Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta strongly. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta strongly. Mostrar todas las entradas

RFE/RL strongly condemns blockage of Russian-language websites and harassment of journalists

February 28, 2022

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) strongly condemns the blocking of its Current Time TV and Russian-language Crimea.Realities websites in Russia. Access to the sites was blocked after RFE/RL refused to comply with Russian state media-monitoring agency Roskomnadzor’s demands to delete information about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. At the time of publication, the Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar versions of Crimea.Realities remained available in Russia.

Said RFE/RL President and CEO Jamie Fly, “The Kremlin is desperate to prevent the Russian people from learning the facts about the death and destruction the Russian invasion of Ukraine is causing. We will continue to provide the truth to the Russian people at this critical moment.”

This is not the first time Roskomnadzor has sought to intimidate RFE/RL. Most recently, in early February, it threatened to block eight RFE/RL websites serving audiences in Russia, Ukraine, and Central Asia unless they took down articles tied to corruption investigations by jailed opposition leader Aleksei Navalny’s team. RFE/RL refused to comply with these demands. Some other Russian news organizations have agreed to comply.

In anticipation that the Kremlin could act on its threats, RFE/RL has been informing its audiences about how to continue to access its reporting in the event that its websites are blocked. Russian-language reporting by Crimea.Realities can be accessed on a mirror site. A Current Time TV mirror site is also available and material can be accessed using VPN client nThlink. In addition, audiences can subscribe to Current Time’s pages on TelegramTwitterInstagramFacebook and TikTok or watch its broadcasts live on YouTube and subscribe to its channel. All materials from the Current Time site are also available on our Google Play and App Store applications, which include a built-in VPN.

In a clear sign of the value audiences place on RFER/RL’s reporting of the war, 527percent more Ukrainians and 275 percent more Russians came to its websites on the first day of the invasion (February 24) than the same day the previous week. RFE/RL Ukrainian Service websites, which include Crimea.Realities and Donbas.Realities, recorded 4.7 million page views that same day, a 313 percent increase over the previous day and a 557 percent rise over the same day one week before. Current Time TV’s live coverage of the early hours of the Russian invasion of Ukraine was viewed more than 10 million times across social platforms, including YouTube and Facebook, reflecting a 25-fold increase over the same day the previous week for Current Time’s morning show.

The blocking of RFE/RL’s websites marks another sharp escalation of intimidation tactics by Russian authorities. Since the start of the war, several journalists have been detained and harassed:

In addition, on February 16, a Russia-controlled court in occupied Crimea sentenced RFE/RL freelance correspondent Vladyslav Yesypenko to six years in prison for the alleged possession and transport of explosives, a charge he has steadfastly rejected.

In the past year, Roskomnadzor has issued 1,040 violations against RFE/RL that will result in fines of more than $13.4 million for its refusal to submit to the unjust and invasive content labeling provisions of Russia’s “foreign agent” law. In addition, 18 RFE/RL journalists have been designated as individual “foreign agents.” On February 9, RFE/RL filed its final written submission with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), asking for a hearing to consider the merits of the legal case it filed in May 2021 challenging Russia’s “foreign agent” laws.

On January 26, RFE/RL’s Russian Service was fined 3 million rubles ($39,000) for the alleged “public distribution of knowingly false information about the activities of the U.S.S.R. during World War II.” In fact, the existence of the published material is backed by documents from Russian archives – and RFE/RL is being held liable for actions that are not punishable under Russian law. RFE/RL is appealing the fine, not least to help defend Russia’s shrinking space for press freedom.

About RFE/RL

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty is a private, independent international news organization whose programs — radio, Internet, television, and mobile — reach influential audiences in 23 countries, including Russia, Ukraine, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the republics of Central Asia and the Caucasus. It is funded by the U.S. Congress through USAGM.

After three days of truce, which seemed to herald the peak of the sixth wave of covid in Spain, the week closed with a rise of 139 points in the accumulated incidence, although hospital and ICU pressure shows a drop

The incidence of covid in Spain rises again strongly

Health personnel of the Hospital Parc Taulí in Sabadell (Barcelona) in the ICU for patients with COVID-19. EFE / Quique Garcia

The incidence of covid in Spain rises again strongly

The penultimate week of January closes in Spain with a new rise in the accumulated incidence of the coronavirus in Spain, which, however, fell during the last three days.

If we thought that the sixth wave had reached its peak, today’s data does not at all show that this is the case.

The data

Cumulative incidence

The cumulative incidence at 14 days, number of cases per 100,000 inhabitants, rises 139 points in a single day, a figure that alone exceeds the drops on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The incidence jumps to 3,418.46, while last Friday, January 14, it was at 3,192.46.

By region, the autonomous city of Ceuta is in the lead (6,366), followed by the communities of Aragón (5,730), Navarra (5,528) and Murcia (5,372).

Below 2,000 is only Andalusia (1,393). The rest of the communities estimate between 2,000 and 5,000 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, with notable differences.

By age groups, those under 11 years of age are in the lead (4,599) and people between 70 and 79 years of age have the lowest figure (1,578).

infections

Today the number of infections adds 141,095 new cases to a total of 8,975,458.

Since last Friday, the total number of infections has risen to 882,422, about 10 percent of the cases recorded since the pandemic broke out, nearly two years ago.

hospital pressure

In line with the characteristics of this sixth wave, the very high number of covid infections does not translate into clear increases in hospital pressure.

Today there are 18,675 admitted patients (14.9%), compared to 18,934 yesterday, Thursday, and 19,000 on Wednesday. Downward trend, therefore, although less was recorded last Friday, 17,436.

In the ICUs, today there are 2,202 patients (23.2%), compared to 2,204 yesterday and 2,230 on Wednesday.

Also downward trend, with 2,224 last Friday, which means 22 fewer patients in intensive care units in the course of the week.

The community that continues to register the strongest pressure on the ucis, well above the average, is Catalonia (42 percent).

A good fact is that the income is below the discharge. Compared to 2,178 admissions for SARS-Cov-2 in the last 24 hours, 2,351 discharges.

The positivity by PCR is also improving, since if seven days ago it was 40.9 percent, this Friday it stands at 38%.

Deceased

The fatality from covid is now at 1 percent.

The number of deaths that have occurred in the last 24 hours is 142, reaching a total of official deaths since the pandemic began of 91,741.

Between Friday of last week and this Friday, 982 people have died from covid.

Casualties due to covid in the classrooms

coronavirus back to school
The Ministers of Health, Carolina Darias (c); of Education, Pilar Alegría (l), and of Universities, Joan Subirats (r), during the press conference in which the return to classrooms in person after Christmas was announced /EFE/Javier Lizón

A total of 24,724 teachers, 4.28% of the 755,000 in Spain, are on sick leave due to covid, and 1,962 classrooms, 0.49% of the 405,000 in Spain, are confined due to the disease. informed this Friday the Minister of Education and Vocational Training, Pilar Alegría.

The minister added that the number of confined students is 262,450, of the 8.2 million there are.

Pilar Alegría has admitted that “cases are increasing” because schools “are not elements unrelated to reality”, but these centers “have never been exporters of cases, in any case, importers of those who came from outside.”

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