Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Stress under shelling produces baby boom in Ukraine – Channel NewsAsia

Avdiivka (Ukraine) - Olena Gorbatova gave birth to her third child in war-torn eastern Ukraine to the sounds of gunfire and exploding shells in the Kiev-held flashpoint town of Avdiivka.

The 40-year-old Gorbatova calmed herself by thinking the attacks were just a celebration of the baby girl she named Myroslava -- which in Russian and Ukrainian means "glory to peace".

The wartime birth was not unusual. The town in which dozens were killed in early February has seen a mini baby boom that doctors attribute to the fact that people want to couple in times of stress and a change in women's hormonal behaviour.

"In recent years, we have managed to deliver babies from older families who are now in their 40s," gynaecologist Svitlana Khomchenko told AFP in the dilapidated and partially abandoned town of less then 20,000 people.

"They had been trying without success for many years. And now families who were considered sterile have children," said Khomchenko.

"It turns out that stress is a factor."

MAKING LOVE, NOT WAR?

Gorbatova's 38-year-old husband Sergiy had to make it past a series of road blocks to reach the maternity ward where his wife was resting.

A part of it has been turned into a military hospital. Women about to give birth lie side by side with the wounded from the 34-month revolt in the pro-Russian region that has killed more than 10,000 people and left nearly 25,000 others injured.

Sergiy laughed off local jokes that the rising birth rate is down to the large number of Ukrainian soldiers defending the town.

He admitted that many people tried to convince him not to bring more children into the Ukraine's unsafe world.

"But we still decided to do it," he said.

The fog of war means that no real scientific study can explain why couples have more sex and women appear to be more fertile when disaster strikes.

Gynaecologist Khomchenko simply cites the statistics she has.

The year the war broke out in 2014 there were 45 births in Avdiivka compared with 110 babies born in 2016 -- more than double the figure despite people fleeing the region for more peaceful parts of the ex-Soviet state.

Khomchenko recalls scenes of horror as women were hidden in basements to shield them from exploding shells that blasted out windows and mortar rounds that landed in the hospital's garden.

The city's heating system is periodically not working and the doctor says she has had to take many deliveries by candlelight.

A power generator has been recently installed and the windows replaced.

'GLORY TO PEACE'

The maternity ward stayed open even during the frightening days in early February when constant clashes between rebels and government troops claimed 35 lives in Ukraine's east.

"We worked while people were dying," said Khomchenko.

"But we were forced to move some of the women in labour to neighbouring towns because there was no heat or water."

Now the fighting has eased and the hospital is preparing to bring more babies into the world.

"The situation has normalised -- if, of course, you call a war a normal situation," the gynaecologist said.

Gorbatova and her husband Sergiy say they are preparing for tough times but are still filled with hope for their baby daughter.

"It will be difficult," Sergiy said. "We will have to deny ourselves many things."

But he added with a smile: "We want her name to give people a signal -- enough war and glory to peace."

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Stress under shelling produces baby boom in Ukraine - Channel NewsAsia

Sex workers march in Ukraine demanding legalisation – The Indian Express

By: AFP | Kiev | Published:March 3, 2017 9:57 pm Photographers take photos as sex worker holds a banner reading Sex work is work in front of Cabinet of Ministers in Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, March 3, 2017. A few dozens of sex workers held a rally to demand the legalisation of their work. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

Dozens of sex workers and human rights campaigners gathered in Kiev Friday demanding the legalisation of prostitution in Ukraine. Some 50 activists holding red umbrellas and wearing red plastic helmets staged the first-ever march through the capital with the goal of revoking a legal ban on sex work in the post-Soviet state.

Wearing white plastic masks, the protesters held placards reading Sex work is work, We stand for decriminalisation of sex work, and My work is my choice.

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It is the first time that we have had the courage to come out and say that we exist, Yuliya Dorokhova of Legalife. a Ukrainian non-governmental organisation for sex workers, said standing in front of the parliament building.

We ask the authorities to lift the punishment for sex work. We would like to pay taxes rather than fines, she added.

According to human rights campaigners, there are some 80,000 sex workers in Ukraine who feel vulnerable -particularly to police abuse due to their profession being outside the law. Being illegal in Ukraine, prostitution is punishable by a fine up to 255 hryvnias ($9/euros).

We want our state to protect us. If a woman was able to sell sex legally, she would pay money to the state budget, Dorokhova said.

The women who work in existing brothels have to hand police their her earnings as protection money, she added.

Due to the legal ban on prostitution, Ukraines police are often accused of demanding money from sex workers to avoid fines and even beating them.

We often suffer from fines and even physical abuse (by the police), sex worker Valya, 30, told AFP wearing a white plastic mask to hid her face.

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Sex workers march in Ukraine demanding legalisation - The Indian Express

Ukraine ‘Blockaders’ Cut Off Rail Traffic From Rebel Areas – New York Times


New York Times
Ukraine 'Blockaders' Cut Off Rail Traffic From Rebel Areas
New York Times
The blockaders, as they call themselves, are a relatively new movement but are already becoming relevant to the delicate politics of peace in Ukraine, seemingly a focus of the Trump administration as it seeks to establish warmer ties with Russia. Their ...
Ukrainian Gas Producers Are Reducing The Country's Dependency On RussiaForbes
What the IMF Doesn't Know About UkraineBloomberg
Russia-backed rebels take over factories, mines in UkraineThe Spokesman-Review
BBC News -RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty -Irish Times
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Ukraine 'Blockaders' Cut Off Rail Traffic From Rebel Areas - New York Times

Deadly coal mine blast in western Ukraine – BBC News


BBC News
Deadly coal mine blast in western Ukraine
BBC News
At least eight miners have been killed after a methane explosion in a coal mine in western Ukraine. Emergency officials said 34 miners were working in the area of the blast, about 500m underground. Six injured were brought to the surface soon afterwards.
At least 8 killed in Ukraine coal mine blast; 20 missingFox News
Coal-Mine Blast, Collapse In Western Ukraine Kills EightRadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
Methane gas explosion kills 8 miners in western Ukraine, 20 missingPittsburgh Post-Gazette
The Straits Times -Hawaii News Now -RT
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Deadly coal mine blast in western Ukraine - BBC News

British Parliament wants to clarify what will be with Ukraine-EU Association Agreement after Brexit – Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

The Parliament of the United Kingdom has called on the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) to clarify whether the Ukraine-EU Association Agreement will apply to UK-Ukraine political and economic relations after it leaves the EU, according to a report of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the UK Parliament, which was posted on Parliaments official website.

It is noted that if the UK is no longer a party to the Association Agreement after it leaves the EU, then the FCO should begin planning a successor agreement.

Clearly the EU relationship with Ukraine will continue and we will need to develop our own bilateral relationship with Ukraine, which we will want to do. It will be supportive of Ukraine and Ukrainian reform and trade, where our interests remain, Tim Barrow, Political Director of the FCO said.

The report says that the FCO should continue to work with the EU, Canada and USA on supporting Ukraine.

In the long term, the UK and its allies should support Ukraine in developing resilience to further Russian encroachment and in building its social, political and physical infrastructure, which will facilitate further engagement with the West and allow Ukraine to engage with Russia on a level playing field, reads the report.

Also, it is noted that 20 million is foreseen in the Good Governance Fund to support Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova, Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Thus, Ukraine alone would justify the investment of British resources of hundreds of millions of pounds to improve governance, according to the report.

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British Parliament wants to clarify what will be with Ukraine-EU Association Agreement after Brexit - Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news