well. i think there is going to be painfor us, and well. i think there is going to be pain for us, and sanctions can it all sounds very well and he think it s the right thing to do. we do need to have sanctions on russia for this action that it s taken, but a lot of those sanctions have come and hit us like a boomerang in the face because we are also implicated and i think there was a piece by the ft today talking about the fact that the interconnectedness of the international financial system is quite hard, quite opaque in certain cases, and just like the financial pressure in 2007 and eight, you could only realise all the connections in the system, again come over here, you just don t know how it s going to come back and hit you, so we will have to wait and see how it plays out. you, so we will have to wait and see how it plays out- how it plays out. the new york times sa s on how it plays out. the new york times says on saturday how it plays out. the new york times says on saturd
human rights council, russia s envoy denounced ukraine and the west, while ukraine s deputy foreign minister accused russian troops of carrying out war crimes in her country, and called for the perpetrators to be held to account. emine dzhaparova talked of her personal experience of having to flee her home in crimea in 2014. because of the russian aggression, i know what it means to lose your home. i have this personal pain since 2014, when i left my home at crimea, with my daughter, with a cat in the basket and two cars full of books and clothes. and i wish no one to live through it ever. russian bombs are destroying the cities an villages of my home land, targeting residential area, school, orphanages, hospital o church, museum, central squares, and critical infrastructure. we did not
well make putin s troops on the way out could well make a putin s troops on the way out could well make a kind of mess behind and which well make a kind of mess behind and which doesn t bear thinking about. russia has which doesn t bear thinking about. russia has the world s biggest biological warfare stockpile, lots of radioactive stuff lying about in ukraine, of radioactive stuff lying about in ukraine, that was supposed to be well looked after. as i was saying earlier well looked after. as i was saying earlier on. well looked after. as i was saying earlier on, a nuclear explosion is one thing. earlier on, a nuclear explosion is one thing, the kind of radioactive fallout one thing, the kind of radioactive fattout vou one thing, the kind of radioactive fallout you get from a leak from this kind fallout you get from a leak from this kind of stuff can be more pernicious. it doesn t come out of a big bang, pernicious. it doesn t come out of a big bang, but it spreads
the new york times reports destructive malware has flooded hundreds of ukrainian websites and computers since the invasion began. and the only other story to challenge ukraine at least for the british papers is the death of the australian cricketer shane warne who was 52. and, as the back page of the express reports it: farewell to the greatest . ali, let s have you began this time and let s start with the british newspaper, the guardian. well, the guardian has newspaper, the guardian. well, the guardian has got newspaper, the guardian. well, the guardian has got this newspaper, the guardian. well, the guardian has got this picture - newspaper, the guardian. well, the guardian has got this picture of - newspaper, the guardian. well, the guardian has got this picture of the | guardian has got this picture of the shelling that took place by russian forces of this nuclear facility which obviously has raised alarm all over the world because one thing you really want to avoid in
well, this is i m afraid is an extremely worrying dimension to the whole problem and i m afraid it s a fact of life that a western doctrine as far as the use of nuclear weapons is different from the russian doctrine. they integrate into normal war fighting procedures smaller tactical nuclear weapons. so, it is not the major crossing of the rubicon that we believe in the west, they don t see it the same way. now, i hope to goodness they don t seriously consider or even use even the small nuclear weapons. that is crossing a line that has not been crossed since 1945 injapan. but we have to take the threat seriously. and the worrying thing is that everything that vladimir putin has threatened to do, whether it is going into georgia, whether it is now indeed coming into ukraine, whether it s going into crimea, he has done. so, we have to listen to his words very carefully and hope that there are some more rational people by his side in the kremlin that would prevent actually doing in desper