- 5/29/2025
๐๏ธ As Moscow prepares to resume peace talks with Kyiv next week in Istanbul, disturbing developments cast a shadow over diplomatic hopes. Russia's lead negotiator and his wife and children have reportedly received direct threats from Ukrainian sources, raising security and political concerns ahead of the proposed second round of negotiations. ๐ท๐บ๐บ๐ฆ
๐ฅ Meanwhile, tragedy strikes in southern Russia, where the deputy mayor and a decorated combat veteran has been killed in an explosion suspected to involve an improvised explosive device (IED). Authorities are investigating the blast, as speculation mounts over potential sabotage or terrorism. ๐จ
๐บ๐ณ At the UN Security Council, tensions soared as the war in Gaza passed the 600-day mark. Palestineโs representative delivered a heartbreaking update, stating that over 1,300 children have been killed since March, when Israel allegedly broke a ceasefire with Hamas. ๐๐๏ธ Emotions ran high as the humanitarian toll continues to escalate with no end in sight.
#UkraineCrisis #RussiaUkraineWar #PeaceTalks #IstanbulNegotiations #RussiaNews #UkraineNews #UNSecurityCouncil #GazaWar #PalestineCrisis #HumanitarianCrisis #MiddleEastConflict #GazaUpdate #CeasefireBroken #IEDAttack #RussianOfficialKilled #GlobalTensions #DiplomacyUnderThreat #ChildrenInWar #WorldNews #GeopoliticalUpdate
๐ฅ Meanwhile, tragedy strikes in southern Russia, where the deputy mayor and a decorated combat veteran has been killed in an explosion suspected to involve an improvised explosive device (IED). Authorities are investigating the blast, as speculation mounts over potential sabotage or terrorism. ๐จ
๐บ๐ณ At the UN Security Council, tensions soared as the war in Gaza passed the 600-day mark. Palestineโs representative delivered a heartbreaking update, stating that over 1,300 children have been killed since March, when Israel allegedly broke a ceasefire with Hamas. ๐๐๏ธ Emotions ran high as the humanitarian toll continues to escalate with no end in sight.
#UkraineCrisis #RussiaUkraineWar #PeaceTalks #IstanbulNegotiations #RussiaNews #UkraineNews #UNSecurityCouncil #GazaWar #PalestineCrisis #HumanitarianCrisis #MiddleEastConflict #GazaUpdate #CeasefireBroken #IEDAttack #RussianOfficialKilled #GlobalTensions #DiplomacyUnderThreat #ChildrenInWar #WorldNews #GeopoliticalUpdate
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NewsTranscript
00:00The Russia's chief negotiator for peace and his family, they're getting threats from the territory of Ukraine.
00:05That is, according to the Russian investigative committee, which has now launched an investigation.
00:09The Kremlin, though, meantime, denouncing the turn of events.
00:14This is, of course, a completely egregious situation.
00:18And the threats are not coming directly to the chief negotiator, but to his family.
00:24A completely unprecedented story.
00:26Now, it is very important that our relevant services determine where these threats come from.
00:33We know that the investigative committee is already dealing with this issue.
00:37And, of course, if the source of these threats is Ukraine, the Kiev regime, then the situation is more than egregious.
00:46Yeah, it's quite disturbing still, very sinister.
00:49And what's most sinister about it, Rory, is probably the fact that it's his family who are being threatened.
00:55And there, his children's names, his family's names have been revealed online.
01:01Threats like this.
01:02We know where your children are.
01:04We have a lot of stuffed scooters, referring to the Ukrainian tactic, terror tactic of using civilian vehicles and scooters to pack with explosives.
01:13Now, he was also, he's been on this Myrtavorets list, the peacemaker Ukrainian kill list for quite some time.
01:21But his family have now appeared on it.
01:23And as you say, the Russian investigative committee have opened a criminal investigation into this.
01:29And it seems to be a real shift, a very dark shift, targeting the families and wives of individuals.
01:35I, myself, am on the peacemaker list, along with many of our colleagues here, our editor-in-chief.
01:40So this is a very dark and sinister tactic, it seems.
01:45But the timing of all this, I mean, it kind of stinks, to be frank.
01:49It all comes, as Russia has proposed, the second round of peace talks set for Istanbul, potentially on Monday.
01:55Ukraine, of course, at the table.
01:57What are the details of that?
01:58Yeah, I mean, this is about the memorandum, a memorandum that's going to be presented by Russia to the Ukrainians,
02:05outlining the conditions by which any ceasefire could take place.
02:08We can guess at what may or may not be in it.
02:11Now, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has announced and proposed a meeting next Monday in Istanbul.
02:20He's thanked the authorities in Turkey for facilitating that.
02:24Now, Kiev is apparently discussing the offer, and the Ukrainian Minister for Defence, Mr. Umarov,
02:34has suggested that he's already told the Russian delegation what the conditions in Ukraine are.
02:40Now, the Kremlin hasn't recently responded to that suggestion.
02:44Let's have a listen to what Mr. Umarov had to say.
02:46I handed over our document to the head of the Russian delegation, which reflects the Ukrainian position.
02:54They received this document.
02:56We are not opposed to further meetings with the Russians and are awaiting their memorandum,
03:00so that the meeting won't be empty and can truly move us closer to ending the war.
03:04Interesting wording.
03:05We're not opposed to any further meetings with the Russians.
03:08On one hand, one element of the Ukrainian state suggesting this.
03:11Another element of the Ukrainian state actively funding terror attacks in Moscow,
03:15targeting senior political figures, people like Barry Dugan have been murdered,
03:20senior military officials as well.
03:22Now, in response to this, Dmitry Peskov has said,
03:25look, we've announced that we're going to have a second meeting in Istanbul.
03:29We're not going to preempt those talks or discussions.
03:32So a very calm and cool response from the Kremlin.
03:34We're going to do business.
03:35Let's get this done.
03:36Let's meet.
03:37Let's have a listen to what he had to say.
03:38Russia has just offered to meet in Istanbul on Monday and start discussing these projects.
03:46Therefore, demanding it immediately or slowly is not constructive.
03:51Here it is necessary either to confirm readiness to continue negotiations or to do the opposite.
03:58So a quite measured response, as per usual, from the Kremlin.
04:01Let's do business.
04:02Let's meet.
04:03We're not going to preempt.
04:04We're not going to suggest yes or no or what we're going to discuss at those meetings.
04:07The Russians have been very, very disciplined in maintaining the dignity, if you like, of silence around these discussions.
04:14While the Ukrainians have been demanding everything's about, you must agree to this ceasefire with no conditions,
04:19only ridiculous on a military front where the Russians are advancing consistently.
04:25Why on earth would Russia agree to an unconditional ceasefire?
04:28Well, that's a good point.
04:29I mean, just reading some of the commentary online, Shay, somebody commented, Russia is winning the war and grinding NATO gear into dust.
04:36I do not think Putin is in any hurry to sign on to any agreements that are not firmly in Russia's best interests.
04:43So hopefully Monday we've got round two of these peace talks.
04:46But we did have round one just a short time ago in Istanbul.
04:49What was achieved in that first round?
04:51Yeah, well, there was a lot of scepticism probably around it that, you know, with the soundings from Mr. Zelensky,
04:56if Mr. Putin doesn't turn up on my command, if I don't command Vladimir Putin,
05:00the elected president of the Russian Federation, to appear in Istanbul, I'm not going to turn up either.
05:06So quite interesting diktats coming from them.
05:10Now, what happened, something did happen, which was very tangible and beneficial.
05:15A thousand prisoners on each side were released in a stage release.
05:18Interestingly, many Russian civilians were released to make up those numbers.
05:24Lots of suggestions that Ukraine may not have the numbers.
05:27Remember, Russia is holding vastly superior numbers of Ukrainian prisoners.
05:31Some say between 15,000 to 20,000.
05:34Some suggestions that the Ukrainians were struggling to make up the numbers,
05:37had to release politically jailed civilians, quite remarkable.
05:41Now, let's have a listen to Mr. Medinsky,
05:44suggesting that these are, of course, the continuation of discussions which began in 2022.
05:51Discussions that were ended by a certain Boris Johnson,
05:54who arrived to drag the Ukrainian delegation away.
05:59We had David Ahamia, the head of the delegation, confirming this,
06:03that he was dragged away from the table and said,
06:05we're going to fight on. Hundreds of thousands of people have died as a result of this.
06:09Let's have a listen to what he had to say.
06:12It was the key topic because we're considering the talks as the resumption of the Istanbul process.
06:18It was important to reiterate what we agreed on in Gomel back at the end of February 2022
06:23and how this would have ended had Ukraine agreed to peace at the end of February.
06:29They did not agree.
06:30They were dragging their feet.
06:32And after that, the next stage of agreements was in Istanbul.
06:34It was slightly more demanding to the situation on the ground than the one in Gomel.
06:39However, unfortunately, the Istanbul process was disrupted with the direct intervention of the West.
06:44And we remember previous cases of similar interventions and what they led to.
06:49And remember, the Ukrainians suggested that Russia had sent a second tier delegation
06:53to Istanbul for the first round.
06:56And then we hear and believe that the Americans said,
06:58don't send such hardliners next time, they asked the Kremlin.
07:01Please send somebody a bit more soft on the Ukrainians.
07:04It's quite remarkable with the way the narrative is chopping and changing.
07:07And this all comes, of course, in the midst of escalation coming from Germany,
07:11suggestions about weapons to strike deep into the heart of Russia.
07:15So all eyes are going to be on Istanbul on Monday.
07:17Now, earlier we heard from an Italian war correspondent and leader of the Italia Unitar movement,
07:23who says that Zelensky's popularity has diminished while he prolongs the conflict to cling onto power.
07:28Zelensky is not popular in his own country.
07:33Now, the population of Ukraine is very tired about the war.
07:37They are losing.
07:38They are drafting the people.
07:41They are taking them from the streets.
07:43They have no manpower anymore.
07:45They are losing the war day by day.
07:48So Zelensky can keep his power, just continue this war.
07:52Otherwise, there will be election in Ukraine.
07:54And after Zelensky lost the war, he will not keep his power.
07:58I can say that also me, I was inserted inside the Miros Voretz list.
08:05Ukrainians already killed one Italian journalist in 2015, Andrea Rokkelli.
08:12He has quite a famous case.
08:13Also, the Italian investigation committee and prosecutors opened an investigation
08:21against the Ukrainian National Guard for the killing, for the murdering of these Italian journalists.
08:27So, also in Italy, we know that Ukrainian Nazis use Miros Voretz list
08:32for trying to kill anybody that don't think exactly like that.
08:37They are poor Nazis, they are criminals.
08:38And this is why it's very important that during the peace negotiations,
08:44there will be a Russian need to insist for us the denotification of the Ukraine.
08:49Because who is now in power in Kiev, they are poor criminals.
08:52Well, for a glimpse into how Russia keeps on winning in Ukraine,
08:57just check out the so-called Military Yearbook 2025, available at rt.com,
09:01from Moscow's plant and its massive military,
09:04to how certain Western partners continue trying to undermine Russia.
09:07It is a must-read on our website right now.
09:10And while there are threats to top Russian officials,
09:15the deputy mayor of a city in Russia's south,
09:17who was also a veteran of the current conflict with Ukraine,
09:20has been killed in a blast.
09:22I warn you, disturbing images coming your way.
09:24It's from CCTV.
09:25The CCTV camera footage showing a man approaching Stavropoul's deputy mayor,
09:29Zaur Gurtsev.
09:30Russian authorities say there are reasons to believe this was a terror attack
09:33using an improvised explosive device.
09:36The Russian investigative committee says the second person in the video
09:39was also killed and was Gurtsev's acquaintance.
09:42The deceased Russian official was an Air Force veteran
09:44who led an operation during the Battle of Mariupol in 2022.
09:48Over now to Dutch journalist Sonja Vandenende.
09:50She says that this is a clear pattern of what she calls Ukrainian terror.
09:55We remember the head of the biological program, the laboratory.
10:00So this is what they are after.
10:01I mean, this year is a hero.
10:04He was the hero of Mariupol.
10:05I was there.
10:06I know what was going on there.
10:08It was very, you know, heroic, I think, what he did.
10:12And so they were after the military.
10:14And, of course, people were on this dead list, the Mirov Horec list.
10:17Most likely he was.
10:18I am.
10:19Many others are.
10:20And it's just to disturb the peace negotiations.
10:23This is what I think.
10:24And this is coming most likely from the Ukrainian side, but they are trying to manipulate.
10:29This is what they are doing.
10:31And I think in the U.S. they don't, maybe Trump doesn't understand 100% really what it's about.
10:38Maybe he's also being manipulated by his people there.
10:41So, I mean, it's unbelievable that how can you disturb a peace process by threatening people?
10:48And it's horrible.
10:50And this is not waiting war.
10:51This is just killing and a killing spree.
10:53This is terrorism.
10:54And this is what is Ukraine doing all the time.
10:57And it's getting worse and worse.
10:59They speak about peace.
11:00They speak about, you know, about the negotiations.
11:02They speak about 30-day ceasefire.
11:05But, meantime, they are now conducting, again, terrorism.
11:10This is what it is.
11:13As the war in Gaza passes, the 600-day mark, the death toll rises every single day.
11:19Since Israel broke its ceasefire with Hamas in March, more than 1,300 Palestinian children
11:25have been killed and around 4,000 wounded.
11:27That is, according to Palestinian officials.
11:29And at a Security Council meeting in New York, that devastation was simply too much for
11:33the Palestinian official to handle.
11:36The images of mothers embracing their motionless bodies, caressing their hair, talking to them,
11:49apologising to them.
11:59Excuse me, Mr. President.
12:11I have grandchildren.
12:14I know what they mean to their families.
12:17And to see the situation of the Palestinians, without us having hearts to do something,
12:25is beyond the ability of any normal human being to tolerate it.
12:34Flames and hunger are devouring Palestinian children.
12:39This is why we are so outraged as Palestinians everywhere, the 14 millions of us, in the occupied
12:48territories, in the diaspora, in the refugee camps, in far places, all the way to California
12:55and in between.
12:58We love our children.
12:59We love our people.
13:01We don't want to see them going through this.
13:03Meanwhile, the situation around humanitarian aid distribution centres remains very dangerous
13:08in the enclave, with Israeli gunfire, again, ringing out.
13:12Yeah, you saw some of those people running for cover right there, with some being carried
13:30away after being wounded.
13:32Now, they've been gathering at a handful of aid points as a hunger crisis just spreads
13:35across the enclave.
13:37Palestinians say their situation is so bad, they're prepared to risk their lives just to
13:41find some food.
13:42We came here because of hunger.
13:47We haven't eaten for nearly a week.
13:49I have children, including an 18-month-old, and he needs food and milk, and I don't have
13:54the ability to secure it.
13:56My little boy is so hungry, he's sucking his thumb.
14:00Adults are collapsing and falling to the ground from the intensity of hunger.
14:04I came despite the danger and long distance to get food.
14:09I was waiting here since yesterday, but it was useless.
14:12People surged in and they got the rest of the aid.
14:15I didn't get anything.
14:16According to the UN, almost half a million Palestinians are very much on the brink of starvation.
14:22Desperate for food, four people recently died while storming aid warehouses.
14:27In fact, two of them were crushed by the crowds, while the other two were killed by gunshots.
14:31So we're now to our correspondent with a few more details.
14:33It's not just the airstrikes that are causing death in Gaza.
14:39Hunger has become an even more terrible ordeal, being turned into a weapon in the war of genocide,
14:44as evidenced by the inhabitants of the region.
14:47Israel closes crossings and ignores the refugee agency, preventing humanitarian aid from entering.
14:52And when it is allowed to be imported, it happens as part of a forced relocation project.
14:58Instead of 400 centres for the distribution of aid, only four are functioning.
15:03The result is obvious.
15:05The humiliation of tens of thousands of people and serious concerns about a project that looks humanitarian on the outside,
15:11but in fact is part of the war.
15:13They look at us with arrogant disdain, seeking to humiliate us.
15:17We need to open the border crossings.
15:19This situation cannot be tolerated, and such measures do not bring results.
15:24We walked four kilometres to get only crumbs.
15:27We witnessed tens of thousands of citizens heading to the distribution centre in the west of Rafa,
15:32which is operated by an American company.
15:35The famine forced children, women and the elderly to walk six kilometres from southern Khan Yunus to western Rafa.
15:41After receiving help, they will have to return the same way.
15:45I come from the Saudi quarter, where aid is currently being distributed.
15:48I feel depressed because I was sent to a remote place, and help is being distributed right at my home.
15:54I tried to return there to receive humanitarian aid at my place of residence.
15:58But, unfortunately, I did not receive anything.
16:02Allah is enough for me, and He is the best protector.
16:07The essence of the Israeli project is to create four centres,
16:10all of which are located in the south of the sector.
16:13Those who want to receive help from Gaza City and the northern regions will have to move.
16:18Thus, Israel has put humanitarian aid at the service of the resettlement project, which it calls voluntary.
16:26To Bangladesh, where tens of thousands have hit the streets, demanding new elections.
16:31The country is currently led by an interim government after its prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, was ousted last year.
16:36The rally was organised by the Nationalist Party, one of the largest political movements in the country.
16:41It has demanded a clear timeline for new elections to be held,
16:45as though in attendance criticised the interim authorities for making decisions that have long-term implications.
16:50Meanwhile, the ousted prime minister, who fled to India, accused the sitting government in Bangladesh of selling out to Washington.
16:59She's claiming that the US was trying to take over a strategically located island, which is true.
17:04Over now to our artist, Charlotte Dubinsky, delving deeper into the Western geostrategic goals in Asia.
17:10A warning, this report does have disturbing images.
17:13The US is always going on about supporting democratic countries around the world.
17:19In doing so, it would probably like you to forget how its interventions have often shifted power in those countries in favour of, well, itself.
17:29That shift of power has come at a huge cost over the decades, with much of the focus on Central America.
17:37But America's grip has always been far larger than that, stretching across the globe.
17:43And in recent years, Washington has been busy.
17:47Let's just turn our attentions to the regime change in Bangladesh last year.
17:51You may have read that student protest toppled Sheikh Hasina, but in reality, this was a military coup, one that the US was OK with.
18:12Over the years, the US has maintained cosy ties with military or military-backed regimes in Bangladesh.
18:18And it views the latest regime change as a positive development.
18:22But the White House and the State Department have denied Hasina's allegation of US involvement in her overthrow.
18:29Now, that ousted leader, Sheikh Hasina, has accused Bangladesh's new leaders of handing over part of her beloved country to the US.
18:38Hasina, specifically mentioning the prize at Washington, has had its eye on for decades, St. Martin's Island.
18:45This island has potential military strategic value, as it would give the US control over the Bay of Bengal, the Strait of Malacca, as well as more access and eyes in the Indo-Pacific region.
18:58Need I say, China?
19:00And she alleges that this is the prize Washington has gone to some pretty extreme lengths to get hold of.
19:06It can't be anyone's intention to give up even an inch of that country's soil to anyone.
19:12But what a misfortune it is today.
19:15My father did not agree to America's demands for St. Martin's Island.
19:18He had to give his life for that.
19:20And that was my destiny, as I never thought of selling the country to stay in power.
19:24In that statement, Hasina is talking about Mohamed Yunus, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, parachuted in to be Bangladesh's interim leader until elections can be held.
19:35Almost 10 months later, and there is no sign of those elections.
19:40And who parachuted him in to being PM?
19:43Well, that's an open secret.
19:45He is known as to be the brain behind the whole revolution.
19:52So he denies it repeatedly.
19:55He said, not me, many others.
19:57But that's how he's recognized, that he's the brain behind the whole thing.
20:02It's an amazing meticulously designed thing.
20:05It's not just suddenly came, it's not like that.
20:08Very well designed.
20:09Even the leadership pattern, people don't know who the leader is.
20:12So you can't catch one and say, OK, it's over, it's not over.
20:15For many experts, Yunus' links to the U.S. deep state are clear.
20:21Mohamed Yunus has long maintained deep connections with the U.S. deep state and its regional enforcers, notably the Pakistani military establishment and the ISI.
20:32His recent ascent to power in Bangladesh, under the guise of leading an interim government, is in fact a geopolitical maneuver orchestrated by foreign intelligence agencies.
20:44This move serves multiple objectives.
20:47One, to turn Bangladesh into a strategic outpost for transnational jihadist operations and narco-terrorism.
20:56And two, to establish American hegemony over the geopolitically sensitive corridor spanning the Bay of Bengal, Arakan and the China-Myanmar border.
21:06As mentioned earlier, this was a military coup.
21:10It was, but it was also a coup heavily supported by radical Islamists, including the Jamati Islami Party.
21:18These are the guys found guilty of being complicit in genocide and war crimes during the 1970s.
21:26Banned from taking part in elections for many years, it was finally given a full ban by Hasina just before she lost her grip on power.
21:34Though Yunus quickly reversed that in a quid pro quo, perhaps.
21:40It's now a prominent force in Bangladesh.
21:43With the protests shaking the established political order, Jamati Islami saw a chance to rehabilitate its image and adopt a stance in favor of change, positioning itself as a pro-revolutionary force.
21:56This strategy has reinvigorated the party's appeal, providing it with greater media attention and renewed popular support.
22:05Meanwhile, Bangladesh's former ruling party has been banned from participating in any elections, if, of course, they take place.
22:13Meanwhile, Hindus are being heavily persecuted in the country.
22:16The United States must work to stop the violence in Bangladesh and stand up for human rights.
22:23There is targeted violence against the Hindu minority in Bangladesh and destruction of Hindu temples.
22:30That is wrong.
22:32The caretaker, Prime Minister Yunus, must work to bring peace, to stop the violence against Hindus, to stop the violence against student protesters, and to build a real democracy in Bangladesh.
22:44The United States must demand that he do that.
22:48So, that's on one side of Asia.
22:51Radicals suddenly finding themselves in power, with Washington's long-asked-for demands about to be fulfilled.
22:59Over on the other extreme of the Asian continent, a very similar game has been playing out.
23:05This time, it wasn't a Nobel Peace Prize laureate that came to power, but outright Islamists.
23:11Yes, we're talking about a guy who only recently dusted himself down and said,
23:16Oh, I'm not an al-Qaeda anymore, trust me, I wear a suit now.
23:21Yet a leopard doesn't change its spots, nor his views on women, it seems.
23:25Even when that's the German foreign minister, when she was on an official visit.
23:31This is Ahmed al-Shara, a man who until very recently had a big bounty on his head, put there by the US.
23:38It was dropped pretty soon after he stormed to power, ousting Syria's Bashar al-Assad,
23:44something the US had been trying to do for over a decade.
23:48Despite the, I've turned over a new leaf spiel, he very quickly got to work persecuting al-Alaite community.
23:56I have two sisters. I don't know what to do with them.
24:10It's okay for me if I die, but not for my two sisters or my mom.
24:15To the United Nations, to everyone, to the organizations, human rights, please stop this genocide.
24:22If I show my face and they see it, they will slaughter my family.
24:25People without any humanity have come and killed kids, infants, women, men and the elderly.
24:32We're human beings. We're Syrians.
24:34If you want to kill us, do it, but not like this.
24:42Anyone, anyone who can hear me, just please save us.
24:45You need to do, to do something quickly. We are running out of time.
24:48You'd think that such atrocities, plus no commitment to holding elections, would see al-Sharah's regime firmly out in the cold with Washington.
24:58But no, he's a tough guy, and that's good.
25:02How did you find the Syrian president?
25:04Great. Great. I think very good. Young, attractive guy. Tough guy.
25:10You know, strong past. Very strong past fighter.
25:14How the hell did a former al-Qaeda leader whose militants just two months ago butchered more than a thousand people suddenly become the guy Washington can work with?
25:26It's very simple. They promised Trump his piece of the pie.
25:30Washington, the administration's changed, but the power behind them doesn't.
25:35And that power is patient, waiting for the right moment to strike.
25:39Across Asia, that moment has been seized.
25:45It is day three of global security talks right here in Moscow.
25:48Over 100 nations in attendance.
25:50Vladimir Putin highlighting the need to develop a new security architecture without compromising the safety nor the interests of any other nation.
25:58And talking with us here at RT, Eritrea, as ambassador to Russia, said the issue of terrorism on the African continent needs to be addressed,
26:05but also highlighting a disturbing link between human trafficking and UN peacekeepers.
26:12The number of countries interested in combating terrorism is growing.
26:19This year there are around 124, I think.
26:23Every year I come here, I see the number growing.
26:26So this shows that it's a common problem, a problem for any country, especially for Africa also.
26:33So it's not only cyber terrorism, it's terrorism in many forms.
26:39Beauty, human trafficking, narcotics and all these problems, they were discussed here.
26:47So they have come to a common conclusion now.
26:51How to fight it so that they are all agreed to cooperate to combat this common threat.
27:00We have, in my country, this so-called peacekeeping force from the United Nations.
27:06What they do there is not peacekeeping.
27:09They do other things there.
27:11Even they themselves make business by human trafficking.
27:19So it was a problem for us.
27:23This peacekeeping force was a problem for us.
27:25It doesn't solve anything.
27:26I have it.
27:27I mean, from my experience, I didn't see anything that this peace force solves anything.
27:33We see it in the Middle East.
27:35We see it everywhere.
27:36Now, I don't know.
27:37What did they solve the problems?
27:38So this is, I think, a mission of, not a mission of the United Nations.
27:47It's a mission of some countries.
27:48So this is, I think, a mission of the United Nations.