Month: October 2017

Відсторонений каталонський лідер закликав чинити мирний опір Іспанії

У Барселоні відсторонений від влади каталонський лідер Карлес Пучдемон закликав прихильників сформувати «демократичну опозицію» і чинити мирний опір діям іспанської влади. Він виступив через кілька годин після того, як прем’єр-міністр Іспанії Маріано Рахой поклав обов’язки голови Каталонії на першу віце-прем’єрку іспанського уряду Сорайю Саєнс де Сантамарію.

У п’ятницю прем’єр-міністр Іспанії Маріано Рахой заявив про розпуск уряду Каталонії і каталонського парламенту.

Дочасні вибори у Каталонії призначені на 21 грудня.

Представник Генпрокуратури Іспанії повідомив у п’ятницю ввечері, що наступного тижня прокуратура має пред’явити голові регіональної виконавчої влади Каталонії Карлесу Пучдемону звинувачення у заколоті. Законодавство королівства передбачає, що за підготовку заколоту винні особи можуть бути засуджені до позбавлення волі на 30 років.

Раніше 27 жовтня Сенат Іспанії схвалив дозвіл урядові Іспанії запровадити в Каталонії пряме правління Мадрида, відповідно до 155-ї статті Конституції Іспанії, яка передбачає таку можливість.

Перед цим парламент Каталонії проголосував за незалежність цього автономного регіону від Іспанії. У рішенні вказано про початок процесу відокремлення, зокрема, про намір розробити нові ключові закони для Каталонії і початок переговорів «на рівних» з іспанською владою для встановлення співпраці.

Іспанія виступає проти незалежності Каталонії.

Прем’єр-міністр Іспанії Маріано Рахой закликав до спокою і заявив, що верховенство права у Каталонії буде відновлене.

Жодна країна не висловила підтримку намірам Каталонії оголосити незалежність.

Референдум про незалежність Каталонії відбувся 1 жовтня. За вихід регіону зі складу Іспанії висловилися понад 90% тих, хто взяв участь у голосуванні. Явка, за даними каталонської влади, становила 43%. Мадрид назвав голосування незаконним. Такої ж думки дотримуються в Єврокомісії.

Після референдуму в регіоні пройшли багатотисячні мітинги як прихильників, так і супротивників незалежності.

First Charges Reportedly Approved in Russia Probe; Details Still Unclear

A U.S. federal grand jury has approved the first charges in an investigation of Russian influence on U.S. elections, according to several major news outlets.

The grand jury’s action, resulting from the probe led by special counsel Robert Mueller, was first reported by CNN on Friday evening. It quoted sources as saying anyone who was charged could be taken into custody as soon as Monday. The exact charges were unclear.

Reuters, The Wall Street Journal and NBC News subsequently issued similar reports. All the reports were attributed to unnamed sources.

President Donald Trump on Saturday visited his Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia. He sent three tweets but they did not refer to the reports.

On Friday evening, the president did post a social media message linking to a New York Post story headlined: How Team Hillary played the press for fools on Russia.

White House officials have not commented on the president’s activities Saturday, but he was seen by VOA News exiting the north portico of the residence, clad in slacks, a windbreaker, what appeared to be white golf shoes and a baseball cap before entering a black vehicle for the 40-minute ride in the presidential motorcade to his private club along the Potomac River.

CNN said lawyers working on Mueller’s team were seen entering the federal courtroom in Washington, D.C., on Friday, where the grand jury meets to hear testimony.

Mueller has kept a tight lid on information about the probe, and a spokesman for Mueller’s office declined requests for comment on the media reports about the indictment.

Working since May

Mueller was appointed special counsel in May, shortly after the firing of then-FBI Director James Comey, to look into allegations that the Trump campaign might have colluded with Russia to win the election. He is also examining the possibility that the president may have tried to interfere with the Russia investigation.

The probe also is examining possible financial ties between Russian businesses and members of the Trump campaign, and foreign lobbying conducted by former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

In addition to Mueller’s probe, three congressional committees are conducting their own investigations into possible Russian influence on the election.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Friday told reporters it was “a pretty big waste” for the news media to investigate connections between Trump associates and Russia. Her comment was made in response to a question about Trump’s tweeting earlier in the day that it was “commonly agreed” there had been no collusion between his presidential campaign and Russia.

“It is now commonly agreed, after many months of COSTLY looking, that there was NO collusion between Russia and Trump. Was collusion with HC!” the president tweeted.

HC is a reference to Hillary Clinton, the former secretary of state and Democratic nominee whom Trump defeated in last November’s presidential election.

VOA’s Marissa Melton contributed to this report.

Кримчанина Зейтуллаєва російська влада могла етапувати до виправної колонії в Башкортостан – дружина

Незаконно засудженого в Росії кримчанина, фігуранта «справи Хізб-ут Тахрір» Руслана Зейтуллаєва могли етапувати до виправної колонії в російській Республіці Башкортостан. Про це дружина Зейтуллаєва повідомила 28 жовтня на засіданні організації «Кримська солідарність», інформує сайт Крим.Реалії.

«Мені прийшов лист із СІЗО Уфи про те, що Руслана етапували десять днів тому до колонії №2 Салавата. Ніяких печаток або підписів, що це завіряють, на листі немає», – сказала Зейтуллаєва.

Адвокат Едем Семедляєв також зазначив, що крім цього листа підтверджень відправки Зейтуллаєва до колонії немає, а зв’язок із засудженим відсутній.

Також на засіданні дружина іншого незаконно засудженого фігуранта севастопольської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» Ферата Сайфуллаєва Ельзара повідомила, що її чоловіка помістили до спеціальної камери до 4 лютого.

Суд над кримчанами Зейтуллаєвим, Ваїтовим, Прімовим і Сайфуллаєвим розпочався в червні 2016 року. Їх заарештували взимку 2015 року в Севастополі й звинуватили в участі в забороненій у Росії ісламській організації «Хізб ут-Тахрір».

Північно-Кавказький окружний військовий суд у Ростові-на-Дону 7 вересня 2016 року засудив Зейтуллаєва до семи років колонії загального режиму, Сайфуллаєв, Ваітов і Прімов отримали по п’ять років колонії загального режиму.

Верховний суд Росії 27 липня 2017 року збільшив до 15 років строк позбавлення волі Зейтуллаєва.

Azerbajani Opposition Holds Anti-corruption Rally in Baku

Hundreds of people have attended an opposition-organized anticorruption rally in Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku.

The protest Saturday was organized by the National Council of Democratic Forces (NCDF) — an umbrella group of Azerbaijani opposition forces, under the slogan “No To Robbery.”

Activists from the Popular Front Party, People’s Democratic Party, National Statehood Party, Musavat Party youth organization, Muslim Union, and NIDA movement attended the rally.

The rally held in the Mehsul stadium in Baku’s Yasamal district was approved by the city authorities. Police said the protest was attended by an estimated 1,000 people, although opposition activists say the number was higher.

Protesters chanted slogans like “End to corruption” and “Freedom for political prisoners!”

Police cordoned off the area around the stadium as part of increased security measures.

No incidents were reported, and the rally ended peacefully, police said.

The opposition, as well as Western governments and international human rights groups, have criticized Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s government for persistently persecuting independent media outlets, journalists, and opposition politicians and activists.

Aliyev, who has ruled the oil-rich South Caucasus country of nearly 10 million people since shortly before his father’s death in 2003, has shrugged off the criticism, and the authorities deny that there are political prisoners in the country.

Recent international corruption investigations have also found that Aliyev’s family makes frequent use of offshore companies to hide its wealth and mask the ways it gains shares in Azerbaijan’s most lucrative businesses.

During the rally, Ali Karimli, the leader of the Popular Front Party, which is part of the NCDF, denounced government corruption. He said the government doesn’t use oil revenues effeciently, and high-level corruption deprives Azerbaijanis from benefiting from oil billions.

Human rights activist Oktay Gulaliyev told the rally that freedom of speech was under threat in the country.

“Access to independent, critical Internet sites has been blocked,” Gulaliyev said. “There are more than 160 [political] prisoners in the country, and up to 20 of them are journalists and bloggers.”

The rally came after the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) earlier this month voiced concerns over Azerbaijan’s “unprecedented crackdown on human rights” as well as checks and balances, and the functioning of justice in the country.

PACE on October 11 passed a resolution blasting “the reported prosecution and detention of leaders of NGOs, human rights defenders, political activists, journalists, and bloggers,” although some of them were released last year.

PACE cited cases of “torture and inhuman or degrading treatment during arrest, in police custody, and in prisons, and the lack of effective investigations, violations of the right to a fair trial, and violations of the right to freedom of expression, association, and assembly.”

The resolution also called on Azerbaijani authorities to “begin real and meaningful reforms” to remove the obstacles to the work of journalists and rights defenders.

Azerbaijani Opposition Holds Anticorruption Rally in Baku

Hundreds of people attended on October 28 an opposition-organized anticorruption rally in Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku. The protest was organized by the National Council of Democratic Forces (NCDF) — an umbrella group of Azerbaijani opposition forces, under the slogan “No To Robbery.” Protesters chanted slogans like “End to Corruption” and “Freedom for Political Prisoners!” (RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service)

Ankara Mayor Resigns as Turkish President Continues Purge

The long-serving mayor of the Turkish capital, Ankara, has resigned after pressure from President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. In the last few weeks, Erdogan has forced out of office six mayors belonging to his ruling AKP party as part of efforts to revitalize the party ahead of looming elections.

Ankara Mayor Melih Gokcek’s resignation followed weeks of intense pressure by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, culminating in the president publicly warning the mayor of severe consequences if he did not quit. In his resignation speech, Gokcek made clear he was not leaving willingly after 23 years in office.

He said, “I’m quitting not because I’m unsuccessful. I’m quitting because Erdogan asked me to do so. I’m complying with Erdogan’s orders and leaving my post.”

Gokcek is the sixth mayor of Erdogan’s ruling AKP Party to be forced out by the president in the past few weeks. Included among the resignations are mayors of some of Turkey’s largest cities, including Istanbul. The purge is part of Erdogan’s effort to revitalize the party after its sluggish performance in this year’s referendum to extend the country’s presidential powers.

The referendum narrowly passed, and it was rejected in many of Turkey’s largest cities, including Ankara and Istanbul, traditional strongholds of the president. While opinion polls continue to give Erdogan’s AKP a commanding lead, the same polls indicate a growing number of undecided voters and a softening among his supporters.

Political analyst Atilla Yesilada of Global Source Partners says with presidential and general elections due by 2019, Erdogan knows he has to act.

“That AKP lost of support is very obvious,” said Yesilada. “So Mr. Erdogan thinks by changing unpopular mayors and local administrations, which in his view have lost their desire to serve the public, he could turn the tide.”

The ongoing ouster of mayors already has resulted in unprecedented challenges to Erdogan’s authority. Several resignations came only after repeated threats by the president, who analysts say is accustomed to his demands being immediately obeyed.

|

With Turkey under emergency rule since last year’s failed coup, Erdogan has sweeping powers to remove elected mayors from their office. It’s a power he has used on more than 80 occasions against mayors belonging to the pro-Kurdish HDP party. Erdogan’s ousting of his top mayors also is being accompanied by a similar ongoing nationwide purge of party and local elected officials.

Analyst Yesilada warns, though, that Erdogan’s strategy may be mistaken.

“What antagonizes the voter is probably not the local administrations or mayors, but it is Mr. Erdogan’s policies or cabinet polices,” said Yesilada. “But he does not seem to understand that. And this cleanup in the rank and file is leading to a lot of objections, as these people, they don’t understand why they are being let go.”

There are increasing reports of growing discord within the ruling AKP, though few members dare to openly speak out. But analysts warn Erdogan’s gamble on revitalizing his party by sacrificing his mayors could backfire given that voters are more likely to be concerned with Turkey’s rising double-digit inflation and unemployment, along with a sinking currency.

US Service Member Killed in Afghanistan Heli Crash

A U.S. service member was killed and six others wounded in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan’s Logar province late Friday.

 

NATO’s Resolute Support Mission office said the crash was “not the result of enemy action.”

 

“We have full accountability of all personnel and the crash site has been secured,” according to a press release circulated Saturday.

 

General John Nicholson, commander of the RS forces, expressed his “heartfelt sympathies” to the families of victims.

“We are deeply saddened by the loss of our comrade,” he said in a statement.

 

Earlier, the Taliban had claimed responsibility for downing the helicopter. The insurgent group often makes claims that later turn out to be false.  

The U.S. military said it is investigating the circumstances of the crash and will release more information when it is appropriate.

Mattis Warns North Korea About Aggressive Nuclear Program

The U.S. defense secretary says the U.S. will never accept a nuclear-armed North Korea.

Jim Mattis said Saturday in Seoul that the North’s aggressive nuclear and missile development programs are undermining the isolated nation’s security instead of securing it.

Mattis warned the North that its military is no match for the military might of the U.S. and South Korea alliance.

“Make no mistake,” Mattis said, “any attack on the United States or our allies will be defeated and any use of nuclear weapons by the North will be met with a massive military response that is effective and overwhelming.”

The secretary said once again as he as said all week on his Asian trip that diplomacy is the preferred way of dealing with North Korea.

Mattis and General Joseph Dunford, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, held annual consultations with South Korean defense officials Saturday, marking the first time the Security Consultative Meeting has been held since the inauguration of South Korea President Moon Jae-in and U.S. President Donald Trump.

On Friday, Mattis met with President Moon and spoke to U.S. and South Korean troops at the Panmunjom “truce village” where South Korea meets North Korea.

The secretary’s Asian trip has included stops in Thailand and the Philippines.

Росія: активістів оштрафували за банер «Путін, ти відповіси за Норд-Ост»

Пресненський суд Москви оштрафував трьох волонтерів штабу опозиціонера Олексія Навального, які повісили на огорожу будівлі уряду банер з написом «Путін, ти відповіси за Норд-Ост».

Як повідомив правозахисному порталу «ОВД-Инфо» юрист Дмитро Волов, розмір кожного штрафу становить 10 тисяч рублів. Протоколи були оформлені за статтею про порушення порядку проведення публічних заходів.

Активістів штабу Навального затримали у Москві вдень 27 жовтня.

23 жовтня 2002 року в Москві під час показу мюзиклу «Норд-ост» бойовики захопили і три дні утримували близько тисячі людей, вимагаючи виведення російських військ із Чечні. 26 жовтня російська влада перервала переговори і штурмувала будівлю театрального центру. До зали пустили газ, склад якого досі засекречений. Загинули 130 заручників, більше ніж 700 постраждали, усіх бойовиків вбили.

У 2011 році Європейський суд з прав людини розглянув колективну скаргу потерпілих у теракті і визнав, що російська влада порушила право на життя і на справедливий судовий розгляд. Суд зобов’язав Росію виплатити грошові компенсації сім’ям жертв теракту і розслідувати обставини спеціальної операції, яка призвела до загибелі людей. Однак Слідчий комітет Росії відмовився порушувати кримінальні справи щодо відповідальних за штурм театрального центру.

Колишні заручники і родичі тих, хто загинув під час штурму, переконані, що відповідальність за численні жертви лежить не тільки на бойовиках, а й на російській владі. Вони вимагають назвати газ, який застосовувався при штурмі, а також людину, яка віддала наказ починати штурм.

У 2014 році був затриманий підозрюваний в причетності до нападу 41-річний Хасан Закаєв. У березні 2017 року Московський окружний військовий суд визнав його винним у тому, що він організував доставку зброї і вибухівки бойовикам. Закаєву дали 19 років колонії суворого режиму. Адвокат Карина Москаленко заявила, що своїм рішенням суд позбавив потерпілих можливості встановити справжніх винуватців загибелі людей у театральному центрі.

«Вертолітний майданчик Януковича» передали у власність держави – ГПУ

Вертолітний майданчик на Парковій дорозі у центрі Києва 27 жовтня передали в управління державному підприємству «Фінансування інфраструктурних проектів», повідомила речниця генпрокурора України Лариса Сарган.

«У зв’язку з перешкоджанням державному підприємству у виконанні дій по забезпеченню нормальної роботи цього об’єкту, сьогодні прокуратурою міста Києва з виходом на об’єкт здійснено дії щодо передачі майна у безпосереднє управління державного підприємства «Фінансування інфраструктурних проектів», – зазначила вона у Facebook.

У жовтні представники Національного корпусу, Правого сектору та Свободи захопили будівлю вертолітного майданчика з вимогою націоналізувати її. Президент України Петро Порошенко розкритикував ці дії та заявив, що майданчик нібито вже перебуває в державній власності. «Прикладом стукання у відкриті двері є захоплення вертолітного майданчика з вимогою повернути його в державну власність, коли він уже рішенням прокуратури і є в державній власності, тільки на законних підставах, і чекає рішення суду», – заявив Порошенко.

У своєму розслідуванні журналісти програми «Схеми» це спростовують. За їхньою інформацією, за британською компанією Fineroad Business LLP, яка є фактичним основним власником вертолітного майданчика в центрі Києва, з 2016 року і донині стояв земляк Віктора Януковича Яшар Ходжаєв. 

South Sudan Camp Residents Accuse Charity of Hiding Poor Conditions From US Diplomat Haley

Residents of a displaced persons camp in South Sudan say they were deeply disappointed when a visit by U.S. envoy Nikki Haley was cut short Wednesday, with several residents accusing the French charity that runs the camp of preventing Haley from seeing their wretched living conditions.

Officials said at the time that Haley’s visit to the UNMISS (United Nations Mission in South Sudan) camp in Juba was cut short because of security concerns over a turbulent demonstration against President Salva Kiir. The cancellation sparked a second demonstration among the residents to express their anger over not being able to meet Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

But some of the IDPs charged this week that organizers of the visit who work at the camp did not want Haley to see the miserable conditions in which they live. The camp hosts more than 30,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) who fled their homes because of a civil war that began in 2013.

Tut Albino, deputy chairman of one portion of the camp, told VOA’s South Sudan in Focus that he and other residents anxiously hoped to meet Haley and ask her to help bring peace to the country.

Albino said residents were angered when the French charity ACTED, which operates the camp, canceled the encounter.

 

 “The community was celebrating but the reaction happened after ACTED denied the community to meet with [the] visitor. After ACTED diverted the venue from the right venue, the community reacted,” Albino told VOA.

 

He accused ACTED of bringing a woman who lives outside the camp to represent the IDPs in a meeting with Haley, denying the real residents the chance to express their concerns.

“They prepared her with four children and they said this is the mother of the orphans that can talk on behalf of the community here in the camp. After the community realized that, it made them react too much,” said Albino.

VOA repeatedly tried to seek a response from ACTED’s office in Juba without success. A representative in ACTED’s Paris office said on Friday that everyone who could speak to the allegations made by the IDPs in Juba was busy and not available until Monday.

Raggedy clothes, smelly latrines

James Mabor, another resident of the camp, charged that ACTED did not want Ambassador Haley to meet the IDPs because they are not well cared for. He said some are wearing the same clothes they wore when arriving at the camp four years ago, and others are down to rags and blankets.

He said ACTED has not fulfilled its obligations to the IDPs.

“Suddenly [they] realized it fell short of some obligations which involve providing cooking utensils, clothes, blankets and so on,” he told South Sudan in Focus.

 

“The clothes you brought along with you three, four years ago would be worn out but if you don’t have an alternative you are bound to wear them then you look shabby. So all these people came out and were in the street in the camp here and ACTED didn’t want that,” said Mabor.

He added that ACTED was supposed to clean the latrines before Haley’s visit but complained that the compound “is really smelly because they have not been cleaned for some time.”

 

Hundreds of South Sudanese lined the roads of the camp as Haley’s convoy approached the area. The U.N. released a statement saying many gathered outside of her meeting with reunited families to chant and call for peace.

 

South Sudan was the middle stop in a three-nation African tour for Haley, who returns to the U.S. this weekend.

Уряд Іспанії розпустив органи регіональної влади у Каталонії

Прем’єр-міністр Іспанії Маріано Рахой заявив про розпуск уряду Каталонії і каталонського парламенту.

Дочасні вибори у Каталонії призначені на 21 грудня – у цей же день у Барселоні планують оголосити про незалежність.

Представник Генпрокуратури Іспанії повідомив у п’ятницю ввечері, що наступного тижня прокуратура має пред’явити голові регіональної виконавчої влади Каталонії Карлесу Пучдемону звинувачення у заколоті. Законодавство королівства передбачає, що за підготовку заколоту винні особи можуть бути засуджені до позбавлення волі на 30 років.

Раніше 27 жовтня Сенат Іспанії схвалив заходи уряду, які дозволяють обмежити самоврядування Каталонії. Йдеться про застосування 155-ї статті конституції, яка дозволяє обмежити самоврядування Каталонії.

Перед цим парламент Каталонії проголосував за незалежність цього автономного регіону від Іспанії. У рішенні вказано про початок процесу відокремлення, зокрема, про намір розробити нові ключові закони для Каталонії і початок переговорів «на рівних» з іспанською владою для встановлення співпраці.

Іспанія виступає проти незалежності Каталонії.

Прем’єр-міністр Іспанії Маріано Рахой закликав до спокою і заявив, що верховенство права у Каталонії буде відновлене.

Жодна країна не висловила підтримку намірам Каталонії оголосити незалежність.

Референдум про незалежність Каталонії відбувся 1 жовтня. За вихід регіону зі складу Іспанії висловилися понад 90% тих, хто взяв участь у голосуванні. Явка, за даними каталонської влади, становила 43%. Мадрид назвав голосування незаконним. Такої ж думки дотримуються в Єврокомісії.

Після референдуму в регіоні пройшли багатотисячні мітинги як прихильників, так і противників незалежності.

NYC Not Backing Down on Feds’ ‘Sanctuary Cities’ Order

New York City officials sent a letter to the U.S. Justice Department Friday defying a directive intended to pressure the city into cooperating more with federal immigration enforcement efforts.

 

New York was among four so-called “sanctuary cities” that were given an Oct. 27 deadline to show they’re not hampering enforcement of U.S. immigration law.

 

The Justice Department has threatened to cut off millions of dollars in federal grants to the cities, which include Chicago, New Orleans and Philadelphia, if they didn’t meet certain criteria.

 

In New York, the Justice Department wants the city’s jails to notify federal immigration agents when someone in the United States illegally is about to be released from custody. Right now, local laws only allow city officials to share information about people who have been convicted of certain crimes.

 

In a letter to an assistant attorney general Friday, city attorney Zachary Carter said he believed New York had met all legal conditions of the grant program and wasn’t required to do more than it was already doing.

 

He said the federal statute that Attorney General Jeff Sessions has cited to compel cooperation with immigration agents “cannot be read to override the city’s confidentiality policy and unconstitutionally interfere with the city’s right to exert control over its officers and employees.”

 

Carter added that Congress did not intend the law-enforcement grant program to be linked to cooperation with immigration agents.

 

New York City is anticipating $4.3 million that’s been authorized under the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program. Carter said the city is “deeply committed to preserving this funding.”

 

The federal grant program was named after a slain New York City police officer. It pays for public safety equipment.

 

Sessions has said that cities that don’t help enforce immigration law are endangering public safety, especially when it comes to sharing information about immigrants who have been accused of crimes.

 

Record Number of Americans Support Legal Marijuana

Nearly two-thirds of Americans now favor the legalization of marijuana, the highest percentage yet.

According to a poll by Gallup, 64 percent of Americans favor legalizing the plant. When Gallup starting asking Americans the question in 1969, only 12 percent of Americans were for legalizing marijuana.

“The trajectory of Americans’ views on marijuana is similar to that of their views on same-sex marriage over the past couple of decades,” Gallup said in an online post.

“On both issues, about a quarter supported legalization in the late 1990s, and today 64 percent favor each. Over the past several years, Gallup has found that Americans have become more liberal on a variety of social issues.”

While marijuana is still illegal under federal law, eight states — Maine, Massachusetts, Colorado, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington and Alaska — and the District of Columbia have made marijuana legal, even for recreational use. Many other states have legalized medical use of marijuana. According to Gallup, one in five Americans lives in a state with legal marijuana.

Gallup found that views on marijuana vary along party lines with Democrats having supported legalization more than Republicans. However, in this latest survey 51 percent of Republicans support legal marijuana. That was nine percentage points higher than last year, Gallup said.

 

 

Catalonia Parliament Votes for Independence from Spain

The Catalan regional parliament voted for independence from Spain on Friday by approving a resolution to convene a constitutional assembly to form a sovereign republic. The move was accompanied by applause and embraces between lawmakers present, who sang the Catalan anthem.

The resolution to secede from Spain was drafted and presented by the more radical separatist factions of the regional coalition headed by Catalonia President Carles Puigdemont, and it passed by 72 votes in favor, 10 against and 2 blank votes.

Spain’s ruling center-right Popular Party and the mainstream opposition socialists, who hold just under half the seats in the Catalan parliament, boycotted the session.

Friday’s resolution by the Catalan regional parliament ends a period of uncertainty over Catalan independence that has prevailed since an October 1 referendum on independence that won 90 percent of the vote in a 50 percent voter turnout.

Puigdemont has held back from declaring independence for fear of triggering direct rule by the central government, which has been moving to take over the region’s finances, police services, and key infrastructure and administrative bodies.

“It was very astute on the part of Puigdemont to let parliament vote on independence resolution prior to declaring it, as it gives him certain legal cover,” a former senior member of the Spanish parliament told VOA.

Puigdemont could face a 25-year prison sentence for sedition. The central government already has jailed two separatist leaders and is prosecuting other officials accused of using public resources to support the independence bid.

Spain’s Senate responded to Catalonia’s independence move by approving the application of constitutional article 155, which officially authorizes the central government to suspend Catalan authorities and take over the region’s administration.

“The turn of events … has left us with no recourse but the application of constitutional prerogatives to reinstitute the legal order in Catalonia,” said Spain’s senate president.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy appealed for national “calm” and called together a special cabinet meeting for later Friday.

“The government will take whatever measures are necessary. We will not allow a group of people to liquidate the country,” he told reporters.

Puigdemont, accompanied by other members of the Catalan regional government, lawmakers and hundreds of mayors, crowded onto the steps of the parliament building to address thousands of supporters gathering outside, shouting “liberty.”

In a short speech, Puigdemont said, “We ourselves must now form our own structures and our own society.”

Catalan, Spanish Historians Continue Dueling, Using History as Battlefield

History is a battlefield in the contentious independence standoff between Spain and Catalan secessionists, pressed into service by each, shaped as a weapon and hurled with abandon.

Both sides in the confrontation that threatens the territorial integrity of Spain have raised the political temperature by citing some of the darkest chapters in Spanish and Catalan history to provoke or to bolster support.

Underscoring the struggle for hearts and minds are disputes about who did what to whom, stretching back to 1714, an emblematic year for Catalans, when after a long siege the Catalan capital of Barcelona, which was loyal to the Habsburg dynasty, fell to the troops of the Bourbon monarch, Felipe V.

The victorious king shuttered Catalonia’s parliament, closed the city’s universities and banned Catalan as the official language.

Since then, the Catalans have struggled with three centuries of exclusion and repression by Madrid, enjoying short periods of autonomy and recognition, and long periods of being forced into a cultural homogeneity dictated by the dominant Castilian nationalism of Spain.

When Spain’s current monarch, Felipe VI, broadcast earlier this month in an unprecedented televised address, his condemnation of Catalan separatists for their “lack of loyalty to the Spanish government,” casting their October 1 independence vote as illegal and undemocratic, Catalan secessionists reacted by referencing the 18th century repression of his namesake.

Catalan commentators, even those holding pro-unity sentiments, complained the king was not the best person to deliver a scathing attack on the independence aspirations of Catalan secessionists, arguing he was merely feeding into the separatist narrative of Madrid’s long-standing disdain for the sub-nationalisms of the Catalans, Basques and Galicians, and the Castilian oppression of Catalonia stretching back to 1714.

The most frequent references to the past that both sides have used to frame the independence standoff roiling Spain, however, is to the Spanish Civil War and the dictatorship of General Francisco Franco.

Regional autonomy was a key driver of the Spanish Civil War — Franco and the nationalist army opposed the leftwing Republican government’s extension of autonomy to Catalonia and the Basques.

To hear some Catalan separatists speak, Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is the second coming of General Franco, a hyperbolic comparison considering that in the purges following the civil war the Franco regime executed an estimated 3,000 to 4,000 Catalans.

That’s a far cry from the violent clashes at voting stations on October 1 when 800 were injured as police, on the orders of Madrid, sought to close voting stations in Barcelona.

“The suppression Catalans lived with during the Franco dictatorship has remained in people’s hearts, and has been transmitted to my generation,” argued Catalan filmmaker Irene Baque.

Some critics of the separatists counter that more Catalans likely were killed during the civil war by the Communist-dominated Republican government as it sought to purge anarchists, Trotskyites and other political undesirables from its ranks — an action that fractured the left as it sought to fend off Franco’s fascist uprising.

And they note that during the 1939-1975 Franco dictatorship there were plenty in the ranks of Catalonia’s middle and landed classes who saw conservative values and law and order as higher priorities than Catalan nationalism. They were supportive of the regime and thrived under it.  

Some hardline Spanish nationalists have gleefully stoked the fires of past controversy.

Earlier this month, Pablo Casado, a lawmaker with Rajoy’s ruling People’s Party, warned Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont that history might repeat itself. Casado said his fate could be similar to that of one of his predecessors, Lluis Companys, who ended up being shot in 1940 by General Franco.

And there was deliberate provocation by Spanish nationalists in Madrid last month when some cheered national police units as they headed to Catalonia to try to prevent the October 1 independence vote by shouting “Viva Franco.”   

“This is a very long lasting political conflict,” said Josep Costa, a political scientist. “The issue of the status of Catalonia within Spain is a problem that comes out every time there is a democratic opening of Spanish society.”

Both sides can be accused of airbrushing the complex history of Spain. Most Spaniards remain unaware the first book printed in Spain was in Catalan. Pro-unity Catalan historians complain that they get snubbed by Catalonia’s cultural institutions, which are dominated the pro-secessionists.

Spanish and Catalan historians have been guilty of mutual ignorance for years, with Spanish historians disregarding Catalan contributions and glorifying the story of the Castilians, and their Catalan rivals doing the reverse and demonizing Spain, according to Swiss journalist Raphael Minder.

“National identity is rooted in history, which is why so much importance is attached to celebrating one event rather than another,” he wrote in his new book on Catalan rebel politics, The Struggle for Catalonia.

He added, “When there is serious disagreement over the past, it becomes even harder to agree over the present, let alone the future.”

 

 

 

Britain: North Korea Was Behind May Global Cyberattack

British Security Minister Ben Wallace said Friday Britain believed “quite strongly” that North Korea was responsible for a global cyberattack earlier this year.

The cyberattack, which occurred in May, disrupted government services and businesses throughout the world, including one-third of English hospitals.

“North Korea was the state that we believe was involved in this worldwide attack on our systems,” Wallace said in an interview with the BBC. He added the British government was “as sure as possible.”

More than 300,000 computers in 150 countries were infected within days of the “WannaCry” attack, dubbed as such because the WannaCry ransomware cryptoworm was deployed.

A report released Friday by Britain’s National Audit Office (NAO) said WannaCry was a relatively simple attack that Britain’s National Health Service (NHS) could have prevented if it adhered to basic information technology best practices.

NHS digital security head Dan Taylor described the event as “an international attack on an unprecedented scale” and said the agency has “learned a lot.”

Minister Wallace said Britain must act quickly to strengthen its cybersecurity program.

“It’s a salient lesson for us all that all of us, from individuals to governments to large organizations, have a role to play in maintaining the security of our networks,” Wallace said.

Ransomware attacks utilize a type of malware that encrypts files on infected computers and demands money to unlock them.

Tillerson Wraps Up Ambitious South Asia Trip

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson tackled several of the world’s most sensitive issues during a whirlwind trip aimed at preventing Afghanistan from falling back into chaos, easing Kurdish-Iraqi tensions that could allow Islamic State to revive, and isolating Iran as much as possible.

Unsurprisingly, Tillerson was welcomed in Afghanistan and India, where President Donald Trump’s administration is trying to foster a growing partnership as part of his recently announced policy for the region. His reception was more muted in Pakistan, which is under increasing pressure to crack down on extremist groups and eliminate their safe havens.

Those stops on the five-day, six-nation trip epitomized the diplomatic tightrope that Washington faces, along with the risks in dealing with them face to face. Likely mindful that insurgents attacked Kabul’s international airport hours after Defense Secretary Jim Mattis visited a month ago, the stops in Kabul and Afghanistan lasted just hours, and neither involved an overnight stay.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani went to Bagram Airbase to meet with Tillerson, whose visit was not announced in advance, to discuss how to deal with the Taliban insurgency that has resulted in what U.S. military officials have called a stalemate.

Faiz Mohammad Zaland, an Afghan analyst who attended a number of conferences with Taliban officials abroad, welcomed Tillerson’s proposal for Afghanistan to draw the Taliban into the peace process, as long as the group renounces terrorism and violent extremism.

“We’ve made clear to the Taliban: You will never achieve a military victory,” Tillerson told a news conference Thursday. “Do you want your children and grandchildren fighting this same fight?Because that’s the way it’s going to be if you don’t find a different way to go forward.”

Akbar Agha, an ex-Taliban official, told VOA the Taliban want a change in the system of government and insist on a pullout of foreign forces from Afghanistan at a time the U.S. and its allies have been beefing up their presence.

In Islamabad, Tillerson was greeted by a low-level Foreign Ministry official and then taken to meet separately with the civilian government and the military, underscoring the difficulty of putting together a united policy when each side has different priorities. There has been strong speculation for years of ties between Pakistan’s intelligence service and extremist groups, and the military’s primary focus is on tense relations with India.

And while the U.S. repeatedly has said it feels that having Pakistan play a positive role is key to success in Afghanistan, there are signs that Islamabad is hedging its bets by growing closer to China — which has undertaken mutually beneficial, multi-billion-dollar development projects in the country — and bolstering relations with Russia in case Washington were to cut back on aid.

Former Pakistani Ambassador Ali Sarwar Naqvi said the low-key welcome shouldn’t be seen as a slight, saying then-President Bill Clinton was given similar treatment when he visited in 2000.

“The meetings were important, the welcome was not,” Naqvi said.

Tillerson described his talks in Pakistan as “frank and candid.”

“We probably listened 80 percent of the time and we talked 20 percent,” Tillerson said. “We put our expectations forward in no uncertain terms. We’re going to chart our course consistent with what Pakistan not just says they do, but what they actually do.”

The two sides reportedly exchanged lists of terrorists they want apprehended or eliminated, and they are seeking help in pursuing them.

The reception for Tillerson was much warmer in India, which is clearly happy about the U.S. plan for the country to play an enhanced role in Afghanistan — where it earlier stepped in to provide air transport of Afghan produce and other goods when Pakistan closed border crossings — and the rest of the region.

“He must be very tired, but the good part was that his last stop is a country that is a close friend,” said Indian Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swarah. “It is said visiting a close friend’s place cures you of tiredness. I hope Secretary Tillerson is not feeling tired any more.”

After wrapping up his first trip to the region, Tillerson said his goal had been to expand on Trump’s new policy and what role is envisioned for each country.

“What we’ve received in the region is enormously positive over the South Asian strategy,” he said. “People have said this is the first time we’ve seen a strategy.

“I think many have said, yes, we’ve been fighting a war in Afghanistan for 16 years; when we’ve been fighting, it was 16 one-year strategies. There was never anything in mind as to how does this come to an end,” Tillerson said. “We now have to go execute.”

VOA’s Dari, Urdu, and Bangla Services contributed to this report.

Sources: Putin Ally Wins Right to Develop Prime Moscow Plot

A company with ties to an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin has won the right to develop a prime piece of Moscow real estate near the Kremlin, two sources familiar with the deal told Reuters.

Moscow city government auctioned off the plot, which lies on the bank’s of the Moskva river and includes a number of historic buildings, and it was won by a construction company called Gorkapstroy-Garant, according to the city.

The two sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said that the firm represents the interests of businessman Gennady Timchenko.

Reuters was not able to independently verify that Timchenko, who has been described by the U.S. Treasury Department as a member of Putin’s inner circle, has a financial interest.

A spokesman for the Volga Group, which groups together Timchenko’s business interests, did not respond to telephone calls or to an emailed request for comment on Thursday.

The plot is a few hundred metres from the Kremlin, and some of the buildings on it date back to the 18th century.

Under a development plan presented by the Moscow city government in August, the winning bidder will preserve and restore historic buildings, turn one of the buildings into a hotel and convert some of the complex into apartments.

Timchenko has since 2014 been subject to U.S. sanctions imposed on Moscow for its role in the Ukraine crisis.

No contact details are listed for Gorkapstroy-Garant. Its parent company, Gorkapstroy, did not respond to a written request for comment. Staff were unable to connect a Reuters reporter by phone to Gorkapstroy’s boss.

The site had been used as a training facility for Russia’s Strategic Rocket Forces, the arm of the military which operates Russia’s nuclear arsenal. It became the property of Moscow city a few years ago.

Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Susan Fenton.

US Sanctions N. Korean Officials for Human Rights Abuses

The United States blacklisted seven North Korean officials and three government entities Thursday, saying they had engaged in human rights abuses that were “among the worst in the world.”

The State Department and Treasury imposed economic sanctions on officials in Pyongyang’s military security, labor and diplomatic outposts, as well as forced labor operations in foreign countries where North Korean soldiers are required to work for free while their wages are sent back to the financially beleaguered government.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the “sanctions target the North Korean military and regime officials engaged in flagrant abuses of human rights. We also are targeting North Korean financial facilitators who attempt to keep the regime afloat with foreign currency earned through forced labor operations.”

State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said the human rights abuses also included extrajudicial killings, torture, prolonged arbitrary detention, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence inside the country.

“Many of the country’s human rights abuses underwrite the regime’s weapons program,” she said, “including forced labor in the form of mass mobilizations, re-education through labor camps, and overseas labor contracts. Thousands of North Koreans are sent abroad every year to work in slavelike conditions, earning revenue for the regime.”

Nauert also said “the regime’s efforts to restrict North Koreans’ freedom of movement, right to leave their country and access to information reach far beyond its sovereign boundaries. The government deploys security officials on assignments overseas to monitor the activities of North Koreans abroad and to forcibly repatriate individuals seeking asylum abroad.”

U.N. report

The U.S. report came as Tomas Ojea Quintana, the U.N. special human rights rapporteur for North Korea, released a similar report concluding that there were “patterns of grave violations” of human rights in the reclusive communist country. Pyongyang has kept him from personal observation of human rights in the country, but he said he had spoken with people who have witnessed abuses there.

However, the U.N. official cautioned that the world body’s repeated imposition of sanctions against North Korea aiming at blocking its nuclear weapons development “can have a devastating impact on the civilian population.”

He called for the world to have “constructive engagement” with North Korea, even while acknowledging such advice “may not be welcomed with open arms.”

The latest U.S. condemnation of the regime of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un came as President Donald Trump was nearing the start of a five-nation Asia trip in early November, including visits to South Korea, China and Japan. Trump is planning wide-ranging talks with leaders in the region about North Korea’s continued defiance of the U.N. dictates against further nuclear and ballistic missile tests.

US State Department in Solidarity With Intersex Persons but Faces Lawsuit

The State Department on Thursday recognized Intersex Awareness Day and said the United States stands in solidarity with intersex persons around the world. The statement comes as the department faces a discrimination lawsuit on the issue.

“We recognize that intersex persons face violence, discrimination, harassment, and persecution on account of their sex characteristics,” State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert said. “At a young age, intersex persons routinely face forced medical surgeries without free or informed consent. These interventions jeopardize their physical integrity and ability to live freely.”

The State Department said it reaffirms its strong commitment to promoting a world where all persons can freely and equally express themselves with dignity, regardless of sex characteristics.

“Intersex” is a general term used for a variety of conditions in which a person is born with a reproductive or sexual anatomy that doesn’t fit the typical definitions of male or female.  

The statement Thursday comes as the department faces a federal discrimination lawsuit from nonprofit Lambda Legal group on behalf of intersex American and U.S. navy veteran, Dana Zzyym.

Zzyym was denied a U.S. passport because only two choices were available for gender marker on the passport application form, either male or female.

“Dana has been fighting for almost three years for an essential identity document that accurately reflects who they are,” Lambda Legal Senior Attorney Paul Castillo said in an October 10 press release. “The U.S. District Court ordered the State Department to reconsider its binary-only gender policy barring use of a third gender marker on U.S. passports.”

Lambda Legal says many intersex people identify as male or female, but some, like Zzyym, do not.  Zzyym uses the gender-neutral pronouns “they,” “them” and “their” and was born with ambiguous sex characteristics.

Lambda Legal outlined Zzyym’s struggle.

“Shortly after Dana’s birth, their parents and doctor decided to raise them as a boy. As a result, Dana underwent several irreversible, painful and medically unnecessary surgeries that didn’t work, traumatized Dana and left them with severe scarring.”

Later in life, Zzymm began educating the public about issues facing intersex people and applied for a passport to travel to a forum in Mexico, but the application was denied.

In October 2015, Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado against the U.S. State Department for violating the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the U.S. Constitution.

The court issued a ruling in favor of Zzyym in November of 2016. However, the case has been reopened because the State Department continues to refuse a gender marker that is neither male nor female on its passport applications.

Asked to comment on the lawsuit, the State Department told VOA: “As a matter of policy, we are unable to comment on pending litigation.”

In tweets Thursday, Lambda Legal called the State Department statement recognizing Intersex Awareness Day hypocritical and said the department should “take its own advice & help end violence, discrimination, harassment, persecution of intersex people.”

Summer Internships Offer Real World Experiences

When kids go back to school, they usually talk about what they did during their summer vacation. The 15 and 16-year-olds who joined Summer RISE in Montgomery County, Maryland, have some unique stories about work in fire departments, non-profits, private businesses and many other workplaces. Faiza Elmasry tells us about one of the high schoolers who spent 3 weeks in the biology lab at a local college. Faith Lapidus narrates.

У Конгресі США підтримали нові санкції проти Ірану через ракетну програму

У США Палата представників Конгресу схвалила законопроект, що має на меті запровадити нові санкції проти Ірану через його програму створення балістичних ракет.

Документ, який схвалили 432 голосами проти 2, пропонує вимагати від адміністрації США накласти санкції на Іран за «будь-яку діяльність, пов’язану з балістичними ракетами, здатними нести ядерну зброю, включно з пусками ракет, що використовують таку технологію».

Крім того, законопроект передбачає в разі набуття чинності також вимогу до влади США накласти санкції також на компанії, що надають матеріали чи допомогу для іранської ракетної програми. Цей пункт має стосуватися компаній не тільки в Ірані, а й у всьому світі.

Для набуття чинності такий самий законопроект іще має ухвалити Сенат Конгресу і підписати спільний документ має президент США.

Подали документ на розгляд республіканець Ед Ройс і демократ Еліот Енґел. «Нічого Ірану розробляти чи здобувати міжконтинентальні балістичні ракети», – сказав Ройс під час обговорення. Нові санкції, сказав він, мають вчинити тиск на іранські й закордонні компанії, банки чи фізичні особи, які підтримують «незаконні збройові програми іранського режиму». «Іран має знати, що США не потерплять його небезпечної поведінки», – додав він.

Попереднього дня, 25 жовтня, Палата представників схвалила ще три законопроекти стосовно Ірану; один із них має на меті запровадити нові санкції проти ліванського шиїтського збройного й політичного руху «Хезболла», підтримуваного Іраном. Конгресмени назвали цей рух «терористичною маріонеткою» Тегерана.

Пропоновані санкції проти Ірану не стосуються його ядерної програми і так званої «ядерної угоди» 2015 року – за нею Тегеран погодився значно обмежити цю програму, щоб виключити можливість створення ним ядерної зброї, а світова спільнота почала знімати санкції, запроваджені проти Ірану через цю програму. За цією ж угодою Рада безпеки ООН зняла з Ірану заборону розробляти балістичні ракети, зняли й міжнародні санкції, що були накладені через ракетну програму. Але США заявляють, що іранська програма балістичних ракет порушує «дух» ядерної угоди, хоча не порушує її саму, і через це запроваджують проти Тегерана все нові власні санкції.

Пораненого на військових навчаннях телеоператора перевели з відділення реанімації

Пораненого на військових навчаннях телеоператора з Кривого Рогу В’ячеслава Волка перевели з реанімації у відділення відновлювального лікування, повідомляє його дружина Інна Волк.

За її словами, це сталося через майже чотири місяці лікування.

Як розповіла дружина, В’ячеславові видалили трахеальну трубку, зараз він уже дихає самостійно, без апарату штучного дихання.

«Зараз будемо дивитися на зміни і зрушення в організмі далі, я знаю, що ми на правильному шляху», – зазначила дружина. Водночас вона повідомила, що родина продовжує збирати кошти на реабілітацію чоловіка, придбання для нього інвалідного візка.

26 жовтня Міністерство оборони України оприлюднило інформацію з посиланням на військового хірурга Західного регіону Івана Богдана про те, що стан здоров’я В’ячеслава Волка задовільний. За цими даними, він успішно переніс дві операції, тепер у відділенні відновлювального лікування з ним будуть займатися відновленням втрачених функцій організму: на В’ячеслава чекає тривала робота за програмою реабілітації.

6 липня в поліції Кривого Рогу повідомили, що під час навчань ЗСУ був поранений представник ЗМІ. В Оперативному командуванні «Схід» Збройних Сил України підтвердили, що інцидент стався під час командно-штабних навчань з територіальної оборони у Саксаганській районній раді. За даними військових, постріл з пістолета зробив учасник навчань, волонтер-інструктор, коли демонстрував журналістам, як затримують порушників.

28 серпня В’ячеслава Волка авіацією транспортували з Дніпра до Львова, зараз його лікують у Військово-медичному центрі Західного регіону.

У вересні справу про поранення В’ячеслава Волка перекваліфікували з «необережного тілесного ушкодження» на умисне – стаття 121 Кримінального кодексу України.

Отримання траншу МВФ на початку наступного року не є проблемою для України – Данилюк

Отримання траншу МВФ на початку наступного року не є критичним для України, заявив міністр фінансів Олександр Данилюк. Так він прокоментував заяву Національного банку України про те, що черговий транш надійде не наприкінці цього року, як очікувалося, а вже на початку 2018 року.

За словами міністра, головне, щоб Верховна Рада ухвалила всі необхідні закони.

«Насправді все залежить від роботи нашого парламенту, від ухвалення цих рішень, які залишилися: ухвалення закону про антикорупційний суд і також ухвалення закону по приватизації. Я бачу такий варіант, як це зробити швидше. Якщо ж це буде початок року, це не є проблемою. Але ключові закони мають бути ухвалені цього року. Ми це розуміємо всі», – сказав Данилюк 26 жовтня.

Водночас він наголосив: якщо потрібні закони таки ухвалять, в України залишається шанс отримати транш цього року. 

Раніше міністр фінансів України заявляв, що отримання чергового траншу МВФ до кінця року залежатиме від домовленостей щодо ціни на газ для населення.

У березні 2015 року між МВФ і Україною була затверджена чотирирічна програма розширеного фінансування на суму близько 17,5 мільярдів доларів США. Наразі МВФ надав Україні за цією програмою близько 8 мільярдів 380 мільйонів доларів.

Twitter Drops Ads by Russia’s Sputnik, RT

The social media company Twitter on Thursday announced it would block any advertising on its platform from Russia-sponsored news outlets Sputnik and RT.

The company, in a statement on its blog, said it took the step as part of its “ongoing commitment to help protect the integrity of the user experience on Twitter.”

Twitter cited a report produced in January by U.S. intelligence agencies that concluded the Russian government attempted to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

“Early this year, the U.S. intelligence community named RT and Sputnik as implementing state-sponsored Russian efforts to interfere with and disrupt the 2016 Presidential election, which is not something we want on Twitter,” the company statement read.

In its report, the intelligence community concluded “with high confidence” that Russian President Vladimir Putin directed an influence campaign intended to “undermine public faith in the U.S. democratic process, denigrate Secretary [Hillary] Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency.”

Further, the report claims “Putin and the Russian Government aspired to help President-elect [Donald] Trump’s election chances when possible by discrediting Secretary Clinton and publicly contrasting her unfavorably to him,” though it provides no direct evidence for either of these claims.

The Russian effort to influence the election is said to have consisted of several hundred fake Twitter accounts and about $100,000 worth of Facebook ads promoting “divisive” causes like Black Lives Matter. U.S. media reports also indicate Russians purchased similar ads on Google.

Lawyers for Twitter and Facebook will testify next month at hearings before congressional committees investigating what, if any, effect the Russian trolls may have had on the election.

Twitter said it will still allow RT, formerly called Russia Today, and Sputnik to remain as users on the platform, but they will not be eligible to buy ads. The company also said it will take the nearly $2 million it has earned on ads from the Russian news agencies since 2011 and donate it to support “external research into the use of Twitter in civic engagement and elections.”

 

Loading...
X