šŸŒ Evacuations fail in Ukraine

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang speaks at the opening session of the National Peoples Congress at the Great Hall of the People.
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang speaks at the opening session of the National Peoples Congress at the Great Hall of the People.
Image: Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

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Hereā€™s what you need to know

Another planned evacuation of Mariupol, Ukraine failed. Russian forces kept shelling the city despite a ceasefire attempt. They also damaged a pipeline supplying gas to southeastern Ukraine and strengthened their hold of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

US gas topped $4 a gallon. Prices, driven up by the war in Ukraine, havenā€™t been this high since 2008. Similarly, oil increased more than 10% and is nearing all-time highs.

Chinaā€™s GDP outlook hit a three-decade low. A real estate crisis and the countryā€™s zero-covid policy are among the factors slowing growth to 5.5% this year.

Israel mediated Russia-Ukraine talks. Prime minister Naftali Bennett held separate meetings with both governments. Meanwhile, Russia snubbed a hearing at the UNā€™s top court.

Visa and Mastercard suspended service in Russia. The credit card giants want to further isolate the country in rebuke of its Ukraine invasion. Netflix is also pausing service in Russia, and Snapchat turned off its public map of Ukraine due to concerns for user safety.

TikTok halted new posts and livestreams in Russia.Ā The move comes days after Russia passed a ā€œfake newsā€ law and blocked Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube in the country (more below).


What to watch for

Chinaā€™s foreign minister Wang Yiā€™s annual news briefing is today. Viewers will be closely watching for any further insight into how the country will approach the war in Ukraine. As the US and Europe hit Russia with unprecedented sanctions, Beijing has called them illegal and counterproductive.

China has long expressed its displeasure with what it calls the USā€™s ā€œfinancial hegemonyā€ and its corresponding ability to slap sanctions on foreign countries. Last year, Wangā€™s address was critical of the USā€™s interactions with foreign nations, and thereā€™s a good chance heā€™ll express the same sentiment this year.

That much was the case on Saturday when the foreign minister spoke with his US counterpart, secretary of state Antony Blinken. According to a Chinese government statement, Wang encouraged talks between the US, the EU, NATO, and Russia, but condemned the ā€œnegative impact of NATOā€™s continuous eastward expansionā€ toward Russia.


What has Russia blocked?

The Russian government is cracking down on speech it doesnā€™t like, limiting its citizensā€™ access to media outside of the Kremlinā€™s grip.

Russian lawmakers passed a new law on March 4 criminalizing the spread of ā€œfalse informationā€ about its military. This is all separate from the external pressures from companies like Visa and Mastercard which have limited Russiansā€™ access because of sanctions or in protesting the war. So what has Russia blocked, limited, or throttled?

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • BBCā€™s Russian-language service
  • US-funded Radio Liberty
  • Independent news outlet Meduza
  • German broadcaster Deutsche Welle
  • The walkie-talkie app Zello

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