Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Gaza in a thousand faces: Two years of Israel’s genocide
  • US and China provoke sharp fall in global outlook for renewable power
  • Indonesia ends search for victims of school collapse with at least 61 dead
  • Five Georgia opposition leaders charged with ‘coup’ attempt after protests
  • Two years of Israel’s genocide in Gaza: By the numbers
  • UNESCO board backs Egypt’s Khaled el-Enany as its next chief
  • Venezuela’s Maduro says US embassy ‘false flag’ bombing foiled in Caracas
  • After two years of war, do Israelis support Netanyahu?
  • Harvard ruled as legally liable for theft of body parts from morgue
  • Live: Israel’s genocide continues across Gaza two years since start of war
  • LeBron James’s post causes retirement rumours as Lakers ticket prices rise
  • One killed, several injured in Syrian Army, SDF clashes in Aleppo: Reports
  • Reports: How the US funded Israel’s wars on Gaza, Lebanon, Iran
  • Marc Marquez to miss two MotoGP rounds with shoulder injury
  • As Israel systematically destroys Gaza City, those fleeing have few options
  • Why is the US military is being deployed in US cities?
  • Trump walks back offer to talk to Democrats as government shutdown extends
  • How Ladakh protest leader Sonam Wangchuk went from Indian hero to ‘traitor’
  • Day one of Israel and Hamas indirect talks ends on ‘positive’ note in Egypt
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,321
  • US sends another ‘third-country’ deportation flight to Eswatini
  • Cycling team to drop Israel name after mass pro-Palestinian Vuelta protests
  • AMD’s shares surge on deal to supply AI chips to OpenAI
  • Indians hard hit as US student visas decline by a fifth from last year
  • White House reverses Trump claim firings have begun amid gov’t shutdown

Photos: Odesa prepares its defences amid fears of Russian attack

By Al Jazeera Published 2022-03-07 12:41 Updated 2022-03-07 12:41 Source: Al Jazeera

Odesa, which Ukraine fears could be the next target of Russia’s offensive in the south, is the country’s main port and is vital for its economy.

But the city of one million people close to the Romanian and Moldovan borders also holds a special place in the Russian imagination.

A cosmopolitan port on the Black Sea with stunning 19th-century architecture, sandy beaches and a Mediterranean climate, it has a Russian-speaking majority.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned on Sunday that Moscow was “preparing to bomb Odesa”, saying, “It will be a war crime … a historical crime.”

French President Emmanuel Macron told Russian President Vladimir Putin during a phone call on Sunday of his concerns about a possible imminent attack on the Ukrainian city of Odesa, according to a statement from Macron’s office.

Odesa is Ukraine’s main port complex. The one in the city itself handles petrol and metals, while others in nearby Youjni and Illytchyivsk handle chemicals and containers.

A large part of Ukraine’s enormous corn and barley exports pass through the ports.

The city’s beaches, Italianate architecture and relaxed way of life have made it a tourist magnet, with numbers increasing since Russia annexed Crimea in 2014.

Odesa is located some 70 kilometres (43 miles) from Transnistria, the tiny unrecognised separatist Russian-speaking statelet that broke away from Moldova as the Soviet Union collapsed. NATO member Romania is a four-hour drive away.

But the city resisted the separatist push that took parts of the mainly Russian-speaking Donbas region in the east out of Kyiv’s control after Putin annexed Crimea.