Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Slotegrator to join the debate on Ukraine legislation – SBC News

Slotegrator will provide expert opinion on the viability and sustainability of the Ukraine market at this months Ukrainian Gaming Week (UGW) in Kyiv.

UGW, which will be held from 23-24 March, is entirely dedicated to issues surrounding one of the latest countries to enter the regulated gambling scene.

Opening of new markets means new horizons to reach and new opportunities to grab, said Slotegrator, as it prepares to present its full suite of solutions to those looking to follow the lead of Parimatch, who last week became the first operator to obtain a sports betting licence from Ukraines Commission for Regulation of Gambling and Lotteries (CRGL).

Despite its approval, SBC News learned that Parimatch is still waiting on final decisions from the Verkhovna Rada (Parliament) regarding online gambling taxation, licensing costs and the technical accreditation of systems.

Just last month, Slotegrator Head of Sales Vadim Potapenko gave his thoughts on Ukraines regulatory structure as part of a recent interview originally for Login Casino.

There is no perfect scenario each countrys regulation has its own pros and cons, he shared. Obviously, operators will always have a negative attitude towards taxes they view them as a burdensome expense on top of what they already pay to payment system providers, game developers and affiliates. That is why the simpler the tax scheme is, the easier it is for the operator.

Ukraine is on the right track. There are licences available for both online and land-based projects. Furthermore, the licences are affordable: many will say they are on the high side but I believe that start-ups with the experience and the budget will pop up.

This will reduce risks for the players if a casino has money, it can guarantee that winnings will be paid out. Any new businesses that appear on the Ukrainian market will be well managed projects with sophisticated brands.

In a possible preview for Slotegrators approach at UGW, he added: Operators from other markets might not be aware of acquisition strategies that would work for Ukraine, but if theyve already successfully developed their projects in Europe and Asia, they can definitely find a way to do so in Ukraine, too.

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Slotegrator to join the debate on Ukraine legislation - SBC News

Weekly Update from the OSCE Observer Mission at Russian Checkpoints Gukovo and Donetsk based on information as of 9 March 2021 – Ukraine – ReliefWeb

SUMMARY

*Kamensk-Shakhtinskiy, Russian Federation. The Observer Mission (OM) continues to operate 24/7 at both Border Crossing Points (BCPs). The overall number of border crossings by persons increased at both BCPs compared to the previous week. *

OPERATIONAL REMARKS

The OM is currently operating with 22 permanent international Mission members, including the Chief Observer (CO). The Mission is supported administratively by a staff member and the Chief of Fund Administration based in Vienna.

Update on COVID-19 measures

Activities have been impacted by COVID-19 and measures undertaken by the OM to ensure the safety and duty of care of its Mission members and compliance with measures set by the host country authorities. The Mission is continuing to keep the situation under review, in close contact with the OSCE Secretariat and the Chairpersonship. Following the host country's recommendations, the observers are adhering to distancing. Due to the preventive measures taken by the central and regional authorities, the OM is faced with certain difficulties, but is still able to continue to fulfil its mandate without any limitations in its observation and reporting activities.

OBSERVATIONS AT THE BORDER CROSSING POINTS

**Persons crossing the border **

The profile of persons crossing the border can be categorized as follows:

The average number of entries/exits increased from 6,930 to 7,319 per day at both BCPs compared to last week.

During the reporting period, the majority of border crossings were to Ukraine, with an average net flow of 307 per day for both BCPs. The Donetsk BCP continued to experience much more traffic than the Gukovo BCP.

Responding to the COVID-19 situation, the host country closed its borders for the majority of foreigners starting from 18 March 2020. Among the exceptions of persons allowed to cross the border (which entered into force on 19 March) are Ukrainian citizens and stateless persons holding passports or identification documents proving permanent residence in certain areas of Luhansk and Donetsk regions of Ukraine. In addition, reportedly, due to the threat of the spread of COVID-19, starting from 10 April 2020, the organized passenger transport commuting between the non-government-controlled areas of Luhansk region of Ukraine and the Russian Federation was temporarily suspended and restored from 25 June.

Persons in military-style outfits

During the reporting period, the number of persons in military-style outfits crossing the border was 15, compared to four last week; seven persons crossed into the Russian Federation while eight persons crossed into Ukraine. These individuals crossed the border on foot.

Families with a significant amount of luggage

The OTs continued to report on families, sometimes with elderly persons and/or children, crossing the border at both BCPs with a significant amount of luggage, or travelling in heavily loaded cars. During this reporting week, seven families were observed crossing into the Russian Federation while 17 families were observed crossing into Ukraine, compared to the previous reporting period when six families were observed crossing into the Russian Federation and five families were observed crossing into Ukraine.

**Bus connections **

Regular local and long-distance bus connections continued to operate between Ukraine (mostly from/to the Luhansk region) and the Russian Federation. During the reporting period, the OTs observed an increase in the overall number of buses crossing the border at both BCPs (322 compared to 297 observed during the previous week). There were 169 buses bound for the Russian Federation and 153 bound for Ukraine. Among the bus connections observed by the OTs, the "irregular" route "Sevastopol" was noted.

On some occasions, the OTs noticed the bus drivers removing the itinerary signs from the windshields of their buses, while some buses did not display their route at all. The majority of long-distance buses commuting between the Luhansk region and cities in the Russian Federation had Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region.

Trucks

During the reporting period, the OTs observed a decrease in the overall number of trucks crossing the border at both BCPs (724 compared to 849 during the previous reporting week); 394 at the Gukovo BCP and 330 at the Donetsk BCP, 383 of these trucks crossed into the Russian Federation, and 341 crossed into Ukraine. Most of the trucks observed by the OTs had Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region; however, on a daily basis, the OTs also noted trucks registered in Armenia, Belarus, Lithuania, the Russian Federation, and trucks with "LPR" plates.

The OTs also continued to observe tanker trucks crossing the border in both directions. During the reporting period, the OTs observed a slight increase in the overall number of tanker trucks crossing the border at both BCPs (36 compared to 30 during the previous reporting week). These trucks were observed crossing the border at both BCPs. The trucks had the words "Propane" and "Flammable" written across the tanks in either Russian or Ukrainian. The majority of tanker trucks had hazard signs, indicating that they were transporting propane or a mix of propane and butane. All trucks underwent systematic inspection by Russian Federation officials, which could include an X-ray check. Due to the unfavorable observation position at the Gukovo BCP, the OTs continued to be unable to observe any X-ray checks.

Compared to the previous week, the total number of X-ray checks at the Donetsk BCP increased from 137 to 160. Of the total number of trucks scanned, 160 trucks (100 per cent) were bound for Ukraine.

Minivans

The OM continued to observe passenger and cargo minivans[1] crossing the border in both directions at both BCPs. The OTs observed minivans predominantly with Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region; however, the OTs also saw minivans registered in the Russian Federation. During the reporting period, the OTs observed a decrease in the overall number of minivans crossing the border at both BCPs (130 compared to 198 observed during the previous week); 81 crossed into the Russian Federation and another 49 into Ukraine.

Trains

The OTs continued to pick up the sound of trains on the railway tracks located approximately 150m south-west of the Gukovo BCP. During the reporting week, the OTs heard trains on 27 occasions; the OTs assessed that 15 trains were travelling to the Russian Federation and the remaining 12 trains were travelling to Ukraine (more details are provided in the sections "trends and figures at a glance" below).

Visual observation was not possible because of the line of trees located between the train tracks and the BCP.

Other observations

The majority of vehicles crossing the border had Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region or Russian Federation licence plates. A significant number of vehicles with "LPR" plates were also observed crossing the border in both directions on a daily basis. The OTs observed vehicles with Belarusian, Georgian, and Lithuanian licence plates, and vehicles with "DPR" plates too.

On 5 March at 13:55, the OT at the Donetsk BCP observed a group of nine brand-new ambulances, all "Gazel" models, entering the BCP from the Russian Federation without licence plates and parking at the customs control area. The OT noticed only one driver inside each vehicle. All the vehicles underwent customs control procedures and left for Ukraine at 15:55.

On 8 March at 10:46, the OT at the BCP Donetsk observed a Russian Federation police minivan, also a "Gazel" model, arriving at the BCP from the Russian Federation and parking next to the main building. At 11:02, the police vehicle drove back towards the Russian Federation. The OT was unable to observe any other details from its position.

For trends and figures at a glance covering the period from 2 February 2021 to 9 March 2021, please see the attachment here.

[1] Cargo minivans: light commercial vehicles with a maximum authorized mass of more than 3.5 t and not more than 7.5 t; with or without a trailer with a maximum mass of less than 750 kg (small cargo vehicles that correspond to driving licence C1).

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Weekly Update from the OSCE Observer Mission at Russian Checkpoints Gukovo and Donetsk based on information as of 9 March 2021 - Ukraine - ReliefWeb

Female Resilience in the Gulag: Rethinking Ukrainian Women’s History with Dr. Oksana Kis – Varsity Online

Dr. Oksana Kis is a researcher specialising in Ukrainian women's history. She is also the author of 'Survival as Victory', which tells the story of Ukrainian women's resilience in the Gulag. Olena Anhelova

Bodies in captivity. Survival prostitution. Motherhood behind bars. Even in poorly-lit, insufficiently ventilated, freezing-cold barracks, a society of women somehow managed to sing, to write poetry, and to keep it all together. They ultimately formed national solidarity, brewing an impenetrable camp sisterhood.

These scenes portray the lives of women in the Gulag forced labour camps during Stalins reign in 1940-50s Ukraine. Only half of these women survived, and only a fraction of them lived on to tell their stories today.

Dr. Oksana Kis, President of the Ukrainian Association for Research in Womens History, is an academic who devotes her scholarship to the retelling of the female experience in recent Ukrainian history. Having studied a history degree from the late 80s to the early 90s, Kis was disillusioned by the limited theoretical frameworks of history studies in Soviet times. We had no access to western scholarship, she recounted, so we had no idea that anything like womens history or gender studies existed.

There are many universal patterns in womens experiences, across different cultures, and across different historical periods.

But things took a turn when Kis moved on to study her Masters degree in psychology, where she became inspired to pursue the concept of gender. Under the encouragement of her father, she became a pioneering academic force, unspooling the deeper meaning of femininity in post-industrial Ukraine. Her most recent book, Survival as Victory, has been released by the Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University. From descriptions of camp leisure to heavy discussions of dehumanisation resistance, this book encapsulates engagingly-told episodes of females imprisoned in the Ukrainian Gulag.

Collecting these episodes together and placing them side by side brought Kis to conclude: There are many universal patterns in womens experiences, across different cultures, and across different historical periods. The women we encounter in Kis book lack legal avenues to protect themselves and therefore pursue informal, often illegal methods such as bribery and manipulation to gain access to food, resources and security for their families. It is this caregiving role as well as the flexible, informal methods used to achieve it, which characterise womens responses to extreme hardship whether it be political persecution, famine, war, or genocide.

It was forbidden to embroider, to sing, and to pray, but all of these things women did every day adding up to the mass-scale, barely detectable, yet ubiquitous transgressions that undermined the very totality of the Gulag.

For a long time, though, historians of the Gulag remained gender-blind. The past decades embedded gender deeply into scholarship on mass violence and genocide, yet Kis says that until recently, the only gender differences noted in Gulag histories were related to womens sexuality and reproductive function. Survival as Victory explores how women used their sexuality as a resource and their bodies as exchangeable goods, but Kis also pushes beyond this to argue that women have used a variety of gender-based resources. Gendered socialisation gave women knowledge of nursing and nutrition, traditions of storytelling and practices of housekeeping, all skills, beliefs, and behaviours which they actually turned into the tools of survival in the Gulag. Paradoxically, normative femininity could be empowering, providing a transferable skill set and the stable identity of a good Ukrainian woman to hold onto.

This book, then, does not reduce female experience to the body, but uncovers the cultural, spiritual and political identities of women in the Gulag. A good Ukrainian woman was a caregiver, but also typically a Christian and a nationalist. By maintaining these identities, Kis argues, women broke the rules at every step. It was forbidden to embroider, to sing, and to pray, but all of these things women did every day adding up to the mass-scale, barely detectable, yet ubiquitous transgressions that undermined the very totality of the Gulag.

But ubiquitous as transgressions were, surviving records of them are scarce. Thousands of Ukrainian women went through the Gulag system, but often only handwritten memoirs were produced which were left to family and friends and, over time, forgotten. Pain is still vivid in the testimonies that the book uses, though, and this presented a methodological and moral dilemma to Kis. Pointing out that she was just two generations away from these women, Kis said that she felt connected by gender, by ethnicity to these women, as if they were her foremothers. Yet a historian is schooled to keep emotional distance, and Kis also wanted to avoid the common victimisation of womens historical experience. Emotionally loaded though these narratives are, the women were speaking of their experience from the point of view of the winners; they saw themselves as those who overcame. Rather than digging into their suffering and pain, Kis decided to focus on their survival strategies and resistance methods in order to preserve their human dignity. Even those who died, she says, deserve to be respected, not just presented as victims.

When women are limited in their rights and resources, they are stronger if they protect their interests together.

Despite focusing on a particular population in a specific time in history, the book is not exclusively directed to academics. Kis presents memoirs in a style that could captivate readers within and beyond the circle of history buffs, and further, her work serves as a critical reminder that generalisations stand weak when researching socially complex phenomena. Although Russians did constitute the majority of Gulag prisoners, Kis maintains that Ukrainians also made up 20% of the inmates, so we cannot just discard that group and neglect their specific experiences. This argument stands solid if we consider Ukrainian womens particular oppositions of the Soviet regime a theme that, according to Kis, was virtually non-existent in Russian Gulag memoirs.

Ultimately, Kis wrote this book not to victimise women nor to incriminate men, but quite the contrary to celebrate those who overcame, who made it through. Her work recognises female adaptability, strength, rebellion, and solidarity during extreme hardships a perspective that has arguably been undermined in history. In light of International Womens Day, Kis message has the power to inspire womanhood beyond Ukrainian borders: when women are limited in their rights and resources, they are stronger if they protect their interests together.

Varsity is the independent newspaper for the University of Cambridge, established in its current form in 1947. In order to maintain our editorial independence, our print newspaper and news website receives no funding from the University of Cambridge or its constituent Colleges.

We are therefore almost entirely reliant on advertising for funding, and during this unprecedented global crisis, we expect to have a tough few months and years ahead.

In spite of this situation, we are going to look at inventive ways to look at serving our readership with digital content and of course in print too.

Therefore we are asking our readers, if they wish, to make a donation from as little as 1, to help with our running costs at least until this global crisis ends and things begin to return to normal.

Many thanks, all of us here at Varsity would like to wish you, your friends, families and all of your loved ones a safe and healthy few months ahead.

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Female Resilience in the Gulag: Rethinking Ukrainian Women's History with Dr. Oksana Kis - Varsity Online

‘I could hear my heart racing’: Ukrainian women referee recalls journey to the top – Reuters

KYIV (Reuters) - Kateryna Monzul made history in 2016 when she became the first female referee in Ukraine to officiate a soccer match in the mens top division, a game between Chornomorets Odesa against Volyn Lutsk.

Despite the mental training, when I went out on the soccer pitch and watched the teams lining up, I could hear my heart racing. I was overwhelmed with emotions, recalls Monzul.

That game was part of a journey for the 39-year-old that began with refereeing childrens and youth championships and took her all the way to refereeing the Womens World Cup Final between the United States and Japan in 2015.

Since then she became the first woman to referee Ukraines domestic cup final last year and was named the best referee in the mens division by the Ukrainian Association of Football in an otherwise male field.

Women referees at mens top flight soccer matches are rare. Frances Stephanie Frappart became the first woman to referee a major UEFA competition final in 2019 and in December she also became the first woman to referee a mens Champions League match when she officiated at the Juventus-Dynamo Kyiv game.

This week Monzul joined other women in speaking about the challenges they face and the hopes they have ahead of International Womens Day on Monday.

Monzul grew up in the eastern Kharkiv region with a soccer pitch next to her home.

I played soccer with boys. It was not popular among girls back then, but I liked it, I lived and breathed soccer, said Monzul, who played on boys teams in local tournaments.

Inspired by her uncle, who was a referee, Monzul switched to officiating.

Just like in any other job, the most important thing is to do your job professionally. Then your skills will be in demand, no matter if you are a man or a woman, Monzul told Reuters.

It is the result which matters, not gender.

To be eligible for officiating mens matches, she has to pass a mens fitness test, the toughest part for a woman, Monzul said.

She said there was no difference between refereeing a mens or womens match, except that it is a common thing for mens clubs to gift Monzul flowers.

In 2016 the team which presented me with red flowers got a red card. And since then there is a joke that it is better to give flowers after the game, not before.

Editing by Matthias Williams and Raissa Kasolowsky

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'I could hear my heart racing': Ukrainian women referee recalls journey to the top - Reuters

Market split on whether Ukraine will raise interest rate from 6% this week: Reuters poll – Reuters

KYIV (Reuters) - Analysts are divided on whether Ukraines central bank will raise its key interest rate on March 4 or hold it steady, balancing the need to restrain inflation with supporting a virus-hit economy, a Reuters poll showed on Tuesday.

FILE PHOTO: People wearing protective face masks visit the Central Universal Department Store (TsUM), on the first day after ending a coronavirus lockdown, in Kyiv, Ukraine January 25, 2021. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko

Half of the 16 Ukrainian analysts see the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) holding the rate at a historic post-1991 independence low of 6.0%, to prevent a rise in borrowing costs and to support businesses.

The central bank will not raise the rate despite a significant acceleration of inflation because of the relatively weak performance in industrial production, said Hanna Cherednychenko from the First Ukrainian International Bank.

Industrial output, which started recovering in December, shrank 4.0% year-on-year in January when the government imposed a two-week nationwide lockdown against the spread of the novel coronavirus.

The economy overall contracted by more than 4% last year.

Eight analysts believe that the central bank will raise its rate: six of them expect 6.5% and two expect 6.25%.

This action would fully comply with the current strategy of the NBU on inflation targeting, said Oleksandr Pecherytsyn from Credit Agricole Bank.

Inflation jumped to 6.1% in January, above the central banks target of around 5%, and analysts see February inflation even higher at 7.2%, their median forecast showed.

Central Bank Governor Kyrylo Shevchenko told Reuters last month that the NBU was ready to raise the rate if inflationary pressures strengthened further.

Alexander Paraschiy from Concorde Capital brokerage, who forecasts the rate at 6.5%, said the central bank had to restrain growing inflationary expectations.

The National Bank is unlikely to dare to do a significant increase, but they have to give a signal to the market that they are trying to curb inflation.

Editing by Matthias Williams; editing by Barbara Lewis

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Market split on whether Ukraine will raise interest rate from 6% this week: Reuters poll - Reuters