The conflict between Russia and Ukraine It follows more than a month of the military incursion of Russian troops and although both parties have held talks, few agreements have been reached, one of them when they established humanitarian corridorsbut so far the negotiations are stuck on essential points such as the ceasefire.
Today the delegations from Russia and Ukraine will once more sit at the table to seek consensus, while the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, analyzes yielding to Russian demands as in the question of neutrality of that country.
Learn here the latest news of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on March 28.
Carlsberg beer producer leaves Russia
The Danish beer producer Carlsberg announced on Monday that it is withdrawing from Russia and putting its important activities in the country, where it has 8,400 employees, up for sale.
“We made the difficult and immediate decision to aim for a complete sale of our activities in Russia, which we think is the right thing to do in the current context. Once completed, we will no longer have a presence in Russia,” the group explains in a statement. , hours following a similar decision by its Dutch competitor Heineken.
Paying for Russian gas in rubles “is not acceptable”, considers the G7
The G7 countries considered on Monday that requiring paying for Russian gas in rubles “is not acceptable” and shows that the president Vladimir Putin is “between a rock and a hard place”said German Economy Minister Robert Habeck.
“All the G7 ministers agreed that this is a unilateral and clear violation of existing contracts … which means that a payment in rubles is not acceptable,” Habeck said following a telematic meeting with his G7 counterparts. “I think this demand has to be interpreted as the fact that Putin is between a rock and a hard place,” he added.
Independent Russian newspaper suspends publication until the end of the war in Ukraine
The Russian independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta announced on Monday the suspension of its online and print publications until the end of the Russian military operation in Ukrainein a context of pressure from power on voices critical of him.
In a statement published on its website, the newspaper – whose chief editor, Dmitri Muratov, received in 2021 the Nobel Peace Prize– indicated that he had made this decision following receiving a second warning from the Russian telecoms regulator for having violated a law on “foreign agents”.
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