Russian president Vladimir Putin and African leaders at the 2019 Russia-Africa Summit and Economic Forum in Sochi in 2019.
Photo by Alexei Druzhinin / SPUTNIK / AFP via Getty Images
Russia is attempting to export its governance model of an authoritarian, kleptocratic and transactional regime onto Africa.
A train with refugees fleeing Ukraine crosses the border in Medyka, Poland, on March 7, 2022.
(AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)
Canada’s temporary protection measures to Ukrainians fleeing the war ensure they’re brought to safety faster. But will this kind of response become the preferred method for all future refugees?
A woman holds a placard with the words ‘language is a weapon’ written in Ukrainian during a 2020 protest of a bill that sought to widen the use of Russian in Ukrainian public education.
Evgen Kotenko/ Ukrinform/Future Publishing via Getty Images
To Russian nationalists, if the Ukrainian language is classified as a derivative of the Russian language, the invasion looks less like an act of aggression and more like reintegration.
Moscow headquarters of Rosneft, Russia’s state-owned oil company.
AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel
Oil revenues are crucial to Russia’s economy. The US only accounts for a small fraction of them, so banning Russian oil imports has mainly symbolic value.
theerapol sri-in/Shutterstock
The BBC has resumed broadcasting via shortwave radio to ensure civilians can access the news.
Oleksii Vakhrushev/Shutterstock
What the world stands to lose due to Putin’s unprovoked war.
Some motorists are willing to pay more for the price of gas. Others are considering trading in gas-guzzling cars for more efficient vehicles. The price of gas at a Petro Canada gasoline station in Ajax, Ont., on March 7, 2022.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Doug Ives
Oil supply is very tight, and the current geopolitical crisis involving Russia, one of the world’s largest oil producers, has pushed prices over the edge.
This painting by Russian artist Alexei Danilovich Kivshenko depicts the ceremonial pledge of allegiance by Ukrainian Cossacks to the Tsar of Russia in 1654.
Heritage Image Partnership Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo
Throughout history, Russian rulers have seen it as their mission to ‘gather the lands of the Rus’.
The prospect of a peace deal remains remote.
Kremlin Pool/Alamy Stock Photo
This is a situation with many moving parts, any one of which can derail diplomacy.
Sergiy Kyslytsya, Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations, speaks during a special session of the General Assembly on March 02, 2022.
Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
The resolution is not legally binding, but is an expression of the views of the UN membership.
Defiant: Volodymyr Zelensky is rallying Ukrainians with a series of video messages as Russian assassination squads try to hunt him down.
EPA-EFE/Ukranian presidential press service handout
Volodymyr Zelensky remains in Kyiv, rallying resistance to the Russian invasion.
Roman Pilipey/EPA/AAP
As Ukraine scrambles to defend itself from Russia’s illegal invasion, men aged 18 to 60 have been banned from leaving the country.
People crowd under a destroyed bridge as they try to flee by crossing the Irpin River in the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, on March 5, 2022.
(AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)
The Russian invasion of Ukraine is a catastrophe and should be condemned, but that doesn’t mean the West should dismiss some of Putin’s conditions as a step to ending the war.
A woman pays homage at the memorial to victims of the 1941 Nazi massacre of Jews in Babi Yar in Kyiv, Ukraine.
AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky
Over two days in September 1941, more than 33,000 Jews were murdered by Nazi forces and their Ukrainian collaborators in Babi Yar.
The war in Ukraine will have major implications for energy and climate change, in Canada and the rest of the world, far into the future.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn
New relationships between energy, geopolitical security and climate change policy flowing from the invasion of Ukraine are beginning to emerge, and the implications could be enormous.
Andrew Parsons, president of the International Paralympic Committee, speaks at the opening ceremony at the 2022 Winter Paralympics. The IPC announced on March 3 that all athletes from Russia and Belarus would be barred from competing.
(AP Photo/Andy Wong)
It’s time for organizations like the IPC to stop lamenting the intersection of sport and politics, and instead accept this well-established reality going forward.
Memorial tanks at the Ukrainian Motherland Monument in Kyiv.
Madeleine Kelly/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
Who are the Ukrainians and when were they part of the same empire as Russia? A scholar answers basic questions on war in Ukraine.
Civilians try to escape from the town Irpin, near Kyiv, which has been heavily shelled in recent days.
EPA-EFE/Roman Pilipey
In 2005 the world decided it must take action to protect civilians from being targeted in war. In Ukraine frightened civilians are still waiting.
The Volodymyr the Great monument, erected in 1853, in Kyiv. Volodymyr was a warlord who became the first Russian ruler to convert to Christianity in the late 900s. A similar statue was erected in Moscow in 2016 as a counter to Ukraine’s.
(Shutterstock)
As an independent country, Ukraine has suffered from corruption, poverty and violent periods, but Vladimir Putin’s view of Ukrainian history in Ukraine is deeply, perhaps deliberately flawed.
A protest sign reads “Glory to Ukraine” in Ukrainian.
Stefano Guidi / Shutterstock
Putin has suggested Ukrainians and Russians share one language, but there are many differences that are important to understand.