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Friday, January 3, 2025

Corruption is Everywhere > Especially in Zelensky's Ukraine and, perhaps, NATO; Hospital workers in the Netherlands with fake credentials; Albania bans TokTok

 

Zelensky’s corruption has ruined Ukraine

– opposition leader

The “attempted bribe” of Slovak PM Robert Fico has exposed Kiev’s criminality, exiled politician Viktor Medvedchuk claims
Zelensky’s corruption has ruined Ukraine – opposition leader











An “attempted bribe” of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has exposed Vladimir Zelensky’s corruption and the criminal nature of the Ukraine conflict, exiled Ukrainian opposition leader Viktor Medvedchuk has said.

Last week, Fico revealed that Zelensky offered him €500 million ($520 million) in exchange for support for Ukrainian membership to NATO. Zelensky confirmed the offer, which he claimed could compensate the people of Slovakia for the loss of Russian gas supplies, which Kiev insists it will cut off on January 31st.

Medvedchuk – who was ousted from Ukraine in 2022 – believes the episode exemplifies the “corrupt nature” of Zelensky's rule, and has urged the EU to investigate the Ukrainian leader for attempted bribery.

Securing NATO membership would shield Zelensky from bearing responsibility for “losing the war” with Russia, Medvedchuk said in a blog post on Friday, and as such he will spare no effort in pushing for it, including through criminal methods.

After Fico’s rebuttal of Zelensky's offer, the Ukrainian leader “found no better way forward than to accuse the Slovak prime minister of corruption,” Medvedchuk wrote.

Zelensky has claimed that Fico is pursuing “shady deals” with Russia for his own personal benefit, after he traveled to Moscow last week for negotiations with President Vladimir Putin.

Zelensky offered to pay €500 million from Russian sovereign funds that have been frozen by Western nations, which Kiev claims it has a right to use, according to Fico. Medvedchuk said he believes the Ukrainian leader could just as easily pay the “bribe” out of his own pocket. Zelensky has embezzled significant amounts of money while running the country, critics claim.

“Obviously, Fico is not the only one who was offered money in this fashion. How else would one explain the info-campaign in Europe in support of corrupt Zelensky?” the exiled politician claimed.

”Zelensky has exposed a huge graft scheme stretching all across Europe,” Medvedchuk went on to say. “The entire Ukraine conflict is based on one large corrupt scheme that involves leading parties and politicians in Europe and the US.”

Western politicians that support Kiev are afraid that after they are voted out of power, the new leaders will “find out that they had been robbing their own people under the guise of helping Zelensky’s Ukraine,” Medvedchuk said.

Common sense and 'doing the right thing' come nowhere close to explaining the West's determination to keep the war in Ukraine going as long as they can.




Dutch healthcare workers claim hundreds of colleagues have fake diplomas, no training


Hundreds of healthcare workers in the Netherlands report colleagues using falsified credentials to care for vulnerable patients, raising serious concerns about neglect and potential criminal activity, according to an investigation by RTL Nieuws. Workers described witnessing unqualified staff, often temporary or independent contractors filling staffing gaps, resorting to online videos to learn basic medical procedures like inserting catheters.

The investigation found that these incidents frequently occur during night shifts when staffing is stretched thin. Permanent staff members told RTL Nieuws that some temporary workers appeared more focused on earning quick money than providing proper patient care. Trade unions representing healthcare workers are demanding urgent action from employers to verify credentials and prevent unqualified individuals from accessing patients.

The ongoing labor shortage means freelance healthcare workers and independent contractors can clear up to 12,000 euros per month when working at various facilities without regard to their own well-being. They take double shifts, work with a short turnaround from overnight hours to daytime hours, and sometimes stay on for seven straight days with consequences like missing pages and falling asleep on the job.

In November, police told RTL Nieuws that the sky-high wage has caused an “alarming” increase in fraud among healthcare workers. That led to the survey of over 2,800 people, which was conducted with help from the FNV and NU’91 labor unions.

Some 643 employees said they were certain colleagues were working with false credentials, and 607 more said that was a high probability. The survey conducted by RTL Nieuws found that 17 percent know one of their colleagues has a falsified diploma, and another 19 percent suspect that to be the case.

“When inserting a catheter, the patient was in a lot of pain, I just saw blood from below,” said a nursing home healthcare worker about one worker who was found to be lacking in professional training.

About 10 percent know a colleague who has a job without the required listing in the BIG registry, while 16 percent suspect this possibility. About 9 percent know a colleague without the required good conduct certification from their background check, while an additional 18 percent believe this to be true.

“The higher-ups said that a manager left because he committed fraud. On LinkedIn, I saw that he simply works at another institution,” said one person who works with people with physical disabilities.

“Dangerous situations arise because of untrained staff,” said another worker providing care for people with disabilities. “A resident took a knife from the kitchen and wanted to stab another.”

“The numbers are alarmingly high and these are really the most vulnerable patients and clients,” concluded NU'91 chair Femke Merel van Kooten. “Clients who come into contact with these people cannot always defend themselves or say, ‘Hey, something is wrong.’”

One colleague spoke of a freelancer who locked the lower portion of a hoist in a position that was too high. “The client would then fall. I said, ‘What are you doing?’ That’s the first thing you learn.”

FNV union leader Saida Youssef could not comprehend why employers might not sufficiently screen their workers. “It is simply terrible that this is happening under our noses in 2024 and that we actually have no control over it,” she said late last year to the news outlet. It is not only dangerous for clients, but also for employees, she asserted. “You put them in very unpleasant situations.”






Albania bans TikTok for ‘perversity’


Critics have accused the Albanian government of political censorship
NATO member bans TikTok for ‘perversity’











Albania is about to enact a year-long ban on TikTok in the name of protecting children and teens. However, critics of Prime Minister Edi Rama claim his real aim is to silence the political opposition ahead of an election in May, according to Reuters.

Rama announced the ban in late December, after what he said were weeks of consultations with parents and teachers. He said the decision was motivated by the fatal stabbing of a 14-year-old boy in November over a social media dispute. TikTok has objected, pointing out that neither the victim nor the attacker had used the platform.

“This creates a dangerous precedent that at any moment governments can close different platforms,” Orkidea Xhaferaj of SciDEV told Reuters, a Tirana-based think tank funded by George Soros’ Open Society Foundation and a variety of Western governments.

“He wants to close our mouth,” Arlind Qori, leader of the political party Bashke (Together), told the agency, describing TikTok as a powerful communication tool of the opposition.

The leaders of Albania’s two largest opposition parties, Sali Berisha (Democratic Party) and Ilir Meta (Freedom Party) have been charged with corruption. They have decried the charges as politically motivated.

Businessman Ergus Katiaj also lamented the upcoming ban, saying it will deprive him of free advertising that adds around $1,000 to his monthly profits. Katiaj posts on TikTok every evening, reminding customers in Tirana that his shop delivers alcohol, cigarettes and snacks all night.

Rama’s government said the ban would go into effect “in early 2025,” but TikTok remains online as of Thursday.

“The ban on TikTok for one year in Albania is not a rushed reaction to a single incident, but a carefully considered decision made in consultation with parent communities in schools across the country,” the prime minister said in December.

After 1,300 such meetings, 90% of educators and parents supported the TikTok ban, the government told AP.

They had 1300 meetings in a matter of weeks? Wow! How did educators have time to educate?

“Inside China’s TikTok, you don't see hooliganism, perversity, violence, bullying, crime,” Rama said in last month’s speech announcing the ban, referring to the platform Douyin. “Why do we need this?”

Both TikTok and its Chinese counterpart Douyin were developed by ByteDance, a company incorporated in the Cayman Islands.

The Chinese origin of the video-sharing platform has placed it in the crosshairs of many governments in the West. The US passed a law last year requiring ByteDance to sell TikTok in the name of national security, with a January 19 deadline.

Romania annulled its presidential elections in November after intelligence agencies claimed “Russian influence” was behind a TikTok campaign supporting independent candidate Calin Georgescu. The decision was not reversed even after it emerged that the campaign had been manipulated by the pro-Western National Liberal Party instead.

This is obviously a political gimmick. It would be great if it somehow reduces online child sexual abuse, but it is doubtful that it will have much effect. 




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