On Air Now:
Now Playing:Loading...
site loader
January 9, 2023 Martinez Named New Portugal Head Coach

Martinez Named New Portugal Head Coach

Former Belgium coach Roberto Martinez has been chosen manager of Portugal, according to the country’s football organization (FPF).

“I appreciate the enthusiasm and ambition with which he [Martinez] received the invitation,” FPF president Fernando Gomes told a news conference.

“This is an important moment for the national team.”

Following Belgium’s sad World Cup group stage elimination, the Spaniard resigned as coach, claiming he had taken the choice to finish his six-year career some time ago and would have departed even if they had won the tournament.

It marked the end of a lengthy tenure in command of the team he led to the top of FIFA’s global rankings and third place in the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

The 49-year-old takes over for former Portugal coach Fernando Santos, who resigned after the side was stunned by Morocco in the quarter-finals in Qatar.

August 18, 2022 Russia Is Recruiting Prisoners To Fight In War

Russia Is Recruiting Prisoners To Fight In War

Human rights advocates claim that Russian jails are actively looking for volunteers to take part in Moscow's conflict with the neighboring Ukraine.

According to Olga Romanova, authorities were enlisting suspects and defendants with the promise that in return, they would have their criminal cases dropped. '

In a Facebook post, a Russian human rights activist residing in Berlin gave examples from pre-trial detention facilities near Moscow.

“But I think it has started everywhere,’’ said Romanova, a specialist on prisoners’ rights in Russia.

Moscow depends on volunteers as general conscription has not been introduced to fill the ranks of its armed forces fighting in Ukraine, in the invasion that began in February.

There may be a scarcity of personnel at the front if authorities are posting street advertisements seeking people to fight in the battle in many regions.

At the moment, cities and regions are creating their own battalions.

Since practically all indictments in the Russian judicial system result in guilty verdicts, suspects and defendants often looked to be offered the option of choosing between prison or war.

The recruitment techniques in jails were confirmed by Vladimir Ossetschkin, the exiled founder of Gulaga.net, an initiative designed to reduce violence in Russian prisons.

He said that St. Petersburg, Ryazan, Tver, and Bryansk had all reported seeing evidence of the practice.

Russian media have been reporting on the search for volunteers in the nation’s many penal camps since July, according to the Meduza website, which said Wagner mercenary group was recruiting convicts.

Yevgeny Prigozhin, a wanted Kremlin businessman and backer of Wagner, personally recruited volunteers in prison camps, the Mediazona website reported.

The prisoners were said to have been promised monthly pay of 100,000 roubles (1,625 dollars) along with bonuses, payments to their families in the event of death, and an amnesty.

 

MORE STORIES

August 5, 2022 US Urges Russia To Accept Deal To Free Brittany Griner

US Urges Russia To Accept Deal To Free Brittany Griner

The US has urged the Russian government to accept a deal to free basketball player Brittney Griner, who has been sentenced to nine years in a Russian prison.

The double Olympic winner was convicted of possession and smuggling drugs after admitting to possessing cannabis oil.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby said the US offer was "a serious proposal", but gave no details.

On Friday, Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow is ready to discuss the topic.

US media reports suggest Washington is offering a prisoner swap involving a Russian arms trafficker named Viktor Bout - known as the "merchant of death", who is serving a 25 year-prison sentence in the US.

 Brittany Griner
US Urges Russia To Accept Deal To Free Brittany Griner

He could be transferred by Washington to the Russian authorities in exchange for Griner and former US Marine Paul Whelan, the reports say.

Whelan, who has US, British, Canadian and Irish passports, was sentenced in 2020 to 16 years in jail in Russia after being convicted of spying.

Mr Kirby told reporters that the duo were being wrongfully detained and needed to be let go.

31-year-old Griner told the court she had made an "honest mistake" and had not intended to break the law.

Considered one of the best female players in the world, she was detained in February at an airport near Moscow when vape cartridges containing cannabis oil were found in her luggage. She had come to Russia to play club basketball during the US off-season.

Her defence team said they would appeal against the verdict.

MORE STORIES

April 20, 2022 Canada Places Sanctions On Putin’s Daughters

Canada Places Sanctions On Putin’s Daughters

Canada announced on Tuesday that it would place sanctions on 14 associates of the Russian government, including President Vladimir Putin’s two daughters.

Mélanie Joly, Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that they would answer for their crimes.

"We will continue to impose severe costs on the Russian regime in coordination with our allies and will relentlessly pursue accountability for their actions,’’ Joly stated.

Putin’s daughters, Maria Putina and Katerina Tikhonova, have already felt the economic impact of the Russia-Ukraine war.

Few details are known about the two since Putin has kept them out of public glare for security concerns.

Their mother is Lyudmila Putina, who was married to the president before they ended their relationship in 2013.

Maria leads Russia’s state-funded programme that work on genetic programmes overseen by the Kremlin, while Katerina works on publicly-funded projects at Moscow State University and oversees an artificial intelligence institute.

The U.S. Treasury Department reports that Katerina also does work supporting the Russian defence industry.

It was not publicly known that Maria is Putin’s daughter until 2015, when blogger Oleg Kashin published the news, considering her surname is from her grandmother.

She is reportedly married to Dutch businessman Jorrit Joost Faassen.

Katerina married Russian businessman Kirill Shamalov in 2013, but they divorced in 2018.

 

MORE STORIES

 

Watch Live

x
PHP Code Snippets Powered By : XYZScripts.com
X