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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: skinowski who wrote (1211014)3/20/2020 10:59:03 AM
From: miraje  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578448
 
Thanks for your advice. Without going into details, I may have had it about 6 weeks ago when I was in Asia (and recovered) and am now experiencing similar symptoms again, though in a very mild form. I'll be getting my test results in a day or two and will decide then how to proceed, if necessary..



To: skinowski who wrote (1211014)8/23/2025 3:17:38 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Respond to of 1578448
 
I think you might be wrong.

You were wrong about this too: Message 33908253

Russians want to keep the whole thing strictly professional

'I was raped for three days': Ukrainian police investigate war crimes

In November 2022, after being detained by police near Melitopol,

Hanna Peklo was raped by a Russian soldier. The Ukrainian war crimes department has identified her rapist.

By Rémy Ourdan (Kyiv and Zaporizhzhia (Ukraine) special correspondent)

Published on July 4, 2025, at 12:01 pm (Paris), updated on July 4, 2025, at 12:32 pm 5 min read




Hanna Peklo in Zaporizhzhia, May 28, 2025. ADRIEN VAUTIER/LE PICTORIUM FOR LE MONDE

After her release, she did not go to the police. She remained silent for a long time to protect her children. At first, because they were still living in territory occupied by Moscow's army, and then, after they joined her on the Ukrainian side of the front line, because "these things are not their concern," even though "one day they will know everything." She kept silent also because it seemed unlikely that the Russian officer who had imprisoned her and raped her would ever be brought to justice. She believed she was just one woman among many living through the nightmare of Russian occupation and that her rapist was just one among many, safe in Russia, in a sea of impunity.

Since the Russian invasion on February 24, 2022, the Ukrainian police and justice system have embarked on a titanic, almost impossible mission: to investigate every crime committed during the war, from the most serious to the most trivial, from the worst killings of innocent civilians to looting and theft. Tens of thousands of cases are under investigation. So far, indictments have been issued against 679 individuals (171 Ukrainians and 508 Russians), including 53 accused of crimes involving sexual violence, and courts have convicted 189 people for war crimes (19 in custody and 170 in...)