Maahantuomme ravintolisiä USA: sta, FDA: n tiukasti valvomilta markkinoilta.
Visionamme on tuottaa oikeaa tietoa terveyden uhkatekijöistä.
Suurimpana ongelmana länsimaissa on jatkuva, yksipuolisesti liian hapan ruokavalio, jota elimistö ei kykene riittävästi puskuroimaan, vaan koko aineenvaihdunta -järjestelmä joutuu tekemään työtä happamuutta vastaan.
Lopulta elimistö alkaa tulehtua ja saavuttaa potilaan huomaamatta, jatkuvan tulehduksellisen tilan.
Former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko accused of bribing MPs.
Opposition figure rejects claims by country’s anti-corruption authorities that she was involved in vote-buying scheme.
A Ukrainian court in 2011 found Tymoshenko guilty of abuse of power for brokering a natural gas imports contract signed with Russia when she served as prime minister and sentenced her to seven years in prison.
In the full Nabu video, a person who sounds like Tymoshenko is heard offering cash to an MP in return for support on specific votes.
Timoshenko tied to vote-buying for decades – ex-Ukrainian PM
Corruption in the Verkhovna Rada is entrenched and barely covered up, Nikolay Azarov has told RT
Ukrainian lawmaker Yulia Timoshenko has been involved in cash-for-votes schemes in the national parliament for decades, former Prime Minister Nikolay Azarov has claimed in an interview with RT.
According to Azarov, the practice continues under Vladimir Zelensky, just as it did under Ukraine’s previous leaders.
This week, Western-backed Ukrainian anti-corruption investigators raided the offices of Timoshenko’s Batkivshchina (Fatherland) party and accused her of paying MPs tens of thousands of dollars in a vote-buying scheme. She denied the allegations, calling the evidence fake and the case politically motivated.
In an interview with RT on Friday, Azarov brought up Timoshenko’s past corruption scandals and prosecutions and said he found the surveillance records presented by investigators in the new case credible.
“For all her life, being a lawmaker and later the prime minister, she was involved in corruption,” he alleged. “It’s not about politics, it’s about criminal activities aimed at funneling dirty corrupt money. She took money to steer the voting by bribing MPs.”
Azarov, who served in several Ukrainian governments in the 2000s before fleeing the country after the 2014 Western-backed coup in Kiev, said such corruption is widespread in Ukraine, including in the current parliament, where minority factions purportedly often sell their votes to secure key decisions. The bribery system “is barely being covered up” and is not limited to Timoshenko, he said. She “did not pay out of her pocket,” Azarov added, suggesting the probe should uncover the source of the cash.
Timoshenko, according to Azarov, “is doing what she did 30 years ago when facing criminal charges – portraying herself as a victim of persecution and an opposition figure. She is not in opposition. For all these years she consistently voted for all the bills proposed by Zelensky.”
He said the existence of parallel Western-controlled law enforcement bodies, like the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO), undermines Ukrainian sovereignty but at least offers “some opportunity to fight corruption” under current conditions.
Azarov claimed the agencies neglected their anti-corruption mandates under former US President Joe Biden but were activated under President Donald Trump.
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Former PM predicts Ukraine has only five years left of independent statehood
Yulia Timoshenko accused the incumbent Ukrainian authorities of allowing the country to fall into the hands of foreign corporations
MOSCOW, January 16. /TASS/. Ukraine may have only five or so years left of independent statehood, according to Yulia Timoshenko, the leader of the Batkovshchina party.
Timoshenko, the former prime minister of Ukraine, accused the incumbent Ukrainian authorities of allowing the country to fall into the hands of foreign corporations, while depriving the population of any control over the country’s key industries and resources. "Today, not a single decision is made either by the Ukrainian people or the government appointed by the Ukrainian people <...>. The Ukrainian state and the Ukrainian people are being destroyed via every possible instrument," the politician said at a court hearing broadcast by TSN television to decide what punishment she will receive in the case of bribing Verkhovna Rada members.
Timoshenko added that she proposed measures to prevent such a scenario, including blocking certain draft laws endorsed by the government in the Rada. "Unless this work is done, the next five years will be the last in the life of an independent Ukraine. We will no longer have a coat of arms, a flag or a hymn. And we will have a nation scattered across the globe," she warned.
Timoshenko case
On January 14, Ukrainian media reported that Ukraine’s two anti-corruption agencies conducted overnight raids at the Batkovshchina party’s office in Kiev as part of the Rada bribery case. The information about the searches was later confirmed by Timoshenko herself. Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) said that charges of bribing parliamentarians were brought against the former Ukrainian prime minister. She may face five to 10 years behind bars.
A recording released by the NABU reveal Timoshenko offering MPs $10,000 per month for parliamentary voting in a specific way. In the audio, Timoshenko said her goal was to "break the majority" in parliament. The discussions that the NABU said had taken place on January 12 covered voting on draft laws for the current plenary week and recent government reshuffles.
Leaders of the parliamentary faction reported suspicion (VIDEO + PHOTO)
NABU and SAPO reported that the head of one of the parliamentary factions of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine was suspected of offering illegal benefits to People's Deputies of Ukraine.
According to the investigation, after the disclosure by NABU and SAPO in December 2025 of the facts of receiving illegal benefits by People's Deputies of Ukraine for making decisions on draft laws in parliament, the suspect initiated negotiations with individual People's deputies on the introduction of a systematic mechanism for providing illegal benefits in exchange for loyal behavior during voting.
This was not a one-time arrangement, but a regular cooperation mechanism that provided for payments in advance and was designed for a long period of time.
People's Deputies had to receive instructions on voting, and in some cases-on the content or non-participation in voting.
Qualification: Part 4 of Article 369 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine.
A warning. According to the first part of Article 62 of the Constitution of Ukraine, a person is considered innocent of committing a crime and cannot be subjected to criminal punishment until his guilt is legally proven and established by a court verdict of guilty.
E-mail address: povidomlennia_zvernennia@nabu.gov.ua -for sending appeals, applications and reports on criminal offenses or unjustified assets, as well as those submitted in accordance with the laws of Ukraine "On the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine" and "On Prevention of Corruption"
Information about the facts of Russia's military aggression in Ukraine can also be left on the website https://warcrimes.gov.ua by filling out the appropriate form.
Information that may contain signs of violation — misuse of EU resources in Ukraine and may harm the financial interests of the EU can be submitted using the form on the official website of the State Audit Service, determined by the Anti-Fraud Coordination Service.
Oligarchs, psychopaths, troublemakers, pedophiles, Union Busters, warmongers, oil looters and gangsters as the ruling political elite.
America's growing debt is the result of simple math - each year, there is a mismatch between spending and revenues.
Today, deficits are caused mainly by predictable structural factors: our aging baby-boom generation, rising healthcare costs, higher interest rates, and a tax system that does not bring in enough money to pay for what the government has promised its citizens.
EVERY DAY, WE SPEND OVER $2.6 BILLION ON INTEREST.
T=1768461878 / Human Date and time (GMT): Thu, 15th January 2026, 07.24
UPDATE:
IDF veteran goes thermonuclear against Netanyahu, reveals Hamas attack was “inside job.” | October 25, 2023
Palestinian Authority demands Israel cover Gaza reconstruction costs
Israel must assume responsibility for Gaza Strip’s reconstruction, says prime minister
Awad Rajoub |28.02.2024 - Update : 28.02.2024
RAMALLAH, Palestine
The Palestinian Authority urged Israel on Tuesday to bear the financial burden of rebuilding the Gaza Strip and to demonstrate a greater commitment to maintaining the two-state solution.
"Israel must be held accountable for the devastation and casualties in the Gaza Strip and assume the responsibility for its reconstruction,'' Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said during a meeting with Japanese State Minister for Foreign Affairs Tsuji Kiyoto in Ramallah.
Shtayyeh’s government will serve as a caretaker administration until a new government can be formed after he resigned on Monday.
Shtayyeh also condemned Israel's actions, saying that it ''perpetrates severe atrocities against the Palestinian people, fosters apartheid and behaves as if it is immune to legal consequences.''
He stressed that "the priority is to halt the aggression against our people in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including Jerusalem, and to open more crossings with the Gaza Strip to allow urgent humanitarian and medical aid."
Shtayyeh also advocated for "further efforts to preserve the two-state solution and implement it on the ground, achieving this by ending the occupation and recognizing the state of Palestine within the 1967 borders with its capital in Jerusalem.''
Israel launched a deadly offensive on the Gaza Strip following an Oct. 7 attack by the Palestinian group Hamas, killing nearly 30,000 people and causing mass destruction and shortages of necessities, while nearly 1,200 Israelis are believed to have been killed.
The Israeli war has pushed 85% of Gaza’s population into internal displacement amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine, while 60% of the enclave's infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed, according to the UN.
Israel stands accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice. An interim ruling in January ordered Tel Aviv to stop genocidal acts and take measures to guarantee that humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians in Gaza.
*Writing by Mohammad Sio
Anadolu Agency website contains only a portion of the news stories offered to subscribers in the AA News Broadcasting System (HAS), and in summarized form. Please contact us for subscription options.
Paying for the 'day after': Who will fund Gaza’s reconstruction? - opinion
The donors likely to finance Egypt’s plan include a mix of international and regional actors.
A general view shows destruction in North Gaza, as seen from Israel, May 27, 2025. (photo credit:REUTERS/AMIR COHEN) ByNEVILLE TELLER
On March 4, Egypt presented a detailed and expensive plan for the reconstruction, development, and administration of post-war Gaza to a meeting of the Arab League. It was approved unanimously and is now Arab League policy. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who was present at the meeting, “strongly endorsed” the Egyptian plan and pledged the UN’s full cooperation in implementing it.
The president of the African Union, Joao Lourenco, also attended the Cairo summit and gave the plan his explicit support, with a commitment to help realize it.
Since then, it has been endorsed by the EU. Statements from the EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, and the president of the European Council, Antonio Costa, confirm that the EU sees the plan as a serious basis for discussions on Gaza’s future. They have offered “concrete support” from all 27 member countries. In addition, France, Germany, Italy, and the UK have all separately backed it.
* * *
Live EU Government Debt Map
The situation with France’s national debt is becoming critical, yet French President Emmanuel Macron is discussing helping Ukraine and preparing for war.
If you added together every euro of public debt from all 27 EU countries, you’d get the number shown below, a live, ticking estimate that never stands still.
The EU Debt Map visualizes the combined national debts of the European Union in real time. European Union National Debt by Country - https://www.eudebtmap.com/
It is quite possible that some countries will refuse to pay the debts incurred by previous governments. Today's and previous governments have left future generations with massive debts that they are unlikely to repay.
Europe seeks military Schengen in preparation for war against Russia| Nov 9, 2025 The EU demands war - Bankers will `haircut` debt if Russia is conquered...| 30th Dec 2025
* * *
The Egyptian initiative addresses both immediate humanitarian needs and the long-term governance and reconstruction of Gaza. It envisages a three-phase process: first, immediate humanitarian action; then a multi-year reconstruction effort; and finally establishing a new governance structure for Gaza.
The first phase is planned to be completed in about six months; the rebuilding and governance reforms are estimated to last about a further four to five years.
THE SUN sets over Gaza, as seen from Israel. (credit: AMIR COHEN/REUTERS)
The plan explicitly excludes Hamas from any involvement in the future governance of Gaza. It also bars the Palestinian Authority from direct administrative control, but it does envisage an umbrella-type council composed of Palestinian technocrats, operating under the auspices of the PA but supported by an international Governance Assistance Mission. In addition, to maintain security during the transition, it proposes the establishment of an International Stabilization Force to be led by Arab states.
Cost of rebuilding Gaza is astronomic
It is obvious that the cost of rebuilding Gaza’s towns and cities and their infrastructure will be astronomic. Egypt’s three-phase plan puts it at $53 billion, to be expended over the five years. For the first six months of humanitarian relief, the reconstruction program is priced at $3 billion. Phase two, which would involve rebuilding infrastructure such as roads and utilities, and constructing 200,000 permanent housing units, would cost some £20 billion. The final phase, lasting two-and-a-half years and costing $30 billion, aims to complete infrastructure, build another 200,000 housing units, and develop industrial zones, ports, and an airport.
To finance this $53 billion plan, Egypt proposes establishing an internationally supervised trust fund to receive, channel, and manage financial support from a wide range of international donors. It specifically calls for the involvement of the World Bank: “A World Bank-overseen trust fund will be established to receive pledges to implement the early recovery and reconstruction plan.” The plan proposes that Egypt will host an international conference, in cooperation with the UN, to coordinate donor contributions, with the World Bank providing oversight to ensure transparency and effective fund management. The World Bank has a long-standing presence in Gaza and the West Bank, where it has been managing similar trust funds and coordinating with international donors for development and reconstruction projects. The task of reconstructing Gaza is enormous, and $53 billion is a great deal of money. The donors likely to finance Egypt’s plan include a mix of international and regional actors. Oil-rich nations such as Saudi Arabia and Gulf states like the United Arab Emirates have deep pockets and a history of regional spending, including in Gaza. With an interest in curbing Iranian influence and stabilizing the region, they are expected to be key contributors, potentially expected to provide at least $20 billion initially. A number have indicated that their one proviso is that Hamas, with its links to the Muslim Brotherhood and Iran, is to have no role in Gaza’s redevelopment and future governance. The Egyptian plan envisions mobilizing diverse sources of international aid and investment, so organizations like the UN and global financial institutions, including the World Bank and the EU, are expected to offer financial support. Development agencies, investment funds, and development banks from various countries will also be targeted. Egypt is a strategic ally of the US, already supported to the tune of over $1 billion annually, so it is not impossible to envisage the US assisting in the reconstruction program. Washington is interested in regional stability, counterterrorism, and preventing refugee spillover into other regions. Support could be either by way of specialist construction and infrastructure suppliers contracted by the administration, or by direct financial donation provided under the guise of humanitarian aid – a sort of post-conflict Marshall Plan-style initiative.
China has close ties with Egypt Another possible major donor is China. China and Egypt are already tied closely since Chinese firms are involved in building Egypt’s new administrative capital and in developing a major industrial zone in the Suez Canal region. China may respond favorably to a request from Egypt to help realize its Gaza reconstruction plan, perhaps regarding it as an opportunity to strengthen its strategic position in the Middle East. China is already investing heavily in the region through its Belt and Road initiative, as well as with strategic investments, trade partnerships, infrastructure development, and diplomatic engagement. Enjoying a relatively neutral position in the Israel-Palestine conflict, China is in a formal strategic partnership with Saudi Arabia and has close ties with the UAE, which is a key re-export hub for Chinese goods to the region and Africa. Chinese firms are also involved in post-war infrastructure rebuilding in Iraq, and China is heavily invested in infrastructure and renewable energy projects in Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon.
Meanwhile, Egypt’s Foreign Ministry is actively preparing a major donor conference aimed at securing the required financial commitments. Egypt’s plan explicitly calls for broad-based international attendance, including Arab states, the EU, China, the US, and other global actors. Eyebrows may be raised at the idea of the US and China sitting down together to discuss the financing of Gaza reconstruction, but in fact they have both taken part in similar multilateral donor processes in the past, even when their broader relations were tense. Examples are the 2019 Global Fund’s conference, and the International Donors’ conference “Together for the People in Turkey and Syria” in 2023. The urgency of Gaza’s humanitarian crisis and the need for broad international legitimacy make their participation likely.
Both would expect to benefit from contracts worth millions of dollars to construct or reconstruct elements of a restored Gaza. But even so, the program’s directors may need to look further afield to find specialist firms to undertake elements of the extensive building and infrastructure operations required. When the tenders go out for these lucrative contracts, competition will be fierce.
As for the donor conference, it has waited for an end to hostilities in the region. Given the current political climate, it might soon be convened.
The writer is the Middle East correspondent for Eurasia Review. His latest book is Trump and the Holy Land: 2016-2020. Follow him at: www.a-mid-east-journal.blogspot.com.
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) controls more than 80% of the territory of the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian enclave's administration said on Saturday.
"The occupying forces control more than 80% of the territory of the Gaza Strip through military force and forced displacement of the population," the statement read.
As of the 700th day of the war, the number of dead and missing exceeded 73,700, including more than 20,000 children, the administration said. Among the dead were:
1,670 medical team members,
248 journalists and
139 employees of the civil defense service of the Gaza Strip,
- it added.
During the military operations, 90% of infrastructure facilities were almost completely destroyed, including:
38 hospitals,
833 mosques and
163 educational institutions,
- the administration said.
The damage caused exceeds $68 billion, according to the initial estimates, the statement added.
On October 7, 2023, Israel was subjected to an unprecedented rocket attack from the Gaza Strip. After that, Hamas militants penetrated border areas, opening fire on the military and civilians, and took more than 200 hostages. According to the authorities, about 1,200 people were killed on the Israeli side. In response, the IDF launched Operation Iron Swords, which included strikes on civilian targets, and announced a complete blockade of the Gaza Strip.
"I don't think there's any modern comparison to what's going to need to happen in the Gaza Strip right now. The level of destruction and devastation is just absolutely immense.
"Imagine not just your house was destroyed, your block was destroyed, your neighborhood was destroyed, but 80 to 90% of the universe that you have access to. It's just going to be incredibly difficult for people to just even continue to survive while the reconstruction takes place."
About 83% of all buildings in Gaza City alone were damaged as of Sept. 23, according to the United Nations Satellite Center. About 40% of those buildings were destroyed.Schools, hospitals, as well as water and electricity infrastructure have all been devastated during the two-year war from Israel's extensive military campaign on the Gaza Strip.
Israel has faced heavy criticism and condemnation over its military action in Gaza from humanitarian rights groups and aid groups. In September, the International Association of Genocide Scholars -- the world's largest group of academic scholars studying the topic -- passed a resolution saying Israel's "policies and actions" in Gaza "meet the legal definition of genocide," established by the U.N. in 1948.Israel has denied that it is committing a genocide in Gaza and denied claims that it has targeted civilian infrastructure. As part of the ceasefire agreement, Israel has agreed to allow into Gaza higher volumes of much needed aid. RecoverySignificant amounts of equipment and supplies will be needed to begin recovery. Mona Yacoubian, the director and senior adviser of the Middle East Program at the bipartisan, nonprofit think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies, told ABC News:
"With the rubble and the massive destruction, there is also concern that there are a number of victims, of bodies, that are buried in that rubble -- they would also need to be exhumed."
Palestinians walk past the rubble of destroyed buildings amid a ceasefire • Gaza City • October 16, 2025
Before reconstruction can begin, there need to be areas that are safe and cleared of unexploded ordnance, Yacoubian said. Amr echoed this point, noting that removing unexploded ordnance and removing rubble will both be a "massive issue" that could take years.
There needs to be a restoration of services like running water and electricity in the meantime, according to Yacoubian.
"There's going to need to be a massive scale up of life saving assistance just to ensure that people are getting food and medical assistance and also shelter, so perhaps tents, and all the kinds of things that are required."
The ceasefire agreement ensures humanitarian aid can resume entry into Gaza immediately at a larger scale.
Palestinians assess unending destruction • Gaza City • October 16, 2025
The agreement released by the White House said:
"At a minimum, aid quantities will be consistent with what was included in the January 19, 2025, agreement regarding humanitarian aid, including rehabilitation of infrastructure (water, electricity, sewage), rehabilitation of hospitals and bakeries, and entry of necessary equipment to remove rubble and open roads."
Since the ceasefire went into effect on Oct. 10, it's unclear how much additional humanitarian aid has been allowed into Gaza, though Israel has long maintained they have always allowed enough aid into Gaza.
The UN and other international aid organizations have reported they are able to move more freely around Gaza in areas where the IDF has withdrawn, but additional border crossing points have yet to open.
Challenges ahead
Many challenges lie ahead, starting with whether this is really the end of the conflict, according to Amr.
"The central challenges today are ending the war, getting Israel to end its military occupation, and then we need to get to a situation where there can be a security force that comes in to provide basic security. Once that happens, that's when reconstruction can start.
"Freedom of movement of people and goods, that is the central challenge. Palestinians have the skills and knowledge and in fact, much of the Persian Gulf was built with Palestinian knowledge, know-how and manpower. Tens of thousands of Palestinians have long worked in Israel as construction workers.
"It's just a question of getting access to having the basic freedom to import what they need to get going."
Who will pay?
It will take about $70 billion to rebuild Gaza, according to an operational damage and needs assessment conducted jointly by the United Nations, the European Union and the World Bank.
European and Arab nations, Canada and the U.S. appear willing to contribute to the estimated $70 billion needed to rebuild Gaza, the UN official said on Tuesday.
"We've heard very positive news from a number of our partners, including European partners... Canada" regarding their willingness to help, the official, Cillers, told a press conference, adding that there were also discussions with the U.S.
Oil-rich Arab Gulf states will likely be willing to pay for the reconstruction of Gaza, according to Amr and Yacoubian.Egypt could also provide a "logistical base," he noted.
"United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, I think, are all poised to potentially fund this. Turkey, I think has a great interest in doing it, but their relations with Israel are at a low point," Amr said.
However, Yacoubian expressed her belief that more progress towards Palestinian statehood needs to be achieved before countries will commit:
"I think that we could certainly see Gulf countries funding it, but they have signaled that they will not fund reconstruction in Gaza in the absence of a longer-term solution to the conflict.And in particular, they are looking to see demonstrated progress on a path toward Palestinian statehood."
Comment: Who destroyed Gaza should pay. $70B might clear the rubble.
Israel dismantled its settlements in Gaza in its unilateral withdrawal from the area in 2005, after 38 years of settlers living in the Gaza Strip. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed that "Israel has no intention of permanently occupying Gaza or displacing its civilian population" and that "Israel is fighting Hamas terrorists, not the Palestinian population, and we are doing so in full compliance with international law".[1][2] In the context of the Gaza war, some Israelis have proposed expulsion of or creating conditions leading to the exodus of Palestinians from the area and a new wave of resettlement of the Gaza Strip.[3][4] CONTINUES: SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proposed_Israeli_resettlement_of_the_Gaza_Strip