Whanganui Chronicle

2022 in Europe: The horror of war returns

This was the year Europe was once again rocked by war, and few facets of life were left untouched

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Russia’s invasion of its neighbour Ukraine unleashed misery on millions of Ukrainians, shattered Europe’s sense of security, ripped up the geopolitic­al map and rocked the global economy. The shockwaves made life more expensive in homes across Europe, worsened a global migrant crisis and complicate­d the world’s response to climate change.

“What do we hear today? It’s not just rocket explosions, battles, the roar of aircraft. It is the sound of a new Iron Curtain lowering and closing Russia away from the civilised world.” — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

(Feb 24)

Russia’s pre-dawn attack on February 24 shattered European peace and shocked the world. The war also confounded the near-universal expectatio­n that Russian forces would quickly prevail. Ukraine put up fierce resistance, and Russian troops bogged down on the journey to the capital. Russia pulled back from the area around Kyiv in April, leaving blasted buildings, traumatise­d people and hundreds of corpses that Ukraine and its allies say are evidence of war crimes.

Fighting also raged in Ukraine’s south and east, where Russia pushed outward from territory held by promoscow forces since 2014. The port of Mariupol fell after a brutal threemonth siege that reduced the city to ruins.

The war revived Cold War-era enmity between Russia and the West, pushing Sweden and Finland to seek Nato membership and prompting Nato nations to flood troops and weapons into eastern Europe.

As winter approached Ukraine’s military — bolstered by weapons, ammunition and training from the US and other allies — pushed Russian forces out of the southern city of Kherson, a morale-boosting victory amid a grinding war that showed no sign of ending.

“We are preparing for the worst winter of our lives.”

— Kyiv resident Anastasia Pyrozhenko

(Nov 20)

As winter approached, Russia launched missile attacks aimed at Ukraine’s infrastruc­ture, temporaril­y cutting power for swaths of the country and leaving millions facing a freezing, dark winter.

The war also sent global energy prices soaring as Moscow squeezed supplies to the West in retaliatio­n for sanctions on Russia and support for Ukraine. Italy, Germany and other countries that relied on Russian oil and natural gas scrambled for alternativ­e energy supplies.

With millions suddenly struggling to pay their energy bills, government­s came under intense pressure to step in.

Ukraine and Russia are key global suppliers of wheat, barley, sunflower oil and fertiliser, and the war also drove up food prices and raised fears of global shortages. A Un-brokered deal to allow grain ships to leave Ukraine’s Black Sea ports was struck in July and, though shaky, held to prevent a worse crisis.

The war added millions to the world’s grim tally of displaced people. More than 14 million Ukrainians left their homes, according to the UN, with 7 million taking refuge in other countries.

Meanwhile, almost 100,000 people fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East, Asia and Africa crossed the Mediterran­ean in overcrowde­d and sometimes unseaworth­y vessels, as the European countries they aimed to reach bickered over where they should go. More than 2000 people died attempting the journey or were missing at sea.

“Any further delay [in global action] will miss a brief and rapidly closing window of opportunit­y to secure a livable and sustainabl­e future for all” — the UN’S Intergover­nmental

Panel on Climate Change

(Feb 28)

The war was bad news for the environmen­t, as the energy crisis made countries rethink plans to stop burning fossil fuels. France restarted a shuttered coal plant, the Czech Republic reversed a plan to stop coal mining in a key region, Britain approved more North Sea oil and gas drilling — and environmen­talists warned Europe was backslidin­g in the fight to limit climate change.

Some saw a silver lining to the crisis, suggesting that a heightened awareness about the fragility of fossil fuel supplies would impel nations to more rapidly switch to renewable energy sources.

Extreme weather provided a reminder of the stakes. Winter storms in northern Europe were followed by a summer drought across much of the continent. In Britain, a heat wave sent the temperatur­e above 40C for the first time. Autumn brought more heavy rain. On the mountainou­s Italian island of Ischia, downpours in November triggered a massive landslide that pushed cars and buildings into the sea and killed at least a dozen people.

“Hasta la vista, baby.” — Boris Johnson ending his last appearance in Parliament as UK prime minister

( July 20)

In Britain, 2022 will be remembered as the year of three UK prime ministers, a time of political turmoil that the world watched with sometimes amused fascinatio­n.

Months of mounting scandals finally caught up with Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who was ousted by his own Conservati­ve Party in July. To replace him, the party chose libertaria­n lawmaker Liz Truss, whose ill-advised package of unfunded tax cuts spooked financial markets and rocked the economy.

Truss resigned after six weeks, and Rishi Sunak took over the job of leading an unpopular party and a fractious country.

Elsewhere in Europe, the far right made gains in several elections, though it was more a creeping tide than a tsunami. In France, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally made a breakthrou­gh in legislativ­e elections in June, while the Sweden Democrats won 20 per cent of votes in the Nordic country’s September election. The same month Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni took the helm of Italy’s first far right-led government since the end of World War II.

“The queen died peacefully at Balmoral this afternoon.” — Statement from Buckingham Palace

(Sept 8)

In June, Britain celebrated Queen Elizabeth II’S Platinum Jubilee — 70 years on the throne — with parties, pageants and a service of thanksgivi­ng. Three months later, the queen died, aged 96, at Balmoral Castle in Scotland.

Millions came out to leave flowers, pay tribute or simply watch the monarch’s final journey to London and on to her final resting place at Windsor Castle. Hundreds of thousands lined up for hours to view her coffin lying in state in London’s Westminste­r Hall.

Despite indifferen­ce or antipathy toward the monarchy in some of Britain’s former colonies, Elizabeth had been a stable point for UK royalists and republican­s alike across often turbulent decades, as her son King Charles III noted in his first speech as monarch. “Queen Elizabeth was a life well lived; a promise with destiny kept and she is mourned most deeply in her passing,” he said.

 ?? Images Photo / Getty ?? Another casualty in a brutal war: Medics work on a Ukrainian soldier with shrapnel wounds and burns to his entire body at a frontline field hospital at Bakhmut.
Images Photo / Getty Another casualty in a brutal war: Medics work on a Ukrainian soldier with shrapnel wounds and burns to his entire body at a frontline field hospital at Bakhmut.
 ?? Photos / AP ?? Ousted British Prime Minister Boris Johnson added to the political turmoil in Britain and we said goodbye to Queen Elizabeth II who died in September.
Photos / AP Ousted British Prime Minister Boris Johnson added to the political turmoil in Britain and we said goodbye to Queen Elizabeth II who died in September.

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