested on the basis of an Interpol arrest warrant and are wanted by the judicial authorities in France. Additionally, the Georgian press said that they have also been prosecuted “in Finland and Romania for child prostitution and rape.” This last information is however false.

As far as we know, the Stoians are not under any prosecution in Finland or Romania. It is only when they were arrested in Georgia that they were notified of an international arrest and extradition warrant from the Court of Paris, in France.

According to some French media, Mihai and Adina Stoian are considered to have been close to Gregorian Bivolaru for many years and are said to run the movement in his absence.

Mihai and Adina Stoian deny having been involved in the administration of the MISA movement. However, they had working relations with other yoga movements, such as the ATMAN Federation and NATHA.

ATMAN, the International Federation of Yoga and Meditation, was created by yoga teachers and trainers from various yoga movements on 7 December 2004 and registered in the UK where it is still located. In 2006, Mihai and Adina Stoian joined ATMAN and trained other yoga teachers on a voluntary basis. As senior teachers, they started unifying the teaching program and methodology. At some point, MISA became a member of ATMAN and consequently, the Stoians claim that their relationship with MISA was only indirect. On 27 October 2016, Mihai Stoian became one of the three directors of ATMAN. Adina went on training yoga teachers and has never been a member of the board.

While the Stoians are in prison in Georgia, a dozen policemen in Denmark accompanied by a representative of the French prosecutor searched the common spaces of the NATHA Yoga Association in Denmark where the Stoians were working part-time. Nobody was arrested or interrogated during the search. The police just took away some electronic devices.

Some conclusions

The French warrant leading to the raids in France in November 2023 and the international arrest warrant implemented in Georgia, as they were drafted, created prejudices and shaped the minds of all the actors involved in the investigation who obviously failed to consider the charges as nothing more than allegations.

Moreover, many journalists and media outlets wrongly perceived the accusations as solid facts, failing quite often to mention the absence of victims and the presumption of innocence of the suspects as the case is still being investigated and as we are still far from any court decision.

Last but not least, it is noteworthy that a significant number of Romanian female and male yoga practitioners kept in custody after the raids in France have lodged complaints against the French authorities for failing to respect the legislation during their detention.

More reading

MISA: Spiritual Explorations and Experiences in the Practice of Esoteric Yoga

(The Journal of CESNUR, 2 November 2024)

By Raffaella Di Marzio , Center for Studies on Freedom of Religion Belief and Conscience (LIREC)

Children and amputees bear brunt of Myanmar’s deadly landmine epidemic

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Children and amputees bear brunt of Myanmar’s deadly landmine epidemic

However, the grim statistic is just the surface of a larger crisis, independent human rights experts warned on Friday, as the military junta intensifies its attacks on civilians, including persons with disabilities.

The junta is doubling the impact of its extensive use of landmines to crush nationwide resistance,” said Tom Andrews, Special Rapporteur on Myanmar, and Heba Hagrass Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities.

They highlighted egregious violations, including forcing civilians to walk through minefields ahead of military units and systematically denying victims access to life-saving aid such as medical care and prosthetics.  

These actions, they emphasised, are “absolutely contrary” to international laws, including Article 11 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and UN Security Council resolution 2475 on protecting persons with disabilities in war.

Children most affected

The impact of landmines and unexploded ordnance is particularly severe on Myanmar’s children, with UNICEF data released earlier this year revealing that over 20 per cent of the 1,052 verified civilian casualties from such incidents in 2023 were children.

This was a significant rise from 2022, when 390 incidents were recorded.

Children are particularly vulnerable to landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO), often unable to recognise their dangers.

In addition, the indiscriminate placement of these deadly weapons in and around homes, schools, playgrounds, and farming areas, puts children at constant risk.

A child who lost his left leg after accidentally stepping on a landmine in his family’s paddy fields in central Myanmar.

Victims facing criminalisation

The consequences for landmine victims extend beyond physical injuries.

Amputees, already grappling with life-altering trauma, are being criminalised by the junta, which associates missing limbs with resistance activity.

“Now amputees are being forced into hiding to avoid harassment and arrest. Losing a limb is being seen as evidence of a crime,” the experts said.

Reality far worse

Amidst the dire picture, the reality is even worse for landmine victims and their families.

“I was heartbroken talking with a young woman who had lost her leg after stepping on a landmine near her home,” Mr. Andrews said.

But I was infuriated when her doctor told me that she had no hope of securing a prosthesis because junta forces were blocking access to the materials necessary to build one,” he added.

Call for action

Mr. Andrews and Ms. Hagrass urged UN Member States to take coordinated measures to weaken the military junta’s ability to harm civilians.

They also called on all parties to the conflict in Myanmar to immediately stop laying landmines and begin removing them without delay.

Related interview: Independent rights expert urges stronger, coordinated actions against Myanmar junta

Special Rapporteurs are independent human rights experts, appointed by the UN Human Rights Council as part of its Special Procedures. They are mandated to monitor and report on specific thematic issues or country situations and work on a voluntary basis.

They serve in their individual capacity, are not UN staff and do not receive a salary.

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A web designer will be the first saint of the millennium

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A Web Designer Will Be The First Saint Of The Millennium

An Italian teenager will be the first saint canonized in the millennium by the Catholic Church, Pope Francis announced at his weekly audience at the Vatican on Wednesday.

Carlo Akutis, 15, who died of leukemia, will be canonized in April after being beatified in 2020. The church recognized two miracles performed by the deceased in 2006. young man

The teenager, who has been dubbed “God’s influencer”, was a devout Catholic and used his computer coding skills to create a website detailing Catholic miracles and visions. His body wrapped in wax, wearing jeans and sneakers, is on display in a tomb in Assisi, Politico writes.

The IX All-Russian scientific and practical conference of the Russian Orthodox Church and the penal system of the Russian Federation was held

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The Ix Allrussian Scientific And Practical Conference Of The Russian Orthodox Church And The Penal System Of The Russian Federation Was Held

The IX All-Russian scientific and practical conference of the Russian Orthodox Church and the penal system of the Russian Federation was held at the Academy of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia.

The event was held at the beginning of November within the framework of the International scientific and practical conference on the problems of execution of criminal punishments, dedicated to the 90th anniversary of the Academy of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia, and was dedicated to the introduction of the probation system in Russia and the establishment of the institution of assistants to pre-trial detention facilities for work with believers.

The conference was attended by: the head of the group for organizing work with believers of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia’s Department of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation Sergei Gurov, assistants to the heads of the Federal Penitentiary Service for organizing work with believers, assistants to the heads of pretrial detention centers for working with believers, clergy of religious associations traditional for Russia, the faculty of the Academy of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia, representatives of public organizations providing assistance to prisoners, as well as persons released from places of imprisonment.

The forum was headed by the acting chairman of the Synodal Department for Prison Ministry, priest Kirill Markovsky.

The first section of the conference was devoted to the consideration of issues related to the introduction of a penitentiary probation system in Russia from January 1, 2024, and post-penitentiary probation from January 1, 2025. Before the conference participants began their speeches, priest Kirill Markovsky presented awards from the Synodal Department for Prison Ministry to the executive secretary of the board of departments for prison ministry of the Don Metropolitanate, the head of the Spas charity shelter, priest Andrei Mnatsaganov, the chairman of the department for prison ministry of the Saransk diocese, assistant to the head of the pre-trial detention center No. 1 of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia for the Republic of Mordovia for work with believers, Archpriest Vladimir Menshoikin, and the chairman of the board of the public organization “House of Diligence “Noah”” Emelyan Sosinsky for many years of work in providing assistance to prisoners and people released from places of imprisonment. Opening the conference, priest Kirill Markovsky emphasized its importance and practical significance, pointing out that the main goal of cooperation between the Church and the penal system is to really help a person who is in prison or has just been released from prison to survive a difficult period of trials, to find the meaning of life that extends into eternity, to find strength for a new life in society not only according to human laws, but also according to the laws of God; to help employees of the penitentiary system worthily carry out the important and responsible service that God has entrusted to them and the state has entrusted to them. According to priest Kirill Markovsky, by adopting the law on probation, the state has certainly extended a hand to a person who has found himself in a difficult life situation. However, it is important to remember that it is impossible to integrate a person into society if he is convinced that it is possible to achieve well-being in life by committing illegal acts, or if he does not have the spiritual strength to resist those sinful desires that have taken root in him due to his past criminal life. “Therefore, first of all, our efforts should be aimed at achieving those positive changes in the mind and soul of the convicted person, which will be the basis for his law-abiding behavior after release. And this work, which is the foundation of probation, must begin in the pre-trial detention center, where the person who committed the unlawful acts ends up. If we do not succeed in this work, then all our other efforts may prove fruitless,” the head of the Synodal Department emphasized. Priest Kirill Markovsky noted that the Church, which has a thousand-year experience in healing the human soul, is currently doing a lot of work in places of forced detention. The UIS has created all the conditions for this, introduced the positions of assistants to the heads of territorial bodies of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia for work with believers, assistants to the heads of pre-trial detention centers for work with believers, who are replaced by clergy. The administration of the institutions for the most part tries to meet the prison clergy halfway. But the clergy themselves are not always sufficiently active.

“Yes, we have many wonderful pastors, zealous workers in the field of Christ, who bring worthy fruit to God, bring many to Christ, and bring many despairing people back to life. We express our sincere gratitude to such clergy. But not all pastors fully realize in their prison ministry the gift that was given to them “with the laying on of hands of the priesthood” (1 Tim. 4:14). The chairmen of the prison ministry departments must closely monitor how the clergyman carries out his pastoral work in the pretrial detention center or correctional institution. Give advice to young priests, explain the importance of the ministry of the Church’s pastor in places of human sorrow, which were and will be places of imprisonment,” the priest noted. The head of the synodal department emphasized that the work of a priest in a correctional institution should not be limited to celebrating the Liturgy. It is necessary to hold meetings and talks with the general mass of convicts, actively interact with the institution’s psychologists to identify individuals in a crisis situation, more actively involve lay specialists in the field of church service, and conduct spiritual and educational work with the UIS employees.

Assistant to the head of the Main Directorate of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region for organizing work with believers, professor of the Department of Church and Practical Disciplines of the St. Petersburg Theological Academy, Archpriest Oleg Skomorokh, spoke about the participation of the Russian Orthodox Church in the implementation of the Federal Law “On Probation in the Russian Federation”, noting that with the adoption of this law, the activities for the resocialization and social adaptation of individuals subject to probation have finally become systemic. In addition, the Church has opportunities to participate jointly with non-profit organizations in the activities of probation centers. Archpriest Evgeny Lishchenyuk, head of the joint commission of prison ministry of the Voronezh Metropolitanate, shared his experience of prison and social ministry, providing assistance to former convicts, including work on the rehabilitation of alcohol and drug addicts. Priest Andrei Mnatsaganov spoke about the activities of the “Spas” charity shelter or “halfway hotel” that he created and heads, where those who want to start a law-abiding life on the outside or have no fixed place of residence can come immediately after their release from prison.

The founder and chairman of the board of this public organization, Yemelyan Sosinsky, reported on the work of the largest network of homeless shelters in Russia, the Noah House of Labor, located in the Moscow Region and including labor and social homes where more than 1,200 people live. Noah has become a “social lift” for a huge number of people. Now many of those who were previously at the very bottom and doomed to perish have found work, a family and a meaning in life.

The second section of the conference was devoted to the formation and development of the institute of assistants to the heads of pretrial detention centers for work with believers. The positions of full-time prison clergy in pretrial detention centers were introduced on January 1, 2024, and at present almost all of them are staffed.

As noted by priest Kirill Markovsky, all priests who have been appointed to the positions of assistants to the heads of pretrial detention centers are pioneers. Being both clergy and officials, they perform, without exaggeration, a sacrificial service associated with a wide range of responsibilities. In addition, pastoral work with suspects and accused has its own characteristics in comparison with the spiritual care of convicts in a correctional institution. And if in a penal colony convicts who have committed crimes of approximately the same degree of severity serve their sentences, then in a pre-trial detention center a priest encounters suspects and accused of a wide variety of crimes – from minor crimes to especially serious ones. He must be able to provide spiritual assistance to men, women, and minors. In this regard, special attention should be paid to the preparation of priests for such a service. Currently, assistants to the heads of pre-trial detention centers for work with believers are trained at the Academy of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia, but the pastoral block for priests of the Russian Orthodox Church is missing from the curriculum. It is extremely necessary to include meetings with experienced prison chaplains who have been ministering to pretrial detention centers for many years in the training program. Moreover, in some pretrial detention centers, priests appointed to the position of assistants to the heads of work with believers have not previously had experience in pastoral work with suspects and defendants.

The head of the group for organizing work with believers of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia, Sergei Gurov, told the conference participants about the legislative norms and the specifics of the work of prison chaplains in pretrial detention centers.

Archpriest Oleg Skomorokh, assistant to the head of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia for organizing work with believers, spoke about the multifaceted activities of priests in the largest Russian pretrial detention center No. 1 “Kresty” in St. Petersburg. The assistant to the head of the pretrial detention center No. 3 of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia for the Republic of Bashkortostan, Imam-Khatib Insaf-khazrat Iskandarov, spoke about the spiritual care of people who profess Islam and the prevention of extremism and terrorism in places of imprisonment.

The conference became a discussion platform that allows one to become familiar with the best practices in providing spiritual and social assistance to prisoners and persons released from places of imprisonment, to see problematic issues that arise in the process of implementing prison ministry, to concentrate the efforts of various social institutions on solving one of the most important tasks – the decriminalization of society.

Source: Synodal Department for Prison Ministry/Patriarchia.ru

Volodymyr Zelensky signed a decree to strip 34 traitors of state awards

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Фото Ани Лорак

President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky signed a decree to strip 34 traitors of state awards to Ukraine

The document, published on the official website of the Ukrainian president, puts into effect the decision of the National Security and Defense Council to strip persons considered traitors to Ukraine of state awards, UNIAN reported.

These persons include former civil servants, deputies, heads of the SBU and the Prosecutor General’s Office, prosecutors, artists, as well as Russian political, religious and cultural figures. All of them are deprived of state awards of Ukraine indefinitely.

In addition, ten of them are subject to the maximum package of sanctions – 21 types of measures, including blocking assets, cancellation of licenses and permits, as well as complete cessation of commercial operations.

Key figures on the list:

Alexander Efremov – former first deputy leader of the political party “Party of Regions” and chairman of the corresponding faction. Deprived of the Orders of Merit I-III degree and Prince Yaroslav the Wise V degree.

Renat Kuzmin – former First Deputy Prosecutor General of Ukraine, holder of the Orders of Merit II-III degree and the title of Honored Lawyer of Ukraine.

Viktor Medvedchuk – former deputy and close ally of Russia. Deprived of the Orders of Merit I-III degree and Prince Yaroslav the Wise V degree, as well as the title of Honored Lawyer of Ukraine.

Other famous names:

Dmitry Tabachnyk – former Minister of Education and Science (2010-2014).

Mykola Azarov – former Prime Minister of Ukraine (2010-2014), holder of numerous orders and the title of Honored Economist of Ukraine.

Viktor Pshonka – former Prosecutor General of Ukraine.

Patriarch Kirill – head of the Russian Orthodox Church, deprived of the Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise I degree.

Artists on the list:

The titles of “People’s Artist of Ukraine” and “Honored Artist of Ukraine” have been stripped from a number of popular Russian performers, including Nikolai Baskov, Philip Kirkorov, Ani Lorak, and Taisiya Povaliy.

Context of the decision:

On November 20, 2024, the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine adopted a bill by President Zelensky that allows for the deprivation of state awards from persons who promote Russia, spread propaganda, or commit other actions against Ukraine.

According to the law, persons deprived of state awards lose all rights and privileges associated with them.

Photo: Ani Lorak / Facebook

Istanbul Convention: experts praise Spain’s commitment to combatting violence against women, call for improving the training of professionals

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man and woman sitting on sofa in a room
Photo by Ben White on Unsplash

In a new report the Council of Europe Group of Experts on Action against Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (GREVIO) welcomes the Spanish authorities’ steady commitment and the progress achieved in measures to prevent and combat violence against women. GREVIO also identifies areas which require urgent action for the country to fully comply with the Istanbul Convention, particularly improving the training of professionals dealing with victims and perpetrators of violence against women, including in the judiciary.

GREVIO recognises that the Spanish authorities have continued to expand the legislative and policy framework to prevent and combat violence against women, in particular by adopting, in 2022, the Organic Law on the Comprehensive Guarantee of Sexual Freedom, which criminalises all sexual acts with a person who has not given free consent.

Other positive steps include the adoption of the Multi-Annual Joint Plan on Violence Against Women (2023-2027), substantial measures to widen the scope of policies and services to other forms of violence against women than intimate-partner violence, and the ongoing setting up of 24-hour comprehensive assistance centres for victims of sexual violence across the country. The allocation of funds for preventing and combating violence against women has continued to increase steadily.

The approach of law-enforcement agencies to women victims of violence, especially among specialised units, has improved substantially. Despite this progress, GREVIO urges the authorities to take several measures to ensure support, protection and justice for victims of violence against women and domestic violence.

GREVIO urges the Spanish authorities to step up the training of all professionals dealing with victims and perpetrators of violence against women on all forms of violence and to address the specific needs of women belonging to vulnerable groups. This training should be provided to justice, law enforcement, social welfare, healthcare, and education professionals.

Furthermore, GREVIO urges the authorities to ensure mandatory training of judges presiding over cases involving custody and visitation rights on the negative effects that witnessing violence against women has on children and the nature and dynamics of domestic violence.

GREVIO observes with particular concern that migrant and refugee women, women with disabilities, and women living in rural areas are disproportionately represented among victims of gender-based violence and calls on the authorities to step up their efforts to provide them protection and support.

Finally, GREVIO is concerned about the increase in reported cases of gang rapes, in which both perpetrators and victims are frequently very young. It stresses the impact, in Spain and elsewhere, of violent pornography on young men committing such crimes and the fact that it is exacerbated where access to contextualised discussions around sexuality, gender equality, non-stereotyped gender roles, mutual respect, gender-based violence against women and the right to personal integrity is limited.