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Archive May 21, 2025

Are direct talks between Russia and Ukraine likely to lead to peace?

Kyiv, Ukraine – United States President Donald Trump sounded jubilant on Monday when he announced the beginning of direct talks between Ukraine and Russia.

“Russia and Ukraine will immediately start negotiations towards a ceasefire, and, more importantly, bring an END to the war,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social network.

The statement seemed to fit Trump’s art-of-the-deal canon – it would bring about a fast and efficient peace settlement to Europe’s hottest armed conflict since World War II and would benefit global security.

But European and Ukrainian observers interviewed by Al Jazeera, including a former Russian diplomat and a Ukrainian top ex-military official, said by agreeing to resume the direct talks that were abandoned in 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin scored a taciturn diplomatic triumph over Trump.

They said Putin has thwarted a ceasefire that his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has been insisting upon for months, and excluded Washington from the negotiations.

The Russian leader is likely to drag the talks on indefinitely while amassing tens of thousands of new servicemen, in a bid to carve out more Ukrainian territory until rains and snow stop this year’s offensive, they said.

Moreover, by seemingly bending to Trump’s demands to communicate with Kyiv directly, Putin has escaped further US sanctions – while creating an illusion of talks.

“Putin essentially uses Trump just to create a picture that Putin or Russia are ready to negotiate,” Anton Shekhovtsov, head of the Centre for Democratic Integrity, a Vienna-based think tank, told Al Jazeera.

However, the “only thing that Russia is ready to negotiate is the capitulation of Ukraine, nothing else,” he said.

“I don’t see what Putin can talk with Zelenskyy about, [as] Putin doesn’t consider Zelenskyy a person worthy of communication,” he added. “I don’t see any progress here.”

Putin has for years dismissed Zelenskyy as a “political puppet” whose “neo-Nazi junta” allegedly forces naturally pro-Russian Ukrainians to accept destructive Western values.

On Monday night, after a two-hour phone conversation with Trump, Putin appeared on Russian television to thank Trump for “his support in resuming direct talks” and to declare the Kremlin’s intention to work out a “memorandum of the future accord” and a “possible ceasefire”.

‘Moscow doesn’t want real talks with Kyiv’

A former Russian diplomat who quit his Ministry of Foreign Affairs job to protest against Moscow’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine called Putin’s readiness an “imitation”.

“The talks won’t be talks because Moscow doesn’t want real talks with Kyiv,” Boris Bondarev told Al Jazeera.

To Putin, “Ukraine is but a tool, a proxy, a satellite that doesn’t decide a thing by itself.”

That is why Putin appointed Vladimir Medinsky, a former culture minister, as lead negotiator, he said.

Medinsky, who has authored history books criticised for factual inaccuracy, has not sounded diplomatic so far.

On May 16, he threatened that the war would last “as long as it takes” and told Ukrainian diplomats that Russia fought Sweden for 21 years in 1700-21 to occupy today’s Baltic states and build its new imperial capital, St Petersburg, on former Swedish lands.

Thus, the peace process Trump announced as his accomplishment is in fact “the main thing Putin achieved”, Bondarev said.

“This is an imitation so that someone in the West thinks that the peace process has begun, and that’s why there’s no need to help Ukraine, to pressure Putin and to impose new sanctions,” he said.

Putin also managed to escape a lull in hostilities that would have helped Ukrainian forces to fortify their positions along the 1,100km (700-mile) front line, according to Nikolay Mitrokhin, a researcher at Germany’s Bremen University.

“Apparently, Putin succeeded in nullifying a very disadvantageous initiative by Zelenskyy to immediately start a 30 days-long ceasefire,” he told Al Jazeera.

While negotiating, clarifying and delaying the talks, Putin may try to seize more land in eastern and northern Ukraine and even restore the giant Kakhovka Dam that used to supply water to annexed Crimea before being destroyed in 2023, he said.

Meanwhile, Moscow has conscripted 160,000 servicemen and keeps recruiting some 50,000 soldiers monthly, in part thanks to the offer of hefty enlistment bonuses, according to Ihor Romanenko, former deputy chief of Ukraine’s general staff.

“They will need to be trained at least a little so that they don’t die that quickly, and so by the end of June, [Moscow] may amass a new resource,” he told Al Jazeera.

‘Trump agreed with Putin’: Pro-Russia observers

Europe was unimpressed by what Trump and Putin agreed upon and introduced the 17th round of sanctions against Moscow on Tuesday.

Brussels and London said the sanctions would target Moscow’s “shadow fleet” of tankers, the financial institutions that help Moscow avoid earlier sanctions, and the supply chains for Russian arms producers.

However, the European sanctions will be less effective without US measures as Putin “acts in the divide-and-rule way”, Romanenko said.

“He wanted everyone [in the West] to step aside from Ukraine, so that there are no arms supplies, and then he could carry out yet another imperial takeover” of Ukrainian territories, he concluded.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Tuesday that Trump is reluctant to slap new sanctions on Russia.

“If, in fact, it’s clear that the Russians are not interested in a peace deal and they just want to keep fighting a war, it may very well come to that point,” Rubio told the US Senate.

He also insisted Putin “hasn’t gotten a single concession” from Trump.

Meanwhile, pro-Kremlin observers are ecstatic.

“These were very successful talks. They may result in  Ukrainian regime’s forced acceptance of Russia’s conditions, and thus peace will be reached,” Moscow-based analyst Sergey Markov wrote on Telegram on Monday.

Adelabu Canvases Funding For TCN To Boost Infrastructure Expansion

The Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) needs funding to expand the power sector’s transmission infrastructure, according to the Power Minister.

Adelabu made the call over the weekend while speaking at a Senate Committee on Power two-day retreat.

The minister argued that the TCN should receive funding under the appropriation bill, not to mention that the organization’s resources are insufficient to support its operations.

They lack the necessary funds, and they only run their internally generated revenue (IGR), which has declined over time. They are unable to pay their monthly salaries, nor are they able to maintain their outdated infrastructure and build new transmission networks. He claimed that TCN should be able to be accommodated in appropriation.

Adelabu addressed the ongoing crisis that is threatening to derail industry progress, which, in his opinion, continues to trajectorise service delivery across the country despite significant reforms in the electricity sector.

The Minister pointed out glaring differences in the performance of distribution companies (DisCo), which include aging networks, widespread electricity theft, and subpar investments that have increased reliance on unsustainable subsidies and left millions in darkness.

“We need to be tough with the DisCos because they can easily thwart our gains.” In terms of performance expectations, they have disappointed us. If consumers are frustrated at the distribution points, whatever we do in generation doesn’t mean anything.

He noted that while the sector was being restructured in 2003, the DisCos were supposed to have technical partners, but many of them showed that they had worked with foreign companies to achieve that goal, which lasted for about three months.

However, he claims that those businesses left right away as soon as they took control.

“We need utility companies that can invest in the sector to improve infrastructure, and likewise, improve service,” he said, adding that “many of them went to the banks to take loans to buy the assets, and after that, they are taking out the money to pay the loans,”

The distribution segment continues to be the weakest link, according to the Minister, despite tariff adjustments that increased market liquidity by 70%, increasing sector revenue from 1 trillion in 2023 to 1 trillion in 2024.

“Abuja DisCo accounted for 85% of Northern payments in the fourth quarter of 2024, with only 124.4% (30%) of their 240.86 billion invoice being sent to DisCos in the North.” Southern DisCos did a little better, sending in a whopping 254.6 billion (67%), despite having to pay only Lagos DisCos for 70% of it. These discrepancies are primarily the result of underinvestment and network degradation outside of economic hubs.

Adelabu noted that the government’s $ 700 billion Presidential Metering Initiative (PMI) and a World Bank-backed program aimed at 4.3 million meters by 2025, and that an additional 200, 000 units are anticipated in May. This is a key driver of revenue loss and consumer distrust.

The Minister acknowledged that closing this gap is essential to fair billing and financial sustainability, but that underinvestment and operational inefficiencies are holding us back.

Additionally, generation companies are owed a 4 trillion dollar subsidy backlog, including 1.9 trillion for 2024 alone. The Minister warned that continuing to pay current tariffs is “unsustainable,” putting strain on public funds needed for infrastructure upgrades, as monthly shortfalls now exceed $200 billion.

We will soon begin restructuring underperforming DisCos and putting stricter performance benchmark enforcement in place to save the sector. However, without urgent funding for distribution networks, gains in generation, including a historic 6,003MW output in March 2025, and transmission upgrades, such as the deployment of 61 new transformers in 2024, won’t be able to provide reliable household supply.

The Minister praised plans to regionalize transmission networks and encourage private investment in grid infrastructure, noting that the two DisCos in Lagos’ 70% remittance reflects better infrastructure than that of the northern networks.

The Minister also mentioned plans to improve the country’s northern region’s power supply. The approximately 1000 megawatt Makurdi hydropower project is being investigated. Additionally, we want to revive the abandoned Kaduna thermal plants, which have been closed down for five years. It has a 215 megawatt power plant that is currently about 87% complete. This power plant is currently being restored in an effort to.

Adelabu reported that the state government is interested in acquiring the 10-MW installed Katsina wind farm. The State government has requested that some private investors be involved in this matter, and we have ordered a feasibility study to be conducted to consign the farm, which has been a while.

He demanded that more stringent laws be passed to protect Nigeria’s power infrastructure from vandalism.

Adelabu emphasized the necessity of stronger legal controls in order to stop the destruction of crucial energy assets and maintain the stability of the nation’s electricity supply.

The Minister believes that vandalism should not be a civil offense but rather a criminal one, adding that illegal connections, power theft, and nonpayment of bills by customers are all serious issues that need to be addressed.

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Adelabu acknowledged that despite the difficulties, the grid has been stabilized and that there hasn’t been a grid collapse since the start of the year.

“Our current grid’s stability is the result of our hard work and expenditure,” he said. TCN installed 61 new transformers in 2024, either by replacing them with brand-new ones or creating new ones. Additionally, TCN installed about 13 new transformers in its first four months, with capacities ranging from 10 megawatts to 300 megawatts. These are what our people still go out to vandalise, all put together, cost hundreds of millions of dollars to install.

Our towers have been toppled by saboteurs and vandals, and there are meters that people tamper with. The Minister urged appropriate legislation and public vigilance to safeguard “national assets,” which are owned by every Nigerian.

Tulisa reveals painful bloodied nose after undergoing six beauty treatments

Tulisa Contostavlos, the star of N-Dubz and I’m a Celebrity, visited London for a “beauty day” to reveal the six treatments she uses to keep looking young.

After six facial treatments, Tulisa reveals painful bloodied nose.

Tulisa showcased her scraped and bloodied nose after undergoing six beauty treatments as she joked ‘no pain no gain’. The N-Dubz singer, 36, took to her Instagram Stories to reveal how she maintains a glowing and youthful look as she travelled to London for a ‘beauty day’.

As an expert worked on a “muscle lifting” treatment that is said to tighten facial muscles, she joked as she spoke to the camera while lying down on a salon bed. She said, “It strengthens your muscles and gives you a snagged look on your face.”

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Tulisa
Tulisa revealed her red face after undergoing many treatments(Image: Instagram/tulisacontostavlos)

She then demonstrated her next “needling” treatment, which involved applying numbing cream first. After this, Tulisa predicted that I would turn a little red. Later, while driving, the singer sat down to her Stories. As the star revealed the redness and bleeding on her cheeks and nose, the star turned her face to reveal the blood.

“I’m really red, as you can see.” It will go out in a few days, so I appear to have been hit in the face. Tulisa explained to fans, “The nose is extra sore because it’s so close to the bone,” before adding: “No pain, no gain”!

She also received radiofrequency treatment with collagen wave. The method uses heat to stimulate fibroblasts, the cells that make collagen and elastin.

Continue reading the article.
Tulisa
Tulisa joked ‘no pain, no gain’ after travelling to London for the procedures(Image: Instagram/tulisacontostavlos)

Before moving on to her next few treatments, the star had a brief break and received a full-body massage and reflexology.

Tulisa prepared to go back to Manchester after receiving all of her medical treatment, saying the healing process would take two to three days. By the weekend, she said, “I should be ready to rumble.”

She ended her video by saying, “Beauty secrets by T. You’re welcome. Tulisa discussed overcoming a significant health issue in a conversation with Paul C. Brunson last year.

The star said: “I will tell you that running up to I’m A Celeb, during lockdown, I unfortunately became dependent on benzodiazepine. So we’re talking zopiclones and diazepam.

I had a lot of them because of the trial’s sleeping problems, and I had a backlog of them. During lockdown, I was by myself. My dog’s cancer was discovered by me. I started taking self-medicination after feeling very depressed.

“As lockdown was about to end, I felt it was time to return to reality.” I was told, “I can’t numb myself every day and this anxiety, I can’t sleep with a sleeper every night.” When it gets to 9 o’clock to calm me down, I can’t take a diazepam. Therefore, it is necessary to stop.

Tulisa made the decision to stop taking the medications after realizing she was becoming dependent on them. Anyway, I eventually realized that enough is enough. She said, “I’m going to stop taking it, no matter how bad it feels when I don’t take it.” I ended up in a hospital because I didn’t know, but my body had grown dependent on it. So I went cold turkey for five days.

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Continue reading the article.

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NFL flag vote sees Olympic ‘Dream Team’ move closer

Images courtesy of Getty
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With NFL players granted permission to play flag football at the 2028 Olympics, the possibility of an “dream team” of American football has come a long way.

In October 2023, the NFL’s LA 2028 program was updated to include flag football, which sparked rumors that the NBA would play like the NBA’s Dream Team from the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona.

Since then, the league has collaborated with its teams, the NFL Players Association, and national federations to provide access to NFL players.

Additionally, team owners unanimously approved a resolution that will allow NFL players to play their Olympic debut at the NFL’s spring league meeting on Tuesday in Minnesota.

One team member per team and any team’s designated international player will be allowed to participate.

For an international player like Louis Rees-Zammit, who will play for the Jacksonville Jaguars in the 2024 season, all 32 teams are allowed to add an additional spot to their practice squad roster.

Flag football: What is it?

The most tolerant and accessible form of American football is the flag. Millions of people worldwide watch this quick, non-contact version of the game.

Defenders must pull a “flag” from the attacking player’s waist with the ball in place of tackling.

The rapid expansion of the women’s game, one of the fastest-growing sports in the world, was essential to flag’s victory in the 2028 Olympic election.

The International Federation of American Football (Ifaf), which has 75 member nations, governs the flag.

There were 20 million players playing in the world’s flag football world championships last year, according to the NFL, with a record 31 countries participating.

What is the process for Olympic selection?

Five-on-five football will be played with a team’s defense and offense on the field against various opponents.

Six men’s and six women’s teams will compete, each with ten players per team.

On the advice of the respective national federations, such as USA Football, national Olympic committees will select Olympic rosters.

The NFL will now work with the NFLPA, Ifaf, and other relevant Olympic authorities to put rules in place that will require players to undergo a try-out or qualification process before participating in the nations’ national flag football team.

NFL players will compete with well-known flag players and “talent-transfer athletes from other sports,” according to USA Football’s CEO Scott Hallenbeck.

Hallenbeck continued, “We have a lot of responsibility ahead of us in selecting, training, and leading the US men’s and women’s national teams for LA28.”

“We’re fortunate to have a talent pool that already includes well-known flag footballers, who have helped USA Football achieve a gold-medal standard in international competition. Our ability to create the best US men’s national team possible only increases when NFL players are added.

Brian Asamoah, the Minnesota Vikings linebacker, stated to BBC Sport, “You can’t just count out the guys that play flag football.

Minnesota Vikings linebacker Brian Asamoah wearing a Ghana headbandImages courtesy of Getty

Who might represent Team USA?

Before switching to tackle football, many NFL players developed their flag skills, but since then the Pro Bowl has evolved from an end-of-season all-star game to a week-long series of skill contests culminating in a game of flag football.

Justin Jefferson, the star wide receiver for the Vikings between 2023 and 2025, said, “To think about the chances of playing in the Olympics and winning a gold medal is a dream.”

I must make a decision on that, without a doubt. The body will be different in three years, but I’ve always wanted to fight for your country.

While Patrick Mahomes, a two-time MVP, and another star receiver, Tyreek Hill, have both stated they want to play, he “definitely wants to.”

Given the rise in international players and their caliber, Asamoah, who has a Ghanaian heritage, stressed that the 2028 Olympics are not just about the prospect of representing Team USA.

He said, “I’ve put 10 or 11 Ghanaian players in a group chat to share the news, and there are now.” Everyone in the group is excited, and the word is definitely spreading.

Asamoah warned that 2028 will not just be a procession to gold for Team USA, as it was for their NBA stars at Barcelona 1992, when he attended a football camp in Ghana earlier this year. It was one of many programs aimed at spreading flag football all over the world.

If you simply stack the stars from our league, Team USA’s talent will be a little crazy. Asamoah continued, “I believe that would resemble a Dream Team.”

“But then you have to face a team like Ghana, where you could have a fast, 6’1” player who is also 240 pounds, and who is just playing some crazy things.

related subjects

  • Olympic Games
  • American Football

Ukrainian former politician shot dead outside school in Madrid

Developing a Story

An unidentified assailant shot a former Ukrainian politician dead outside a school in Madrid, Spain, according to authorities.

Andriy Portnov, a senior aide to Ukraine’s former president Viktor Yanukovych, was previously identified by the Spanish Ministry of Interior as Andriy Portnov.

In Pozuelo de Alarcon, the upscale neighborhood in the Spanish capital, the attack occurred on Wednesday morning outside the American School’s gates.

Around 9:15 a.m. (07:15 GMT) was a man shot in the street, and police were called.

According to witnesses who spoke to the police, the officer “severe times” shot him in the head and body. According to police, the attackers fled on foot.

Portnov was attacked while taking his children to school, according to a report from Cadena SER radio station.

Since serving as deputy head of the presidential office from 2010 to 2014, Portnov had a long-standing relationship with Ukraine’s pro-Russian former leader Yanukovych.

Portnov participated in the draft of legislation intended to prosecute those who participated in the Ukrainian revolution of 2014 during Yanukovych’s rule. He was later added to a list of sanctions, including those issued by the US Treasury in 2021.