U.N. warns of “terrible escalation” in Sudan’s civil war

**Powerful Paramilitary Group Claims Capture of El-Fasher Amid Sudan Conflict**

Johannesburg — A powerful paramilitary force fighting the government in Sudan’s ongoing two-and-a-half-year civil war has claimed over the weekend to have captured the city of El-Fasher. The city, where hundreds of thousands of civilians have been trapped and cut off from the world for months, has been a focal point in the conflict.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed grave concern about the escalating violence. Speaking to the French news agency AFP, he described the situation around El-Fasher—the last city in the Darfur region not held by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitaries—as a “terrible escalation in the conflict.” He added, “The level of suffering that we are witnessing in Sudan is unbearable.”

Reports circulating on social media on Sunday indicated that RSF forces had taken control of the Sudanese Armed Forces’ 6th Division Headquarters in El-Fasher. Supporting these claims, the Yale School of Public Health’s Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL), which monitors the war via satellite imagery, confirmed a major RSF attack on El-Fasher on Sunday.

The HRL reported evidence of close-quarter battle within the city, noting that activity may correlate with reports of RSF capturing prisoners in and around the army airfield. They emphasized their ongoing commitment to monitoring satellite imagery for any signs of mass atrocities in El-Fasher.

While the RSF issued a statement asserting full control over the city, the Sudanese army maintained that fighting continued. Independent analysts cautioned that the RSF’s claim could not be independently verified at this time.

The United Nations has urged for the safe evacuation of an estimated 250,000 civilians trapped inside El-Fasher. U.N. Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher called for an immediate ceasefire in the city to facilitate civilian escape.

The RSF has besieged El-Fasher for weeks, constructing an earthen berm around the city to halt supplies and prevent the movement of people. As the last remaining stronghold of the Sudanese army in the Darfur region, the full capture of El-Fasher by the RSF would leave the paramilitary group in control of all five states within Darfur.

Analysts warn that RSF leaders have indicated intentions to formally partition Sudan and establish a parallel government in territories under their control.

Unverified images shared on social media reportedly show RSF fighters walking among bodies and injured civilians while celebrating inside El-Fasher on Sunday.

Fighting has persisted around El-Fasher for 18 months, leaving tens of thousands of residents trapped without access to essential supplies such as food and medical aid. Communication with the outside world remains extremely limited.

Eyewitness accounts reveal that drone strikes and artillery bombardments have become part of daily life as the Sudanese army and RSF continue to battle over control of this critical city.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sudan-civil-war-escalates-rsf-attack-el-fasher/

Will Trump’s sanctions against Russian oil giants hurt Putin?

Washington has announced new sanctions against Russia’s two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil, in an effort to pressure Moscow to agree to a peace deal in Ukraine. This marks the first time the current Trump administration has imposed direct sanctions on Russia.

Speaking alongside Nato Secretary-General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office on Wednesday, US President Donald Trump said he hoped the sanctions would not need to be in place for long, but expressed growing frustration with stalled truce negotiations.

“Every time I speak to Vladimir [Putin], I have good conversations and then they don’t go anywhere. They just don’t go anywhere,” Trump said, shortly after a planned in-person meeting with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, in Budapest was cancelled.

Trump’s move is designed to cut off vital oil revenues that help fund Russia’s ongoing war efforts. Earlier on Wednesday, Russia unleashed a new bombardment on Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, killing at least seven people, including children.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the new sanctions were necessary because of “Putin’s refusal to end this senseless war.” He added that Rosneft and Lukoil fund the Kremlin’s “war machine.”

### How Have Rosneft and Lukoil Been Sanctioned?

The new measures will freeze assets owned by Rosneft and Lukoil in the US and bar US entities from engaging in business with them. Additionally, thirty subsidiaries owned by Rosneft and Lukoil have also been sanctioned.

Rosneft, which is controlled by the Kremlin, is Russia’s second-largest company in terms of revenue, behind natural gas giant Gazprom. Lukoil is Russia’s third-largest company and its biggest non-state enterprise.

Together, the two companies export 3.1 million barrels of oil per day, accounting for 70 percent of Russia’s overseas crude oil sales. Rosneft alone is responsible for nearly half of Russia’s oil production, which makes up 6 percent of global output.

In recent years, both companies have been hit by ongoing European sanctions and reduced oil prices. In September, Rosneft reported a 68 percent year-on-year drop in net income for the first half of 2025. Lukoil posted an almost 27 percent fall in profits for 2024.

Meanwhile, last week the United Kingdom unveiled sanctions on the two oil majors. Elsewhere, the European Union is set to announce its 19th package of penalties on Moscow later today, including a ban on imports of Russian liquefied natural gas.

### How Much Impact Will These Sanctions Have?

In 2022, Russian oil groups, including Rosneft and Lukoil, were able to offset some of the effects of earlier sanctions by pivoting exports from Europe to Asia, and by using a “shadow fleet” of hard-to-detect tankers with no ties to Western financial or insurance groups.

China and India quickly replaced the EU as Russia’s biggest oil consumers. Last year, China imported a record 109 million tonnes of Russian crude, representing almost 20 percent of its total energy imports. India imported 88 million tonnes of Russian oil in 2024.

These figures represent a significant increase compared to pre-2022 levels, when Western countries started tightening sanctions on Russia. At the end of 2021, China imported roughly 79.6 million tonnes of Russian crude, while India imported just 0.42 million tonnes.

Trump has repeatedly urged Beijing and New Delhi to halt Russian energy purchases. In August, he levied an additional 25 percent trade tariff on India because of its continued purchase of discounted Russian oil. He has so far refrained from a similar move against China.

However, Trump’s new sanctions are likely to place pressure on foreign financial groups that do business with Rosneft and Lukoil, including banking intermediaries facilitating sales of Russian oil in China and India.

“Engaging in certain transactions involving the persons designated today may risk the imposition of secondary sanctions on participating foreign financial institutions,” the US Treasury Department’s press release on Wednesday’s sanctions states.

As a result, the new restrictions may force buyers to shift to alternative suppliers or pay higher prices. Though India and China may not be the direct targets of these latest restrictions, their oil supply chains and trading costs are likely to come under increased pressure.

“The big thing here is the secondary sanctions,” Felipe Pohlmann Gonzaga, a Switzerland-based commodity trader, told Al Jazeera. “Any bank that facilitates Russian oil sales and with exposure to the US financial system could be subject.”

However, he added, “I don’t think this will be the driver in ending the war, as Russia will continue selling oil. There are always people out there willing to take the risk to beat sanctions. These latest restrictions will make Chinese and Indian players more reluctant to buy Russian oil; many won’t want to lose access to the American financial system. But it won’t stop it completely.”

According to Bloomberg, several senior refinery executives in India, who asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue, said the restrictions would make it impossible for oil purchases to continue.

On Wednesday, Trump said he would raise concerns about China’s continued purchases of Russian oil during his talk with President Xi Jinping at the 2025 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea next week.

### Have Oil Prices Been Affected?

Oil prices rallied after Trump announced the US sanctions. Brent, the international crude oil benchmark, rose nearly 4 percent to $65 a barrel on Thursday.

The US benchmark, West Texas Intermediate (WTI), jumped more than 5 percent to nearly $60 per barrel.

*Recommended Stories*

– Trump hits Russia’s oil giants with sanctions, EU bans Russian LNG
– EU poised to agree on using frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine in war
– Why planned Trump-Putin talks collapsed, and what it means for Ukraine
– EU moves to ban Russian energy imports by 2028
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/10/23/will-trumps-sanctions-against-russian-oil-giants-hurt-putin?traffic_source=rss

Rahaf in Gaza

Rahaf Warshagha is a Palestinian who was displaced from her home due to Israel’s war on Gaza.

In her video diary, Rahaf shares a personal account of how her life has changed since a ceasefire deal went into effect in early October 2025.

The ceasefire has allowed her to access water more reliably and travel more freely to other parts of the Gaza Strip. Through her story, Rahaf highlights both the challenges she has faced and the newfound opportunities that the ceasefire has brought to her community.
https://www.aljazeera.com/video/on-the-ground/2025/10/21/rahaf-in-gaza?traffic_source=rss

A war on drugs or a war on terror? Trump’s military pressure on Venezuela blurs the lines

**U.S. Drug War Under Trump Echoes Post-9/11 War on Terror Legal Framework**

**WASHINGTON (AP)** — Under President Donald Trump, the U.S. drug war is increasingly mirroring the war on terror. To support military strikes against Latin American gangs and drug cartels, the Trump administration is relying on a legal argument that gained prominence after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. This framework allowed U.S. authorities to use lethal force against al-Qaida combatants responsible for the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks.

However, the criminal groups currently targeted by U.S. strikes represent a very different adversary. These groups, such as Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang, were spawned in prisons and are fueled not by anti-Western ideology but by drug trafficking and other illicit enterprises. Legal scholars warn that Trump’s use of overwhelming military force and authorization of covert action inside Venezuela—possibly aimed at ousting President Nicolás Maduro—push the limits of international law.

This shift comes as Trump expands the military’s domestic role by deploying the National Guard to U.S. cities and expressing openness to invoking the nearly 150-year-old Insurrection Act, which permits military deployment in only exceptional civil unrest cases.

### Lethal Strikes Without Formal War Declaration

So far, U.S. military strikes have killed at least 27 people in five separate incidents targeting vessels alleged to be carrying drugs. The most recent strike occurred on Tuesday, killing six people. These actions have taken place without any legal investigation or a formal war declaration from Congress.

Such circumstances raise questions about the legal justification for these strikes and their potential impact on diplomatic relations, especially with Latin American countries that recall the U.S.’s contentious Cold War-era military interventions.

Meanwhile, the U.S. intelligence community disputes Trump’s central claim that Maduro’s government collaborates with the Tren de Aragua gang to orchestrate drug trafficking and illegal immigration into the United States.

### “You Can’t Just Call Something War”

Trump’s assertion that the United States is engaged in an “armed conflict” with drug cartels hinges on the same legal authority the Bush administration used to declare a war on terror after 9/11. This authority permits the capture and detention of combatants and the use of lethal force against their leaders.

However, the United Nations Charter expressly forbids the use of force except in self-defense. Claire Finkelstein, a professor of national security law at the University of Pennsylvania, commented, “You just can’t call something war to give yourself war powers. … It makes a mockery of international law to suggest we are in a noninternational armed conflict with cartels.”

Unlike al-Qaida, which was actively plotting attacks designed to kill civilians after 9/11, the cartels’ primary goal is drug trafficking. Geoffrey Corn, a Texas Tech law professor and former senior Army adviser on law-of-war issues, described the government’s position as politically motivated: “Even if we assume there’s an armed conflict with Tren de Aragua, how do we know everyone in that boat was an enemy fighter? I think Congress needs to know that.”

### Trump Defends Military Strikes and Signals Possible Escalation

When asked at the White House why the U.S. does not use the Coast Guard to intercept Venezuelan vessels and seize drugs, Trump responded, “We have been doing that for 30 years and it has been totally ineffective.”

He also suggested that the U.S. might strike targets inside Venezuela, a move that would markedly escalate tensions and legal concerns. So far, the strikes have occurred in international waters outside any single country’s jurisdiction.

Trump said, “We’ve almost totally stopped it by sea. Now we’ll stop it by land.”

Regarding a New York Times report that he authorized a covert CIA operation in Venezuela, Trump declined to confirm whether he had given the CIA authority to take out Maduro, calling it “ridiculous” to answer.

### Legal and Historical Context of Covert Operations

Numerous U.S. laws and executive orders since the 1970s prohibit the assassination of foreign officials. Yet, by declaring Venezuelan criminals “unlawful combatants,” Trump may be attempting to circumvent these restrictions, possibly reviving a historical pattern of covert regime-change operations akin to those in Guatemala, Chile, and Iran.

Finkelstein noted, “If you pose a threat, and are making war on the U.S., you’re not a protected person.”

During Trump’s first term, Maduro was indicted on federal drug-related charges, including narcoterrorism and conspiracy to import cocaine. This year, the Justice Department doubled the reward for information leading to Maduro’s arrest to $50 million, labeling him “one of the largest narco-traffickers in the world.”

### Drug Trade Realities and Geographic Focus

Despite the intense focus on Venezuela, the bulk of American overdose deaths stem from fentanyl, primarily transported by land from Mexico. While Venezuela is a significant drug transit zone, about 75% of the cocaine produced in Colombia—the world’s largest producer—is smuggled through the eastern Pacific Ocean, not the Caribbean.

### Congressional and International Oversight Lacking

Under the U.S. Constitution, only Congress can declare war. Yet no indications suggest congressional pushback against Trump’s broad interpretation of presidential authority to target drug cartels blamed for tens of thousands of American overdose deaths annually.

The GOP-controlled Senate recently voted down a war powers resolution sponsored by Democrats, which would have required the president to seek congressional authorization for further military strikes.

Even amid calls from some Republicans for more transparency, the Trump administration has yet to provide compelling evidence to lawmakers that the targeted vessels were carrying narcotics, according to two U.S. officials familiar with the matter.

Senator Angus King (I-Maine) revealed that members of the Senate Armed Services Committee were denied access in a classified briefing to the Pentagon’s legal opinion on whether the strikes complied with U.S. law.

### Legal Challenges and International Court Prospects

Legal opposition is unlikely to deter the White House. A 1973 Supreme Court ruling, stemming from a lawsuit aimed at halting the Vietnam War’s spread to Laos and Cambodia, set a high legal threshold for challenging military orders.

Families of those killed in the boat strikes also confront legal hurdles after several high court decisions have limited the ability of foreign citizens to sue in U.S. courts.

The strikes occurred in international waters, which could open the door for the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate, similar to its probes into alleged war crimes in Russia and Israel—both countries, like the U.S., do not recognize the ICC’s authority.

However, the ICC’s work is currently hampered by a sexual misconduct investigation that led to its chief prosecutor stepping aside. Additionally, U.S. sanctions related to the ICC’s indictment of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have complicated the court’s operations.

### Conclusion

President Trump’s approach to the drug war, invoking a war-on-terror legal framework to justify lethal strikes on Latin American criminal groups, challenges established international and constitutional norms. As this policy unfolds, it raises critical questions about legality, transparency, and long-term geopolitical impacts in the region.
https://ktar.com/national-news/a-war-on-drugs-or-a-war-on-terror-trumps-military-pressure-on-venezuela-blurs-the-lines/5762491/

Russian Drones, Missiles ‘Still Terrorizing Ukraine,’ Zelenskyy Says Ahead Of Meeting With Trump

**Zelenskyy Says Swarm of Russian Drones Attacked His Hometown Ahead of White House Meeting**

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reported that a swarm of Russian drones struck his hometown, Kryviy Rih, in southeastern Ukraine on the evening of October 16, just before his scheduled meeting with US President Donald Trump at the White House.

Zelenskyy described the attack as a stark example of how Russia continues to “terrorize Ukraine.” He noted that dozens more attack drones were observed in Ukrainian skies, along with missile launches targeting critical infrastructure. “In fact, not a single night in recent weeks has passed without Russian strikes on Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said in a post on X after arriving in Washington ahead of talks with Trump.

Highlighting the ongoing conflict, Zelenskyy emphasized that Russia will only stop the war when it can no longer sustain it. He stressed that Russia’s readiness for peace is demonstrated not through words but by ceasing attacks and killings. “Therefore, every air defense system for Ukraine matters,” he asserted. “Every decision that can strengthen us brings the end of the war closer. Security can be guaranteed if everything we have agreed on, including here in Washington, is implemented.”

### Discussions on Air Defenses and Long-Range Capabilities Expected

The upcoming talks between Trump and Zelenskyy are expected to cover Ukraine’s air defense needs and long-range strike capabilities. There is particular focus on the possibility of the US supplying Ukraine with Tomahawk missiles, a key point amid escalating tensions.

Earlier on October 16, Trump surprised many by announcing that he and Russian President Vladimir Putin had spoken by phone and agreed to meet in Budapest. According to Trump’s social media statement, a meeting of high-level advisers is planned for the following week to prepare for the summit, with an aim “to see if we can bring this ‘inglorious’ war, between Russia and Ukraine, to an end.”

Trump also revealed that the US delegation would be led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The precise location for the meeting remains undecided, but Trump expects it to occur “within two weeks” and be hosted by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Orban, who has maintained cordial relations with Russia and been skeptical about military aid to Ukraine, welcomed the planned summit. On X, he described it as “great news for the peace-loving people of the world” and declared, “We are ready!”

### Kremlin and White House Praise Phone Call

Both the Kremlin and the White House hailed the Trump-Putin phone call as “good” and “productive.” Kremlin foreign policy adviser Yury Ushakov described the conversation as “extremely frank and trustful” and indicated that further details would be discussed in an upcoming call between Rubio and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Ushakov conveyed that Putin told Trump supplying Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine would not alter the battlefield situation but would undermine peace efforts and damage US-Russia relations.

### Zelenskyy Sees Signs of Moscow’s Eagerness to Resume Dialogue

After arriving in Washington, Zelenskyy posted on Telegram that Russia’s response suggested a keen interest in resuming dialogue, particularly upon hearing of possible US support with Tomahawk missiles. “We can already see that Moscow is rushing to resume dialogue as soon as it hears about Tomahawks,” he remarked on X.

### Trump and Zelenskyy Hold Two Calls Amid Missile Talks

Over the weekend, Trump and Zelenskyy spoke twice as discussions intensified regarding the potential US decision to provide Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine. While Trump has not ruled out supplying the weapons, on October 16 he expressed concern about depleting US Tomahawk stockpiles.

Tomahawk missiles have a range of up to 2,500 kilometers—enough to reach Moscow from Ukraine—and can be equipped with nuclear warheads. Trump described them as a “vicious, offensive, and incredibly destructive weapon,” adding, “Nobody wants Tomahawks shot at them.”

Trump confirmed mentioning Tomahawks during his call with Putin, who “didn’t like the idea.” The missile debate underscores the complex balance between supporting Ukraine’s defense and managing broader geopolitical risks.

*Stay tuned for further updates as diplomatic efforts and military developments continue to unfold.*
https://www.rferl.org/a/zelenskyy-trump-russia-ukraine-tomahawks-putin/33562274.html

‘This is not Gaza’: Palestinians return to war-torn neighborhoods amid ceasefire

Palestinians Return to Gaza After Ceasefire, Find Devastation and Displacement

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip – While some Palestinians returning to the Gaza Strip this week after two years of war showed joy on their faces, many found their old neighborhoods unrecognizable due to relentless fighting that reduced numerous buildings to rubble.

Following a historic ceasefire agreement enacted on Monday, tens of thousands of displaced residents, along with nearly 2,000 Palestinians released from Israeli prisons, made their way back to Gaza—only to find themselves homeless.

“Of course, I was happy about being released, but not happy about being displaced with no safety in place, no life necessities,” said 23-year-old Abdullah Wa’el Mohammed Farhan, one of the former Palestinian prisoners freed on Monday as part of a ceasefire deal brokered by President Donald Trump.

Standing outside a tent in Khan Younis, where he and his family are currently living, Farhan told ABC News that he was imprisoned for 20 months as the war with Israel raged on. He described how, while detained, he and other Palestinian prisoners were “completely isolated from the world.”

“When I was told about my release, I didn’t believe it because more than once [Israeli authorities] told us about our release and moved us from one prison to another while being tortured and beaten,” Farhan said.

ABC News has contacted the Israel Defense Forces and the Israel Prison Service regarding allegations from Farhan and other released prisoners about being tortured and subjected to starvation while incarcerated, but has yet to receive a response.

Abdullah’s sister, 21-year-old Samaher Farhan, spoke to ABC News about their reunion. While thankful to be together again, she expressed sadness that her brother had to return to a community ravaged by war.

“When I saw Abdullah yesterday, it was mixed feelings of happiness and sadness because of how he looked before he went to prison and how he looked now,” Samaher said. She hopes to resume living in their home, which remains intact but is located in an area currently uninhabitable.

“For the time being, we are living in a tent,” she added. “We felt bad that this is not a worthy welcoming of a prisoner. How can he come out to a worn tent? So, it was a sad feeling. I even tried not to meet him or sit with him for a long time because the situation is dire in this worn tent.”

She recalled that when Abdullah was taken prisoner, their neighborhood was still in good shape. “It was barely 1% of the destruction we have now,” she said.

Devastation Across Gaza

The United Nations and other organizations have reported that there is no safe place left in the Gaza Strip, which measures approximately 25 miles long by 7.5 miles wide. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have designated most of the war-torn territory as a “no-go zone,” issuing evacuation orders for civilians, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

A damage assessment by the U.N. Satellite Centre found that 83% of all structures in Gaza City—the capital of the Palestinian territory—have been damaged. The assessment identified at least 17,734 structures destroyed, representing about 43% of the total number of damaged structures.

In a report issued on Tuesday, the U.N. estimated that it will cost approximately $70 billion to reconstruct Gaza.

Human Toll of the Conflict

According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health’s latest report on Wednesday, nearly 68,000 Palestinians were killed in the Gaza Strip during the war. The conflict began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists launched a surprise attack on Israel, killing more than 1,200 people and taking about 250 others hostage.

The final 20 living Israeli hostages were released by Hamas on Monday as part of the ceasefire deal.

Voices from Those Released

Shadi Abu Sido, a Palestinian photojournalist released from Israeli prison on Monday, expressed shock at the widespread devastation in Gaza since his detention in March 2024.

“I entered Gaza and found it to be like a scene of Judgment Day,” Sido said in a video testimony. “This is not Gaza. Where is the world?”

He shared that while in prison, an Israeli officer told him his wife and two children had been killed during the war. However, upon returning to his home in Khan Younis, he discovered they were alive.

“I heard her voice, I heard my children—I was astonished. It cannot be explained, they were alive,” Sido told Reuters.

For another Palestinian prisoner, the joy of being freed was quickly replaced by heartbreak upon learning that his three children—aged 2, 5, and 8—had died in the conflict.

In a video testimony, the man, whose name has not been released, is seen falling to his knees and sobbing. Holding a bracelet in his hand, he explained that he had made it in prison and planned to give it to his youngest daughter.

“I made this for my daughter, whose birthday was supposed to be in five days,” he said in the video.

ABC News’ Bill Hutchinson contributed to this report.

https://abcnews.go.com/International/gaza-palestinians-return-war-torn-neighborhoods-amid-fragile/story?id=126551546

エネルギー施設攻撃の死者6人に ウクライナ、警戒呼びかけ

2025年10月11日 6:07更新(2025年10月11日 6:08更新)

【有料会員限定記事】

【キーウ共同】ウクライナメディアは10日、同国各地のエネルギーインフラを標的にしたロシア軍の一斉攻撃による死者が6人になったと伝えました。

また、首都キーウのクリチコ市長は、12人が負傷したと報告し、「数日以内に新たな攻撃がある」と警戒を呼びかけています。

※本記事は有料会員限定です。残り365文字をご覧いただけます。7日間の無料トライアルを利用すると、1日37円で読み放題。年払いならさらにお得です。

――――――――――――

【西日本新聞meとは?】

クリップ機能は有料会員の方のみご利用いただけます。

――――――――――――

[シェアする]
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https://www.nishinippon.co.jp/item/1410196/

ロシア無人機、鉄道の標的増える ウクライナ市民に恐怖、経済打撃

国際
ロシア無人機、鉄道の標的増える
ウクライナ市民に恐怖、経済打撃

2025年10月11日 8:15(同日8:16更新)
[有料会員限定記事]

【キーウ共同】ロシアが侵攻するウクライナで、鉄道や主要駅の施設を狙った攻撃が増加している。

今夏以降、長距離飛行できる無人機の編隊による攻撃が頻発しており、日常の足として鉄道を利用する市民に恐怖を与えている。この状況は、人や物の移動に大きな支障をもたらし、ウクライナ経済に深刻な打撃を与えている。

※この記事は有料会員限定です。続きをご覧になるには、7日間無料トライアル(1日37円で読み放題)または年払いプランをご利用ください。

【西日本新聞meとは?】
(サービス内容の紹介が入る場合はこちらに記載)
https://www.nishinippon.co.jp/item/1410215/

Two years since the October 7 massacre and the trauma is far from over – opinion

Two Years Since the October 7 Massacre: The Trauma Is Far From Over

The calculated sadism inflicted on women and men, soldiers and civilians, young and old—entire communities—was unprecedented. Sexual violence was an intentional component of the enemy strategy.

Demonstrators hold signs against what they describe as international silence over sexual violence perpetrated against Israeli women during the attack by Hamas on southern Israel on October 7, at a protest in Jerusalem, November 27, 2023.
(Photo credit: REUTERS/DEDI HAYUN)

By ORIT SULITZEANU
https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-869608

Two years since the October 7 massacre and the trauma is far from over – opinion

Two Years Since the October 7 Massacre: The Trauma Is Far from Over

The calculated sadism inflicted on women and men, soldiers and civilians, young and old—entire communities—was unprecedented. Sexual violence was not incidental; it was an intentional component of the enemy’s strategy.

Demonstrators recently held signs protesting what they describe as international silence over sexual violence perpetrated against Israeli women during the Hamas attack on southern Israel on October 7. The protest took place in Jerusalem on November 27, 2023.

(Photo credit: REUTERS/DEDI HAYUN)

By ORIT SULITZEANU
https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-869608