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UKRAINE

Ukraine’s ambassador to Sweden criticises ‘deeply offensive’ TV brothel joke

Ukraine's ambassador to Sweden, Andrii Plakhotniuk, has criticised the SVT programme Invandrare för Svenskar (IFS), after comedian Elaf Ali made a joke about Ukrainian women and prostitution on a recent episode.

Ukraine's ambassador to Sweden criticises 'deeply offensive' TV brothel joke
File photo of Ukrainian ambassador Andrii Plakhotniuk. Photo: Caisa Rasmussen/TT

In the programme, whose name translates as Immigrants for Swedes, a play on the Swedish for Immigrants courses offered to new arrivals in the country, celebrity panelists representing a range of immigrant groups in Sweden are tasked with giving varying answers to questions from presenter Ahmed Berhan.

A group of ordinary Swedes then have to guess whether the panelists are lying or telling the truth. 

In an episode on March 7th, contestants were asked to answer the question ‘which immigrant group were granted the most residence permits in Sweden in 2022?’

“It’s actually, unsurprisingly, people from Ukraine,” answered journalist and comedian Elaf Ali.

“That’s not true,” fellow contestant Thanos Fotas remarked.

To which Ali responded: “Maybe you don’t think about it that much because they’re light haired so they blend in,” before adding that “it’s maybe most obvious in, like, the brothels.”

Ukrainian Ambassador to Sweden, Andrii Plakhotniuk, reacted on social media site X saying that he was “deeply upset” by Ali’s joke. He demanded that she apologise and that and public broadcaster SVT, who broadcast the programme,”takes the necessary measures to prevent similar situations in the future”.

“I consider such statements deeply offensive and completely unacceptable, given the circumstances of the full-scale Russian military aggression against Ukraine, which forced Ukrainian women to flee abroad to save their lives and the lives of their children,” Plakhotniuk wrote.

Ali addressed the criticism in a post on X.

“In the season premiere of IFS, which was broadcast last week, I made jokes about an imam, Somalians and about the tragedies of war (Ukraine) – women who are forced into prostitution,” she wrote, adding that the Ukrainians were “super angry” and had been “bombarding” her on social media. 

“So many harsher things have been said, but the idea that a group of people should be immune from having jokes made about them is crazy. And no one seems to care about using their brain to think a step further. Why are women ending up in this position? Who is buying services from these women?” Ali added in a comment under her post on X.

In a comment to Aftonbladet, the broadcaster’s head of programming, Christina Hill ruled out the possibility of SVT issuing a formal apology.

“IFS is a programme with a clear premise: making jokes about stereotypes surrounding ethnicity and culture, often at the boundary of what’s considered socially acceptable. I think it’s clear that the comment is meant as a joke and believe that our audience understands this,” Hill said.

“It is of course not relevant for SVT to take any measures in response to this, as the content of the programme is covered by Swedish freedom of speech,” she added.

Member comments

  1. When so called freedom of speech is positioned to hurt and be broadcasted I would at least stop calling it a freedom of speech, but rather the freedom to offend without consequences, whether they be legal or societal.
    Because if we are going to keep stretching things then Putin will become a fighter for peace and Xi a fighter for inclusion.
    This way of thinking has led us to have Berlusconi and Trump leading countries, followed by others.

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UKRAINE

Pro-Ukraine rallies across Europe on war anniversary

Protesters rallied across Europe Saturday in support of Ukraine on the second anniversary of Moscow's invasion, urging greater Western backing as fears mount about Kyiv's ability to fend off an emboldened Russia.

Pro-Ukraine rallies across Europe on war anniversary

Crowds gathered in Berlin, London, Paris and other European cities, waving the blue and yellow Ukrainian flag and demanding that Russian President Vladimir Putin put an end to the war.

When Putin sent his forces into Ukraine on February 24, 2022, it brought conflict back to Europe for the first time in decades, a geopolitical earthquake that sent shockwaves across the world.

With concerns growing about waning support from Ukraine’s allies as an emboldened Moscow makes battlefield gains, there were calls at a protest at Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate for accelerated arms deliveries.

Addressing thousands of supporters, some waving banners that read “arm Ukraine now”, Berlin mayor Kai Wegner decried Putin’s “brutal war of aggression”.

“He wants to wipe out Ukraine, he wants to wipe out the identities of Ukrainians,” he told the crowd, which organisers estimated at 10,000-strong while police gave a figure of 5,000.

“But we won’t let that happen.”

He called on Berlin to deliver long-range Taurus missiles long sought by Kyiv, a demand the German government has so far refused for fears they could also strike inside Russia.

Valeria Zhylenko, a 32-year-old Ukrainian at the rally, recognised it was “more difficult now to support only Ukraine” due to other crises happening around the world.

But she added: “I want to remind the world that we are still here, we are resisting… we still need this support.”

In London, thousands of protesters marched to Trafalgar Square, waving banners that read “world support Ukraine”, and “Russia is a terrorist state”.

“Every single day people are dying, and the West is not supplying enough… weaponry, unfortunately,” said Tania Zubashenko, a 54-year-old Ukrainian.

“They promise, but sometimes it’s only words. We need real actions.”

‘Ukraine defending values’

Protests took place across France, with several thousand joining a march in central Paris, with shouts of “Putin murderer” and “Russia out of Ukraine” ringing out from the crowd.

In the city of Rouen, mayor Nicolas Mayer-Rossignol told a crowd of several hundred that “Ukraine is defending its sovereignty but also its values and ideals, which are those of Europe.

“Europe is at war — we cannot remain on the sidelines of this battle.”

More than 1,000 protesters gathered in Warsaw — the capital of Poland, Ukraine’s neighbour and a key ally — in front of the Russian embassy, waving Ukrainian flags.

The demonstrators put up crosses with the names of victims of Russia’s war, as well as models of buildings destroyed in Russian bombings.

Demonstrations took place in numerous other cities across Europe, including Dublin, Athens, Stockholm and Milan.

At the Stockholm rally, Maryana Kostiv, a 22-year-old Ukrainian from Lviv, told AFP that she hoped for Ukraine to “win the war”.

“Everything will end and all the Ukrainians can go back to Ukraine and start to live their normal lives again. That’s all that I hope for,” she told AFP.

Despite the show of support across the continent on Saturday, Europeans are becoming increasingly worried about Ukraine’s faltering efforts to fend off Moscow.

According to a survey released last week, only 10 percent of Europeans believe Ukraine can defeat Russia on the battlefield.

The survey conducted last month across 12 EU countries showed that on average 20 percent of those asked believed Russia could win, and 37 percent thought the conflict would end in a compromise settlement.

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