Two articles discuss different aspects of Russia's actions in Ukraine.
One article from The Guardian reports on how thousands of Ukrainian parents like Yevhen Mezhevyi have had their children abducted and transferred to Russia since Putin's invasion of Ukraine.
In response, the international criminal court has issued an arrest warrant for Putin for his alleged involvement in forced deportations.
Another article from The Telegraph details how the Russian Education Ministry introduced new weekly classes to promote the Kremlin's world view in Russian schools.
These "Talking about What's Important" sessions were initially intended to extol the virtues of Russia's invasion of Ukraine but have since been watered down to less political subjects.
The teachers have responded to this political intrusion by transforming the lessons into philosophical discussions.
The Guardian article describes how thousands of Ukrainian parents have had their children abducted and transferred to Russia since Putin's invasion of Ukraine.
Vladimir Putin has overseen this act of forced deportation, prompting the international criminal court to issue an arrest warrant for the Russian president.
Yevhen Mezhevyi, one of the affected parents, commented on Putin's visit to his hometown of Mariupol calling him "nobody to me and half of the world knows what he is".
The Telegraph article discusses the Russian Education Ministry's introduction of "Talking about What's Important" weekly classes in Russian schools.
These classes aimed to promote the Kremlin's world view and included extolling the virtues of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
However, the classes have been watered down to more innocuous subjects such as Russia's greatest scientists or national holidays, with only one lesson still decidedly political, the anniversary of the Crimean annexation.
Teachers like Maria (not her real name) have responded to this political intrusion by diverting the lessons into philosophical discussions, turning it into a space for critical thinking.