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WWIII Return of the Ruskie




Trans and non-binary people trapped in war-torn Ukraine
by Enrique Anarte | @enriqueanarte | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 4 March 2022 18:00 GMT
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The rule forcing men aged 18 to 60 to stay and fight has left many trans women and non-binary people stranded in the country.
By Enrique Anarte

BERLIN, March 4 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The main obstacles to Valeria Kolosova escaping from Ukraine are her passport and ID card, which identify the 24-year-old transgender woman as a man - meaning she must stay to fight the invading Russian forces.

Kolosova left her hometown of Kyiv on Sunday and took a shared ride to the western city of Lviv, hoping to cross into Poland. But she is too scared to attempt the journey.

"I haven't tried as I'm afraid they won't allow me to flee because of the martial law," she said, referring to the rule that men aged 18 to 60 must register for conscription and cannot leave the country.

"But if I stay in Lviv, there will be no hope for a normal life ... I do not see my future in Lviv or in ruined Kyiv. I have little hope," Kolosova told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in text messages from a local shelter.

Women and children make up most of the 1 million people who have left Ukraine since Russia invaded last week, according to the United Nations' refugee agency.

The former Soviet republic legalised gay sex in 1991 - the year it declared independence - and LGBTQ+ people say they have more freedom than in Russia, where persecution has increased since the introduction of a ban on gay "propaganda" in 2013.

There is no data on how many of Ukraine's 41 million people are LGBTQ+ and the community is often targeted by conservative and far-right groups. Trans people say the process to change their gender on official documents is long and complicated.

In Germany, the newly-formed Alliance for Queer Emergency Aid for Ukraine, has made contact with about 40 trans women and non-binary people - who identify neither as male or female - in need of evacuation and shared their names with the government.

"Unfortunately, the current situation in Ukraine does not allow for evacuations organised by the federal government," a German foreign ministry spokesperson said.

NIGHTMARE

In the southern city of Odessa, Ukraine's most important port, soldiers and civilians are building defences and preparing for an attack. But Nick, an 18-year-old non-binary resident whose passport lists him as male, is in hiding.

"Military authorities can force me to the combat zone with a gun in my hand," Nick said.

"This is wrong. All civilians want to run away from the nightmares from war, not only biological females ... I want to run anywhere from this nightmare and start my life from zero."

LGBTQ+ groups across Europe are working to help gay, bisexual and trans people flee, find shelter and apply for asylum if they wish.

Terry Rivers, founder of Queer Spaces Network in the Czech Republic, said they are providing help to refugees arriving at the Slovak border and that other LGBTQ+ groups are doing the same in Poland, Hungary and Romania.

Robert, a 31-year trans man from Iraq who had been living in Ukraine for 13 years, travelled by train for three days from the eastern city of Kharkiv to Slovakia and on to Prague.

"I feel like I'm in a dream," said Robert, who was given a place to stay in the Czech capital by Queer Spaces Network.

Robert, who asked not to give his full name, said the Slovak border control police mocked him, laughed and shouted at him for being trans and twice threw away his identity documents.

"I was so scared, I didn't know what to do. But after a few hours, they let me in," he said.

With combat raging across Ukraine for a second week and Kyiv under renewed attack, anxieties are mounting.

For Judis, a 24-year-old trans woman hiding with her girlfriend about 70 kilometres outside Kyiv, the assault on Kyiv means she has little hope of getting her cross-sex hormone medication when it runs out in two weeks.

"I'm totally scared. And I don't know how much longer I can stay where I am now. I have nowhere to go," she said.

Related stories:

Ukraine LGBTQ+ community in fear after Russian assault

'Constantly pursued': Ukraine's LGBT+ activists attacked online and in the street

Ukraine war: How will economic sanctions hit ordinary Russians?

(Reporting by Enrique Anarte; Editing by Katy Migiro and Hugo Greenhalgh. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

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Oliver Bullough book Moneyland is worth a read/listen
There was a section about the corruption in Ukraine whereby parents would end up paying off doctors to help treat their kids.
That happens in Greece. Slip the doc a few quid and your relative gets looked after better. Obviously it's not all doctors and I think it's not as common as what it was. Well, I hope so anyway.
 
Poland is giving all their MiGs to the Ukrainian air force. Getting F16s from the US in exchange.

Russia not happy with Poland and Romania in particular.
 
Interesting swap. I've a 09 honda civic, if anyone wants to swap me it for an Alfa Romeo in cherry red I'm all ears.
 
Interesting swap. I've a 09 honda civic, if anyone wants to swap me it for an Alfa Romeo in cherry red I'm all ears.
You'll be wanting that Honda back when the Alfa breaks down and trust me, it will break down, it's an Alfa.
 
What else have the Poles and Romanians got Russian weapons wise we could exchange? How about a Russian destroyer for one of our Type 22 frigates? Or a Nimitz class aircraft carrier from the yanks?
 
You'll be wanting that Honda back when the Alfa breaks down and trust me, it will break down, it's an Alfa.
These days it'll only be used for the odd trip here and there as we hardly drive anywhere. I think even an Alfa can handle that.
 
These days it'll only be used for the odd trip here and there as we hardly drive anywhere. I think even an Alfa can handle that.
When Putin's nukes drop you'll be wishing you were in the Honda not the Alfa
 
Russia have called a third 'ceasefire' this Time their 'humanitarian' routes end in Russia and Belarus.. no other routes permissable.
 
Poland is giving all their MiGs to the Ukrainian air force. Getting F16s from the US in exchange.

Russia not happy with Poland and Romania in particular.

They just need to send in Maverick and Iceman to sort that shit out.
 
That happens in Greece. Slip the doc a few quid and your relative gets looked after better. Obviously it's not all doctors and I think it's not as common as what it was. Well, I hope so anyway.
People in the West don't realise that this is the way of the world outside of their circle of knowledge.

In China it's little red envelopes, dinners etc. The doctors are so poorly paid that this is considered a legitimate way of supplementing their income. Especially specialists (surgeons etc.). It's accepted by everyone but of course benefits the wealthy. However with the advent of private hospitals (initially for foreigners but now open to all with the money) it's not the only option now.
 
Russia have called a third 'ceasefire' this Time their 'humanitarian' routes end in Russia and Belarus.. no other routes permissable.

Well, the other routes that are permissible are to other Ukrainian cities, which is largely pointless in the long run. One of the routes that was tried was littered with landmines, but the Ukranian's who have been reporting it aren't even blaming it on anything sinister, just on a complete lack of communication and cohesion within the Russian forces, that's what they're seeing on the ground.
 
Well, the other routes that are permissible are to other Ukrainian cities, which is largely pointless in the long run. One of the routes that was tried was littered with landmines, but the Ukranian's who have been reporting it aren't even blaming it on anything sinister, just on a complete lack of communication and cohesion within the Russian forces, that's what they're seeing on the ground.
But what happens when they get to Russia? That's my main concern.

It seems to have been rejected by Ukraine.
 
The Russians obviously want to use the refugees as propaganda fodder - they did the same with refugees from Donbas. Any civilian to them is either a “Nazi” or a “grateful regular person forever indebted to Mother Russia for saving them from the horrors of the Ukrainian Nazi regime” - they don’t have use for anyone else. They are thoroughly confused by the hostile reception they are getting in the Russian-speaking cities and regions throughout Eastern Ukraine in particular.
 


Lewandowski dropped Huawei as a sponsor because they're helping Russia.

Unfortunately they'll probably release whatever shit they have on him as revenge.
 
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A glimpse of the future
 
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