Chinese drone firm DJI pauses operations in Russia and Ukraine
By Chris Vallance
Technology reporter
Published27 April
The world's largest commercial drone-maker DJI has suspended all business activities in Russia and Ukraine.
Since the start of the war, Ukraine has urged the company to take steps to stop its drones being used by Russia.
Not for combat
Mr Troiak shared with the BBC a link to a video apparently produced by Russian forces, which purports to show a drone used in combat in Mariupol. DJI's logo is visible on the controller.
DJI says it does not:
- market or sell its products for military use
- provide after-sales services for products that have been identified as being used for military purposes
- customise or enable modifications that would enable its products for military use
A DJI spokesperson told the BBC: "We are concerned about the reported military use of our products as we stated on 21 April 2022."
They said the suspension of operations was "a statement about our principles".
"DJI has only ever made products for civilian use. They are not designed for military applications.
"Such use is against our principles and has potential legal compliance implications," the spokesperson added.
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-61179022#:~:text=Chinese drone firm DJI pauses operations in Russia and Ukraine,-By Chris Vallance&text=The world's largest commercial drone,drones being used by Russia.
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Russia faces its biggest economic collapse since Putin rose to power
BY
CHRISTIAAN HETZNER
May 2, 2022 7:05 PM GMT+2
Russia is about to suffer the most severe economic collapse since Vladimir Putin rose to power at the turn of the millennium, as
sanctions imposed on the country after he invaded Ukraine are expected to wreak more damage than any previous crisis the Russian strongman has faced.
On April 29, Russian
central bank governor Elvira Nabiullina slashed the country's interest rates by three percentage points for the
second time in less than a month, after forecasting a severe recession, soaring prices, and coming labor market upheaval as the country pays the price for its unprovoked war.
Gross domestic product is expected to nosedive by a minimum of 8% this year, and could even shrink by as much as 10%, the most since 1994, according to the World Bank.
Nabiullina dismissed the Russian government's
rosy first-quarter GDP figure, which showed an expansion of 3.7%, as nothing more than a temporary effect driven by people stocking up on goods before they disappear. As inventories gradually run out, the damage will continue to worsen over the course of the year and peak in the final three months of this year, according to her analysis.
https://fortune.com/2022/05/02/russia-faces-its-biggest-economic-collapse-since-putin-rose-to-power/
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