Drogheda Stands With Palestine 🕬 will host its weekly vigil tomorrow, 31-January-2026.
Time: 1200
Venue: West Street
A Digest of News ✊ from Ukrainian Sources ⚔ 5-January-2026.
In this week’s bulletin
⬤ Ukraine & Venezuela.
News from the territories occupied by Russia
Ukrainian POWs and civilians gunned down by Russian invaders near Pokrovsk (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 30th)
Weekly update on the situation in occupied Crimea (Crimea Platform, December 30th)
Russia subjects Ukrainian political prisoner with multiple sclerosis to medical torture for serving her country (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 29th)
Neo-Nazi sadist wanted for war crimes in Ukraine invited to give ‘lesson on courage’ to Russian children (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 29th)
The Face of Resistance: The Story of Crimean Tatar Activist Yanikov Asan (Crimea Platform, December 26th)
Russia sentences tortured Melitopol journalist to 15 years for pro-Ukrainian Telegram channel (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 26th)
Analysis of Toretsk Satellite Images (Tribunal for Putin, December 24th)
Russian invaders abduct 52 civilians, including children, from Sumy oblast (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 24th)
Imprisoned Crimean Solidarity activist Tofik Abdulgaziev needs urgent operation for a malignant brain tumour (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 23rd)
Russia’s supreme court OKs illegal charges & faked 'evidence' against Crimean Tatar political prisoners (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 22nd)
News from Ukraine
Few politicians are interested in Anti-Corruption Court's effective work, court's head says (Kyiv Independent, December 15th)
Ukrainian military intelligence says it faked neo-Nazi militia commander’s death (Meduza, 1 January)
Defiance & denial: residents of besieged Sloviansk resist surrender to Moscow (Observer, Dec 28th)
Oil Spill Report in the Black Sea near Odesa Following Russian Attacks on Port Infrastructure (Crimea Platform, December 24th)
War-related news from Russia
‘Your power is based on lies and violence.’ Three years for sharing Ukrainian songs (People & Nature, 4 January)
Ukrainian drones mysteriously “attack” Putin’s residence: The chronology of yet another Kremlin lie (The Insider, January 1st)
Gordey Nikitin’s story: 17 years for “high treason” (Ivan Astashin, The Russian Reader, 31 December)
Five years for enlisting. Kazakhstan prosecutes hundreds of citizens for fighting in Ukraine (Mediazona, December 30th)
Predatory recruitment is sending Indians to their deaths on the Ukraine front (Scroll.in, Dec 30th)
Russia’s Descent Into Tyranny (Nina Khrushcheva, Foreign Affairs December 30th)
Russian army in 2025: “meat grinder” continues (Mediazona, 30 December)
Banking on repression: How Russia weaponized its “terrorist” list against political dissidents (The Insider, December 28th)
Banking on repression: how Russia weaponised its “terrorist” list against dissidents (Ivan Astashin, The Insider, 28 December)
We need to change our view of the Arctic as a frontier (Valentin Zemlyansky interviewed at Posle.Media, 24 December)
Free Daria Egereva! (Russian Reader, December 24th)
Putin Uses End-of-Year Presser to Send Message to Trump (Carnegie Politika, December 23rd)
What We Learned from a Hacker Attack on the Russian Military Registry Developer (iStories, 22 December)
While others are celebrating, Ukrainian POWs are being tortured in Russian prisons (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 22nd)
Siren songs (Novaya Gazeta, December 17th)
Analysis and comment
‘What’s wrong with US aggression against Venezuela’ (Sotsialnyi Rukh / European Network for Solidarity with Ukraine, 3 January)
Retrieving History: Ukrainian People’s Republic (Vladyslav Starodubtsev, Against the Current, January 2026)
The Russian Idée Fixe (Andriy Movchan, Counterpunch, January 1st)
Money talks: Abramovich, the Tory peer and the Trump adviser (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, December 31st)
Generating pushback: Eastern European countries are turning away political asylum seekers from Russia and Belarus (The Insider, December 24th)
The EU blinks: When capital’s inviolability trumps geopolitical necessity (Labour Hub, December 21st)
A Ukrainian view of Nathan Gill’s prison sentence for taking pro-Russian bribes (Nation Cymru, November 22nd)
Research of human rights abuses
Michael O’Flaherty published a report on Ukraine (Zmina, December 31st)
A court for Russian propagandists: how to prove their complicity in international crimes? (Ukrainska Pravda, December 24th)
International solidarity
Street singer Diana Loginova’s first interview in exile: “I thought, what could they do to me?” (Meduza, 2 January)
Annual Report of Solidarity Collectives 2025 (Solidarity Collectives, 31 December)
Green Party conference to hear Ukraine solidarity motion (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, 23 December)
Ukraine-Sweden: Upholding Human Rights for Victims of the Russian War (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 23rd)
Upcoming events
Wednesday 7th January, 5.0 pm. No to Business as Usual with Putin’s Oligarchs: Protest at Tory HQ, 4 Matthew Parker Street, London SWIH 9NP, called by USC.
Thursday 15th January, 7.0 pm. Webinar: Russia’s War on Ukraine, US Security Review – Stopping the authoritarians. Organised by By Ukraine Solidarity Campaign Scotland
Thursday 5th February, 6.30 pm. Try Me For Treason: readings from speeches by anti-war protesters in Russian courts, and discussion. Clore Lecture Theatre, Birkbeck College Clore Management Centre, Torrington Square, London WC1E 7JL.
We are also on twitter. Our aim is to circulate information in English that to the best of our knowledge is reliable. If you have something you think we should include, please send it to 2U022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com.
We are now on Facebook and Substack! Please subscribe and tell friends. Better still, people can email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com, and we’ll send them the bulletin direct every Monday. The full-scale Russian assault on Ukraine is going into its third year: we’ll keep information and analysis coming, for as long as it takes.The bulletin is also stored on line here.
To receive the bulletin regularly, send your email to:
2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com.
To stop it, please reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field.
We are also on twitter. Our aim is to circulate information in English that to the best of our knowledge is reliable. If you have something you think we should include, please send it to 2U022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com.
We are now on Facebook and Substack! Please subscribe and tell friends. Better still, people can email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com, and we’ll send them the bulletin direct every Monday. The full-scale Russian assault on Ukraine is going into its third year: we’ll keep information and analysis coming, for as long as it takes.
The bulletin is also stored on line here.
To receive the bulletin regularly, send your email to:
2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com.
To stop it, please reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field.
“Made to lay down in a stone pasture/We were made to to lay down in a pasture of stone/Besidе dark waters and some steel tanks/By your side I rеst my head” - Easterhouse
New Horizons
Foetus – HaltSupposedly J.G Thirlwell’s final album under the Foetus banner and if it is, he’s gone out with a bang. His deranged mixture of Frank Zappa orchestration, King Crimson power and Fela Kuti beats sounds mightier than ever but there is genuine drama in the music (such as ‘Polar Vortex’). Simply put, the man is a genius and we should all bow down to Foetus.
The album can be streamed and purchased here.
Zu - Ferrum Sidereum
With the title being Latin for ‘cosmic iron’, it’s no surprise that the Italians continue to be inspired by the esoteric. Going for a sound that King Crimson and Tool pioneered in the mid 90’s, it’s a proggy take on industrial rock with tight and precise riffage that allows for a more trippy, esoteric vibe throughout.
The album can be streamed and purchased here.
Xiu Xiu - Xiu Mutha Fuckin' Xiu: Vol. 1
Jamie Stewart and co. take time out to fuck up (in the best way) some songs that mean a lot to them. The minimal take on ‘Warm Leatherette’ highlights the grotesquely visceral lyrics, ‘In Dreams’ is even more nostalgic and ‘Sex Dwarf’ is transformed into an industrial techno dancefloor filler. An interesting diversion but towers over most cover albums.
The album can be streamed and purchased here.
Bloody Head – Bend Down and Kiss the Ground
The Nottingham based noise rockers return with their finest album to date. With a cleaner production that allows little intricacies (such as bass lines) to shine through and make the songs much more powerful (see the title track for such an example). One of the albums of the year and it’s only the end of January.
The album can be streamed and purchased here.
Golden Oldies
Probably responsible for manys a confused rockabilly seeking out synth punks Suicide, front man Alan Vega’s debut solo record sees him fully indulge his love of rock n roll through hip shaking classics like ‘Jukebox Babe’ while ‘Love Cry’ feels like a tip of the hat to John Cale’s version of ‘Heartbreak Hotel.’
The Sound – All Fall Down
Written to get out of their record contract, retrospective listening finds this to be a solid follow-up to the band’s first two albums. While it may lack the pathos of later releases, songs such as ‘Monument’ and 'Glass and Smoke’ are fine slabs of earnest post punk that display an optimism that can be overlooked upon first listen.
Warning – Watching from a Distance
20 years on, the power and emotion radiating from this LP is second to none. While very much traditional doom metal, the emotion radiating from Patrick Walker combined with the seriously slow and heavy riffing, makes this a record for those long dark nights of the soul.
The Smashing Pumpkins – Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness
30 years on, the album that Billy Corgan declared would be the equivalent of Pink Floyd’s ‘The Wall’ for Gen X has held up remarkably well. From aggressive number ‘Jellybaby’ through to lush orchestral beauties like ‘Tonight Tonight’ and the krautrock influenced ‘1979’, it’s overblown but never sags and it does bring you into a different world.
⏩ Christopher Owens was a reviewer for Metal Ireland and finds time to study the history and inherent contradictions of Ireland. He is currently the TPQ Friday columnist.
Ten links to a diverse range of opinion that might be of interest to TPQ readers. They are selected not to invite agreement but curiosity. Readers can submit links to pieces they find thought provoking.
Before We Conform, Or Condemn, Let Us At Least Be Curious

2020Throughout the violent Northern conflict that raged or simmered for the best part of three decades, the Daily Telegraph was viewed as a stanchion of British officialdom, colloquially referred to as the Daily Torygraph. It had never earned a reputation for searching under every stone, preferring instead to place stones over the graves of the many British army colonels and generals it glowingly obituarised, burying beneath the stone’s weight a candid account of the role of senior British military in the North.
Season Three of Bed of Lies has broken the mould. With Cara McGoogan narrating and Mick Brown fact checking Conflict takes the listener into the murky murderous world of British intelligence operations.
Broadcast ahead of the Kenova Report, Conflict raised both anticipation and scepticism about what Jon Boutcher’s team might reveal. One of its core themes is that Freddie Scappaticci, the agent known as Stakeknife, is only a small window on a much larger espionage world where the rule of law became displaced by the rule of law enforcement.
Conflict interviews an expansive body of state and non-state actors who played a violent hand during the North’s turbulence. Most tellingly, the candour with which some of the legacy investigators spoke will cause earache for those directing the British intelligence community. Their agencies had dirty hands in a dirty war.
In earlier seasons of Bed of Lies Cara McGoogan had exposed a scandal involving British police emotional and sexual exploitation of the agents they were handling, as well as calling out the behaviour of the NHS during the infected blood controversy.
As the violence of the conflict recedes into the distance, the reverberations are no longer from the bomb blasts and gun fire of republican and loyalist activists but pulsate from the shock waves at revelations about those who claimed to be working to stop such actions. With Conflict the sound of J’Accuse emanates from the most unlikely of sources.
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| ⏩Follow on Twitter @AnthonyMcIntyre. |
The ‘Board of Peace’ will have an Executive Board which will consist of the following: Nickolay Mladenov, US appointed High Representative to Gaza, the area of Palestine the Israelis - supplied by the US - obliterated, murdering thousands of civilians. Marco Rubio, US Secretary of State, Steve Witkoff, US Special Envoy to the Middle-East, Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s son in law, and former British Prime Minister, Tony Blair.
The Twenty-Six County administration have not yet signed up to this laughable ‘Board of Peace’ but the fact they were/are even considering doing so beggars belief. Fine Gael TD and Chair of the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Health, Jerry Buttimer, said; “it is unlikely we will join”, hardly an endorsing rejection of such a barmy notion! The British Government are still considering their position but have reservations over Vladimir Putin possibly coming onto the field of play. This is not the major reason Westminster should kick Trump and his farce into touch. The British are not concerned about the corrupt nature and makeup of this ‘Board of Peace’ but moreover the possible inclusion of the leader of a world nuclear power, which Russia, love or loath them, are. The British Government, if they dare, should be trying to expose this can of worms for what it is perceived by many as a Board for War and a cash cow for Donald. I sincerely hope the Twenty-Six- County Government see sense, that would be a first, and have nothing to do with this joke. Of course, that will depend how low they are prepared to go in order to arse lick Trump. The British, Harold Wilson exempted, are well known for their subordination to Washington ever since 1945. Let’s hope Dail Eireann kick this farce into touch.
There are many sensible people who see Trump as trying to usurp the United Nations. Many of the tasks his ‘Board of Peace’ will, in theory, undertake are those presently tasked to the UN Security Council. Admittedly they do not perform their duties very well as Trump and Netanyahu have repeatedly told them, in not so many words, to fuck off. Could Trump be trying to replace the UN with himself and this ‘Board of Peace’? Well, although he would deny it at this juncture, the signs for such a usurpation are not good. Is Trump crawling in this field before he can walk? Like Hitler’s intentions of global domination he started off with what seemed not unreasonable demands. Unifying all German speaking peoples was his first tentative move, after reoccupying the Rhineland, then greater, more ambitious plans were unveiled. By then it was a bit late to stop him. Could Donald Trump be adopting a similar, in principle, position?
Ten links to a diverse range of opinion that might be of interest to TPQ readers. They are selected not to invite agreement but curiosity. Readers can submit links to pieces they find thought provoking.
Before We Conform, Or Condemn, Let Us At Least Be Curious
Peace, under any serious definition, requires consent, accountability, and representation. This board offers none of the three. Instead, it concentrates power in the hands of political and financial figures far removed from Gaza, while excluding Palestinians from meaningful authority over their own future.
At the top of the structure sits Donald Trump, with Jared Kushner playing a central architectural role. Their approach to conflict has long favored leverage, securitization, and deal-making over rights and self-determination. Previous “economic peace” proposals explicitly sidelined Palestinian political agency, offering investment frameworks in place of sovereignty. The Gaza board reflects the same philosophy: development without democracy, rebuilding without consent.
To understand why this matters, it is necessary to look not only at Gaza, but at how this administration has exercised power elsewhere — including at home.
In the United States, under this same leadership, federal immigration agents have fatally shot American civilians during enforcement operations, with the administration defending those killings under contested self-defense claims even as video evidence and local officials raised serious questions. Oversight has been resisted, independent investigations delayed, and criticism framed as hostility to “law and order” itself. The message is clear: coercive force first, accountability later — if at all.
That governing logic has extended beyond U.S. borders and onto the open sea. In late 2025, U.S. forces conducting maritime counter-narcotics operations killed individuals aboard vessels designated as suspected drug-smuggling boats. Subsequent reporting revealed a serious internal controversy over a follow-up strike in which survivors from an initial attack were reportedly killed. Senior officials, including Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, publicly denied giving any unlawful order to open fire on survivors, while anonymous military and defence sources told journalists that such an order had been issued or implicitly authorized. The administration defended the overall campaign as lawful, but the episode exposed a familiar pattern: lethal force deployed, responsibility disputed, and accountability absorbed into a fog of denials rather than clarified through transparent, independent review.
That same pattern is visible in the administration’s actions toward Venezuela. U.S. forces have seized multiple oil tankers carrying Venezuelan crude in international waters, rerouting or confiscating them under sanctions and enforcement authorities. These actions were publicly justified as economic pressure and law-enforcement measures, even as senior U.S. officials openly acknowledged that the broader objective was to deprive the Venezuelan state of revenue and enable American access to its energy resources. While defended as lawful by Washington, the practice has been described by legal scholars and international observers as indistinguishable from maritime coercion: the use of naval power to expropriate another state’s resources without judicial process. When resource seizure becomes policy, the distinction between enforcement and piracy becomes a matter of power rather than principle.
This is the context in which the same administration now claims authority to shape Gaza’s future.
The inclusion of Benjamin Netanyahu on the Board of Peace deepens the legitimacy crisis. His government has consistently defended the killing of Palestinians, both during major military operations and in daily enforcement across the occupied territories. International organizations, UN bodies, and Israeli human rights groups have documented repeated cases in which Palestinian civilians were killed by Israeli forces with little or no meaningful accountability.
This pattern is not limited to large-scale warfare. In the West Bank, settler violence against Palestinian farmers and communities is extensively documented: attacks during olive harvests, destruction of property, intimidation, and land seizures. These acts frequently occur with impunity and, in some cases, in the presence or protection of Israeli forces. At the same time, Netanyahu’s government has continued to authorize and expand illegal settlements, including recent announcements of new construction and the retroactive legalization of outposts built on privately owned Palestinian land. Violence clears the ground; policy formalizes the theft.
The conduct of the Israel Defense Forces reinforces these concerns. While Israeli authorities point to internal accountability mechanisms, those processes have been widely criticized by human rights organizations as opaque and ineffective. Investigations are slow, prosecutions rare, and convictions rarer still — creating what critics describe as a system that performs accountability without delivering justice.
Alongside Netanyahu sit figures such as Tony Blair, whose post-conflict governance record emphasizes security coordination and market-led development while deferring responsibility for past harm. Financial leadership on the board includes Ajay Banga, whose experience in global finance is tied to compliance and sanctions regimes that human rights groups have long criticized for disproportionately restricting humanitarian access in Muslim-majority contexts. There is no evidence of personal religious animus; the concern is structural. In Gaza, where aid access is already precarious, such frameworks risk turning reconstruction into another instrument of control.
What unites these figures is not accountability to Gaza’s people, but experience administering populations from above.
Palestinians themselves are excluded from the board’s highest decision-making authority. Advisory or technocratic bodies may exist downstream, but real power — mandates, money, enforcement — flows from an external executive dominated by those who have enabled, excused, or directly overseen Palestinian suffering.
Peace does not work this way.
A government that defends lethal force against civilians at home, denies responsibility for deadly operations at sea, and openly seizes another nation’s resources cannot plausibly present itself as a steward of peace. A board that excludes the governed, launders reputations, and substitutes control for consent is not a peace project — it is a management strategy.
If power can be exercised with such impunity in Minneapolis, in international waters, or against a sovereign state’s resources, it will not suddenly become benevolent in Gaza. And with Netanyahu on the board, Palestinians are being asked to trust the very system that has spent decades justifying their deaths and dispossession.
Calling this a “Board of Peace” does not make it one. It only exposes how far removed it is from peace itself.

















