News And PoliticsCommunications And EntertainmentSports And FitnessHealth And LifestyleOthersGeneralWorldnewsBusiness And MoneyNigerianewsRelationship And MarriageStories And PoemsArts And EducationScience And TechnologyCelebrityEntertainmentMotivationalsReligion And PrinciplesNewsFood And KitchenHealthPersonal Care And BeautyBusinessFamily And HolidaysStoriesIT And Computer ScienceSportsRelationshipsLawLifestyleComedyReligionLifetipsEducationMotivationAgriculturePoliticsAnnouncementUSMLE And MedicalsMoneyEngineeringPoemsSocial SciencesHistoryFoodGive AidBeautyMarriageQuestions And AnswersHobbies And HandiworksVehicles And MobilityTechnologyFamilyPrinciplesNatureQuotesFashionAdvertisementChildrenKitchenGive HelpArtsWomenSpiritualityQuestions AnsweredAnimalsHerbal MedicineSciencePersonal CareFitnessTravelSecurityOpinionMedicineHome RemedyMenReviewsHobbiesGiveawayHolidaysUsmleVehiclesHandiworksHalloweenQ&A
Top Recent
Loading...
You are not following any account(s)
dataDp/1032.jpeg
Worldnews

Donald Trump Live: US Senate Votes On Amendments To Big, Beautiful Bill
~0.2 mins read
Democrats have criticised Republican president’s revised budget for its cuts to social welfare spending and its tax benefits for the wealthy. Trump’s ‘big, beautiful’ but controversial bill faces crucial vote Follow Al Jazeera English:...
Read this story on Aljazeera
dataDp/1032.jpeg
Worldnews

Putin Confirms He Wants All Of Ukraine, As Europe Steps Up Military Aid
~7.3 mins read
Trump made no pledge of assistance to Ukraine at last week’s NATO summit, but said he’d ‘try’ and sell it Patriot interceptors. Ukraine’s European allies pledged increased levels of military aid to Ukraine this year, making up for a United States aid freeze, as Russian President Vladimir Putin reaffirmed his ambition to absorb all of Ukraine into the Russian Federation. “At this moment, the Europeans and the Canadians have pledged, for this year, $35bn in military support to Ukraine,” said NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte ahead of the alliance’s annual summit, which took place in The Hague on Tuesday and Wednesday, June 24-25. “Last year, it was just over $50bn for the full year. Now, before we reach half year, it is already at $35bn. And there are even others saying it’s already close to $40bn,” he added. The increase in European aid partly made up for the absence of any military aid offers so far from the Trump administration. In April, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy offered to buy the US Patriot air defence systems Ukraine needs to fend off daily missile and drone attacks. The Trump administration made its first sale of weapons to Ukraine the following month, but only of F-16 aircraft parts. At The Hague this week, Zelenskyy said he discussed those Patriot systems with Trump. At a news conference on Wednesday, Trump said: “We’re going to see if we can make some available,” referring to interceptors for existing Patriot systems in Ukraine. “They’re very hard to get. We need them too, and we’ve been supplying them to Israel,” he said. Russia has made a ceasefire conditional on Ukraine’s allies stopping the flow of weapons to it and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov repeated that condition on Saturday. On June 20, Vladimir Putin revealed that his ambition to annex all of Ukraine had not abated. “I have said many times that the Russian and Ukrainian people are one nation, in fact. In this sense, all of Ukraine is ours,” he declared at a media conference to mark the opening of the Saint Petersburg Economic Forum on Friday, June 20. “But you know we have an old parable, an old rule: wherever a Russian soldier steps, it is ours.” “Wherever a Russian soldier steps, he brings only death, destruction, and devastation,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said the next day. In a post on the Telegram messaging platform on June 21, Zelenskyy wrote that Putin had “spoken completely openly”. “Yes, he wants all of Ukraine,” he said. “He is also speaking about Belarus, the Baltic states, Moldova, the Caucasus, countries like Kazakhstan.” German army planners agreed about Putin’s expansionism, deeming Russia an “existential threat” in a new strategy paper 18 months in the making, leaked to Der Spiegel news magazine last week. Moscow was preparing its military leadership and defence industries “specifically to meet the requirements for a large-scale conflict against NATO by the end of this decade”, the paper said. “We in Germany ignored the warnings of our Baltic neighbours about Russia for too long. We have recognised this mistake,” said German chancellor Friedrich Merz on Tuesday, highlighting the reason for an about-turn from his two predecessors’ refusal to spend more on defence. “There is no going back from this realisation. We cannot expect the world around us to return to calmer times in the near future,” he added.
Germany, along with other European NATO allies, agreed on Wednesday to raise defence spending to 5 percent of gross domestic product by 2035. It was a sign of the increasingly common threat perception from Russia, but also a big win for Trump, who had demanded that level of spending shortly after winning re-election as US president last year. Of that, 1.5 percent is for military-related spending like dual-purpose infrastructure, emergency healthcare, cybersecurity and civic resilience. Even Trump, who has previously expressed admiration for Putin, seemed to be souring on him. “I consider him a person that’s, I think, been misguided,” he said after a moment’s thought at his NATO news conference. “I’m very surprised actually. I thought we would have had that settled easy,” referring to the conflict in Ukraine. “Vladimir Putin really has to end that war,” he said. In the early weeks of his administration, Trump appeared to think it was up to Ukraine to end the war. Putin continued his ground war during the week of the NATO summit, launching approximately 200 assaults each day, according to Ukraine’s General Staff – a high average. Ukraine, itself, was fighting 695,000 Russian troops on its territory, said Zelenskyy on Saturday, with another 52,000 attempting to create a new front in Sumy, northeast Ukraine. “This week they advanced 200 metres towards Sumy, and we pushed them back 200–400 metres,” he said, a battle description typical of the stagnation Russian troops face along the thousand-kilometre front. Russia continued its campaign of demoralisation among Ukrainian civilians, sending drones and missiles into Ukraine’s cities. Russian drones and missiles killed 30 civilians and injured 172 in Kyiv on June 19. “This morning I was at the scene of a Russian missile hitting a house in Kyiv,” said Zelenskyy. “An ordinary apartment building. The missile went through all the floors to the basement. Twenty-three people were killed by just one Russian strike.” “There was no military sense in this strike, it added absolutely nothing to Russia militarily,” he said. Overnight, Russia attacked Odesa, Kharkiv and their suburbs with more than 20 strike drones. At least 10 of the drones struck Odesa. A four-storey building engulfed in flames partly collapsed on top of rescue workers, injuring three firefighters. A drone attack on Kyiv killed at least seven people on Monday this week. “There were 352 drones in total, and 16 missiles,” said Zelenskyy, including “ballistics from North Korea”. A Russian drone strike on the Dnipropetrovsk region on Tuesday killed 20 people and injured nearly 300, according to the regional military administration. Ukraine, too, is focused on long-range weapons production. Five of its drones attacked the Shipunov Instrument Design Bureau in Tula on June 18 and 20. Shipunov is a key developer of high-precision weapons for the Russian armed forces, said Ukraine, and the strikes damaged the plant’s warehouses and administration building, causing it to halt production. “Thousands of drones have been launched toward Moscow in recent months,” revealed Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin last week, adding that air defences had shot almost all of them down. But Ukraine is constantly improving designs and increasing production. On Monday, the United Kingdom announced that Ukraine would be providing its drone manufacturers with “technology datasets from Ukraine’s front line” to improve the design of British-made drones that would be shipped to Ukraine. “Ukraine is the world leader in drone design and execution, with drone technology evolving, on average, every six weeks,” the announcement from Downing Street said. On the same day, Norway said it would invert that relationship, to produce surface drones in Ukraine using Norwegian technology. Zelenskyy said this Build with Ukraine programme, in which Ukraine and its allies share financing, technology and production capacity, would ultimately work for missile production in Ukraine as well. His goal is ambitious. “We want 0.25 percent of the GDP of a particular partner state to be allocated for our defence industry for domestic production next year,” he said. Among Ukraine’s projects is a domestically produced ballistic missile, the Sapsan, which can carry a 480kg warhead for a distance of 500km – enough to reach halfway to Moscow from Ukraine’s front line. Asked whether the Sapsan could reach Moscow, Zelenskyy’s office director, Andriy Yermak, told the UK’s Times newspaper: “Things are moving very well. I think we will be able to surprise our enemies on many occasions.” Ukraine’s ambition to join NATO and the European Union, leaving Russian orbit, is what triggered this war, and Russia has said that giving up both those clubs is a condition of peace. NATO first invited Ukraine to its 2008 Summit in Bucharest. But in February, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said NATO membership for Ukraine was not a “realistic outcome of a negotiated settlement”, and a “final” ceasefire offer from the White House on April 17 included a ban on NATO membership for Ukraine. Despite this, on Wednesday, Rutte told Reuters: “The whole of NATO, including the United States, is totally committed to keep Ukraine in the fight.” Earlier this month, Rutte told a discussion at the Chatham House think tank in London that a political commitment to Ukraine’s future membership of NATO remained unchanged, even if it was not explicitly mentioned in the final communique of the NATO summit. “The irreversible path of Ukraine into NATO is there, and it is my assumption that it is still there after the summit,” Rutte said. If that gave Ukrainians renewed hope, this was perhaps dashed by the European Union’s inability last week to open new chapters in its own membership negotiations. That was because Slovakia decided to veto the move to do so in the European Council, the EU’s governing body. Slovakia also blocked an 18th sanctions package the EU was set to approve this week, because it would completely cut the EU off from Russian oil and gas imports. Slovakia and Hungary have argued they need Russian energy because they are landlocked. Their leaders, Robert Fico and Viktor Orban, have been the only EU leaders to visit Moscow during the war in Ukraine. Zelenskyy has openly accused Fico of benefiting personally from energy imports from Russia. In a week of disruptive politics from Bratislava, Slovakia also intimated it could leave NATO. “In these nonsensical times of arms buildup, when arms companies are rubbing their hands … neutrality would benefit Slovakia very much,” Fico told a media conference shown online on June 17. He pointed out that this would require parliamentary approval. Three days later, the independent Slovak newspaper Dennik N published an interview with Austria’s former defence minister, Werner Fasslabend, in which he said Slovakia’s departure from NATO might trigger Austria’s entry into the alliance. “If Slovakia were to withdraw from NATO, it would worsen the security situation for Austria as well. It would certainly spark a major debate about Austria’s NATO membership and possible NATO accession,” Fasslabend said. Follow Al Jazeera English:...

Read this story on Aljazeera
dataDp/9958.jpeg
P7as2

Abhishek Bachchan Breaks His Silence On Separation Rumors.
~2.4 mins read
For more than a year now, Abhishek Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan’s relationship has been under the scanner, with constant whispers about their alleged separation dominating social media chatter and gossip columns. Though they enjoy international popularity and a glorious reputation in Indian films, the couple has elected to maintain silence so far. During recent promotions for his new ZEE5 movie Kaalidhar Laapata, Abhishek Bachchan finally broke his silence over the relentless gossip and shared an honest opinion regarding online hate, media hyperbole, and the psychological cost such hateful negativity can have on family lives. Abhishek Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai, two of Bollywood’s most renowned personalities, have had a close relationship since their marriage in 2007. From acting together in romantic successes such as Guru, Dhoom 2, Dhaai Akshar Prem Ke, and Kuch Naa Kaho to handling their personal and public lives with grace, the couple has been admired for a long time. They are proud parents to 13-year-old daughter Aaradhya Bachchan as well. Even though they live a relatively low-key life, the couple has frequently found themselves on the receiving end of aggressive media speculation. Speaking to Etimes, Abhishek discussed how there has been a rise in digital gossip and online negativity. “Previously, things that were said about me didn’t affect me. Today, I have a family, and it’s very upsetting,” he shared. He explained that even if he clarifies a rumor, it gets twisted. “Because negative news sells,” he said. For him, the focus is no longer on himself but on the emotional impact it can have on the people closest to him. Abhishek also talked about how trolling has become a disturbing trend. He recalled a particularly harsh comment left on one of his social media posts. His friend Sikandar Kher was so angry that he posted Abhishek’s address online, daring the troll to say it in person. “It’s so convenient to sit anonymously behind a computer screen and write the nastiest things,” he said. “You’re hurting someone. No matter how thick-skinned they are, it affects them.” Taking a strong stand, Abhishek added, “If you’re going to say it on the internet, I dare you to come say it to me on my face.” He explained that if someone has the courage to speak directly, he’ll at least respect their honesty. “But that never happens,” he said, pointing out how easy it is for people to attack someone they don’t really know from behind a screen. Abhishek emphasized how his perspective has changed since becoming a husband and a father. “When I was single, I could ignore things. But now I have people I love and protect,” he said. He reminded readers that celebrities are human too, and rumors can deeply affect their families, even if they remain quiet. Despite all the speculation, Abhishek remains focused on his work. His upcoming film Kaalidhar Laapata will release on ZEE5 on July 4. Directed by Madhumita, the movie also stars Zeeshan Ayyub and Daivik Bhagela. Abhishek is known for taking on unique, performance-driven roles, and this project is expected to be another strong addition to his filmography. In a world that thrives on gossip, Abhishek Bachchan’s response stands out. Rather than reacting emotionally or getting into online debates, he’s taken a calm but firm approach. His message is clear: say what you want, but have the courage to say it to his face. And more importantly, think about the impact your words may have on real lives behind the screen.
Read this and Other similar stories at MissMalini.com
profile/5377instablog.png.webp
Instablog9ja

Using Himself As An Example, Techie Shares Why His Compatriots Should Consider Leaving Nigeria
~3.6 mins read
Loading...