Another week has flown by, and with it the first month of the new year. Every night, russian drones attack Ukraine and Kyiv, and air bombs attack cities near the front line. Civilians are dying, houses are being destroyed, and this has long become a familiar part of Ukrainian life.
https://glavred.net/ukraine/kiev-atakovali-drony-rf-oblomki-bpla-upali-vozle-metro-10634807.html?utm_source=ukrnet_newshttps://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/articles/c07km3xpdlmoEvery time we meet someone we know, we wonder if we did the right thing by staying in Ukraine. And even more surprising are those few who return and could not adapt to a new life abroad. Things look even worse for those in the army with no hope of leaving before the end of the war.
Zelensky said that currently there is no law in Ukraine to demobilize the military. In an interview with Italian journalist Cecilia Sali for the newspaper Il Foglio, he said that martial law involves the mobilization of people and all the country's resources. "We are defending ourselves today. If tomorrow, for example, half of the army simply goes home, then we should have surrendered on the first day. Because if tomorrow half of the people go home, Putin will kill us all," he added.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISB7siWg-PUUnfortunately, neither he nor the parliament, in which the party he controls has a majority, are going to do anything to make the war a common cause, and not just a matter for a couple of million poor men who have become slaves. Why talk about there being no law, if he himself can submit such a law to the parliament?
Mobilization is used not only to persecute ordinary people or lawyers who defend them too effectively, but also for political persecution and pressure on opponents.
The Kyiv territorial center of recruitment and social support fined Oleksiy Poroshenko, the 39-year-old son of the former president of Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko, for failure to appear on a summons, which gave the opportunity to put under arrest all his property. His lawyers say it is illegal and part of an "information attack" on the ex-head of state's family. Oleksiy has been permanently residing in the UK since 2019 and was removed from military registration in Ukraine. But after another change in the law, hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian men abroad have become violators.
https://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/articles/cg5y151vdr9oThe heads of several settlements in the Lviv region have received fines from the territorial recruitment and social protection centers for allegedly failing to fulfill mobilization plans. The mayor of one city calls this "legal arbitrariness." The fact is that the heads of settlements do not have any law enforcement units to forcibly deliver citizens to mobilization centers. The only function available to them is to notify the population about mobilization measures. In addition, the mayor of Drohobych hinted that the mobilization plans imposed from above cannot be implemented, because there are not enough human resources. One of the mayors considers all this to be pressure on local government and "preparation for elections." These are just some of the cases in the first month of this year when, through artificial actions of state authorities, communities are deprived of leaders elected by residents.
https://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/articles/cd9qk7gj7qjoIn Kyiv, a conflict has also erupted between the newly appointed head of the Kyiv City Military Administration, Timur Tkachenko, and Kyiv City Mayor Vitali Klitschko. Tkachenko accuses Klitschko of poorly performing his duties, while Klitschko accuses Tkachenko of encroaching on his power in the city.
https://www.komersant.info/chy-znaydetsia-rishennia-shchodo-rukhu-transportu-pid-chas-tryvoh-ochilnyk-kmva-rizko-vidpoviv-klychku/However, it was only a matter of time before the military tried to extend its power to the civilian part of life. Everyone wants to control property and money, using the opportunities they have.
Just don't forget that armies win battles, and economies win wars. And if russia is still fighting for its own money, then Ukraine exists solely thanks to foreign aid. According to the Ministry of Finance, in 2022-2024, Ukraine received more than $115 billion from international partners to the budget. The top three look like this: almost $45 billion came from the EU, $31 billion from the US, and $12.4 billion from the IMF.
Although the government has agreements on Western aid, which should last for the entire year 2025, everyone understands the risks that everything could change, and if the war ends, aid could be significantly reduced.
https://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/articles/cj48y778z4woFar-right pro-russian Romanian politician Calin Gheorghescu, who is the most popular potential presidential candidate according to polls, said that Ukraine is a "fictional state" that will "inevitably" be divided among its neighbors.
https://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/articles/clyz02j9qp7oAbout 90 Patriot missiles from Israel are being sent to Ukraine in a transfer facilitated by the United States, according to a US defense official. The missiles had been in storage in Israel, which operated Patriot air defense systems for more than 30 years before retiring them in April.
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/01/28/politics/patriot-missiles-ukraine-israel-us/index.htmlThe US Citizenship and Immigration Services announced the suspension of the United for Ukraine program for Ukrainians fleeing war to the US.
https://interfax.com.ua/news/general/1043798.htmlSatellite images of the port of Tartus in Syria showed that from January 18 to 27, the russians began to take out military equipment collected at the port on ships of the Ministry of Defense of the russian federation. They say that russia could not come to an agreement with the new government in Syria because of their demand to hand over Assad.
https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2025/01/27/7495541/