Month: November 2017

Суд призначив розгляд по суті обвинувального акту в справі Насірова на 7 грудня

Шевченківський районний суд Києва призначив на 10:00 7 грудня розгляд обвинувального акту по суті в справі відстороненого голови Державної фіскальної служби України Романа Насірова та керівника департаменту погашення боргу ДФС Володимира Новікова.

Також суд задовольнив клопотання прокурорів і продовжив до 25 січня 2018 року термін дії процесуальних зобов’язань для обвинувачених.

Під час засідання Насіров заявив, що задоволений можливістю розгляду його справи в суді по суті.

«Це можливість прокоментувати справу та можливість розказати суспільству, розказати саме суду по суті так званого надуманого обвинувачення, розказати, що відбувалося у справі останні 7 місяців. І остаточно довести невинуватість», – сказав Насіров.

За даними слідства, голова ДФС причетний до так званої «газової схеми Онищенка» і упродовж 2015 року ухвалив низку «безпідставних і незаконних рішень» про розстрочення сум платежів з рентної плати за користування надрами для задіяних у схемі компаній на загальну суму понад мільярд гривень. Слідство вважає, що такими рішеннями державі завдано збитків на суму майже 2 мільярди гривень.

Захист Насірова і він сам ці звинувачення заперечують.

На початку березня суд арештував Насірова з можливістю застави в 100 мільйонів гривень, яку внесли його дружина і тесть. Після цього відсторонений голова ДФС вийшов із СІЗО. Пізніше запобіжний захід продовжили.

Наразі відсторонений голова ДФС зобов’язаний носити електронний браслет, здати закордонний паспорт, утриматися від спілкування зі свідками й фігурантами справи, приходити до детектива, прокурора чи до суду на першу вимогу. Також Насіров не може без дозволу виїжджати з Києва.

В Івано-Франківську відкрили пам’ятник художникові-дисиденту Опанасу Заливасі

Відкриттям пам’ятника і презентацією книжки «Дзвонар» в Івано-Франківську відзначили 92-у річницю від дня народження живописця, багаторічного політв’язня-дисидента, лауреата Шевченківської премії Опанаса Заливахи.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, бронзовий пам’ятник зображає художника з мольбертом, який сидить на лавці на «стометрівці» – пішохідній вулиці Незалежності в центрі Івано-Франківська. Його автором є скульптор Ігор Семак.

«Робота дуже відповідальна для мене. Старався показати його в першу чергу як художника і водночас як просту людину. Він жив тут, він ходив тут, по цьому проспекту. Якщо близько подивитесь на обличчя, у нього є автопортрет, де на чолі як розп’яття. Так і у на цій роботі є цяточка по центру чола, нагадує якусь фігурку», – розповів скульптор.

Вартість пам’ятника – 395 тисяч гривень, з них 250 тисяч гривень – це відлив з бронзи і робота. Цей проект переміг серед восьми пропозицій на конкурсі, оголошеному рік тому.

А у виставковому залі обласного осередку Національної спілки художників України 27 листопада відбулася презентація книжки «Дзвонар. Збірка статей і спогадів про Опанаса Заливаху» (харківське видавництво «Права людини»).

У лютому цього року в Івано-Франківську на виставці представили майже 90 робіт Опанаса Заливахи і презентували альбом його маловідомих творів (івано-франківське видавництво «Місто-НВ», упорядник – мистецтвознавець Мирослав Аронець).

Опанас Заливаха народився 26 листопада 1925 року на Харківщині. Правозахисник-шістдесятник, звинувачений у антирадянській агітації та пропаганді, відбув п’ять років у мордовських таборах. Лауреат премій імені Тараса Шевченка і Василя Стуса. Український інститут національної пам’яті на відзначення 83-х роковин Голодомору в Україні у листопаді 2016 року вніс його ім’я до проекту «Незламні» серед 15 видатних людей, що пройшли через 1932–1933 роки і змогли реалізувати себе.

Помер Заливаха 24 квітня 2007 року, похований в Івано-Франківську, в Дем’яновому Лазі. 

UN Envoy: No Signs Damascus Will Participate in Latest Geneva Talks

President Bashar al-Assad’s government has not confirmed its participation in peace talks with the Syrian opposition scheduled for this week in Geneva, the U.N. special envoy for Syria said Monday.

Staffan de Mistura told the U.N. Security Council the Assad government said it would not be sending representatives to Geneva on Monday. But de Mistura held out hope saying, “We know and indeed expect that the government will be on its way shortly, particularly in light of President Assad’s commitment to [Russian] President [Vladimir] Putin when they met in Sochi.”

Putin hosted Assad last week for a meeting, during which Syria’s president said he was “ready for dialogue with all those who want to come up with a political settlement”.

Russia has bolstered Assad’s rule with airstrikes since late 2015 against groups trying to overthrow his regime, with Iranian and Lebanese Hezbollah fighters also supporting Damascus.

Tuesday’s talks in Geneva will be the eighth on a political settlement in Syria after previous meetings achieved little progress to stop the war that has left at least 400,000 people dead and 13 million Syrians in need of humanitarian aid.

White House Official Says Trump Won’t Campaign for Moore

President Donald Trump will not campaign for Republican Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore before the Dec. 12 special election, a White House official said Monday.

Despite public statements in which he raised doubts about the accounts of women who have accused Moore of sexual misconduct, Trump will not to travel to Alabama on Moore’s behalf, said the official, who was not authorized to discuss the president’s plans publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

 

The president held the door open to campaigning for Moore last week, when he all but endorsed Moore’s candidacy and attacked his Democratic opponent, Doug Jones

 

The announcement comes as Trump continued to wade into race over the weekend, taking to Twitter to bash Jones.

 

Trump said electing the Democrat as Alabama’s next senator “would be a disaster,” warning of damage to his legislative agenda.

 

“The last thing we need in Alabama and the U.S. Senate is a Schumer/Pelosi puppet who is WEAK on Crime, WEAK on the Border, Bad for our Military and our great Vets, Bad for our 2nd Amendment, AND WANTS TO RAISES TAXES TO THE SKY,” Trump wrote from Florida, referring to Democrats’ congressional leaders Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi.

 

Trump has declined to follow the path of other mainstream Republican leaders, who have called on Moore to step aside. Republican lawmakers are considering expelling Moore should he win the seat.

 

For weeks, accusations that Moore, now 70, sexually molested or assaulted two teens, ages 14 and 16 – and tried to date several others – while he was in his 30s have taken center stage in the heated Alabama race. Moore denied the allegations of misconduct and said he never dated “underage” women.

 

Trump’s words could be a boost to the Moore camp, since Democrats’ hopes in the race partly depend upon peeling away Republican support from Moore in the deeply red state.

 

Moore’s campaign quickly touted Trump’s comments on social media and in a fundraising email to supporters that lashed out at Republican leaders as much as it did Jones.

 

“President Trump calls them like he sees them. And, he’s got my opponents in D.C. scrambling,” Moore wrote in a fundraising email.

 

The Republican candidate has made limited public appearances since the allegations surfaced earlier this month.

 

Jones, speaking to reporters in Birmingham, shrugged off Trump’s criticisms, saying he would not be a partisan voter. He said Alabamians are focused on issues such as the economy, education and health care.

 

“My record speaks for itself … I think I am very strong on the issues that the people of Alabama care for,” Jones said.

 

Jones, a former federal prosecutor, said he would be an independent voice in the U.S. Senate, similarly to his political mentor, the late U.S. Sen. Howell Heflin, who represented the state for nearly 20 years.

 

Jones’ campaign issued a more biting statement saying, “Roy Moore was unfit for office even before nine Alabama women served as witnesses to all Alabamians of his disturbing conduct.”

 

Trump’s comment in the race signaled that the success of his legislative agenda outweighs widespread concerns from national Republicans, many of whom are repulsed at the prospect of seating Moore.

 

Top Republicans in Congress, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan, have called for Moore to leave the race, and the Republican National Committee and the National Republican Senatorial Committee have pulled their support for his campaign.

 

GOP Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina said the Dec. 12 election has become a referendum on “the character of the country” that transcends partisan politics.

 

“In my opinion, and in the opinion of many Republicans and conservatives in the Senate, it is time for us to turn the page because it is not about partisan politics. It’s not about electing Republicans versus Democrats,” Scott said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”

 

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who has also called for Moore to step down, said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union” that Trump is “definitely trying to throw a lifeline to Roy Moore.”

 

But when it comes to Moore, Graham said it’s unclear “what winning looks like.”

 

“If he wins, we get the baggage of him winning and it becomes a story every day about whether or not you believe the women or Roy Moore, should he stay in the Senate, should he be expelled. If you lose, you give the Senate seat to a Democrat at a time we need all the votes we can get,” he said, referring to Republicans’ current 52-48 majority in the Senate.

 

“The moral of the story is: Don’t nominate somebody like Roy Moore who could actually lose a seat that any other Republican could win,” Graham said.

 

Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the No. 3 Republican in the Senate, said he’d like to see Trump “come out and support what many of us have said and that is that Roy Moore needs to step aside” and “allow somebody else to be a write-in candidate.”

 

He said on “Fox News Sunday” that if Moore ends up winning and comes to Washington in January, he will be the immediate subject of an ethics investigation, “which is going to be a cloud that he’ll be operating in and it’s going to be a distraction for us and for our agenda.”

 

Trump backed incumbent Sen. Luther Strange in the Alabama Republican primary but moved quickly to embrace Moore after he won. The seat opened up after Republican Jeff Sessions was tapped as U.S. attorney general.

Macron Heads to Africa in Apparent Push to Reboot France’s Clout in Region

French President Emmanuel Macron arrives in Burkina Faso late Monday – the first stop of a three-day Africa tour aimed to reinvigorate what observers see as France’s fading influence on the continent. Lisa Bryant has more on Macron’s trip that also takes him to Ivory Coast for an EU-Africa summit and to English-speaking Ghana.

Security, jobs, the environment and migration are among key themes of President Emmanuel Macron’s trip to the three West African countries – with an overall focus on youth.

On Tuesday morning, he’s expected to outline his Africa policy in a much- anticipated speech before 800 students at the University of Ouagadougou. Africa’s youth will also be a key theme at the EU-Africa summit in Ivory Coast on Wednesday — the next stop on Macron’s itinerary.

And again, when he makes the first trip by a French president to Ghana, and meets with youngsters in Accra, accompanied by former Ghanaian football player, Abedi Pele.

Security is another top priority.  France has more than 7,000 troops deployed across Africa — including those hunting down Islamist militants in the Sahel, in cooperation with the new regional African counterterrorism force that Macron helped to launch.

The French president is also pushing development to address insecurity — and the floods of migrants still heading to Europe.

“One of the things that Macron has announced is that he wants official French development aid, the figures, to go up again…,” says Manuel Lafont Rapnouil, who heads the Paris office of the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Lafont Rapnouil added that “in connection precisely with the fact that he knows that even if military operations are successful in the Sahel – whether it’s the French or Sahelian operations— even if we’re successful in Central Africa or with Boko Haram, the military success will not be enough to solve the crisis and stabilize the situation.”

Macron drew criticism during his first trip to Mali in May, when he bypassed the capital, and again during a July speech during the G-20 summit when he said, in his words, that “civilizational” problems and women having too many children were hampering African development.

 

The young president is also trying to break from the past. He has created an ‘Africa Presidential Council’ made up of entrepreneurs with myriad backgrounds and often dual nationalities. His keynote speech in Burkina Faso is set to contrasts with France’s last two presidents, who delivered theirs in Senegal. And at 39, he was not even born when former French colonies received their independence.

 

Whether he can reboot France’s image in Africa is uncertain. This week’s trip will be a first test.

US Targets IS in Somalia Airstrike

One terrorist was killed in a targeted airstrike in Somalia conducted by U.S. forces in coordination with Somalia’s government, the U.S. military said Monday.

The strike against Islamic State fighters was carried out around 3pm local time on Monday in northeastern Somalia, U.S. Africa Command said in a statement.

“U.S. forces will continue to use all authorized and appropriate measures to protect U.S. citizens and to disable terrorist threats. This includes partnering with AMISOM and Somali National Security Forces (SNSF) in combined counterterrorism operations and targeting terrorists, their training camps, and their safe havens throughout Somalia and the region,” the statement read.

Monday’s strike brings the total number of U.S. airstrikes in Somalia this year to 30 – 28 of them having been carried out against al-Shabab. It is the second targeted at Islamic State fighters, the first having been carried out earlier this month.

Intensified airstrikes and renewed battles between government forces and militants have forced over 10,000 people to flee from their homes in Somalia, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council.

In a statement, the NRC said new ground fighting in the Middle and Lower Shabelle regions has displaced thousands of people

“We are seeing a spike in families fleeing fighting that are arriving in overcrowded camps in Mogadishu. The camps are already overfilled with people affected by drought.” Victor Mose, the NRC’s country director in Somalia, said in a statement Monday.

Moses said people affected by both the conflict and drought “have to endured multiple crisis at once and this can push them over the brink.”

According to the United Nations, half of Somalia’s population is in need of humanitarian aid as parts of the country try to cope with a severe drought.

Abdulaziz Osman of VOA’s Somali Service contributed to this report.

Hawaii on Frontlines of Preparing for Nuclear Attack

As tensions escalate between North Korea and the United States, Hawaii finds itself on the frontlines in preparing for a nuclear attack. Whether or not North Korea has developed the capability of hitting the islands with a missile, state officials aren’t taking any chances.

Starting in December, Hawaii will be testing its “Attack Warning” siren for the first time since the Cold War in the 1980s. The state is adding the signal to its monthly “Attention Alert” test, which warns people of an incoming tsunami or hurricane.

While the wailing siren could be used to warn of a nuclear strike from North Korea, Vern Miyagi, administrator of the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency (HI-EMA), said he thinks an attack is unlikely.

“If North Korea launches against us or our allies, the retaliation would be complete and they would defeat North Korea’s ambition to continue its regime. So if they did launch an attack against us, the regime would be probably end,” said Miyagi.

Nevertheless, HI-EMA is ramping up efforts to educate the state’s 1.4 million residents and also visitors on how to prepare for a nuclear attack.

“Hawaii is a likely target, ‘cause we’re in the Pacific, we’re closer in to North Korea than most of the continental United States,” Miyagi pointed out, “so it’s something we need to prepare for. As we track the news and we see the tests, both missile launches and nuclear tests, it’s the elephant in the room. We can’t ignore it.”

That’s why the state has posted guidelines online to prepare people for a nuclear attack. It’s also getting the word out through community meetings and public service announcements.

Echoes of Dec. 7, 1941

World War II veteran Ted Tsukiyama recalled hearing the air-raid warning sirens after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor.

“Sirens were installed all over the city after the war started. And they would test them every now and them. I remember hearing the sirens going off. The radio would give us a warning, ‘this is only a test,’ don’t get alarmed and all that,” said Tsukiyama.

Tsukiyama, who’s now in his late 90s, said he isn’t surprised the sirens are coming back because Hawaii has long been a defense outpost. It’s home to the U.S. Pacific Command, the military’s headquarters for the Asia-Pacific region. “I suppose that’s necessary as a precaution, but I don’t think North Korea is gonna attack. They’d be foolish to threaten South Korea, or Japan, or the U.S.,” he said.

Make a plan

U.S. officials estimate a North Korean missile could reach Hawaii in about 20 minutes. It would take 5 minutes for authorities to determine its target, which would leave about 12-15 minutes to warn the public.

Despite the state’s public outreach and education efforts, Miyagi said there are still misconceptions.

“The first one that I’ve heard is that we shouldn’t prepare, we shouldn’t plan because it’s never going to happen, so we’re wasting our time. But again, when you see all of the things in the news, and the tests, missile launches, I can’t ignore it. So we have to continue planning as if it’s there and it may happen.”

The second misconception, he said, is fatalistic. “’There’s no use preparing, no use planning because if it’s a nuclear attack we’re all going to die.’ But based on what the threat is right now, if there is an impact there’ll be many, many survivors, 80 percent, 90 percent survivors.”

So Miyagi encouraged everyone to have a plan and know where to “shelter in place” ahead of time. Officials also recommend having enough food and water to survive for 48 hours, and supplies to last up to 14 days… just in case.

Britain’s Prince Harry, US Actress Meghan Markle Officially Engaged

Britain’s Prince Harry is officially engaged to American actress Meghan Markle.

Harry’s father, Prince Charles, made the announcement in a statement Monday.

“His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales is delighted to announce the engagement of Prince Harry to Ms. Meghan Markle.”

The statement said the wedding will take place in Spring 2018 and “Further details about the wedding day will be announced in due course.”

The couple became engaged in London earlier this month, according to the statement.

Harry “informed The Queen and other close members of his family,” the announcement said, and “. . . also sought and received the blessing of Ms. Markle’s parents.”

An official announcement had been expected after Markle said in a recent interview in Vanity Fair about her relationship with Harry:  “We’re a couple. We’re in love.”

Markle’s parents also released a statement, saying “We are incredibly happy for Meghan and Harry. Our daughter has always been a kind and loving person. To see her union with Harry, who shares the same qualities, is a source of great joy for us as parents.”

Markle’s parents, Thomas Markle and Doris Ragland, are divorced.

Markle is best-known for her work in the television drama Suits.

She is a Global Ambassador for World Vision Canada, which campaigns for better education, food and healthcare for children around the world. As well as her humanitarian work, she is known for campaigning for gender equality.

She was married briefly in 2011 to film producer Trevor Engelson, but they split two years later.

The prince and the actress made their first public appearance in September at the Invictus Games in Toronto, a sports event for wounded veterans.

Last year, Harry, who is fifth in line to the throne, issued a statement decrying the media coverage of his girlfriend, condemning the “outright racism and sexism of social media trolls and web article comments,” as well as the racial stereotypes used in some newspapers.

Markle is bi-racial. Her father is white. Her mother is black.

Затриманих добровольців руху «Визволення» везуть до слідчого в Маріуполь – Соболєв

Затриманих у Києві та Житомирській області 26 листопада бійців добровольчих батальйонів «Донбас» і ОУН Анатолія Виногродського і Леоніда Литвиненка везуть до слідчого донецької поліції в Маріуполь. Про це повідомив народний депутат Єгор Соболєв на своїй сторінці у Facebook.

«Обох захоплених наших добровольців везуть до Маріуполя. І другого командира «Донбасу» Анатолія Виногродського (позивний «Гал»), якого взяли в Києві; і командира роти добровольчого батальйону ОУН Леоніда Литвиненка (позивний «Бек»), якого захопили у Новограді-Волинському», – написав нардеп у соцмережі. За його словами, обом інкримінують якийсь напад у Кіровоградській області. «Але везуть перевіреним маршрутом – до слідчого донецької поліції Артема Подвига. Він сьогодні домігся арешту закритим судом у Маріуполі Олександра Новікова, ветерана «Донбасу» з позивним «Хаммер», – констатував Соболєв.

Національна поліція повідомляла, не називаючи імен, про затримання двох колишніх добровольців у Києві та на Житомирщині. За даними поліції, їм раніше оголосили про підозру у вчиненні розбійного нападу влітку цього року на охоронця одного з приватних сільськогосподарських підприємств Кіровоградщини.

Раніше стало відомо, що ще одного активіста руху «Визволення» Олександра Новікова Жовтневий районний суд Маріуполя на Донеччині посадив під арешт на 60 діб без права внесення застави. Як повідомляється, його затримання відбулося у п’ятницю у Києві. Судовий розгляд у цій справі відбувається закрито. Як зазначають у поліції, це відбувається на прохання потерпілого.

Представники руху «Визволення» називають цю справу сфабрикованою.

Amid Allegations, Congressman Steps Aside From House Panel Role

The longest-serving member of the U.S. House of Representatives, Congressman John Conyers of Michigan, said Sunday he is relinquishing his position as the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee while allegations of sexual harassment against him are investigated.

The 88-year-old Conyers last week acknowledged he had reached a $27,000 settlement with a woman who formerly worked on his Washington staff who alleged Conyers fired her after she rebuffed a sexual advance from him. But Conyers continued to deny the allegation and said he settled the case only to avoid protracted litigation over her claim.

The House Ethics Committee is investigating whether Conyers used taxpayer money in his office funds to settle the case and whether he engaged in sexual harassment of other women.

“I deny these allegations, many of which were raised by documents reportedly paid for by a partisan alt-right blogger,” Conyers said. “I very much look forward to vindicating myself and my family.”

Президент Албанії з неофіційним візитом вирушив до південної Сербії

Президент Албанії Ілір Мета здійснює дводенний неофіційний візит до південного сербського міста, значну частку населення якого становлять етнічні албанці.

Під час зустрічі з місцевими чиновниками у місті Медвежа, Meтa оголосив про нову еру відносин між Белградом і Тираною. 

«Ми живемо в нову еру співпраці між Сербією та Албанією як двома країнами, але також як двома народами», – сказав він.

«Наше прагнення – прокласти шлях до Європи», – сказав президент Албанії.

Зоран Станкович, який очолює Координаційну раду муніципалітетів Пресево, Буяновац та Медвежа, сказав, що мета візиту Мети – «показати, що серби, албанці та інші народи, які живуть у цьому регіоні, можуть жити без жодних проблем».

Відносини між двома балканськими країнами залишаються напруженими, переважно через колишню сербську провінцію Косово, де етнічна албанська більшість оголосила про незалежність у 2008 році. Цей крок був визнаний 115 країнами, але не Сербією.

Прем’єр-міністри Сербії та Албанії пообіцяли працювати над поліпшенням зв’язків, коли вони зустрілися в Тирані в травні 2015 року.

Обидві країни Сербія та Албанія є кандидатами на вступ до Європейського Союзу. Албанія є членом НАТО, а Сербія – ні.

Чехія: у празькому аеропорту чекають на Кольченка та інших політв’язнів, утримуваних в Росії

У празькому аеропорту імені Вацлава Гавла, як і в низці інших міжнародних аеропортів України, Чехії, Польщі, у неділю 26 листопада відбулася акція під назвою «Марне очікування», присвячена 28-му дню народження кримського активіста Олександра Кольченка. Таким чином активісти закликали не забувати про справу українських і кримськотатарських політв’язнів, що утримуються в російських тюрмах.

Учасники заходу, переважно чеські та російські активісти, з самого ранку очікували з іменними табличками на прибуття Кольченка, а також з табличкою «трансфер в Гаагу для Володимира Путіна».

«Але Олександр Кольченко не прилетить. Не через скасування рейсу чи погані погодні умови, а тому, що вже більш ніж три роки сидить за кремлівськими ґратами. Там Тундра (прізвисько Олександра Кольченка в середовищі активістів – ред.) зустріне свої двадцять вісім років. Там перебуває ще близько 60 громадян України, яких переслідують за політичними мотивами. Їх ми також будемо чекати. Стільки скільки потрібно», – зазначають організатори акції.

Окрім Праги до акції долучились Варшава та українські міста: Київ, Одеса, Львів.

Цього ж дня президент України Петро Порошенко заявив, що влада продовжує зусилля зі звільнення всіх українців, які перебувають в ув’язненні в Росії і на окупованих територіях. «Україна з тобою, Олександре», – написав Порошенко у Facebook.

Олександра Кольченка разом із режисером Олегом Сенцовим затримали російські спецслужби в анексованому Криму в травні 2014 року за звинуваченням в організації терактів на півострові.

У серпні 2015 року російський Північно-Кавказький окружний військовий суд у російському Ростові-на-Дону засудив Олега Сенцова до 20 років колонії суворого режиму за звинуваченням у терористичній діяльності на території Криму. Кольченко отримав 10 років колонії. Обидва свою провину не визнали.

Провідні правозахисні організації оголосили Сенцова і Кольченка політичними в’язнями. Україна і низка західних країн і міжнародних організацій продовжують вимагати їх звільнення і повернення на батьківщину. Акції на підтримку засуджених проходять не тільки в Україні, але і в інших країнах.

Pope Francis Hopes to Bring Spotlight to Myanmar Refugee Crisis

Pope Francis is to arrive Monday in Myanmar in an effort to draw global attention to the Rohingya refugee crisis.

The leader of the Roman Catholic Church is to visit Bangladesh on Thursday.

The pontiff’s schedule does not include a visit to a refugee camp, but he is expected to meet with a small group of Rohingya in Dhaka, the Bangladeshi capital.

“I am coming to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ, a message of reconciliation, forgiveness, and peace,” Pope Francis told Vatican Radio, “My visit is meant to confirm the Catholic community of Myanmar in its worship of God and its witness to the gospel.”

In recent weeks, Myanmar and Bangladesh have agreed to the return of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya who fled to Bangladesh to escape violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, according to officials from both countries.

Despite the deal, Cardinal Patrick D’Rozario told the French news agency AFP, the situation remains “explosive and tough to resolve.”

“I am hopeful the Rohingya can be returned to Myanmar,” D’Rozario, the Archbishop of Dhaka, told AFP.

Reports said the deal was signed following talks in Myanmar’s capital, Naypyitaw, with Myanmar State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and Bangladesh’s foreign minister, Abul Hassan Mahmood Ali. The French news agency AFP quoted Ali as saying, “This is a primary step. [They] will take back [Rohingya]. Now we have to start working.”

The U.N. refugee agency spokesperson said conditions in Myanmar’s Rakhine state are not in place to enable safe and sustainable returns.

“Refugees are still fleeing, and many have suffered violence, rape, and deep psychological harm,” Adrian Edwards, a spokesperson for the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said Friday.

D’Rozario, who was made cardinal by Francis in 2016, is still looking forward to the pontiff’s visit. There are about 360,000 Catholics in Bangladesh.

“The cries of the Rohingya are the cries of humanity,” D’Rozario said. “These cries ought to be heard and addressed. The main thing is to tell the people ‘We are on your side,” he said.

The cardinal spent two days visiting a refugee camp, speaking with families forced to leave their homes in Rakhine state.

“The international response for relief has been satisfactory, but how long will it last for? Generosity will not continue to flow as it did in the initial phase of the crisis.”

D’Rozario added that Bangladesh, though overcrowded and impoverished, deserves praise for its efforts in helping those fleeing violence.

“There are a lot of tensions, social tensions. Land is not available. It’s a very densely populated country, physically they don’t have any space. I admire the local people [for their restraint], the population has more than doubled. There are environmental issues with all the trees cut to make shelters. There will be landslides when there is big rain,” he said.

About 600,000 people have fled Myanmar for neighboring Bangladesh, which is now undergoing its own crisis as it seeks to accommodate the Rohingya.

“It is not possible for Bangladesh alone to tackle this. The future looks very bleak,” D’Rozario said.

 

Trump Attacks Democrat in Alabama Senate Election

U.S. President Donald Trump sped full throttle Sunday into a special Senate election in Alabama, attacking Democrat Doug Jones as a lawmaker who would be a “puppet” to party leaders if he is elected next month.

In Twitter comments, Trump did not mention Republican nominee Roy Moore, accused of sexually abusing two teenage girls four decades ago when he was a local prosecutor in his early 30s and pursuing other teen girls for dates.

But Trump said Jones, a former federal prosecutor, would be beholden to the two top Democratic leaders in Congress, Senator Charles Schumer and Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi.

“The last thing we need in Alabama and the U.S. Senate is a Schumer/Pelosi puppet who is WEAK on Crime, WEAK on the Border, Bad for our Military and our great Vets, Bad for our 2nd Amendment, AND WANTS TO RAISES TAXES TO THE SKY. Jones would be a disaster!” Trump said, in part referring to the country’s constitutional amendment sanctioning gun ownership.

The December 12 election is for the three remaining years left in the Senate seat once held by Jeff Sessions, who resigned it in early 2017 to join Trump’s Cabinet as attorney general, the country’s top law enforcement position.

Democrats have not won the Alabama Senate seat in two decades, but polls in the southern state show Jones with a small lead after allegations surfaced in a Washington Post story that Moore had abused a 14-year-old girl when he was 32. Another woman later leveled similar accusations against Moore.

Moore has denied the allegations, attacking the newspaper report as “fake news” and accusing establishment Republican lawmakers in Washington of trying to undermine his election chances. Both Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Paul Ryan and two of the party’s former presidential candidates, Senator John McCain and Mitt Romney, have called for Moore to end his candidacy.

The White House at first said the election was up to Alabama voters, but as Trump left last week for the Thanksgiving holiday at his oceanfront resort in Florida, said of the allegations against Moore, “He totally denies it.” Trump did not directly say whether he believes the women’s accusations or Moore’s denial.

“You have to listen to him also,” Trump said of Moore. “He said 40 years ago this did not happen, so, you know.”

 

In a second tweet Sunday, Trump noted that he had endorsed appointed Senator Luther Strange, who lost a Republican primary to Moore in late September. “He shot way up in the polls but it wasn’t enough,” Trump said of Strange. “Can’t let Schumer/Pelosi win this race. Liberal Jones would be BAD!”

Senator Lindsey Graham, another Republican lawmaker who called for Moore to quit the race after the sexual abuse allegations surfaced, told CNN on Sunday that if Moore wins the election, “it becomes an everyday case” for Republicans in Washington of whether Moore should be expelled from the Senate because of the sexual abuse allegations.

“The moral of this story is don’t nominate someone like Roy Moore who could lose a seat most Republicans would win,” Graham said.

Graham told Trump, “You’re mistaken,” if he thinks it would easy for Republicans to align with Moore in the Senate should he win. “I’m not going down the road he’s going,” by supporting Moore.

The Republican party’s already tenuous hold on a Senate majority, now at 52-48, would be cut in half to 51-49 should Jones win.

The party is facing difficult issues in the coming weeks as it attempts to overhaul the country’s complex tax code and approve a spending plan to keep the government funded through next September.

Germany’s Merkel Faces Pressure for Quick Coalition Talks

Chancellor Angela Merkel faced pressure from inside her conservative bloc Sunday to aim for a quick coalition deal with center-left rivals without conceding too much ground on core issues such as immigration.

Talks between Merkel’s conservative bloc and two smaller parties to form a previously untried coalition collapsed a week ago. Merkel’s partners in the outgoing government, the center-left Social Democrats, initially refused to consider a repeat but said Friday they’re open to holding talks.

If Merkel can’t put together a coalition, the only options would be a minority government or a new election, months after the Sept. 24 vote.

On Sunday, the youth wing of Merkel’s Union bloc published a resolution stating that the conservatives must not enter a coalition “at any price.” Its leader, Paul Ziemiak, said any deal must contain recognizable conservative policies, particularly on migration and public finances.

Merkel’s conservatives have pushed to curb migrant flows and are keen to ensure that Germany sticks to a balanced budget.

Negotiations “should be viewed as failed” if there is no deal by Christmas and the conservatives should instead aim for an unprecedented minority government, the resolution said.

It remains to be seen what party leaders will make of the proposed timetable, which looks unrealistic. Meanwhile, Merkel’s outgoing Cabinet remains in office on a caretaker basis.

The Social Democrats, smarting from a disastrous result in September, have made clear they would demand a high price for cooperating again with Merkel’s Union bloc.

“As things stand, Merkel is not in a position in which she can set conditions,” prominent Social Democrat Malu Dreyer told the daily Trierscher Volksfreund on Saturday.

Merkel’s chief of staff, Peter Altmaier, told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung newspaper that her caretaker government won’t take decisions that could bind its successor’s hands on “major political questions.” That includes French President Emmanuel Macron’s proposals for reforming the European Union.

Altmaier said the “constructive restraint” applies to “all European questions” as well as domestic matters, but said Berlin’s position on Brexit won’t be affected.

Pope Holds Minute of Silence for Egypt Mosque Attack Victims

The pope has led a minute of silence in St. Peter’s Square for the victims of the deadly attack on a mosque in Egypt.

Francis said following the traditional Angelus greeting on Sunday that the victims “were praying in that moment. We also pray in silence for them.”

The pope said the attack on Friday “brought great pain,” adding that he continued to pray for the dead and the wounded “and for the whole of that community, that has been so hard hit.”

The pope previously expressed in a telegram his “strong condemnation” of the attack, which killed 305 people in the deadliest assault by Islamic extremists in modern Egyptian history.

The pontiff also asked for prayers for his six-day trip Myanmar and Bangladesh, for which he departs later Sunday.

Former Soviet Dissident: Foreign Policy Styled After Realpolitik ‘Absolutely Wrong’ 

In February 1986, Natan Sharansky, a Soviet political prisoner, crossed the Glienicke Bridge linking East and West Berlin under American diplomatic escort, thus ending nine years of Gulag-style labor camps in Siberia and dark, cold cells in Moscow.

“Thirteen years after I asked to be deprived of Soviet citizenship, I was finally deprived of Soviet citizenship,” he said.

Sharansky emigrated to Israel, took up several ministerial positions in the Israeli government, including deputy prime minister. 

In an interview with VOA on the sidelines of events marking the centennial of the Bolshevik Revolution, Sharansky recalls his battles with the KGB and calls on leaders of the free world to take up the mantle left by visionaries such as Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher and continue the legacy of democracy.

WATCH Sharansky: ‘By Sun, I See That We Were Going to the West’

‘By sun, I see that we were going to the West’

“They were taking me somewhere, they refused me to tell me where; by sun, I see that we were going to the West. After three or four hours, it was clear that we were no longer in the Soviet Union. I demanded [to know]: ‘Is this hijacking? What is happening to me?’”

He was finally informed by one of the four KGB men accompanying him that the Soviet state had determined that his actions were “not worthy of a Soviet citizen” and he was being expelled.

“This is how I understood I am free,” Sharansky told VOA.

Sharansky’s release was negotiated along with an exchange of spies between the U.S. and the then-Soviet Union. The transfer was layered in drama, with the Soviets seeking to keep their control of the political activist to the very last minute, while the Americans were pushing for their own concessions.

The American side insisted that Sharansky would cross the bridge a half-hour before the spies were exchanged, making clear that the “spying for the Americans” charge the Soviets put on Sharansky were groundless; he was a human rights activist both on the day he was sentenced and on the day he was freed.

Sharansky told VOA that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, U.S. President Ronald Reagan’s counterpart, complained to him when the former prisoner and the USSR leader later met. 

“You say of all the people you’re grateful, No. 1 Reagan, No. 2 [Soviet dissident Andrey Dmitriyevich] Sakhorov, only No. 3 is me. I’m the one who released you!” Gorbachev said, according to Sharansky.

Sharansky insists, then and now, that the order of thanks for the collapse of the Soviet Union, and any authoritarian regime for that matter, is as follows: first of all, dissidents such as Andrey Sakharov in their time who “keep this spark of freedom of alive, I know this is very difficult, it needs a lot of courage and in many cases it has a tragic ending;” secondly, leaders like Reagan and Margaret Thatcher “who saw the real nature of the regime and understood it was an evil empire and you have to stand up to it and link the question of human rights with international policy.”

‘In the interest of détente, in the interest of peace, in the interest of stability’

Sharansky acknowledges, though, not everyone holding leadership positions in democratic societies treats the task of supporting democratic movements in totalitarian regimes with equal enthusiasm.

In the era of Reagan and Thatcher, international politics was largely dictated by “realpolitik,” he says, referring to a policy approach dominated by concerns for power juggling instead of moral objectives.

“Even if it was absolutely wrong morally, in the interest of détente, in the interest of peace, in the interest of stability,” Western societies largely practiced a noninterference or little-interference policy in the realm of human rights back then, he said.

Today, he says, there’s also the belief that it may be better not to demand change from dictatorships, which often appear invincible, at least on the outside, citing China as a regime that “is strong, or looks strong.”

“There are terrible human rights violations, and the world doesn’t ask questions, because they do not have the courage to demand a change to the policy,” he said.

The seeming habit of governments of bringing out a long list of “interests” or problems that “have to be dealt with first” before human rights issues, often put down as “abstract values,” are addressed, is “an absolutely wrong approach,” in Sharansky’s opinion; nevertheless, this approach, in his words, “is very typical,” citing his own experience.

WATCH: Sharansky: ‘Our Representatives Were Absolutely Shocked’

Chinese official ‘didn’t look like the one shocked by the question’

In 1997, while serving as minister of Industry and Trade in Israel, Sharansky met with a visiting Chinese delegation. 

“I said: Mr. Vice President, I was in a political prison for many years, I know how important it was that the [outside] world were asking about my fate, so I’m asking you, what about the fate of Chinese political prisoners?”

“He [the Chinese vice president] didn’t look like the one shocked by the question, but our representatives, our foreign affairs officials, were absolutely shocked! I think after this, there was some kind of order that I didn’t have any more meetings with Chinese [delegations]; they tried to prevent me from asking this kind of question again!” Sharansky said.

In the end, he says, Israel’s ability to affect Chinese government’s behavior is limited, “but it’s very important that when the American president and leaders of European countries are meeting with Chinese leaders that they put the question, the fate of dissidents on the top of their agenda.”

“I know that nowadays more often it doesn’t happen than happen,” he conceded.

​Reagan and Thatcher’s legacy

The former Soviet political prisoner sums up the legacy of Reagan and Thatcher in the roles they played in bringing down the Soviet empire: “Your solidarity with people struggling for freedom is not only your moral principle, it’s your basic interest.” His message for the new generation of leaders: “the more you understand this and your policy reflects this, the more you can influence the world.”

He attributes the reluctance to confront authoritarian regimes to a lack of understanding, due to deceptive appearances, of what goes on inside those regimes.

WATCH: Sharansky: The Nature of Totalitarian Regime

Anatomy of totalitarian regime

In every totalitarian regime, there are three categories of people, Sharansky says: a small group of true believers, a vast number of “double thinkers,” and dissidents.

He describes double thinkers as those “who don’t believe in the regime, who don’t believe in its ideology, but are afraid to speak the truth, so they pretend.” However, observers from the outside often mistake double thinkers, who tend to make up the majority of these societies, as true believers, he says.

“You see, these massive parades, everybody shouting ‘welcome’ to their leaders, everybody crying and weeping when the leader is dead, all these people must be true believers; look how strong this regime is!” Sharansky explained.

Such mass shows of support often can deceive outsiders and lead to dissidents’ voices being discounted when in fact “dissidents are usually people who are very connected to what is happening inside the minds of people” and understand the regime’s weaknesses, Sharansky said. 

“That’s why my friend Andrei Amalrik, 20 years before the Soviet Union fell apart, predicted that it would fall apart, explaining exactly what’s happening in the minds of the people. … He predicted it 20 years before it happened,” he added.

Sovietologists were wrong

Soviet dissident Amalrik published a book in 1970 titled Will the Soviet Union Survive until 1984? He said that he originally intended to use the year 1980 in the book’s title, but settled on 1984 instead, in recognition of British writer George Orwell’s seminal political novel 1984, which depicted the horrors of life under totalitarianism.

In contrast, “Sovietologists [academics who specialize on the former Soviet Union], even one year before it happened, before the Soviet Union fell apart, were writing and saying how strong the [Soviet] system is,” Sharansky said, adding the same can be said about other dictatorships.

WATCH: Sharansky: ‘It’s Not They Who Guarantee Work and Food’

Mitterrand: ‘I was wrong’

In the epilogue of his memoir, Fear No Evil, Sharansky wrote about a meeting with then-French Prime Minister François Mitterrand that underscores the odds against which dissidents and their supporters had to fight in their struggle to be heard.

During the meeting, Mitterrand pointed to a chair Sharansky was sitting in and said: “Avital [Sharansky’s wife] sat there often when she came to ask for my assistance. I always wanted to help her, but the truth is, I never believed she had a chance. I thought she was naïve, and that they’d never let you out. But your wife was right and I was wrong.”

Sharansky: ‘I Prefer to Be a Free Person in Their Prison’

«Голову Леніна» розбили у Кривому Розі біля пам’ятника жертвам Голодомору

У суботу ввечері в Кривому Розі біля пам’ятника жертвам Голодомору та політичних репресій активісти розбили скульптурну голову Леніна. Про це Радіо Свобода повідомила одна з організаторів акції Тетяна Соловйова. 

«Активісти молодіжної організації «Сокіл» принесли «голову Леніна». Це голова з пам’ятника, який раніше стояв на околиці Кривого Рогу і був скинутий в рамках «народної декомунізації», оскільки влада декомунізацію в місті майже не проводила. Символічно – оскільки Ленін привів комунізм, який і влаштував голодомори, – ця голова була розбита як встановлення історичної справедливості», – сказала Соловйова.

Молоді люди розтрощили «голову Леніна» кувалдою. Пізніше уламки викинули в смітник.

Як розповіла Тетяна Соловйова, цього дня у Кривому Розі активісти також провели мовчазну ходу та мітинг-реквієм до Дня пам’яті жертв голодоморів. Пам’ять загиблих вшанували хвилиною мовчання та панахидою, учасники акції також прочитали вірші про Голодомор. У заході взяли участь члени ВО «Свобода» та низки громадських організацій – «Сокіл», «Самооборона Кривбасу», «Інгульська паланка Війська запорізького низового», «Правий сектор», «СічКР», «Просвіта».

У лютому 2016 року в Дніпропетровській облдержадміністрації повідомили, що в області в рамках декомунізації демонтували 116 пам’яток та перейменували понад 1,8 тисяч вулиць. Тоді ж в ОДА зазначили, що Кривий Ріг не розпочав «декомунізацію»: у місті не змінили жодного топоніму. 

За даними істориків, Дніпропетровська область є однією з тих областей, які найбільше постраждали від Голодомору 1932-33 років. В останню суботу листопада в Україні вшановують пам’ять жертв Голодомору.

На захід України йдуть дощі з мокрим снігом, які поширяться на майже всю територію – синоптики

У неділю, 26 листопада, у більшості західних областей України очікується дощ і мокрий сніг, які вже з понеділка, крім східних, Сумської, Чернігівської та Полтавської областей, поширяться на решту території, повідомили в Укргідрометцентрі.

Крім того, за даними синоптиків, у Карпатах в понеділок очікується лавинна небезпека.

«27 листопада у зв’язку з інтенсивними опадами, у високогір’ї Івано-Франківської та східної частини Закарпатської областей очікується значна лавинна небезпека (3 рівень)», – йдеться в повідомленні.

Синоптик Наталка Діденко на сторінці у Facebook пояснює, що зміна погоди пов’язана з атмосферним фронтом, який рухається з Польщі.

«У неділю дійде до західних областей і принесе сильні дощі. У Карпатах з мокрим снігом. Більшість території – або хмарно, або тумани. На сході – слизькі дороги, ожеледиця. Вночі +4-2, на сході -3-7 градусів. Вдень +3+7, на сході до -2 градусів. В Криму та в Одеській області +6+11 градусів. У Києві завтра переважно без опадів, місцями туман, температура до +4 градусів. Опади дійдуть до Києва у понеділок. Підготуйтеся», – повідомила Наталка Діденко.

У Держслужбі з надзвичайних ситуацій попереджають, що 26-27 листопада через рясні опади очікується підвищення рівня води на річках Закарпатської області до одного метра.

«У деяких регіонах вже випав перший сніг, утворивши численні затори на автошляхах, а на заході України, у районі Чорногірського масиву, з цього тижня розпочався лавинонебезпечний сезон», – повідомили рятувальники.

У ДСНС наголошують на важливості враховувати ускладнення погодних умов при плануванні поїздок і дозвілля.

Президент RFE/RL щодо закону про «іноземних агентів»: працюватимемо надалі для російськомовної аудиторії

Президент Радіо Вільна Європа/Радіо Свобода Томас Кент заявив, що всі проекти для російськомовної аудиторії продовжать свою роботу, оскільки жодний новинний ресурс не названий «іноземним агентом» у зв’язку з підписанням президентом Росії Володимиром Путіним закону про статус «іноземного агента» для ЗМІ.

«Ми не можемо спекулювати наразі на темі впливу нового закону, оскільки жодна новинна організація ще не названа спеціально «іноземним агентом», і обмеження, які накладаються на таких «агентів», не були оголошені», – йдеться у заяві Томаса Кента.

Президент Радіо Вільна Європа/Радіо Свобода також наголосив, що всі інформаційні ресурси корпорації на території Росії продовжують свою роботу.

«Ми, як і раніше, віддані продовженню нашої журналістської праці в інтересах надання точних і об’єктивних новин нашій російськомовній аудиторії», – додав Томас Кент.

Сьогодні президент Росії Володимир Путін підписав закон про засоби масової інформації – «іноземних агентів», згідно з яким, ЗМІ, які отримують фінансування з-за кордону, можуть бути визнані «іноземними агентами».

Раніше Міністерство юстиції Росії надіслало Радіо Свобода і телеканалу «Настоящее время» повідомлення про можливі обмеження в їхній роботі. Таке ж повідомлення отримав ще один проект корпорації Радіо Вільна Європа/Радіо Свобода сайт «Idel.Реалії», а також новий медіа-проект Російської служби Радіо Свобода «Сибирь.Реалии». У листі Міністерства юстиції Росії не уточнювалося, які заходи можуть бути вжиті після внесення змін до законодавства.

Missing American Military Personnel Identified After Plane Crash

The three American sailors who missing since their plane crashed into the Philippine Sea were identified by the U.S. Navy on Saturday as Lt. Steven Combs, Aviation Boatswain’s Mate Airman Matthew Chialastri, and Aviation Ordnanceman Airman Apprentice Bryan Grosso.

The Navy said Thursday that eight U.S. Navy and Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force ships, three helicopter squadrons and maritime patrol aircraft had covered nearly 1,000 square nautical miles in the two-day search for the missing sailors.

On Thursday, search and rescue efforts were halted for the three sailors, who were lost at sea Wednesday when a U.S. Navy transport plane crashed into the western Pacific Ocean.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with our lost shipmates and their families,” said Rear Admiral Marc Dalton, commander, Task Force 70.

“As difficult as this is, we are thankful for the rapid and effective response that led to the rescue of eight of our shipmates, and I appreciate the professionalism and dedication shown by all who participated in the search efforts.”

​Routine mission

The Navy said the twin-propeller C2-A Greyhound aircraft plummeted into the sea about 925 kilometers southeast of Okinawa while it was on a routine mission taking passengers and cargo from a U.S. base in Japan to the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier.

It said the eight people were rescued about 40 minutes later and taken to the Reagan where they are reported in good condition. There was no immediate explanation for the crash, and the Navy said the incident is being investigated.

U.S. President Donald Trump, at his oceanfront Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida for the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, said via Twitter that he is monitoring the situation.

“Prayers for all involved,” he said.

Joint exercises with Japan

The Reagan was operating in the Philippine Sea as part of joint exercises with Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force, part of 10 days of training designed to increase defensive readiness and interoperability in air and sea maneuvers between the two countries.

More than 14,000 U.S. personnel are participating in the drills, which also include the guided-missile destroyers USS Stethem, USS Chafee and USS Mustin, and a maritime patrol and reconnaissance squadron.

Fifth accident this year

Wednesday’s crash was the fifth major Navy incident in Asian waters this year. Two fatal accidents left 17 sailors dead and prompted the Defense Department to remove of eight top Navy officers from their posts, including the 7th Fleet commander.

The destroyer USS John S. McCain collided with an oil tanker in August off Singapore, leaving 10 U.S. sailors dead and five injured. The USS Fitzgerald, another destroyer, collided with a container ship in waters off Japan in June, killing seven sailors.

After investigations, the Navy concluded the collisions were avoidable, resulting from widespread failures by commanders and crewmembers, who did not recognize and respond quickly to the emergencies as they unfolded. The Navy has called for improved training, and increasing sleep and stress management for sailors.

Separately, in January, the USS Antietam ran aground near Yosuka, Japan, and the USS Lake Champlain collided with a South Korean fishing vessel in May.

 

 

Fugitive Catalan Leader Launches Campaign From Belgium

The fugitive leader of Catalonia’s separatist movement has launched his campaign for the upcoming Catalan elections from Belgium, where he awaits extradition.

Carles Puigdemont, who wants to be re-elected as regional president, launched “Together for Catalonia” from Bruges on Saturday. Spanish media reports that 90 of the candidates he chose traveled from Catalonia in northeastern Spain to the Belgian city for the launch.

Puigdemont and four former members of his government fled to Belgium following a declaration of independence by Catalonia’s parliament on Oct. 27 and a swift crackdown by Spanish authorities, which included firing his government and calling regional elections for Dec. 21.

Puigdemont’s extradition could take several weeks or longer, meaning he can run his campaign from abroad. He faces arrest if he returns to Spain.

France: Macron Outlines Plan Tackling Violence Against Women

President Emmanuel Macron has announced an initiative to address violence and harassment against women in France, with plans aimed at erasing the sense of shame that breeds silence among victims and changing France’s sexist culture.

In a speech on Saturday marking the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, Macron laid out a plan to encourage women to take action, strengthen laws against offenders and educating citizens on the issue – starting from nursery school.

He said that 123 women died of violence against them in France last year. Holding a moment of silence for them, he said: “It is time for shame to change camps.”

US Reverses Decision to Close Washington PLO Office

The U.S. has reversed its decision that would have closed the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) office in Washington.

The U.S. said last week the PLO had to close its office because the organization had violated a little-known provision in U.S. law prohibiting a PLO  Washington office if the organization asked the International Criminal Court to investigate Israelis or prosecute Israelis for crimes against Palestinians.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas asked the international court earlier this year to “open an investigation and to prosecute Israeli officials for their involvement in settlement activities and aggressions against our people.”

Mustafa Barghouti, a Palestinian legislator, told the Associated Press that the U.S. made a “correct” decision in reversing its original choice.  He said the first decision should not have been made because “the United States cannot play the role of a mediator and at the same time take the side of the Israelis against the Palestinians  …We cannot have peace in this region if the United States government continues to be biased to the Israeli positions.”

A State Department spokesman says the U.S. has “advised the PLO Office to limit its activities to those related to achieving a lasting, comprehensive peace between the Israelis and Palestinians.”

 

US Wrestles With the Issue of Asylum

When people come to the U.S. seeking protection because they have suffered persecution or are afraid they will suffer persecution, they are permitted to file for asylum regardless of their immigration status.

U.S. law offers asylum to those people facing persecution in their home countries on the basis of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular group.

WATCH: What is Asylum and How Does it Work in the US?

There are two kinds of asylum: affirmative and defensive. An immigrant may claim affirmative asylum within one year of their last arrival in the United States. An immigrant may request defensive asylum while fighting an order of deportation.

During the years 2013-2015, an average of about 25,000 people received asylum each year. Almost twice as many affirmative applicants were approved as defensive applicants.

Detention

Applicants must be physically present in the U.S. to apply for asylum.

Current policy is to detain asylum-seekers, often when they arrive at a port of entry. Waiting while their cases go through the courts can mean spending months in a detention center.

“We are closing the doors on so many people, and the first thing that they get when they come here to the U.S. is like ‘OK, we’re going to lock you up,’” said Rosa Santana, a detainee visitation coordinator at First Friends immigrant advocacy group. “We don’t know what these people have been through, their traumas. Putting them in detention is another trauma for them.”

First Friends is a local nonprofit in Jersey City, New Jersey, and its visitation groups visit immigrant detainees at the Elizabeth Detention Center, Hudson County Correctional Center, Bergen County Jail and Essex County Correctional Center-Delaney Hall.

Credible fear

Asylum-seekers must apply within one year from the date of last arrival or show proof of an “exceptional” change based on extraordinary circumstances. Above all, they must prove to the asylum officer or to an immigration court judge that they have a “credible fear” of returning to their home country.

To Judy Pepenella, community organizer at the Conservative Society for Action in New York, asylum is a “touchy” subject.

“I have a problem, personally, and it has to be honesty. You know, just because you have to get out and you don’t have the ability to become a citizen and you don’t want go back, it has to truly be an issue,” Pepenella told VOA.

Pepenella, a Republican and conservative, said though she doesn’t believe in jailing asylum-seekers, each case must be looked at on its merit.

“When they come here, are they gonna become citizens, or are they going to stay on an immigrant or not American basis? If you come, become a citizen, become part of the process, become part of what makes America great,” Pepenella added.

WATCH: Asylum in the US: The Pros and Cons

Future of asylum

The White House wants to tighten standards in the U.S. asylum system.

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has claimed the current asylum system is “subject to rampant abuse and fraud” and he called for tighter rules for people seeking asylum in the United States.

Sessions said current policies allow applicants to take advantage of a “broken” court system that is backlogged by about 600,000 cases nationwide, although not all are asylum cases.

Figures from the months of July, August and September of 2016 and 2017, while hardly conclusive, indicate that asylum cases were being adjudicated at a faster rate since Trump took office in 2017 than the previous year — and that the percentages of approval, at least for affirmative cases, have fallen off slightly.

July 2016: 1,957 cases adjudicated; 996 affirmative approvals

August 2016: 2,262 cases adjudicated; 884 affirmative approvals

September 2016: 2,232 cases adjudicated, 967 affirmative approvals

 

July 2017: 3,934 cases adjudicated; 1,252 affirmative approvals

August 2017: 5,336 cases adjudicated; 1,543 affirmative approvals

September 2017: 4,255 cases adjudicated; 1,513 affirmative approvals

Pepenella struggles with asylum. 

“I’m not saying everyone is lying, please make sure you understand that, there are nations that people need help to get out of,” she said.

But Santana sees it in stark, human terms. 

“We know that they are not lying. We can hear the desperation, you know, when we talk to them,” she said. “Every day we have tears in our eyes from the stories that we hear. Because we know that people are really risking their lives to come here.”

Trial of Turkish-Iranian Trader to Start Without Main Suspect

The politically fraught trial of a Turkish-Iranian businessman accused of running a multibillion-dollar scheme to evade U.S. sanctions on Iran gets underway next week but is widely expected to start without the main suspect: Reza Zarrab.

Zarrab is a 33-year-old multimillionaire of dual Iranian-Turkish citizenship with business interests in Turkey and the United Arab Emirates, and ties to the governments of Turkey and Iran.

He was arrested in Florida in March 2016 while on a family trip to Disney World and later moved to New York to face criminal charges of helping Iran evade U.S. sanctions between 2010 and 2015 by laundering money through the U.S. financial system and bribing Turkish officials.

​US-Turkey relations

The impending trial has become a flashpoint in deteriorating U.S.-Turkish relations.

Turkish President Recept Tayyip Erdogan has personally lobbied the U.S. to release Zarrab, raising questions that Erdogan and other Turkish official are worried Zarrab could implicate them with bribery and corruption.

Meanwhile, the recent transfer of Zarrab from a federal detention center in New York to an undisclosed location has prompted speculation that he is cooperating with U.S. prosecutors, possibly on unrelated matters of interest to Turkey.

Zarrab is accused of using a network of front companies in Turkey and the UAE to disguise hundreds of millions of dollars of business transactions on behalf of the Iranian government and other Iranian entities.

One entity, Mahan Air, is charged with ferrying fighters to Syria. Among other things, Zarrab is accused of shipping gold to Iran in exchange for Iranian oil and natural gas in a scheme known as “gold for gas.”

To facilitate his scheme, Zarrab allegedly paid tens of millions of dollars to Turkish government officials and bank executives.

The sanctions, aimed at Iran’s access to U.S. financial institutions, were lifted after Iran struck a deal with the U.S. and other major world powers in 2015 to keep a peaceful nuclear program.

Eight other people, including Zarrab’s 39-year-old brother, Mohammad Zarrab, and a former minister of economy, Mehmet Zafer Caglayan, have been indicted on charges related to the scheme.

But only one other, Mehmet Atilla, a former deputy general manager of Halkbank, one of Turkey’s largest banks, has been arrested.

Their trial has been repeatedly postponed and is now scheduled to start Monday in New York with jury selection.

Allegations

In court filings, prosecutors have alleged that Zarrab has had a personal relationship with Erdogan and that Erdogan may have known of of Zarrab’s sanctions-busting scheme.

Erdogan is not accused of any wrongdoing, but he and other Turkish officials have slammed the case as a conspiracy against Turkey.

Erdogan has repeatedly pressed President Donald Trump and former President Barack Obama to drop the case. In September, he said Trump told him that the “prosecution is out of his jurisdiction.”

Yet as Zarrab’s trial draws near, there are indications that Zarrab may be negotiating a deal with U.S. prosecutors.

For starters, his whereabouts remains a mystery.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons website, Zarrab was “released” from the Metropolitan Correction Center, a federal detention center in New York, Nov. 8.

But the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan, where Zarrab will be tried, says he remains in “federal custody.”

Nick Biase, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, confirmed Zarrab’s detention to VOA but declined to elaborate.

Indication he’s talking

Legal experts say Zarrab’s release from federal detention is an indication that he’s talking to prosecutors as part of a guilty plea deal.

“One cannot be sure, but the most likely explanation for the release of a detained defendant, in the absence of any formal release from detention, is that he is in the custody of the FBI,” said Daniel Richman, a former federal prosecutor now a professor at Columbia University in New York. “This move rarely happens, but has occurred in extraordinary circumstances.”

Benjamin Brafman, Zarrab’s lead attorney, did not respond to a request for comment.

In recent weeks, Brafman and Zarrab’s other lawyers have not participated in key pretrial proceedings, such as providing questions for prospective jurors. That has fueled speculation that Zarrab may skip his own trial.

In an Oct. 30 court filing, Victor Rocco, an attorney for Atilla, Zarrab’s co-defendant, wrote that it appeared “likely that Mr. Atilla will be the only defendant appearing at trial.”

Eric Jaso, a former federal prosecutor now a partner at the Spiro Harrison law firm in Short Hills, New Jersey, said the absence of Zarrab’s lawyers from court proceedings could mean Zarrab is cooperating with the government.

Adding to the mystery, the federal judge overseeing the case dropped Zarrab’s name from the title of the case in an order issued Monday and replaced it with Atilla’s name.

The title change suggests Atilla will be the only defendant on trial Monday, Richman said.

“It is also consistent with Zarrab’s having already entered a guilty plea, although that is not necessarily the case,” Richman said.

Acting U.S. Attorney Joon Kim, whose office is prosecuting the case, gave no indication last week that his office has dropped the case against Zarrab.

“This case, our case, the prosecution that’s going on and we’ll start next week in the courthouse, was brought and will continue to be brought by career prosecutors, by career FBI agents and investigators,” Kim said at a press conference.

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