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Economy Apr 24, 2026

Ukraine’s Strikes Slash Russian Oil Exports, Cost $2.3 bn in March

Ukraine’s intensified long‑range attacks on Russian ports and refineries have slashed oil transhipm…
Ukraine has succeeded in depriving Russia of a large share of the windfall it would have earned from soaring oil prices in March and April, as a coordinated long‑range strike campaign crippled key ports and refineries. Ukraine’s Long‑Range Campaign Targets Russian Oil Infrastructure 21 March: First wave of strikes hit oil loading berths and the Tuapse refinery on the Black Sea. Subsequent attacks on 16 April and 20 April damaged the Tuapse, Sizran, Novokuibyshevsk, Samara and Gorky refineries, forcing several to halt operations. Ukrainian forces also struck oil‑related facilities in the Baltic ports of Ust‑Luga and Primorsk. Revenue Hit: $2.3 bn Lost in March Alone In a video address on 19 April, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claimed that Russia’s oil‑revenue losses from the campaign were “no less than $2.3 bn in March”. Oil transhipments fell by 300,000 barrels per day. Refined product shipments dropped by 200,000 barrels per day. Production and Export Decline: Record Lows Since 2024 Russian business daily Kommersant reported that April exports hit their lowest levels since the summer of 2024, with analysts warning they could fall to the lowest point of 2023 by month‑end. To compensate for the export slump, Russia cut crude production by an estimated 300,000‑400,000 barrels per day. The U.S. sanctions waiver, renewed on 13 April through 16 May, has not offset the decline. Fiscal Pressure and Strategic Implications for Russia Swedish intelligence chief Thomas Nilsson told the Financial Times that Russia needs oil prices to stay above $100 a barrel for the rest of the year to cover its budget deficit, a target now jeopardised by the export squeeze. Budget shortfalls are compounded by broader economic weaknesses after four years of war. Domestic support for President Vladimir Putin has slipped, with approval falling from 72.9 % to 66.7 % over six weeks. What’s Next: Russian Oil Outlook and Ukraine’s Expanding Defence Export Market With the EU clearing a €90‑billion loan for Ukraine and a new sanctions package targeting Russian energy, Moscow faces a tightening fiscal and diplomatic environment. Ukraine is leveraging its air‑defence expertise, signing 10‑year cooperation deals with Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE, and courting additional Middle‑East partners. Continued strikes on Russian refineries could push export volumes even lower, forcing further production cuts and potentially accelerating a shift toward alternative revenue streams for Russia. The coming months will reveal whether Russia can stabilize its oil sector under sustained Ukrainian pressure and whether Kyiv’s defence‑export push can offset the economic fallout of the conflict.
#Russia #Ukraine #Volodymyr Zelenskyy
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World Wide Apr 22, 2026

Inside the Pentagon’s UFO Saga: From Secret Videos to a $22 Million Program

The Pentagon’s release of declassified navy videos in 2021 revived global interest in UFOs, buildin…
The Pentagon’s Declassified UFO Footage Sparks Global CuriosityIn June 2021 the Department of Defense released historic navy videos showing unidentified aerial phenomena, reigniting public fascination after a 2017 New York Times expose on the secret Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program. The clips feature pilots reacting to a dark, glowing object that appears to defy conventional aerodynamics.Numbers Behind the Mystery: 140 Unexplained Incidents and a $22 Million Contract140+ sightings remain unexplained over two decades, according to the Pentagon’s 2021 report.$22 million awarded in 2008 to Robert Bigelow’s company for research into advanced aerospace weapon systems.2023 whistleblower David Grusch testified that the government holds “non‑human biologics”.Why the Disclosure Wave Is Reshaping Defense TransparencyThe cascade of revelations—from former intelligence officer Luis Elizondo to congressional hearings—has pressured the Pentagon to rename and restructure its programs, now called the Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program (AAWSAP). Public demand for accountability is forcing lawmakers to allocate resources for systematic UAP analysis, while skeptics question the credibility of sources who claim psychic abilities.What Comes Next? Forecasting the Future of UAP InvestigationsAnalysts expect tighter oversight, increased funding for scientific study, and possible international collaboration as allies confront similar unexplained phenomena. If further evidence emerges, it could trigger policy shifts in aerospace defense and spark a new era of open‑source research into anomalous technologies.
#Pentagon #Luis Elizondo #Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program
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News Apr 09, 2026

India Hands Down Three Life Sentences to Kashmiri Separatist Aasiya Andrabi

An Indian court has sentenced prominent Kashmiri separatist Aasiya Andrabi to three life terms, spa…
Prominent Kashmiri separatist Aasiya Andrabi has been handed down three life sentences by an Indian court, a move that has been widely condemned by activists and legal experts. Andrabi, the founder of the banned all-women's organisation Dukhtaran-e-Millat (DeM), was sentenced on March 24 by a special National Investigative Agency (NIA) court in New Delhi.Andrabi, 64, and her two associates, Sofi Fehmeeda and Nahida Nasreen, were arrested by the NIA in 2018 under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), a draconian anti-terror law. The UAPA was introduced in 2008 and amended in 2019 to allow authorities to declare individuals as 'terrorists'. Andrabi was accused of waging war against the Indian government, raising funds for terrorist acts, and being a member of a terrorist group.However, the court found no evidence related to these charges, yet convicted her on less serious allegations such as provoking hostility between communities and undermining national integration. The court noted that while Andrabi's actions did not directly cause violence, they could evoke sentiments that may lead to violence.Legal experts say Andrabi's conviction is mainly based on offensive speech-making, raising questions about India's tolerance of dissenting voices. 'Ideology is not punishable by law; only actions are,' a Kashmir-based legal researcher said. 'But the UAPA's scope has been widened significantly through several amendments.'Andrabi's son described the conviction as 'effectively a death sentence' given her age and time already spent in jail. Her husband, a former rebel leader, has also been imprisoned since 1992. Critics argue that the conviction fits a broader pattern in which all forms of political resistance are disciplined in Kashmir.
#kashmir #india #uapa
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