'Nederland gevoelig voor energieboycot' • Zelensky: gesprekken met Rusland zwaar
Among other news about Ukraine, there is this from the Dutch National News Broadcast (NOS)
AN HOUR AGO
Now 5620 Ukrainians registered in the Netherlands
Until yesterday, 5620 Ukrainians have been registered with Dutch municipalities, according to new figures from the Ministry of the Interior. This concerns both people who are in emergency shelters and people who have found shelter themselves. The figures are based on registrations in the Personal Records Database (BRP).
The actual number of Ukrainian refugees in the Netherlands is much higher. There are 13,000 people in the shelter that the municipalities have arranged alone. Registration in the BRP is mandatory for Ukrainians who stay in the Netherlands for a longer period of time, but given the circumstances, it will not be enforced for the time being.
2 HOURS AGO
Russian advance stalls, struggle at its 'culmination point'?
It has now been four weeks since Russia started the war in Ukraine and stalled the Russian advance, Professor of War Studies Frans Osinga said in the
NOS Radio 1 Journaal this morning . "The only option for the Russians is to encircle, dig in and shell. Russia doesn't seem to have the troops to take all the cities and you also see that the Ukrainian defenses are strong. So we're talking about an old-fashioned medieval siege, in order to force the population and the military to capitulate."
As a result, hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped in the completely surrounded Mariupol. The city is under constant shelling, there is a lack of water, food and medical aid, and according to Ukrainian authorities, 300,000 people in the city of Kherson are now in that harrowing position.
So from a Russian point of view, the battle is not going well. The more than 100,000 troops are spread over four fronts in a large area. "So the 'density of soldiers' is ultimately not that great," Osinga says. "Only in the east, in the Donbas, around Mariupol and in Crimea it seems successful, but other objectives are not within reach. We call that the 'culmination point': Russia has to deal with desertion, demoralization of the troops already weeks in the field, lack of ammunition, long supply lines disrupted by Ukraine."
"We thought we could expect an amphibious landing of the Russians at Odessa from the Black Sea, but that is very risky, because the city is well defensible. The Russian ships are now used to fire all kinds of cruise missiles, also far into Ukrainian territory. Meanwhile, the weapons for the Ukrainians continue to come from the West. Those ammunition, anti-tank weapons, anti-aircraft defenses have proven to be really crucial for the defense of Ukraine in recent weeks," Osinga said.
3 HOURS AGO
CPB: The Netherlands is very sensitive to energy boycott Russia
The Netherlands is very sensitive to the cut-off of the Russian energy supply. It is true that the direct dependence is not that bad, but the blow is still harder than in other Western European countries via the international trade chains. No sector can escape contraction, writes Het Financieele Dagblad based on calculations by the <Dutch> Central Planning Bureau (CPB).
The CPB performed calculations using a so-called 'disaster model', in which the physical supply of oil and gas from Russia comes to a standstill. In that model it is assumed that there are no immediate alternatives and that production chains will therefore come to a (partial) standstill.
Of the gas we use in the Netherlands, only about 15 percent comes from Russia, so that means that we are directly dependent on it to a limited extent. But the Netherlands is strongly linked to other European countries via all kinds of production chains, which are much more dependent on gas and oil from Russia, for example the motor vehicle sector and the clothing industry. As a result, the Netherlands could still be hit hard if the Russian energy supply to Europe stops, not only through higher prices for energy imports, but also for other goods. "This interdependence underlines the importance for the Netherlands of a Europe-wide approach to possible energy shortages",
concludes the CPB .
4 HOURS AGO
Putin wants to attend G20 summit in Indonesia at the end of this year
Russian President Putin plans to attend the G20 summit hosted by Indonesia at the end of this year. That is what the Russian ambassador in Jakarta said.
Ambassador Lyudmila Vorobyova responded to calls from some G20 countries, including the United States, to exclude Russia from the group of major economies in the world. "Not just the G20, many organizations are trying to exclude Russia," she said. "The reaction of the West (to the Russian invasion of Ukraine) is absolutely disproportionate."