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Rusia mató más de 2.500 civiles ucranianos en 2025, muchos de ellos lejos de las líneas del frente, según la ONU

Kraig Pakulski 0 42 Article rating: No rating

Por Ivana Kottasová

La guerra de Rusia en Ucrania alcanzó un nuevo: el 2025 fue el año más mortífero para la población civil desde que comenzó la invasión rusa a gran escala en 2022, según un informe publicado este lunes por las Naciones Unidas. La ONU indicó que más de 2.500 personas perdieron la vida ese año.

La Misión de Monitoreo de Derechos Humanos de la ONU en Ucrania dijo que verificó que 2.514 civiles murieron y 12.142 resultaron heridos por violencia relacionada con el conflicto en Ucrania en 2025, casi todos ellos en ataques rusos contra zonas controladas por Ucrania.

El informe de la ONU muestra claramente que ningún lugar en Ucrania es seguro: más de un tercio de los civiles que murieron o resultaron heridos se encontraban en zonas alejadas de las líneas del frente cuando Rusia los atacó.

Rusia ha intensificado su campaña de ataques aéreos contra ciudades ucranianas en 2025, aterrorizando regularmente a la población civil con grandes asaltos de drones y misiles.

En uno de estos ataques la semana pasada, Moscú lanzó 242 drones, 14 misiles balísticos y 22 misiles de crucero contra múltiples ciudades en una sola noche, apuntando a la infraestructura energética civil y dejando a cientos de miles de ucranianos sin electricidad ni calefacción.

La ONU señaló que el número de bajas civiles documentadas en Ucrania el año pasado fue un 31 % mayor que en 2024 y un 70 % mayor que en 2023.

“Este aumento se debió no solo a la intensificación de las hostilidades a lo largo de la línea del frente, sino también al uso expandido de armas de largo alcance, lo que expuso a los civiles de todo el país a un mayor riesgo”, dijo Danielle Bell, quien encabeza la misión de monitoreo de la ONU en Ucrania.

Según la ONU, el más mortífero de estos ataques ocurrió en la ciudad occidental ucraniana de Ternopil el 19 de noviembre. Al menos 38 civiles, incluidos ocho niños, murieron en el ataque y 99, incluidos 17 niños, resultaron heridos. Según la ONU, 10 familias perdieron a dos o más miembros cada una.

Más de 14.900 civiles han muerto desde que Rusia comenzó la guerra a gran escala en febrero de 2022, según datos de la ONU com base en muertes que pudo confirmar.

Naciones Unidas ha dicho que “las cifras reales probablemente sean más altas” en cuanto a bajas civiles en Ucrania, ya que muchos informes “aún están pendientes de corroboración” y no tiene acceso a los territorios ocupados y un acceso limitado a zonas cercanas a las líneas del frente.

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Rent Stabilization Could Progress Soon in Santa Barbara

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Another step towards rent control in Santa Barbara could happen on Tuesday.

The city council first discussed it late last year in a five-hour session, and instructed the staff to come back with a plan.

It would include a rent freeze until the ordinance can be discussed and voted on, possibly in the summer.

The tenants union has rallied in support of the rent stabilization efforts saying rents and increases in recent years are drastically beyond the reach of many residents, including low and middle income workers and families.

Landlords say a rent freeze or limits on rent increases would impact their ability to keep up their property or make their payments in some cases.

The discusson on this began when two council members Wendy Santamaria and Kristen Sneddon had it added to the agenda to open the process that included staff input and many community members speaking out.

Mayor Randy Rowse has not waited for this issue to move forward and has already spoken out against the plan.

City council will take up the issue after 2:00pm tomorrow afternoon.

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Trump administration strikes deal with AbbVie to cut costs of certain drugs

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By Adam Cancryn, Tami Luhby, CNN

(CNN) — The Trump administration has finalized a deal with drugmaker AbbVie to cut the cost of certain medicines, marking the latest pact as part of its “Most Favored Nation” pricing initiative.

The deal comes days after the administration inked a deal with Johnson & Johnson, which was announced by the drugmaker without the White House fanfare that accompanied the agreements unveiled with more than a dozen manufacturers last year.

Under the agreement, AbbVie said Monday it will offer a series of drugs to Medicaid as well as directly to consumers at “Most Favored Nation” levels, or the lowest price available in peer countries. It will sell some other medications at a deep discount compared to their list prices.

The drugs subject to “Most Favored Nation” pricing include glaucoma treatment Combigan and thyroid hormone medicine Synthroid. AbbVie is separately expected to reduce the price of its popular rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira, as well as another glaucoma medicine, Alphagan.

AbbVie declined to disclose the specifics of the discounts it plans to offer for the drugs.

Meanwhile, Johnson & Johnson said Thursday that it, too, would sell medicines directly to patients at “significantly discounted rates,” as well as provide drugs to Medicaid at prices comparable to those in other developed nations. The manufacturer also said it would enable American patients to access medicines at those prices but did not provide any details on the products that would be available or the size of the discounts.

The deals represent the latest in a string of administration pacts with major pharmaceutical companies aimed at lowering the price of drugs, as President Donald Trump tries to assuage voters’ concerns over the cost of living.

Trump has touted the “Most Favored Nation” initiative as a centerpiece of his health care agenda, vowing to push more companies to strike deals to sell their medicines directly to consumers willing to pay cash and forgo insurance at discounts through a soon-to-be-launched TrumpRx online platform.

Yet the size of the overall impact on Americans’ budgets remains unclear. The administration’s agreements cover only a small fraction of drugs sold in the US. And some of the discounted drugs may still be too costly for consumers who will need to pay for them out of pocket.

Plus, it’s unclear how much these agreements will benefit the Medicaid program, which already receives discounts on drugs.

Drugmakers, in the meantime, have sought to strike such deals in an effort to avoid hefty tariffs that Trump has threatened to impose on the industry by promising to expand manufacturing in the US, which has also been a top priority for the president.

In addition to the discounts on certain medicines, AbbVie is expected to commit to investing $100 billion in research and development and manufacturing over the next decade, the source said. The company will receive a three-year exemption from tariffs in exchange, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told CNN.

Johnson & Johnson, which previously announced $55 billion in investments in the US by early 2029, said it expects to announce additional commitments this year. It is also receiving a tariff reprieve. In its press release last week, the company highlighted two new domestic manufacturing facilities, including a cell therapy manufacturing site in Pennsylvania and a drug product manufacturing facility in North Carolina.

This story has been updated with additional information.

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