logo
#

Latest news with #112th

Savings habit turns retired teacher into BSN SSP millionaire
Savings habit turns retired teacher into BSN SSP millionaire

Sinar Daily

time10 hours ago

  • Business
  • Sinar Daily

Savings habit turns retired teacher into BSN SSP millionaire

Recalling his savings journey with BSN SSP, Bahari said he enjoyed depositing money at various branches, always hoping that luck would one day be on his side to win the BSN SSP Millionaire draw. 18 Jun 2025 06:16pm Bahari Harun, 60, from Kampung Sungai Putat, said he began saving in his BSN SSP account at the age of 17, Initially drawn by the attractive prizes offered through the draw, a habit he continues to this day. - Bernama photo MELAKA - What began as a simple savings habit turned into a life-changing moment for a retired teacher who was named the winner of the 112th Bank Simpanan Nasional Sijil Simpanan Premium (BSN SSP) Millionaire draw. Bahari Harun, 60, from Kampung Sungai Putat, said he began saving in his BSN SSP account at the age of 17, Initially drawn by the attractive prizes offered through the draw, a habit he continues to this day. Bahari Harun, 60, from Kampung Sungai Putat, said he began saving in his BSN SSP account at the age of 17, Initially drawn by the attractive prizes offered through the draw, a habit he continues to this day. - Bernama photo "At first, I only saved RM10 as I didn't earn much, but I was motivated by the prizes offered, such as motorcycles and cars, so I continued saving. "I've won several prizes before, including cash and electrical appliances, which keeps me motivated to continue saving in my BSN SSP account. Who knows, I might become a millionaire one day,' he told reporters here today. He said this when met after the interview session held in conjunction with the 112th BSN SSP Millionaire Prize Presentation Ceremony, presented by Melaka BSN director Mohd Hairul Izam Abu Bakar. Recalling his savings journey with BSN SSP, Bahari said he enjoyed depositing money at various branches, always hoping that luck would one day be on his side to win the BSN SSP Millionaire draw. The former senior assistant (administration) at Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan (SMK) Ayer Molek said his savings had steadily grown over the years, without any expectation of earning dividends. Sharing the moment he had long been waiting for as a loyal SSP account holder, the father of three, aged between 13 and 20, said he received the good news from his wife, Dalena Mahadi, 42, over the phone last Saturday. "Although I was really hoping to win, I didn't believe it at first because the draw wasn't held on the usual first Saturday of the month. "I only believed it after confirming with BSN, and I'm truly thankful for this long-awaited blessing,' said Bahari, who had served in the teaching profession for 34 years. He said that for now, he had no plans on how to spend the prize money and would continue saving it in his SSP account to remain eligible for future draws. However, Bahari said he intended to use part of the winnings to take his siblings, who had yet to perform the haj or umrah, to fulfil the pilgrimage. - BERNAMA More Like This

Unmasked: The Russian missile brigade slaughtering Ukrainian civilians
Unmasked: The Russian missile brigade slaughtering Ukrainian civilians

Yahoo

time15-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Unmasked: The Russian missile brigade slaughtering Ukrainian civilians

Should Russia ever face a war crimes court over its actions in Ukraine, the men of the 112th missile brigade may have some explaining to do. Officially, their job is to support Russian troops in north-east Ukraine, using huge, truck-launched rockets to take out military targets far behind enemy lines. Unofficially, they are also accused of 'terror bombing', such as this weekend's Palm Sunday attack on the city of Sumy, which killed 34 people. Just before 10.30am, an Iskander ballistic missile – a 21-foot projectile big enough to carry a nuclear warhead – slammed into Sumy's down town area, packed with worshippers returning from church. Minutes later, in a so-called 'double tap', a second Iskander scattered cluster munitions as rescue workers rushed to help. The Kremlin has insisted that the attack – denounced as a war crime by European leaders – was aimed at a gathering of senior military officers. But Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine's military intelligence chief, has pinned the blame on the 112th missile brigade – a unit Kyiv says specifically targets civilians. Kyiv also blames the 448th brigade for the Sumy attack and on Tuesday targeted its base in a retaliatory strike. In October 2023, the 112th was accused of firing an Iskander at a funeral in the village of Hroza, killing 59 mourners. Another attack, last July, destroyed a demining office in Kharkiv. Mr Budanov has sworn vengeance against the 112th, vowing that 'no war criminal – from those who gave orders to those who launched the missiles – escapes retribution'. Coming from Ukraine's spymaster, that is no idle threat. Last summer, his agents published a dossier on 30 Russian soldiers allegedly working for the 112th, including names, photos, rank and passport details. Credit: X/@PopularFront_ In January, Konstantin Nagayko, a 112th captain, was badly injured after opening a parcel bomb, widely understood to have delivered in retribution for the Hroza attack. He was helicoptered to hospital, but died later from massive head wounds. 'Russian surgery was of no help to the war criminal,' said Mr Budanov's office afterwards. 'The Ukrainian people will see just retribution for every war crime committed against them.' Based in Shuya, north-east of Moscow, the 112th is part of the 1st Tank Army of the Moscow Military District, and received its Iskander missile batteries in 2014 as part of Vladimir Putin's modernisation of the Russian armed forces. It has three missile divisions, with 12 operational launchers. According to the Ukrainian intelligence dossier on the brigade, its commander is Sergey Sergeevich Ponomarev, 47. The deputy commanders are Vladimir Alexandrovich Filin, 48, and Nikolay Vladimirovich Izvoltsev, 50. Other senior commanders, according to the dossier, include Alexander Vladimirovich Sukhorukov, Vyacheslav Yurievich Osokin, Roman Anatolyevich Ivshyn, Sergey Aleksandrovich Tikhomirov and Vladimir Igorevich Yudin. The Kremlin denies using Iskanders to target civilians, claiming that Ukrainian troops routinely use civilian buildings to hold operational meetings. Over the weekend, Russian state television portrayed the Sumy attack as a 'fabrication', saying it was intended to sabotage ceasefire talks between Moscow and Washington. What is not in doubt, however, is the horrifying power of such missiles, which carry a payload many times that of the average mortar or artillery shell. An Iskander can deliver nearly a tonne of high-explosive from up to 350 miles away, precision guided to within ten or 20 metres of a target. Fired into a typical civilian neighbourhood, its warhead – designed to destroy factories, take out bridges or hardened bunkers – can devastate an entire street. First used in combat during Russia's war with Georgia in 2008, the missile is typically launched off a 40-tonne articulated truck, equipped with tractor-sized wheels that allow it to operate off-road. It then climbs up to 30 miles into the sky before plummeting at up to six times the speed of sound, making it hard for air defences to intercept. The missiles typically cost several million dollars each – far more than a mortar or artillery round – but thanks to their range can be used to hit targets well beyond the immediate front-line areas. Their computerised command facilities can receive targeting information from other Russian units, and also real-time battlefield video from drones. Dr Sidharth Kaushal, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, said it was unlikely that some of those who had launched the missile that hit Sumy would have been ignorant as to what the target was. 'The individuals who were pulling the trigger, so to speak, probably would have been given essentially co-ordinates to plug into the onboard computers, rather than necessarily deep detail of what they were firing,' he said. 'But even if you assume that the decisions were made at a higher commanders of the brigade would have probably been given a set of they would have a certain degree of knowledge.' Iskanders have also been used throughout Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and have been blamed for some of the war's most notorious acts of civilian slaughter. Earlier this month, Kyiv said that one had been used in an attack on president Volodymyr Zelensky's home city of Kryvyi Rih, which killed 19 people. Nine children were among those killed in the blast, which sprayed shrapnel across a playground. Another Iskander was blamed for an attack on the Ria Pizza restaurant in the Donbas city of Kramatorsk in June 2023, which killed 15 people, including the Ukrainian writer Victoria Amelina, who also worked for Truth Hounds, a Ukrainian human rights organisation exposing Russian war crimes. Credit: X/@legion_svoboda Whether Russian missile commanders ever agonise over their targeting decisions is another matter. Glen Grant, a former British military attache to the Baltics and a former advisor to Ukraine's defence ministry, said he doubted it. 'My sense is that throughout the Russian military system, there's a near-100 per cent consensus about destroying Ukraine. They are not going to say: 'Oh, this is a hospital, or this is a civilian facility, we mustn't fire'. These guys don't care.' While it currently seems unlikely that Russia will ever hand over war crimes suspects for trial, those who pressed the button on such attacks from afar can no longer presume they will never be identified. Thanks to open-source satellite imaging, human rights investigators are now often able to track the likely trajectories of missile launches back to specific Russian units. In the case of the Ria Pizza restaurant missile attack, Amelina's former colleagues at Truth Hounds produced an 80-page investigation, titled The Bill is on You. It identified the culprits as Russia's 47th missile brigade, under the command of Colonel Vitaliy Bobyr. Col Bobyr has since also been accused by Ukrainian intelligence of involvement in a missile attack in Kramatorsk last August that killed Ryan Evans, a British security advisor working with a team of Reuters journalists. Again, the target in the attack was not a military installation, but a hotel. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Unmasked: The Russian missile brigade slaughtering Ukrainian civilians
Unmasked: The Russian missile brigade slaughtering Ukrainian civilians

Telegraph

time15-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Telegraph

Unmasked: The Russian missile brigade slaughtering Ukrainian civilians

Should Russia ever face a war crimes court over its actions in Ukraine, the men of the 112th missile brigade may have some explaining to do. Officially, their job is to support Russian troops in north-east Ukraine, using huge, truck-launched rockets to take out military targets far behind enemy lines. Unofficially, they are also accused of 'terror bombing', such as this weekend's Palm Sunday attack on the city of Sumy, which killed 34 people. Just before 10.30am, an Iskander ballistic missile – a 21-foot projectile big enough to carry a nuclear warhead – slammed into Sumy's down town area, packed with worshippers returning from church. Minutes later, in a so-called 'double tap', a second Iskander scattered cluster munitions as rescue workers rushed to help. The Kremlin has insisted that the attack – denounced as a war crime by European leaders – was aimed at a gathering of senior military officers. But Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine's military intelligence chief, has pinned the blame on the 112th missile brigade – a unit Kyiv says specifically targets civilians. Kyiv also blames the 448th brigade for the Sumy attack and on Tuesday targeted its base in a retaliatory strike. In October 2023, the 112th was accused of firing an Iskander at a funeral in the village of Hroza, killing 59 mourners. Another attack, last July, destroyed a demining office in Kharkiv. Mr Budanov has sworn vengeance against the 112th, vowing that 'no war criminal – from those who gave orders to those who launched the missiles – escapes retribution'. Coming from Ukraine's spymaster, that is no idle threat. Last summer, his agents published a dossier on 30 Russian soldiers allegedly working for the 112th, including names, photos, rank and passport details. In January, Konstantin Nagayko, a 112th captain, was badly injured after opening a parcel bomb, widely understood to have delivered in retribution for the Hroza attack. He was helicoptered to hospital, but died later from massive head wounds. 'Russian surgery was of no help to the war criminal,' said Mr Budanov's office afterwards. 'The Ukrainian people will see just retribution for every war crime committed against them.' Based in Shuya, north-east of Moscow, the 112th is part of the 1st Tank Army of the Moscow Military District, and received its Iskander missile batteries in 2014 as part of Vladimir Putin's modernisation of the Russian armed forces. It has three missile divisions, with 12 operational launchers. According to the Ukrainian intelligence dossier on the brigade, its commander is Sergey Sergeevich Ponomarev, 47. The deputy commanders are Vladimir Alexandrovich Filin, 48, and Nikolay Vladimirovich Izvoltsev, 50. Other senior commanders, according to the dossier, include Alexander Vladimirovich Sukhorukov, Vyacheslav Yurievich Osokin, Roman Anatolyevich Ivshyn, Sergey Aleksandrovich Tikhomirov and Vladimir Igorevich Yudin. The Kremlin denies using Iskanders to target civilians, claiming that Ukrainian troops routinely use civilian buildings to hold operational meetings. Over the weekend, Russian state television portrayed the Sumy attack as a 'fabrication', saying it was intended to sabotage ceasefire talks between Moscow and Washington. What is not in doubt, however, is the horrifying power of such missiles, which carry a payload many times that of the average mortar or artillery shell. An Iskander can deliver nearly a tonne of high-explosive from up to 350 miles away, precision guided to within ten or 20 metres of a target. Fired into a typical civilian neighbourhood, its warhead – designed to destroy factories, take out bridges or hardened bunkers – can devastate an entire street. First used in combat during Russia's war with Georgia in 2008, the missile is typically launched off a 40-tonne articulated truck, equipped with tractor-sized wheels that allow it to operate off-road. It then climbs up to 30 miles into the sky before plummeting at up to six times the speed of sound, making it hard for air defences to intercept. The missiles typically cost several million dollars each – far more than a mortar or artillery round – but thanks to their range can be used to hit targets well beyond the immediate front-line areas. Their computerised command facilities can receive targeting information from other Russian units, and also real-time battlefield video from drones. Dr Sidharth Kaushal, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, said it was unlikely that some of those who had launched the missile that hit Sumy would have been ignorant as to what the target was. 'The individuals who were pulling the trigger, so to speak, probably would have been given essentially co-ordinates to plug into the onboard computers, rather than necessarily deep detail of what they were firing,' he said. 'But even if you assume that the decisions were made at a higher commanders of the brigade would have probably been given a set of they would have a certain degree of knowledge.' Iskanders have also been used throughout Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and have been blamed for some of the war's most notorious acts of civilian slaughter. Earlier this month, Kyiv said that one had been used in an attack on president Volodymyr Zelensky's home city of Kryvyi Rih, which killed 19 people. Nine children were among those killed in the blast, which sprayed shrapnel across a playground. Another Iskander was blamed for an attack on the Ria Pizza restaurant in the Donbas city of Kramatorsk in June 2023, which killed 15 people, including the Ukrainian writer Victoria Amelina, who also worked for Truth Hounds, a Ukrainian human rights organisation exposing Russian war crimes. Whether Russian missile commanders ever agonise over their targeting decisions is another matter. Glen Grant, a former British military attache to the Baltics and a former advisor to Ukraine's defence ministry, said he doubted it. 'My sense is that throughout the Russian military system, there's a near-100 per cent consensus about destroying Ukraine. They are not going to say: 'Oh, this is a hospital, or this is a civilian facility, we mustn't fire'. These guys don't care.' While it currently seems unlikely that Russia will ever hand over war crimes suspects for trial, those who pressed the button on such attacks from afar can no longer presume they will never be identified. Thanks to open-source satellite imaging, human rights investigators are now often able to track the likely trajectories of missile launches back to specific Russian units. In the case of the Ria Pizza restaurant missile attack, Amelina's former colleagues at Truth Hounds produced an 80-page investigation, titled The Bill is on You. It identified the culprits as Russia's 47th missile brigade, under the command of Colonel Vitaliy Bobyr. Col Bobyr has since also been accused by Ukrainian intelligence of involvement in a missile attack in Kramatorsk last August that killed Ryan Evans, a British security advisor working with a team of Reuters journalists. Again, the target in the attack was not a military installation, but a hotel.

Ukrainian intelligence identifies Russian brigades behind Sumy strike
Ukrainian intelligence identifies Russian brigades behind Sumy strike

Yahoo

time13-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Ukrainian intelligence identifies Russian brigades behind Sumy strike

The data obtained by Ukraine's military intelligence indicates that the criminal strike on 13 April has been carried out by the Russian 112th and 448th missile brigades. They struck the city of Sumy with two Iskander-M ballistic missiles from the territory of Russia's Voronezh and Kursk oblasts respectively. Source: Defence Intelligence of Ukraine (DIU) on Telegram Details: Intelligence officers even revealed the settlements from which the strike was launched – Liski (Voronezh Oblast) and Lezhenki (Kursk Oblast). Andrii Yermak, Head of the Ukrainian President's Office, stated that the missiles were equipped with cluster munitions. Quote from DIU: "Another war crime by Russia – a ballistic missile strike on Sumy, the killing of Ukrainian civilians. Many people were on their way to church for Palm Sunday, some were returning home from the service. It is our common cause to ensure that no war criminal – from those who gave the orders to those who launched the missiles – escapes justice." Background: A Russian missile strike on the centre of Sumy on the morning of 13 April killed 31 people, including 2 children. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store