Month: June 2017

У Херсоні відкрили пам’ятник українським прикордонникам усіх часів

Пам’ятник прикордонникам, які охороняють кордони України, відкрили у Херсоні.

Його встановили на площі біля адміністративного корпусу Херсонського прикордонного загону. За словами автора пам’ятника, херсонського скульптора Олександра Теплякова, традиційний зовнішній вигляд монументу – прикордонник із службовим собакою – обраний на прохання самих прикордонників. Під час виготовлення пам’ятника скульптору позували реальний боєць загону зі своїм чотириногим помічником.

Фінансувало виготовлення та встановлення пам’ятника одне з херсонських підприємств, керівник якого – колишній офіцер-прикордонник.

Гостями церемонії відкриття пам’ятника були керівники Херсонської ОДА, Херсонської облради та міськради, ветерани-прикордонники.

Освятив пам’ятник священик УПЦ КП протоієрей Ігор Семеніхін. Після церемонії освячення він виступив з проповіддю, у якій зазначив, що для нього цей пам’ятник перш за все – пам’ятник 67-ми українським прикордонникам, які загинули у зоні АТО у найважчі для України часи.       

Cyberattacks Spread From Ukraine to Europe, US

A wave of cyberattacks that hit Ukraine and Russia is spreading beyond the borders of those countries, wreaking havoc on government and corporate computer systems in Europe and across the Atlantic.

Banks, government offices and airports in Ukraine were among the first to report the cyberattack. Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Pavlo Rozenko tweeted a photo of his black computer screen with a warning massage, saying the government’s headquarters had been shut down.

Multiple international firms reported being affected Tuesday. They include America’s Merck pharmaceutical company, Russia’s Rosneft oil giant, the Danish shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk, British advertising giant WPP and French industrial group Saint-Gobain.

“We confirm our company’s computer network was compromised today as part of global hack. Other organizations have also been affected,” Merck said on Twitter.

Anders Rosendahl, a spokesman for A.P. Moller-Maersk, said the attack had “affected all branches” of the shipping group, both at home and abroad.

IT experts have identified the virus as a type of ransomware — a program that is often used to hold data “hostage” until a payment is delivered.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it is monitoring the attacks and is in contact with its international and domestic partners.

“We stand ready to support any requests for assistance,” officials said in a statement.

British Defense Minister Michael Fallon spoke earlier at a conference hosted by the Chatham House policy institute in London. He did not address the attack, but discussed how Britain is responding in general to cybersecurity concerns.

“We are investing a huge chunk of money — some £1.9 billion [$2.4 billion] — into boosting our cybersecurity,” he said.

Europol’s European Cybercrime Center has told anyone affected by Tuesday’s attack to report the crime to national police and encouraged them not to pay any ransom requested by hackers.

VOA’s Jeff Seldin contributed to this report.

Державний секретар США відзначив поступ України у боротьбі з торгівлею людьми

Рекс Тіллерсон, виступаючи у Вашингтоні 27 червня з доповіддю про торгівлю людьми в світі (TIP – Trafficking in Persons Report), назвав Україну серед тих держав, які досягли певних успіхів у боротьбі з торгівлею людьми.

«В Україні – державі, яка вже кілька років перебуває у списку спостереження, Генеральна прокуратура видала директиви щодо покращення розслідування торгівлі людьми та збільшення зусиль, спрямованих на викорінення співучасті, зокрема, працівників поліції у цих процесах», – заявив Рекс Тіллерсон, пославшись на директиви, які випустила ГПУ щодо поліпшення розслідувань з даної проблематики та відзначив усунення перешкод при боротьбі з «перевертнями в погонах» і держслужбовцями, які здійснюють такі злочини. Тіллерсон, зокрема, згадав про випадок, коли вихователь дитячого притулку намагався продати підопічного.

У доповіді про торгівлю людьми у світі 187 країн розділені на три групи. Україна увійшла до другої групи, яка в свою чергу розділена на дві частини. Тіллерсон зазначив, що «протягом багатьох років Україна входила до «особливого списку» при другій групі», країни з якого не відповідають стандартам американського закону щодо захисту жертв работоргівлі, хоча і роблять серйозні кроки в даному напрямку, але обтяжені низкою перешкод.

Нині ж, за словами Тіллерсона, Україна перейшла до «основного складу» другої групи.

Президент США Дональд Трамп назвав протидію торгівлі людьми «пріоритетним завданням» його адміністрації. Щорічна доповідь Державного департаменту покликана сприяти скороченню експлуатації – в основному жіночої і дитячої праці.

Mattis Heads to NATO to Discuss Afghanistan Plan with Allies

U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis travels this week to Brussels, where he will consult with NATO allies on troop contributions and other support in Afghanistan before announcing his own decision on increasing the number of U.S. forces in that war-torn country. But as VOA Pentagon correspondent Carla Babb reports, the new strategy is likely to be more of the same.

Iran Blasts US Top Court Ruling on Trump Travel Ban

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has denounced the U.S. Supreme Court’s partial reinstatement of a travel ban affecting six predominately Muslim countries and said the decision could energize terrorist groups.

“It is regrettable that the citizens of the countries on the list have never participated in any act of terrorism against the U.S. and yet they are being punished for acts of terrorism,” Zarif told reporters Tuesday during a visit to Berlin.

Zarif added the reinstatement was the “greatest gift” for terrorist groups seeking new recruits.

In an apparent reference to Saudi Arabia, Zarif said the travel ban punishes people who have never been “involved in terrorism” while citizens of other countries involved in past terrorist acts were not affected.

Osama Bin Laden and 15 of the 19 hijackers involved in the September 11, 2001, al-Qaida attacks on the United States were Saudi nationals.

During a recent visit to Saudi Arabia, President Donald Trump closed arms deals worth nearly $110 billion.

The Supreme Court says it will consider the case of Trump’s executive order restricting travel while allowing much of the order to take effect.

Trump’s revised executive order, often referred to as a travel ban, halted entry to the U.S. for people from six mostly Muslim countries for 90 days and the nation’s refugee program for 120 days.  The order said these steps were necessary in order to revise security screening to safeguard the nation from external threats.

The travel order had been stayed by two separate federal courts, one in Hawaii and one in Maryland.  Both rulings were upheld by separate appeals courts.

US link crucial for travelers

The nation’s highest court took a more nuanced view, allowing the ban on travelers from Libya, Iran, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen and the suspension of the refugee program.

But the justices said the ban on travel cannot be enforced against “foreign nationals who have a credible claim of a bona fide relationship with a person or entity in the United States.”

The court goes on to define relationships that would qualify: for individuals, a family relationship; for students; admittance to a college or university; for workers, a job offer.

Trump has said that the travel order would go into effect 72 hours after the high court ruling.

In a statement Monday, he called the Supreme Court decision “a clear victory.”

The president added that the ruling helps him protect the homeland.  “As president, I cannot allow people into our country who want to do us harm.  I want people who can love the United States and all of its citizens, and who will be hardworking and productive.”

The justices are expected to hear the travel order case later this year, but noted that they will also consider whether the case will be moot at that point. The measures spelled out in the order are meant to be temporary while the government reviews its security procedures.

Becca Heller, executive director for the International Refugee Assistance Project, said individuals most likely to be affected are those seeking tourist visas from the six countries in question. This is due to their potential inability to prove a relation to the United States that the court’s ruling calls for.

As for refugees, Heller said their clients will largely not be affected and neither should the clients of other resettlement organizations.  As of May 31 of this year, 46,403 refugees have been admitted into the United States, near the cap of 50,000 the Trump administration put into place.

В Одесі протестують проти побиття активістів

В Одесі 26 червня відбулася акція протесту проти побиття активістів. До неї долучилися кількасот людей.

Коли до мітінгувальників вийшов очільник Одещини Максим Степанов, його зустріли вигуками «Ганьба!». Степанов заявив, що тримає на контролі розслідування по всіх інцидентах, проте учасники протесту його твердження зустріли з сумнівом.

Як повідомляє кореспондент радіо Свобода, після понад години спілкування з активістами Максим Степанов заявив, що «діалог не є конструктивним» і пішов у будівлю ОДА. Частина учасників мітингу зробила спробу прорватися слідом, виникла штовханина.

Кількох делегатів від активістів впустили в будівлю для спілкування з головою області.

Приводом до протесту став напад на представницю екозахисної організації «Зелений лист», члена експертної групи «2 травня» Світлану Підпалу. 24 червня біля її будинку у центрі міста жінку вдарили по голові й ляпнути в обличчя з газового балончика.

Як стверджує радник начальника Головного управління Національної поліції в Одеській області Руслан Форостяк, відкрите кримінальне провадження за статтею 125 (умисне нанесення легких тілесних ушкоджень) Кримінального кодексу України.

20 червня від невідомих постраждав син іншого активіста-еколога – директора національного природного парку «Тузловські лимани» Івана Русєва. Постраждалий Роман Русєв каже, що його вивезли у Дністровські плавні, що у Біляївському районі на Одещині, зв’язали і били. Поліція Одещини також повідомила про слідчі дії.

Порошенко у Франції: світ має називати Росію агресором, а Анну – Київською

Президент України Петро вшанував пам’ять королеви Франції Анни Київської, поклавши квіти до її монумента у Санлісі біля Парижа

Президент Румунії схвалив кандидатуру Міхая Тудосе на посаду прем’єра

Президент Румунії Клаус Йоханніс схвалив кандидатуру колишнього міністра економіки Міхая Тудосе на посаду прем’єр-міністра. Раніше у понеділок його кандидатуру запропонували представники правлячої коаліції соціал-демократів.

21 червня парламент Румунії проголосував за відставку з посади прем’єр-міністра Соріна Ґріндяну і вотум недовіри його урядові.

Соціал-демократ Сорін Ґріндяну обіймав посаду прем’єра з січня 2017 року.

Представники коаліції звинуватили його у затягуванні термінів реалізації економічних реформ. Але Ґріндяну відмовився подати у відставку, заявивши, що голова СДП Лівіу Драґня хоче посісти прем’єрське крісло.

Раніше Драґня не зміг зайняти пост прем’єра, оскільки у квітні 2016 його засудили до двох років позбавлення волі умовно за підтасовку голосів на референдумі у 2012 році.

Family of Slain Black Motorist Reaches $3 Million Settlement

A settlement has been reached for the family of a black motorist whose dying moments were caught on a Facebook livestream after he was shot by a police officer last year in the U.S. state of Minnesota.

The nearly $3 million settlement will be paid to the family of Philando Castile.

His family represented by his mother, Valerie Castile, will bypass any federal wrongful death or civil rights lawsuits arising from his death.

Castile was at a traffic stop when he was fatally shot by St. Anthony police officer Jeronimo Yanez after Castile told Yanez he was armed. The 32-year-old was supposedly reaching for something when he was shot seven times at close range.

Earlier this month, Yanez was acquitted of manslaughter and other charges, sparking days of protests that ended with 18 arrests.

A joint statement released Monday by the city of St. Anthony and the attorneys representing the Castile family said, “No amount of money could ever replace Philando. With resolution of the claims the family will continue to deal with their loss through the important work of the Philando Castile Relief Foundation.”

The squad car video shows the shooting, but does not show the build up to the shooting, creating room for debate. In her livestream video, Castile’s girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, says that Castile was reaching for his wallet, not his gun. Castile had a permit for his gun.

Yanez testified earlier this month, describing how he feared for his life and said that Castile ignored his pleas to not pull out his gun. The squad car footage that captured the moments before the shooting shows Castile saying, “I’m not pulling it out” before Yanez opened fire.

The city of St. Anthony is offering Yanez a “voluntary separation agreement” from the police department, in which he would no longer be an on-duty officer.

Trump Blames Democrats for Blocking Health Care Repeal

U.S. President Donald Trump is blaming opposition Democrats as “obstructionists” for refusing to help Republicans in dismantling the national health care reforms championed by former President Barack Obama.

Trump, in a pair of Twitter comments Monday as Senate Republicans look this week to make good on a seven-year promise to repeal the law known as Obamacare, said Democratic lawmakers “have no policies or ideas. All they do is delay and complain. They own ObamaCare!”

He said, “Republican Senators are working very hard to get there, with no help from the Democrats. Not easy! Perhaps just let OCare crash & burn!”

Trump offered his comments on the messy legislative dispute over the law as Republican senators supporting a replacement measure wait for an official assessment of the plan from the independent Congressional Budget Office. The CBO report is likely to project the measure’s cost for the government and predict how many people would lose insurance if the plan goes into effect.

The CBO earlier estimated 23 million people would lose their insurance over the coming decade under a health care bill the House of Representatives narrowly approved last month, which Senate Republicans have now revamped.

‘Very narrow path’

Trump said Sunday he and Senate Republicans are facing “a very narrow path” in trying to approve the latest repeal and replace plan.

It would end the requirement that Americans buy health insurance or pay a fine, phase out subsidies to help lower-income people buy insurance, curb taxes on the wealthy and cut hundreds of billions of dollars in funding over the next several years for the government’s health care program for the poor and disabled.

Despite the united opposition of Senate Democrats, Trump told Fox News on Sunday, “I think we’re going to get there.”

He noted the complicated road in the coming days to pick a plan “that everybody is going to like,” but argued the alternative to changing U.S. healthcare policies is the collapse of the current law.

Republicans hold a 52-48 majority in the Senate, and all of the Democrats in the chamber are expected to vote against the Republican proposal. That leaves Republicans with little room to pass the legislation if three or more of their members decide not to support it.

On Monday, Senate Republicans offered some small changes to their proposal, including a penalty for people whose insurance coverage lapses, an effort to persuade consumers to buy insurance before they have a health care emergency and need help with paying their medical bills.

Already five Republican Senators have said they cannot support the bill as it stands now, with four of them saying it does not go far enough to end provisions of the current law and one saying cuts in health care payments for the poor go too far. Other Republican lawmakers have also expressed reservations.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Trump talked with some of the opponents over the weekend, in hopes of getting them to vote in favor of the legislation. Spicer said Trump is “pleased with the developments” in changes Senate Republicans are making to the House passed version, a plan Trump has labeled as “mean.”

Trump chided Democrats for their opposition to the Republican effort, saying on Twitter, “Democrats slam GOP healthcare proposal as Obamacare premiums & deductibles increase by over 100%. Remember keep your doctor, keep your plan?”

Under Obamacare, about 20 million more people have been enrolled in insurance plans, many of them under the government’s Medicaid program for the poor and disabled, which Republicans now want to cut by more than $800 billion over the coming years. Trump said during his campaign for president he would not curtail Medicaid.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer criticized the Republican plan as “devastating for the middle class” and said he thinks Republicans have at best even odds of being able to pass the bill. He added that Democrats are willing to work with Republicans to make reforms to the current health care system, but not repeal Obamacare.

“They want to try it themselves first,” he told ABC’s This Week. “If they fail, hopefully they’ll come sit down. They’ll stop sabotaging Obamacare, and sit down with us, and we’ll make Obamacare better.”

Ever since Obamacare was enacted in 2010 without any Republican votes, House Republicans voted dozens of times to repeal it, a futile effort as long as Obama was president. But repeal of the law could be possible with Republicans in control of the White House and both chambers of Congress.

If the Senate approves its repeal version, either the House would have to pass the same bill or reconcile its version with the Senate’s before Trump could sign it into law.

US Judge Considering National Freeze on Iraqi Deportations

Lawyers for Detroit-area Iraqi nationals who fear they could be tortured or killed if they’re kicked out of the U.S. asked a judge on Monday to extend his freeze on their deportations to all Iraqis who have been ordered to leave the country.

 

U.S. District Judge Mark Goldsmith heard arguments but didn’t immediately rule on the matter. He ordered a 14-day stay last week for 114 Iraqi nationals who recently were rounded up in the Detroit area, including many who are Christian. The American Civil Liberties Union wants him to extend the deportation freeze to all Iraqis who have been ordered to leave the U.S.

 

The U.S. government says 1,400 Iraqis are under deportation orders, though most are not in custody. Some have been under removal orders for years because they committed crimes in the U.S. But legal action over deportations suddenly is heating up because Iraq has agreed to accept them.

 

Goldsmith isn’t even sure if he has jurisdiction. The 14-day freeze is intended to give him more time to decide.

 

“It’s an unusual case for all kinds of reasons,” he said.

 

The Justice Department argues that immigration court, not U.S. District Court, is the proper venue. The ACLU says a freeze is necessary so Iraqi nationals can go to immigration court and argue that their lives would be in jeopardy if returned to their native country.

 

“They need enough time to file those petitions to reopen. It’s the government that is hurrying these people toward deportation,” attorney Margo Schlanger told the judge.

 

 

Poll: Russians View Stalin as ‘Greatest’ Figure in History

A recent poll of Russian opinion shows that a majority of the population thinks former dictator Josef Stalin was the greatest figure in history.

Current President Vladimir Putin came in a joint second with beloved Russian writer Alexander Pushkin.

The poll was conducted in April by the Levada Center, a Russian independent research organization not affiliated with the Russian government. The poll asked participants to make an order of the 10 greatest individuals of all time.

The order was not limited to Russian figures.

The poll said 38 percent chose Stalin as their top individual, with Putin and Pushkin coming in a close second with 34 percent. Former Soviet statesmen Mikhail Gorbachev came in last with 6 percent.

The results were vastly different than that of a similar poll done in 1989, where 12 percent chose Stalin.

It is estimated that more than 1 million people were killed during the Stalin regime, with millions more dying in forced labor camps or as a result of mass deportations and starvation.

In a 2012 poll, Stalin led with even higher numbers, indicating that his victories in World War II were more memorable than the countless executions under his rule.

Swede Held by Al-Qaida in Mali Freed After 6 Years

A Swede held hostage by al-Qaida in Mali since 2011 was released, the Swedish Foreign Ministry announced Monday.

Forty-two-year-old Johan Gustafsson is doing well and can return to Sweden, although he is “overwhelmed by everything going on,” Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom said in a statement after having spoken with him over the phone.

Gustafsson was abducted in Timbuktu, northern Mali, in November 2011 along with South African national Stephen McGowan and Dutchman Sjaak Rijke, who was freed in April 2015 by French special forces. The fate of McGowan was not known.

Wallstrom did not provide further details about how Gustafsson’s release was negotiated.

A Swedish newspaper reported that he was already on a plane bound for Europe.

Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, claimed responsibility for kidnapping the three men, who were taken by a group of armed men from the terrace of their hotel along with Rijke’s wife, who managed to escape, and a German who was killed while trying to resist abduction.

AQIM took a number of Western hostages in the north of Mali in 2012 before the French military deployed its forces in early 2013.

 

Trump Eager For Big Meeting with Putin, Some Advisers Wary

President Donald Trump is eager to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin with full diplomatic bells and whistles when the two are in Germany for a multinational summit next month. But the idea is exposing deep divisions within the administration on the best way to approach Moscow in the midst of an ongoing investigation into Russian meddling in the U.S. elections.

 

Many administration officials believe the U.S. needs to maintain its distance from Russia at such a sensitive time — and interact only with great caution.

 

But Trump and some others within his administration have been pressing for a full bilateral meeting. He’s calling for media access and all the typical protocol associated with such sessions, even as officials within the State Department and National Security Council urge more restraint, according to a current and a former administration official.

 

Some advisers have recommended that the president instead do either a quick, informal “pull-aside” on the sidelines of the summit, or that the U.S. and Russian delegations hold “strategic stability talks,” which typically don’t involve the presidents. The officials spoke anonymously to discuss private policy discussions.

The contrasting views underscore differing views within the administration on overall Russia policy, and Trump’s eagerness to develop a working relationship with Russia despite the ongoing investigations.

 

Russian reaction

Asked about the AP report that Trump is eager for a full bilateral meeting, Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow on Monday that “the protocol side of it is secondary.”

The two leaders will be attending the same event in the same place at the same time, Peskov said, so “in any case there will be a chance to meet.” Peskov added, however, that no progress in hammering out the details of the meeting has been made yet.

 

There are potential benefits to a meeting with Putin. A face-to-face meeting can humanize the two sides and often removes some of the intrigue involved in impersonal, telephone communication. Trump — the ultimate dealmaker — has repeatedly suggested that he can replace the Obama-era damage in the U.S.-Russia relationship with a partnership, particularly on issues like the ongoing Syria conflict.

Potential risks

There are big risks, though. Trump is known to veer off-script, creating the possibility for a high-stakes diplomatic blunder. In a brief Oval Office meeting with top Russian diplomats last month, Trump revealed highly classified information about an Islamic State group threat to airlines that was relayed to him by Israel, according to a senior administration official. The White House defended the disclosures as “wholly appropriate.”

 

In addition, many observers warn that Putin is not to be trusted.

 

Oleg Kalugin, a former general with Russia’s main security agency, known as the KGB, said Putin, a shrewd and experienced politician, has “other priorities” than discussing the accusations that Russia hacked the U.S. election with Trump, such as easing sanctions, raising oil prices, as well as next year’s presidential elections in Russia.

 

“Putin knows how to redirect a conversation in his favor,” Kalugin said.

 

Nina Khrushcheva, a Russian affairs professor at the New School, said Trump is in an “impossible position.”

 

“He can’t be too nice to Putin because it’s going to be interpreted in a way that suggests he has a special relationship with Russia,” she said. “He can’t be too mean because Putin has long arms and KGB thinking. So Trump needs to have a good relationship with him but he also needs to fulfill his campaign promises of establishing better relations with Russia.”

 

The White House said no final decision has been made about whether a meeting will take place. It did not respond to questions about the opposing views within the administration.

 

Bilateral meetings are common during summits like the G-20, where many world leaders and their advisers are gathered in one place.

The meetings are typically highly choreographed affairs, with everything from the way the two leaders shake hands to the looks that they exchange and the actual words spoken offering glimpses into the state of affairs.

 

The last U.S.-Russia bilateral meeting was a 2015 encounter between Putin and President Barack Obama that began with an awkward handshake and ended with progress on the brutal civil war in Syria.

That 2015 meeting, the first in two years, involved a 90-minute sit-down at U.N. headquarters. Putin and U.S. officials later said the two leaders had made progress on issues related to Syria, which had strained their already tense relationship. For the Obama administration, cautious engagement was the name of the game, with the U.S. working tirelessly to find middle ground with Moscow on Syria, Ukraine and other issues.

The disconnect between Trump and his advisers in the State Department and National Security Council over Russia runs deeper than the debate over a G-20 bilateral.

 

More careful approach urged

A former administration official who spoke anonymously to discuss classified information said that frustration is growing among foreign policy advisers over the failure of the White House to embrace a more cautious and critical approach to Russia. All 17 U.S. intelligence agencies have agreed Russia was behind last year’s hack of Democratic email systems and tried to influence the 2016 election to benefit Trump.

 

Trump has to directly “say to Putin, ‘We’re not happy about you interfering in our election,'” said Steven Pifer, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine. “If you don’t say that, you are going to get hammered by the press and Congress and you can guarantee Congress will pass sanctions legislation against Russia.”

 

“They also need to keep their expectations very, very modest,” added Pifer. “If they aim for a homerun in Hamburg, my guess is they’ll strike out.”

 

 

Мовознавець Мозер став лауреатом премії імені Івана Франка

Відомий мовознавець, професор Інституту славістики Віденського університету Міхаель Мозер став лауреатом міжнародної премії імені Івана Франка у 2017 році.

Як повідомляється на сайті фонду Івана Франка, книга Мозера «Нові причинки до історії української мови» була визнана найкращою у номінації «За вагомі здобутки (досягнення) у галузі україністики».

У номінації «За вагомі досягнення у галузі соціально-гуманітарних наук» лауреатом визнали почесного професора Львівського національного університету імені Івана Франка Олега Шаблія з його науковою роботою «Суспільна географія».

Цьогорічних лауреатів визначили 24 червня у ході засідання журі премії Івана Франка в Інституті славістики Віденського університету. Цього року до складу журі увійшли 12 вчених з університетів України, Австрії, Чехії, Польщі та США.

Переможці премії імені Івана Франка отримують грошову винагороду (цього року преміальний фонд становить 500 тисяч гривень) та золотий знак лауреата. Церемонія нагородження лауреата відбудеться 27 серпня у Дрогобичі на Львівщині.

Міжнародну премію імені Івана Франка започаткував Міжнародний фонд Івана Франка у 2015 році. Щорічна премія є почесним визнанням наукових відкриттів, вагомих здобутків і значних заслуг науковців світу в галузі україністики та соціатльно-гуманітарних наук. Ініціатором створення фонду став внук Івана Франка – Роланд Франко.

Іран заявляє про арешт 50 підозрюваних у зв’язках з «терористичними» угрупованнями

Іранська влада заарештувала щонайменше 50 людей, підозрюваних у зв’язках із «терористичними» угрупованнями в західній провінції, повідомляє прокуратура 25 червня.

 

«Після терактів в Тегерані в провінції Керманшах арештовано понад 50 прихильників, пов’язаних з терористичними угрупованнями», – заявив прокурор провінції Немат Садекі урядовому інформаційному агентстві ІRNA.

«У затриманих було вилучено значну кількість поясів смертників, електронних детонаторів та зброї», – сказав Садекі.

Арешти відбулися після атак 7 червня у столиці Ірану. Відповідальність за напади на іранський парламент і мавзолей засновника нинішнього ісламського режиму Ірану аятоли Руголли Хомейні взяло на себе угруповання «Ісламська держава». 

Тіллерсон: Катар розглядає вимоги сусідніх арабських країн

Державний секретар США Рекс Тіллерсон заявляє, що Катар розглядає вимоги сусідніх держав щодо припинення дипломатичної суперечки.

«Катар уважно вивчає і розглядає низку вимог від Бахрейну, Єгипту, Саудівської Аравії та ОАЕ», – зазначив Тіллерсон у заяві, оприлюдненій 25 червня.

Уряди США, Саудівська Аравія, Єгипет і Бахрейн 22 червня склали список з 13 вимог до Катару, один з пунктів – закриття телекомпанії «Аль-Джазіра», на розгляд цих вимог дали 10 днів.

«Незважаючи на те, що деякі з цих елементів Катару буде важко виконати, існують значні сфери, які є основою для постійного діалогу, який веде до вирішення», – вважає Тіллерсон.

Тіллерсон додав, що Катар і чотири арабські держави повинні сісти за стіл переговорів, щоб вирішити цю ситуації. 

«Зниження риторики також допоможе полегшити напругу», – переконаний Тіллерсон, додавши, що Сполучені Штати будуть підтримувати тісний зв’язок з усіма зацікавленими країнами.

Напруженість у відносинах між країнами Перської затоки й іншими партнерами США в арабському світі зросла раніше цього місяця, коли Бахрейн, Саудівська Аравія, ОАЕ та Єгипет розірвали відносини з Катаром через підозру в підтримці ним екстремізму. Ці звинувачення Катар відкидає.

US: It ‘Will Be Very Difficult’ for Qatar to Meet Arab Neighbors’ Demands

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Sunday that it “will be very difficult” for Qatar to meet some of the demands that Saudi Arabia and three of its allies are making on Doha, but urged that they negotiate an end to the Persian Gulf diplomatic standoff.

Tillerson, in a statement a day after Qatar rejected the demands as unreasonable and impinging on its sovereignty, said, “there are significant areas which provide a basis for ongoing dialogue leading to resolution.” Tillerson did not say on what issues he thought Egypt, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and the Saudis could reach agreement with Doha.

The four Arab governments, which severed diplomatic links with Qatar more than two weeks ago on grounds that it was fomenting terrorism in the region, delivered their demands to Qatar last week through mediator Kuwait. Among other items, the four countries demanded that Qatar shut down the Al-Jazeera television network, long a source of conflict between Qatar and its neighbors.

The four countries also demanded that Qatar end its ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, Islamic State, al-Qaida and Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah movement. In addition, the four Arab governments want Qatar to downgrade links with Iran, turn over opposition figures it has been holding and shut a Turkish military base in the emirate.

Qatar said the demands confirmed “what Qatar has said from the beginning — the illegal blockade has nothing to do with combating terrorism, it is about limiting Qatar’s sovereignty, and outsourcing our foreign policy.”

Tillerson said that “a productive next step would be for each of the countries to sit together and continue this conversation. We believe our allies and partners are stronger when they are working together towards one goal, which we all agree is stopping terrorism and countering extremism.”

The top U.S. diplomat said that “each country involved has something to contribute to that effort. A lowering of rhetoric would also help ease the tension. The United States will continue to stay in close contact with all parties and will continue to support the mediation efforts of the emir of Kuwait.”

Police Enforce Ban on Istanbul Pride March

Turkish police stopped protesters and attempted to disperse those marching for LGBT rights in Istanbul Sunday, a day after the governor banned the march.

The French press agency, AFP, reported rubber bullets being fired to break up the crowds.

Organizers of the march had vowed to gather in Taksim square despite the event being banned by the Turkish government for the third year in a row.

“We are here again to show that we will fight in a determined fashion for our pride,” the Pride Committee said in a statement Sunday.

On Saturday, the governor’s office announced it would not give permission to the parade organizers out of concern for the safety of the marchers and tourists in the city.

It said a number of groups had “serious reactions” to the march, which was planned to coincide with the first day of the Islamic feast of Eid al-Fitr, and urged citizens against continuing with the parade in violation of the ban.

The march was cancelled last year after bombings by the Islamic State group and Kurdish militants raised security levels. Police used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse people who marched in spite of the warnings.

Unlike some other Muslim countries, there is no law in Turkey forbidding homosexuality. The parade has been held since 2003, and drawn peaceful crowds of more than 100,000 people.

Top Democrat Slams Obama Administration’s Response to Russian Hacks

The top Democrat on the U.S. House Intelligence Committee on Sunday criticized the administration of former President Barack Obama for not taking earlier and tougher action against Russia for its alleged hacks aimed at swaying the Nov. 8 election for Donald Trump.

“The Obama administration should have done a lot more when it became clear that not only was Russia intervening, but it was being directed at the highest levels of the Kremlin,” said Representative Adam Schiff on CNN’s “State of the Union” program.

The Obama administration imposed sanctions in December on two Russian intelligence agencies over their alleged involvement in hacking political groups during the election, but those sanctions were too little, too late, Schiff said.

Schiff and his Senate counterpart, Dianne Feinstein, issued an unusual public statement in September condemning Russia for the alleged hacks. “We had to vet that with the intelligence community, but we took that step because we weren’t succeeding in getting the administration to do it itself,” Schiff said.

Trump: ‘A Very Narrow Path’ to Repeal Obama’s Healthcare Law

U.S. President Donald Trump says he and his Republican colleagues in the Senate are facing “a very narrow path” in their seven-year effort to overhaul the national healthcare reforms championed by former President Barack Obama.

Trump, in an interview that aired Sunday on Fox News, said, “I think we’re going to get there,” but acknowledged the complicated road in the coming days to “picking a plan that everybody is going to like.”

But he contended that the alternative to changing U.S. healthcare policies is the collapse of the law commonly known as Obamacare.

Thursday vote planned

Senate leaders plan to vote Thursday on a measure that would end the requirement that Americans buy health insurance or pay a fine if they do not, phase out federal subsidies to help lower-income people buy insurance, curb taxes on the wealthy and cut hundreds of billions of dollars in funding over the next several years for the government’s healthcare program for the poor and disabled.

But Republicans only hold a 52-48 majority in the Senate, with all Democrats expected to vote against the Republican proposal. That means that Republican supporters of the legislation can only lose two Republican votes, with Vice President Mike Pence casting a tie-breaking vote if the Senate splits 50-50.

Republican reluctance

Already five Republican senators have said they cannot vote for their party’s plan as it stands now, with four them saying it does not go far enough to curb provisions under the Obama law and one saying the cuts in healthcare payments for the poor go too far.

All appear ready to negotiate changes before the expected vote ahead of the week-long congressional recess around the July 4th holiday celebrating the U.S.’s 18th century independence from England. Other Republican lawmakers have also voiced reservations, casting doubt on the outcome.

Trump said he does not think Republicans voicing objections to the party’s proposal are “that far off” from supporting it.

In a Twitter comment Saturday, Trump voiced optimism about passage of the Republican plan, saying, “I cannot imagine that these very fine Republican Senators would allow the American people to suffer a broken ObamaCare any longer!”

He chided Democrats for their opposition to the Republican effort, saying, “Democrats slam GOP healthcare proposal as Obamacare premiums & deductibles increase by over 100%. Remember keep your doctor, keep your plan?”

Under Obamacare, about 20 million more people have been enrolled in insurance plans, many of them under the government’s Medicaid program for the poor and disabled, which Republicans now want to cut by more than $800 billion over the coming years even though Trump during his campaign for the White House said he would not curtail it.

But premiums for those buying insurance on the individual market under Obamacare, as opposed to those getting their insurance through their employer, have risen sharply and many Americans were not able to keep their same doctors or insurance plan as Obama had promised.

Ahead of the vote, Trump and lawmakers are waiting for an independent assessment from the Congressional Budget Office, possibly as early as Monday, on how many people would lose insurance if the Republican plan is enacted and projections on the cost of insurance in the next few years.

The CBO said that 23 million people would lose their insurance over the coming decade under a different version of the healthcare changes that House of Representatives narrowly approved last month.

Trump held a victory celebration in the Rose Garden of the White House after the House vote, but since then has called the legislation “mean.”

In the Sunday interview, Trump said, “I want to see a bill with heart.”

Ever since Obamacare was enacted in 2010 without any Republican votes, House Republicans voted dozens of times to repeal it, a futile effort as long as Obama was president. But repeal of the law could be possible with Republicans in control of the White House and both chambers of Congress.

The leader of the minority Senate Democrats, Senator Charles Schumer, said Sunday that Republicans have “at best a 50-50 chance” of approving their Senate proposal.

If the Senate approves its repeal version, either the House would have to pass the same bill or reconcile its version with the Senate’s before Trump could sign it into law.

Europeans Learn to Live with – And Adapt to – Terror Attacks

The jihadis’ targets in Europe are depressingly repetitive: the Brussels metro, the Champs-Elysees in Paris twice, tourist-filled bridges in London twice and a U.K. rock concert. And that’s just the past few months.

The steady stream of attacks on centers of daily life have drawn pledges from Europeans not to let terrorists change how they live, but in ways large and small they already have.

There is a heightened awareness and quicker reactions, especially in the hardest-hit countries of France, Britain and Belgium, that would have seemed unthinkable just a few years ago.

In Brussels on Tuesday, a 36-year-old Moroccan man shouting “Allahu akbar!” set off a bomb among subway commuters. The bomb didn’t detonate in full and a soldier shot him dead.

It was another Muslim, Mohamed Charfih, who demanded that the subway’s doors be closed before the attacker could enter.

“I heard people on the platform shouting for help,” he told the news site DH. He looked out and knew what he saw. “I screamed to close the doors immediately. I asked to get out of there as fast as possible and that everyone get down on the floor.”

That reaction, blocking the door and fleeing, has become part of official instructions on what to do in case of an attack in France. Signs have been posted in public areas and even schools showing people running, ducking beneath a window, or using heavy furniture as a barricade.

Tensions are high enough in central Paris that on Thursday the quick-response police unit reacted to a witness’ phone call about a man wearing a sidearm by tackling him on the street, only to learn that he was a ranking member of the anti-terrorism squad, according to French media.

In Britain, decades of IRA attacks prompted the installation of country-wide TV surveillance cameras – one of the most expansive systems in the world. Paris is quickly ramping up its own camera system, to the point where authorities were able this week to track the minute-by-minute path of the man who tried to attack a Champs-Elysee gendarme patrol until the moment he rammed their vehicle. The man died of burns and smoke inhalation – the only casualty of his act – but left behind a substantial arsenal.

Both Britain and France have installed barriers around airports, train stations and other public buildings in recent years. Since the Westminster bridge attack in March, however, talks are underway to install even more barriers on bridges and around crowded places such as London’s Borough Market, where three attackers this month went on a stabbing rampage after crashing their vehicle on a busy street not far from London Bridge.

Echoing France, London’s security authorities have issued advice to pubs and restaurants since the attacks with the message of “Run, Tell and Hide.” The advice includes establishing whether the threat is inside or outside and not waiting for police to decide whether the venue should be locked down or evacuated.

Few British commuters have changed their habits. After suicide bombers in 2005 struck trains and buses during a busy London morning rush-hour, scores of commuters started riding bicycles to work. That method of transport has its own problems in London – with the number of annual cyclist deaths a rising concern.

Three of the four recent attacks, however, have involved the use of a vehicle as a weapon – much like the deadly 2016 Nice attack in France that killed 87 people.

“I suppose I could try taking a boat to work, but before long I’m sure they would attack those too. So I’m just taking my chances,” said Rohan Chansity, a 34-year-old finance worker in London.

Parents and teachers are talking to children more about being observant – a skill often lost on a gadget-obsessed generation.

A suicide bomber blew himself up last month at Manchester Arena, killing 22 people, mostly young concert-goers.

“We talk about being observant, looking for exits, making sure you’re around a responsible crowd – but in the end, it’s not like I’m going to keep her from going to concerts,” said Moira Campbell, 45, who has a 15-year-old daughter.

Tourists, too, say they are aware of potential dangers but have refused to be cowed.

Dave Howland, who traveled from New Hampshire to London with his youngest son a few days before the Borough Market attack, said he was conscious of the threat when he went to Shakespeare’s Globe theatre, a round wooden venue in the Borough Market area.

“I looked around and didn’t see exit signs,” said the 47-year-old English teacher who lives in Durham. “But then I looked around and saw this performance and that people were celebrating life. So I thought, we’re going to enjoy the moment. London is an incredible city, and life is too short not to enjoy everything you can.”

The latest would-be assailant on the Champs-Elysees had an arsenal of firearms in both his car and at home, and France’s anti-terrorism prosecutor said disaster was averted only by sheer luck. It was the second attack in less than two months on the famous avenue.

Still, tourists and Parisians still flock to the Champs-Elysees, watched over by camouflaged soldiers carrying automatic rifles. And in Brussels, the day after the fizzled metro bombing, the headlines focused on how to cope with the recent heat wave.

The weather, it seems, is not going away – just like the jihadi threats.

UK: 6 Hurt as Vehicle Strikes People at Muslim Prayer Event

Six people, including three children, were injured Sunday after a car ran into pedestrians outside a sports center in the northern English city of Newcastle where people gathered to celebrate the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr. Police said the incident was not believed to be terror-related.

 

Northumbria Police said they arrested a 42-year-old woman, who remained in police custody. The force said it was not looking for other suspects in the incident outside Westgate Sports Center on Sunday morning.

 

They say a full investigation was underway to determine what happened, but “there is nothing to suggest that this is terror-related.” Extra officers were put on patrol to reassure people.

 

 A statement from the nearby Newcastle Central Mosque, which organized Sunday’s family event “Eid in the Open,” said the collision took place as people were leaving after prayers.

 

 “Immediately after the Eid prayers when the people were starting to leave the venue, a car collided with pedestrians. The injured were immediately attended to by the emergency medical services and the police,” it said.

 

Video on social media, apparently taken minutes after the crash, showed a field where dozens of people in Muslim dress, including children, were screaming and rushing forward to see what happened.

 

The ambulance service said three children and three adults were being treated at a local hospital for injuries sustained in the crash.

 

Newcastle lawmaker Chi Onwurah said on Twitter that she was one of thousands celebrating Eid in the city. “I was at the prayers earlier and there was so much joy and unity. Thinking of those affected by what I am told was terrible accident,” Onwurah tweeted.

 

Britain is on high alert for terror-related incidents involving vehicles after a string of recent attacks. A man drove a van into Muslim worshippers leaving two London mosques on June 19, killing one and injuring others. Police said that was a terror attack directed at Muslims.

Поліція розслідує напад на громадську активістку в Одесі

В Одесі поліція почала розслідування за фактом нападу на громадську активістку, учасницю експертної комісії «Група 2 травня» Світлану Підпалу. Як повідомив у Facebook радник начальника Головного управління Національної поліції в Одеській області Руслан Форостяк, відкрито кримінальне провадження за статтею 125 (умисне нанесення легких тілесних ушкоджень) Кримінального кодексу України.

«Всі розуміють, як важливо встановити причетних осіб, а головне – мотиви. Зараз проводяться невідкладні слідчі дії. Просто зараз оперативно-слідча група вилучає відео з камер району, де стався напад», – указав Форостяк.

За даними активіста Владислава Балинського, «на Світлану чатували двоє». «Один залишився за кермом заведеного мопеда, другий спочатку покликав, потім схопив за руку, розвернув і забризкав обличчя з балончика. Потім заштовхав у кут арочного в’їзду і почав бити кулаками по обличчю», – повідомив Балинський.

За його словами, коли Підпала впала, нападник разом зі спільником зник на мопеді в невідомому напрямку, а потерпілу доставили до лікарні. За попередніми даними, у Підпалої закрита черепно-мозкова травма, забій м’яких тканин і окістя лобової частини голови, велика гематома.

Світлана Підпала є активною учасницею незалежного розслідування, яке проводить громадська комісія «Група 2 травня», створена в 2014 році після масових заворушень, що призвели до загибелі 48 осіб. Підпала також активно бере участь у різних акціях проти знищення зелених зон та проти забудови узбережжя Чорного моря в Одесі.

У Пакистані число жертв серії нападів зросло до 85 людей

У Пакистані число жертв двох скоординованих вибухів на північному сході країни зросло до 67, повідомили посадовці.

Таким чином, загальне число жертв серії нападів у Пакистані, скоєних у п’ятницю, зросло до не менш ніж 85 людей.

Як повідомляють місцеві посадовці в Парачинарі, де два вибухи були влаштовані майже одночасно на багатолюдному базарі біля автобусної станції.

Відповідальність за цей напад у переважно шиїтському місті Парачинарі взяло на себе екстремістське сунітське угруповання «Лашкар-е-Джганґві». Парачинар є центром адміністративного агентства Куррам, де нерідко стається насильство поміж шиїтами й сунітами.

Іще 12 людей загинули у п’ятницю внаслідок вибуху замінованого авта з водієм-смертником у місті Кветті на південному заході країни, центрі провінції Белуджистан. За той напад відповідальність узяли на себе відразу два екстремістські угруповання, що конкурують між собою, – «Джамаат-уль-Ахрар», що відкололося від пакистанських талібів, і «Ісламська держава».

Крім того, ще чотирьох працівників поліції застрелили невідомі нападники в ресторані ввечері у п’ятницю в портовому місті Карачі на півдні Пакистану.

Хвиля насильства спалахнула напередодні святкувань закінчення священного місяця рамадана, свята Ід-аль-Фітр, яке в Пакистані цього року відзначатимуть у понеділок, 26 червня.

Британський парламент зазнав кібератаки

Влада Великої Британії заявила, що розслідує кібератаку, яка вразила систему електронної пошти британського парламенту.

24 червня речниця Палати громад указала, що віддалений доступ до електронної пошти був відключений задля безпеки внутрішньої мережі законодавчих органів. Вона підтвердила, що були виявлені неавторизовані спроби доступу до мережі.

Національний центр кібербезпеки аналізує атаку та здійснює необхідні заходи для захисту мережі.

У травні Національна служба охорони здоров’я Великої Британії постраждала від великої атаки, яка також зачепила інші системи у всьому світі.

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