Women, children, elderly exit Neo-Nazis steel plant
…from the Washington Post
[ Editor’s Note: At first blush I thought this might be a May Day present to Russia, but then decided…not! My second choice was that the US told Zelensky that the Azov hoodlums offer to sell them by the pound for food and medicine had bad optics and it was time to get them out of the news cycle.
VT knew all along that the hostages were being saved as the ticket for the Neo Nazis to get out, but they are still there, along with the mystery of what comes now. The hostages were not all Donbass people as the city’s population were strong Yanyuchovich supporters when he was overthrown in 2014 NATO coup.
From those that were released earlier a number of them wanted to go to Kiev controlled areas. Why the hell did the Nazis hang onto them all this time, eating up the food when they could have lightened the load?
We may never know that as in war time both sides prefer the version that makes them look best, leaving us to decided who was the bull-shitter.
That there were zero video and photos released of the event also seems strange. I will update as soon as we know more. Happy mother’s day. Eat well, drink and be merry, and happy you are not in the Ukraine war zone … Jim W. Dean ]
First published … May 05, 2022
The development comes as Russia aims to capture the plant — the last sliver of Mariupol still under Ukrainian control — and pressures the soldiers there to surrender. Control of Mariupol would allow Russia to establish a land bridge with annexed Crimea.
Meanwhile, fighting continued in Ukraine’s eastern region, with Kyiv accusing Russian forces Saturday of blowing up three bridges northeast of Kharkiv, the country’s second-largest city, to prevent counterattacks.
In the south, Russian forces launched cruise missiles at the Black Sea port of Odessa on Saturday, hitting a civilian target, according to the Ukrainian military.
First lady Jill Biden, who is in Romania as part of a four-day trip to Eastern Europe, met Ukrainian refugee students and their mothers Saturday at a school in Bucharest. The first lady, who often appeared to be on the verge of tears as she heard harrowing stories of how they fled the war in Ukraine, emphasized her concern over a refugee crisis that “keeps going on and on.”
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