Latest news with #InternalAffairsMinistry


CNA
3 days ago
- Business
- CNA
Japan April household spending unexpectedly falls
TOKYO :Japanese household spending unexpectedly fell in April, as consumers tightened their purse strings in the face of higher prices. Consumer spending fell 0.1 per cent in April from a year earlier, data from the internal affairs ministry showed on Friday. That was worse than the median market forecast for 1.4 per cent growth and March's 2.1 per cent increase. On a seasonally adjusted, month-on-month basis, spending declined 1.8 per cent, versus an estimated 0.8 per cent fall. Consumption and wage trends are among key factors the Bank of Japan is watching to gauge economic strength and decide how soon to raise interest rates. Hefty pay hikes are seen as essential to counter sharp increases in the cost of living. Major Japanese firms on average agreed to more than 5 per cent pay hikes during annual spring wage talks in March. The monthly wage data released on Thursday showed real wages fell for a fourth consecutive month, eroded by stubborn inflation that has continued to outpace pay hikes.

ABC News
21-05-2025
- ABC News
Fiji counter narcotics bureau faces review after arrest of officer
Fiji's police commissioner says the country's new Counter Narcotics Bureau needs to be reviewed after a police officer working with it, was arrested over a recent methamphetamine bust. The police officer is one of four people arrested over the seizure of four kilograms of meth disguised as coffee at the Nadi international airport. The Counter Narcotics Bureau was set up last year to combat the country's growing drug problem and sits in the Internal Affairs Ministry, staffed by officers from several agencies including the police. Police Commissioner Rusiate Tudravu says the officer arrested has been suspended without pay while investigations continue.


The Independent
07-03-2025
- Politics
- The Independent
Millions of Ukrainians face conscription into Russian army after Moscow issues passports in occupied territory
Russia has issued millions of passports to Ukrainians living in illegally Russian-occupied territory leaving them at risk of conscription into its army, the UK Ministry of Defence has said. Around 3.5 million Russian passports have been issued to Ukrainians, Moscow's interior minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev said. This means around 700,000 have been issued since March 2024, when 2.8 million had been handed out. Holding a Russian passport in the occupied territories has been made necessary for Ukrainians who want to access healthcare, retirement income, social services, or prove property ownership. A Russian law stipulated that anyone in the occupied territories who did not have a Russian passport by 1 July 2024 was subject to imprisonment as a 'foreign citizen.' The eastern Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson are all partially under Russian control, with Putin's forces having controlled much of south and east Ukraine since its invasion in February 2022. Millions of Ukrainians live under Russian control. Incentives are also offered as part of the passport, including a stipend to leave the occupied territory and move to Russia, pensions for retirees, humanitarian aid, and money for new parents who have children with Russian birth certificates. For each Russian passport and birth certificate issued, it becomes more difficult for Ukraine to reclaim its lost land and children - and it allows Russia to claim a right to defend its new citizens against a hostile neighbour. 'Russian efforts to enforce governance in illegally occupied territory, and to coerce and compel Ukrainians to accept Russian passports, demonstrate the Russian senior leadership's continuing commitment to, and pursuit of, a Russification policy,' the UK Ministry of Defence said. 'Possession of a Russian passport also constitutes eligibility for conscription into the Russian military. Ukrainians without a Russian passport also face the seizure of their property by authorities.' Russia has a history of enforcing citizenship on Ukrainians, after adopting a similar approach after it annexed Crimea in 2014. Russian citizenship was automatically given to permanent residents of the peninsula and those who refused lost rights to jobs, healthcare and property. In eastern Ukraine, Russia first passed laws to make it easier to obtain passports in May 2022, before introducing punishments for those who did not accept citizenship in April 2023. Russians could be considered stateless and required to register with Moscow's Internal Affairs Ministry Hundreds of properties deemed 'abandoned' were seized by the Russian government after officials said a Russian passport was needed to prove property ownership. 'If someone got their passport in August 2022 or earlier, they are most certainly pro-Russian, Oleksandr Rozum, a lawyer who left the occupied city of Berdyansk and now assists Ukrainians under occupation, said in 2024. 'If a passport was issued after that time – it was most certainly forced,' he added. The area controlled by Russia has grown in the past year, with Putin's forces steadily edging forward in eastern areas, taking village by village as the Ukrainian military struggles with manpower issues. But Russian forces have also faced difficulty in sustaining the vast numbers of troops needed to fight their war of attrition in Ukraine, and their enforcement of passports on Ukrainians may come as part of an effort to increase its pool for frontline manpower. Moscow has made use of Russian prisoners to help compensate for the huge losses it suffers on the battlefield as a result of what has been described as a 'meat grinder' strategy - in which thousands of troops are sent charging at Ukrainian defense lines in an attempt to overcome them through sheer manpower. Thousands of North Korean troops sent by Pyongyang have also supplemented Russian forces on the ground.
Yahoo
10-02-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Russian strike in Donetsk Oblast: number of injured rises to 17
The number of people injured in a Russian attack on Kramatorsk and Kostiantynivka on the evening of 9 February has risen to 17. Source: National Police, Ukraine's Ministry of Internal Affairs Quote from the Internal Affairs Ministry: "Donetsk Oblast. The number of injured has increased to 17 as a result of a massive strike on the territory of the oblast." Photo: National Police Details: In Kramatorsk, Russian troops killed a 52-year-old man and injured 12 civilians. Five people were injured in Kostiantynivka. Photo: National Police So far, more than 100 destroyed objects have been recorded, including 69 apartment buildings and 47 residential houses, infrastructure facilities, 76 garages and more than 25 civilian vehicles. Background: Earlier, Vadym Filashkin, Head of Donetsk Oblast Military Administration, reported that at least six people had been injured in Russian strikes on the northern districts of Donetsk Oblast. Four people were reported to have been injured in Kostiantynivka and two in Kramatorsk. As of the morning of 10 February, the number of casualties increased to 12. Support UP or become our patron!