Soltz and Macron communicate with Putin: Call for immediate ceasefire in Ukraine

Telephone conversation with the Russian president Vladimir Putin German Chancellor Olaf Soltz and French President Emmanuel Macron had today. The two leaders demanded an immediate ceasefire in Ukraine, a German government official said.

The two Western leaders also told the Russian president today that any solution to the war in Ukraine should come from “negotiations between Ukraine and Russia”the official added.

“Mr Macron and Mr Soltz insisted that any solution to this crisis should come from negotiations between Ukraine and Russia,” the German government source said, adding that during the conversation the two Western leaders ” They also demanded an “immediate ceasefire from Russia” in Ukraine.

The three leaders agreed to remain in close contact in the coming days, concluded the German government official, as broadcast by international agencies and the Athens News Agency.

Europe is preparing for an increase in the number of Ukrainian refugees

Meanwhile, Eastern Europe is currently preparing to increase their numbers refugees from the bombed cities of Ukraine as the clashes continue after the escalation of the Russian invasion while the United Nations announced that more than 2.3 million people had fled the country.

Ukraine hopes to begin evacuating civilians via seven “humanitarian corridors” today, a day after announcing that a children’s hospital had been hit by a Russian airstrike in Mariupol, where thousands of people are trapped without access to water, medicine or food.

Both sides have blamed both sides for the failure of previous attempts to evacuate civilians. Russia called the hospital bombing “fake news.” The district governor said 17 people were injured.

“We are only seeing the beginning, unfortunately, and I think there will be many millions more”EU Home Affairs Commissioner Elva Johansson told Swedish radio.

Authorities and volunteers across Central and Eastern Europe have spent the past two weeks trying to provide food, shelter and medical assistance to the many thousands of refugees crossing the border.

“We are preparing for refugees from war zones,” said Witold Volczyk of the mayor’s office in Przemysl, a town west of the Polish border crossing at Medica, which has become a major transit point for refugees.

“We have psychologists on the spot. They have not been so busy until now. “If it turns out that we need more professionals to help people with mental illness, we will look for them.”

The Polish border guard announced today that 1.43 million people have entered the country from Ukraine since Russia invaded its neighboring country on February 24. President Vladimir Putin has said his “special military operation” is aimed at “de-Naziizing” Ukraine, a position rejected by the West as baseless propaganda.

Nearly 350,000 people have crossed into Romania from Ukraine, while more than 150,000 have arrived in Slovakia and Hungary, according to local authorities.

Nadezhda, a 48-year-old woman from Kharkiv in northeastern Ukraine who did not want to be named, arrived in Poland on foot today with her two daughters.

“We will try to be a little more comfortable, see what is available and try to live,” she said, as she crossed the Medica pass, limping as she had broken a heel in one of her shoes and was carrying two small bags.

The hopes of the refugees to be able to return home one day are diminishing day by day. “Kharkiv is lost, half the city is destroyed, there is nothing to return to,” Nadezhda said.

Authorities and non-governmental organizations in Poland have expressed concern that vulnerable refugees may fall victim to criminal acts such as passport theft or forced begging, theft or prostitution and have set up a 24-hour helpline, advertising the in refugee reception centers.

Irena David-Olczyk, head of the Warsaw-based NGO La Strada, which fights against human trafficking, said the key was prevention.

“So far, there are no confirmed cases of human trafficking. “But we expect that in about a month, bad things will happen and fraudulent employers will try to take advantage of the situation,” he told Reuters.

“I am not afraid that people will suffer here, but rather that they will be transported to Western Europe. “We are in a crisis, so an orphanage in sunny Spain may sound nice, but it can also be a trap.”

Source: News Beast

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