Month: February 2018

«Нафтогаз України» повідомив про перемогу у Стокгольмському арбітражі над російським «Газпромом»

Компанія НАК «Нафтогаз України» повідомила про перемогу у Стокгольмському арбітражі над російським газовим монополістом, компанією «Газпромом» у суперечці щодо обсягів газу для транзиту, йдеться в Twitter-повідомленні компанії.

«Стокгольмський арбітраж задовольнив вимоги «Нафтогазу» щодо компенсації за недопоставлені «Газпромом» обсяги газу для транзиту. За рішенням Стокгольмського арбітражу «Нафтогаз» домігся компенсації у сумі 4,63 мільярда доларів США за недопоставку «Газпромом» погоджених обсягів газу для транзиту. За результатами двох арбітражних проваджень у Стокгольмі «Газпром» має сплатити 2,56 мільярдів доларів США на користь «Нафтогазу», – йдеться в повідомленні.

У російському «Газпромі» рішення Стокгольмського арбітражу поки що не коментували.

«Нафтогаз України» 31 травня 2017 року заявив, що отримав окреме рішення Стокгольмського арбітражу у провадженні проти «Газпрому» за контрактом на постачання газу. За повідомленням компанії, Стокгольмський арбітраж задовольнив вимогу «Нафтогазу» щодо перегляду ціни в контракті на постачання газу з «Газпромом» з урахуванням ринкових умов, а також скасував вимоги російського монополіста за умовою «бери або плати» і повністю скасував заборону на реекспорт Україною газу. За принципом «бери або плати», прописаним у контракті 2009 року, Україна мала щороку купувати 52 мільярди кубометрів газу або, навіть не купуючи, оплачувати його вартість.

У «Газпромі» ж заявили, що принцип «бери або плати» не скасований, але не пояснили цю позицію.

У жовтні 2014 року компанія «Нафтогаз України» звернулася до Стокгольмського арбітражу з вимогою перегляду контракту на транзит газу з російським «Газпромом», а також компенсації у зв’язку з недостатніми обсягами прокачування.

Кличко: Київ впорався з подоланням наслідків негоди

Міський голова Києва Віталій Кличко заявив, що столичні служби впоралися з подоланням наслідків негоди, про що свідчить безперебійна робота комунального транспорту.

«Зараз ми бачимо, що на переважній кількості вулиць транспорт рухається нормально. Але є місця, де люди безвідповідально кидають свої автівки на узбіччях і заважають прибирати сніг, спричиняють затори», – сказав Кличко під час оперативної наради.

Він доручив керівникам районів і комунальних служб бути готовими до більш потужних опадів.

Автомобілі, що заважатимуть розчищати дороги від снігу, як заявили у мерії, евакуйовуватимуть.

Крім того, ввечері 28 лютого та зранку (з 5:00 до 10:00) 1 березня буде обмежено в’їзд великовагового та великовантажного транспорту в столицю.

За даними Укргідрометцентру,  1 березня в Україні, крім заходу, внаслідок переміщення активного циклону очікуються складні погоді умови: в більшості областей сильний сніг, хуртовини, снігові замети, вночі на Миколаївщині, Кіровоградщині, Дніпропетровщині та Полтавщині дуже сильні снігопади; на  Приазов’ї подекуди налипання мокрого снігу та ожеледь; вночі та вранці пориви вітру 15-20 м/с, на дорогах країни ожеледиця. Денна температура повітря -10-12° на Заході, на решті території – в середньому -4-6 морозу. У Києві 1 березня снігопад і -5-7° морозу вдень.

Trump Leads Tributes to Late Evangelist Billy Graham

U.S. President Donald Trump led dignitaries Wednesday in honoring American evangelist Billy Graham, whose body laid in state in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda, following his death last week at the age of 99.

Trump said the life of Graham and his conservative Christian message “changed our country, and it changed, in fact, the entire world.”

The U.S. leader said, “We can only imagine the number of lives touched by the preaching and the prayers of Billy Graham – the hearts he changed, the sorrows he eased, and the joy he brought to so many.  The testimony is endless.”

“Today, we give thanks for this extraordinary life,” Trump said.  “And it’s very fitting that we do so right here in the Rotunda of the United States Capitol, where the memory of the American people is enshrined.” 

With Graham’s pine casket positioned in the center of the Rotunda, the man known as “America’s Pastor” is getting a rare honor, last given to civil rights icon Rosa Parks upon her death in 2005.

Members of Graham’s family joined congressional leaders, as well as Trump and his wife, first lady Melania Trump, to watch as the casket was carried into the Capitol.

After the short ceremony, members of the public started to stroll by the casket to pay their respects.

Graham’s funeral will take place Friday in Charlotte, North Carolina, which Trump plans to attend.

The evangelist was a spiritual adviser and acquaintance of every U.S. president from Harry Truman in the 1940s to Barack Obama in the 21st century.  Graham was often asked to pray or preach at public national U.S. events, such as inaugurations of new presidents.

He preached to more than 200 million people in 185 countries and territories.  He staged massive rallies, called the Billy Graham Crusades, that were attended by thousands of people, and reached millions through television, radio and satellite.

Graham’s Christian rallies presaged that of other U.S. televangelists, although none has reached his prominence.

But he was not above criticism.  He generally stayed on the sidelines of the civil rights movement of the 1960s and did not attend marches that included many religious leaders – something he later said he regretted.

Graham was caught on tape telling his close friend President Richard Nixon that “Jews don’t know how I really feel about what they’re doing to this country.”  He was remorseful and apologized for his remarks when they were revealed.

Graham’s literal interpretation of the Bible led him to oppose gay rights and condemn homosexuality as a “sinister form of perversion.”

 

 

Футбол: «Динамо» зарахована технічна поразка після рішення CAS у «маріупольській справі»

Українська футбольна прем’єр-ліга зарахувала технічні поразки трьом командам київського «Динамо» в матчах з командами «Маріуполя» у серпні 2017 року, повідомляє прес-служба УПЛ.

У прем’єр-лізі зазначили, що організація отримала лист від Федерації футболу України, який повідомив, що 19 лютого 2018 року Спортивний арбітражний суд (CAS) у швейцарській Лозанні відмовив «Динамо» у задоволенні скарг на рішення Апеляційного комітету ФФУ від 14 листопада 2017 року у справі про неявку основної та двох молодіжних команд київського клубу на матчі в Маріуполі в Донецькій області.

У серпні 2017 року «Динамо» відмовилося грати матч чемпіонату України в прифронтовому Маріуполі проти однойменного клубу, посилаючись на відсутність гарантій безпеки.

11 вересня контрольно-дисциплінарний комітет ФФУ ухвалив рішення зарахувати технічні поразки з рахунком 0:3 за неявку команд клубу «Динамо» на матчі чемпіонатів U-19, U-21 та Української прем’єр-ліги, які мали відбутися в Маріуполі.

14 листопада Апеляційний комітет Федерації футболу України відхилив скаргу клубу «Динамо» (Київ) на рішення комітету ФФУ.

In US, Unclaimed Bodies Pile Up as Payments Wither, Overdoses Rise

Who takes care of the unclaimed dead, the people who were homeless or estranged from family members, or who outlived all their kin, and left no assets behind?

 

The answer is usually funeral homes that get reimbursed by state or local governments for the cost of cremation or burial. But payments are not keeping up with ever-rising expenses in some places, like Massachusetts, meaning the number of funeral homes willing to shoulder the burden is dwindling. In at least one state, West Virginia, drug overdose victims have used up nearly all the money set aside for the unclaimed dead.

 

“These are human beings, someone’s mother, father, sister, brother,” said Peter Stefan, a funeral director in his 70s who buries dozens of unclaimed bodies a year in central Massachusetts. “What do you do with these people? If I leave this place this way, the poor won’t have too many options.”

 

The $1,110 reimbursement for funeral directors who bury the indigent and unclaimed in Massachusetts hasn’t risen in 35 years. The total cost for their time, the casket, transportation of the corpse and a burial plot can be double that, they say.

 

Cremation is cheaper, but that’s impossible if, as is required in some places including Massachusetts, funeral directors can’t find kin to sign off. That leaves them scrambling to find discounts or covering some costs themselves.

 

“As long as you have two or three funeral homes that are willing to do this, it’s not a problem,” said Robert Lawler, a Boston funeral director who buries about 100 unclaimed bodies a year. “But what happens when we decide we can’t do it anymore?”

 

Directors recently became eligible for an extra $1,000 if they accept bodies from the Massachusetts medical examiner’s office, which investigates suicides and suspicious and accidental deaths. But that accounts only for some bodies.

 

About 15 states provide some funding for unclaimed body burials or cremations, while the rest have pushed the cost to local governments, said Scott Gilligan, general counsel for the National Funeral Directors Association.

Ohio, for example, used to pay $750 before shifting the burden to local governments. Now, some communities offer a set fee, while some smaller towns often won’t even budget for it and funeral directors have to fight to just get paid $350, Gilligan said.

 

“A lot of times, they just do it as good citizens,” he said.

 

Running out of money

In West Virginia, there will soon be no money for the cremation or burial of the poor and unclaimed. The state fund that pays for them is set to run out of money at the end of this month because of drug overdose deaths, said Robert Kimes, executive director of the state funeral directors association.

 

Directors who bury the indigent and unclaimed from March on will have to try recouping money from the state later, but there’s no guarantee, Kimes said. Lawmakers are considering lowering the $1,250 payment to $1,000 but doing away with some things funeral homes have to pay for, like a vault, to make the fund last longer, he said.

 

In northwestern Georgia’s Floyd County, Coroner Gene Proctor last year was calling five or six funeral homes every time he had an unclaimed body before he could find one willing to bury it for the $1,250 the county provided.

 

“I couldn’t blame them because … they’re a business and they have to make money to survive, and here I am asking them to cost themselves money,” said Proctor, who handled about 90 unclaimed sets of remains last year.

 

He recently persuaded the county to pass an ordinance that provides for the cremation of the unclaimed. Now, funeral homes get $750, and every director in the county is stepping forward, he said.

 

In Massachusetts, Stefan wants lawmakers to require local health boards to approve cremation when relatives don’t come forward within 30 days. He and his supporters, including Democratic state Senate President Harriette Chandler, say they believe it would make more funeral homes willing to help out with abandoned bodies.

 

Stefan, who arranged the burial of Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev, is often the go-to funeral director for police, nursing homes and hospitals.

He smoked from a wooden pipe as he explained how the body of James Oram, 82, arrived at his Worcester funeral home hours after dying at a nursing home in January.

 

Oram’s body spent about a month in an unfinished basement in a large refrigerator where Stefan can keep three bodies as he looks for relatives, money and burial space. Others are placed in caskets and stored in a room kept cold.

 

The body of one man who wanted to be buried at sea has been at Stefan’s funeral home for more than a year. Nearby, hundreds of containers of cremated remains that were never picked up by relatives line rows of shelves; some date to the 1800s.

 

Stefan eventually discovered that Oram died with about $2,000, money that paid for his burial instead of the state.

 

On the unusually warm February day Oram was laid to rest, a funeral director read the 23rd Psalm as cemetery workers put his simple blue casket adorned with white and yellow flowers into the grave and covered it with dirt.

 

Stefan and the others looked at the grave of the man whose information in their possession fit on a single sheet: White. Male. Single. Factory Worker.

 

“These people were born, grew up, went to high school,” Stefan said. “What happened in the middle? Who knows.”

Could Winning Super Bowl Play Be Winning Marketing Ploy?

A company’s value is often tied to the message it portrays to customers. But what happens when other companies try to take advantage of your brand?

Take the Philadelphia Eagles, for instance. The American football team wants to exclusively own the phrase: “Philly Special.” That was the trick play that helped them win the Super Bowl, and the Philly Special is, by far, the most talked-about play of the Super Bowl.

Watch the play here:

It is a gutsy move. In football-speak, it is a direct-snap reverse pass to quarterback Nick Foles, who usually throws the ball. But the coach gives the OK, and Foles tells his teammates the plan in the huddle.

The team lines up, Foles runs up the field. Tight end Trey Burton throws the football, and Foles catches it in the end zone for a touchdown.

“Play of the century”

Now, the phrase, ‘Philly Special,’ has turned into a city-wide phenomena. Bakeries are making Philly Special pastries. Some people are getting the words or even a sketch of the play tattooed on themselves.

And stores, like Ashley Peel’s Philadelphia Independents, cannot keep enough Philly Special T-shirts in stock.

“It’s the ‘Nick Foles play of the century,’ as I’m dubbing it from the Super Bowl,” Peel said. “It has a layout of the [specifics] from the play. We just got it in and we’re almost already sold out of it. It’s definitely moving well.”

It’s moving well, even as several entrepreneurs are competing to be awarded a trademark — in other words, exclusive rights — to the phrase.  Many of the businesses filed their own trademark applications ahead of the Eagles.

“I do have a client that’s applied for the mark, ‘Philly Special,’” said Philadelphia-based lawyer Nancy Rubner Frandsen.

She filed a trademark application on behalf of a company called Whalehead Associates. She can’t comment too much about the application without violating attorney-client privilege, but admits the phrase goes beyond a football play.

“Obviously it brings everyone together, it was our Super Bowl championship that brought it all about,” she said. “It’s got the term ‘Philly’ in it — from the trademark standpoint, it would be deemed to be descriptive. But then you combine it with the term, ‘Special,’ and it could make a very unique trademark.”

Some of the other businesses that want to trademark the term include a sandwich maker, a gift shop manufacturer … and the Philadelphia Eagles. The team was actually the last to file a trademark application. Even so, experts say, it’s likely the rights will be awarded to the Eagles.

Newsjacking

“This particular term, ideally, should belong to the Eagles,” said Dr. Jay Sinha, an associate marketing professor at Temple University in Philadelphia.

He added the phenomenon around ‘Philly Special’ is not the first time there’s been a rush to trademark a term after a big event, like the Super Bowl. And it’s even got a name: ‘newsjacking.’

“The term, newsjacking, means where a company rides or takes advantage of some event happening in current affairs and uses it for their own commercial purposes, especially for marketing in branding,” Sinha said.

For example, think of famous movie lines, like: ‘May the force be with you,’ from “Stars Wars.” When sequels are released, other companies often try to take advantage of the film’s popularity for marketing purposes, like an ice cream shop that posts a sign reading, ‘May the swirl be with you.’

“If there’s anything which is relevant in popular culture as well as the news, companies like to ride on it,” Sinah said.

In this case, it likely will be several months before the U.S. Patent Office announces who will be awarded the rights to the now famous phrase. By then, though, another Super Bowl will be approaching and the excitement of the Philly Special could be fading.

Artificial Intelligence Poses Big Threat to Society, Warn Leading Scientists

Artificial Intelligence is on the cusp of transforming our world in ways many of us can barely imagine. While there’s much excitement about emerging technologies, a new report by 26 of the world’s leading AI researchers warns of the potential dangers that could emerge over the coming decade, as AI systems begin to surpass levels of human performance.

Automated hacking is identified as one of the most imminent applications of AI, especially so-called “phishing” attacks.

“That part used to take a lot of human effort – you had to study your target, make a profile of them, craft a particular message – that’s known as phishing. We are now getting to the point where we can train computers to do the same thing. So you can model someone’s topics of interest or preferences, their writing style, the writing style of a close friend, and have a machine automatically create a message that looks a lot like something they would click on,” says report co-author Shahar Avin of the Center for the Study of Existential Risk at Britain’s University of Cambridge.

In an era of so-called “fake news,” the implications of AI for media and journalism are also profound.

Programmers from the University of Washington last year built an AI algorithm to create a video of Barack Obama, allowing them to program the “fake” former president to say anything they wished. It’s just the start, says Avin.

“You create videos and audio recordings that are pixel to pixel indistinguishable from real videos and real audio of people. We will need new technical measures. Maybe some kind of digital signatures, to be able to verify sources.”

There is much excitement over technology such as self-driving AI cars, with big tech companies alongside giant car makers vying to be the first to market. The systems, however, are only as secure as the environments in which they operate.

“You can have a car that is as good and better at navigating the world than your average driver. But you put some stickers on a ‘Stop’ sign and it thinks it’s ‘Go at 55 miles per hour.’ As long as we haven’t fixed that problem, we might have systems that are very safe, but are not secure. We could have a world filled with robotic systems that are very useful and very safe, but are also open to an attack by a malicious actor who knows what they are doing,” adds Avin.

The report warns that the proliferation of drones and other robotic systems could allow attackers “to deploy or re-purpose such systems for harmful ends, such as crashing fleets of autonomous vehicles, turning commercial drones into face-targeting missiles or holding critical infrastructure to ransom.”

He says AI use in warfare is widely seen as one of the most disturbing possibilities, with so-called ‘killer robots’ and decision-making taken out of the hands of humans.

“You want to have an edge over your opponent by deploying lots and lots of sensors, lots and lots of small robotic systems, all of them giving you terabytes of information about what’s happening on the battlefield. And no human would be in a position to aggregate that information, so you would start having decision recommendation systems. At this point, do you still have meaningful human control?”

There is also the danger of AI being used in mass surveillance, especially by oppressive regimes.

The researchers stress the many positive applications of AI; however, they note that it is a dual-use technology, and assert that AI researchers and engineers should be proactive about the potential for its misuse.

The authors say AI itself will likely provide many of the solutions to the problems they identify.

 

IOC Reinstates Russia’s Membership

The International Olympic Committee has reinstated Russia’s membership after suspending it over state-sponsored doping allegations.

“The Russian Olympic Committee has had its rights fully restored,” said Alexander Zhukov, the president of the Russian Olympic Committee.

The IOC had banned Russian athletes from competing under the country’s flag during the 2018 Winter Games in South Korea because of allegations Russia ran a state-sponsored doping program during the last Winter Olympics, in Sochi in 2014. However, the Olympic Committee allowed more than 160 Russians to compete individually at the 2018 Games.

Two of the Russian athletes failed drug tests at the Pyeongchang Games. However, the IOC said Wednesday that all remaining test results were negative.

“The IOC can confirm that all the remaining results are negative. Therefore, as stated in the Executive Board decision of 25th February, the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee is automatically lifted with immediate effect,” an IOC statement said.

Russia repeatedly has denied it carried out a doping operation.  

UN Sets Up ‘Helpline’ to Fight Sexual Harassment Among its Own

The United Nations has set up a 24-hour helpline to fight sexual harassment among its staff in the workplace as part of its Zero Tolerance policy regarding sexual exploitation and abuse. 

The so-called “Speak Up” hotline is part of the U.N. Secretary-General’s wider initiative to fight sexual harassment and to support victims and witnesses.  U.N. spokeswoman in Geneva, Alessandra Vellucci, explains U.N. staff can call the helpline 24 hours a day to speak confidentially to a trained, impartial person about problems of sexual abuse and to provide information.

She says the United Nations also is creating a specialized team to investigate cases of sexual harassment.

“Particular attention of this would be on increasing the number of female investigators,” she said. “So, basically we are strengthening our tools to answer to this problem and put victims at the core of our action.”

While the United Nations can deal with internal problems of sexual harassment, Vellucci says the organization has no control over the behavior of U.N. peacekeepers.  She says it is ultimately the responsibility of the member state of the soldiers accused of sexual misconduct to investigate and prosecute these crimes.

Officials from U.N. agencies condemned the recent reports that local workers and private charities were trading food and other assistance for sexual favors from Syrian women.  U.N. refugee spokesman Andrej Mahecic calls the practice despicable and dehumanizing.

“But the mere suggestion that the U.N. can somehow control the situation in a war zone and the implied conclusion that we can somehow turn this on and off is rather simplistic,” said Mahecic. “It is disconnected from the reality of what an aid operation looks like in an open and fierce conflict.”

The UNHCR and other U.N. aid agencies say their partners must adhere to a strict code of conduct, which covers sexual exploitation and abuse.  They say any U.N. personnel found to be in breach of the code would be subject to disciplinary measures, including dismissal from service.

Скоп’є пропонує Греції чотири варіанти вирішення суперечки щодо назви «Македонія» – прем’єр

Прем’єр-міністр Македонії Зоран Заєв заявив, що запропонував чотири варіанти Греції в спробі вирішити багаторічну суперечку щодо назви «Македонія». Заєв в інтерв’ю агентству Reuters 27 лютого заявив, що запропонував такі варіанти: Республіка Північна Македонія, Республіка Верхня Македонія, Республіка Вардар Македонія або Республіка Македонія (Скоп’є).

Заєв сказав, що у Греції є також деякі варіанти. За його совами, Македонія «готова внести зміни Конституції», але це буде «дуже складно», додав він.

Міністри закордонних справ Греції та Македонії проведуть переговори з цього приводу в березні. Заєв також планує зустрітися з прем’єр-міністром Греції Алексісом Ципрасом цього місяця.

В останні місяці Македонія проводить широкі переговори з сусідньою Грецією з метою вирішити суперечку щодо назви «Македонія». З огляду на заперечення Греції щодо використання назви, Македонія в 1993 році приєдналася до ООН як колишня Югославська Республіка Македонія (КЮРМ).

Адвокат з посиланням на представників колонії заявив, що Сенцова нікуди не перевозили

Український режисер Олег Сенцов, як і раніше, перебуває в колонії російського міста Лабитнангі, його нікуди не перевозили, заявив «Крим.Реалії» із посиланням на адміністрацію закладу адвокат Сенцова Дмитро Дінзе.

«Я зв’язався з офіційними представниками колонії. Вони мені сказали, що Сенцов нікуди не перевозився й перебуває зараз у колонії», – сказав адвокат.

Вдень 27 лютого стало відомо, що на лист на адресу Сенцова за останнім відомим місцем перебування ув’язненого (колонія), відправник отримав відповідь про те, що «одержувач не перебуває в цій установі».

В українських ЗМІ з’явилась інформація про можливий швидкий обмін режисера Олега Сенцова й журналіста Романа Сущенка на ув’язнених в Україні. Офіційного підтвердження такої інформації немає.

Представник України в гуманітарній підгрупі Тристоронньої контактної групи, перший віце-спікер Верховної Ради Ірина Геращенко заперечувала наміри обміняти засуджених у Росії громадян України Романа Сущенка й Олега Сенцова на колишніх українських військовослужбовців Олександра Баранова й Максима Одинцова.

Перед цим адвокат засуджених у Києві колишніх українських військовослужбовців Баранова й Одинцова Валентин Рибін заявив, що найближчим часом може відбутися обмін на ув’язнених у Росії українців.

Українського режисера Олега Сенцова затримали представники російських спецслужб у Криму в травні 2014 року за звинуваченнями в організації терактів на півострові. У серпні 2015 року російський Північно-Кавказький окружний військовий суд у Ростові-на-Дону засудив Сенцова до 20 років колонії суворого режиму за звинуваченням у терористичній діяльності на території Криму. Він не визнав свою провину. Правозахисний центр «Меморіал» вніс Сенцова до списку політв’язнів.

Reuters: лідер Північної Кореї міг подорожувати світом з підробленим бразильським паспортом

Лідер Північної Кореї Кім Чен Ин і його покійний батько Кім Чен Ір використовували фальшиві бразильські паспорти для відвідування західних країн у 1990-х роках, повідомили агентству Reuters п’ять провідних джерел безпеки в Західній Європі.

Агенція Reuters також оприлюднила фотокопію бразильського паспорта, виданого лідеру Північної Кореї Кім Чен Ину.

«Вони використовували ці бразильські паспорти, які чітко демонструють фотографії Кім Чен Ина та Кім Чен Іра, щоб спробувати отримати візи від іноземних посольств», – цитує агенція своє джерело.

«Це показує бажання подорожувати і вказує на спроби правлячої сім’ї побудувати можливий маршрут втечі», – заявив співрозмовник агенції. 

Посольство Північної Кореї в Бразилії відмовилося це коментувати.

Міністерство закордонних справ Бразилії повідомило, що проводиться розслідування.

Бразильське джерело агентства зазначило, що два паспорти, про які йде мова, є законними документами, вони були випущені на бланках від консульств.

Проте невідомо, чи були візи в цих паспортах. 

У грудні 2011 року у віці 69 років помер тодішній північнокорейський лідер Кім Чен Ір. Це призвело до успадкування влади в Пхеньяні наймолодшим з трьох його синів – Кім Чен Ином, якому на той час було 26 років. Кім Чен Ин був проголошений спадкоємцем ще у 2009 році. 

US Adds Several Islamic State Affiliates to Terror List

The U.S. State Department on Tuesday branded seven Islamic State groups from around the world and two of its leaders as terrorists in an effort to cut off any financial support they may have been getting from within the United States.

The top U.S. diplomatic agency blacklisted ISIS-West Africa, ISIS-Philippines and ISIS-Bangladesh, along with four other ISIS-affiliated groups — ISIS-Somalia, Jund al-Khilafah-Tunisia, ISIS-Egypt and the Maute Group. The State Department said it also has sanctioned two ISIS leaders, Mahad Moalim and Abu Musab al-Barnawi.

Nathan Sales, the State Department’s counterterrorism coordinator, said in a statement that the designations “target key ISIS-affiliated groups and leaders outside its fallen caliphate in Iraq and Syria. Today’s actions are a critical step in degrading ISIS’s global network and denying its affiliates the resources they need to plan and carry out terrorist attacks.”

The law under which the sanctions were imposed blocks the IS groups from conducting any business transactions linked to any properties they may have in the U.S. and prohibits Americans from doing business with them.

The State Department said the sanctions send a message globally that “these groups and individuals have committed or pose a significant risk of committing acts of terrorism.  Terrorist designations expose and isolate entities and individuals, and deny them access to the U.S. financial system. Moreover, designations can assist the law enforcement activities of U.S. agencies and other governments.”

It said the terrorist designations are part of the U.S. plan to defeat IS insurgents.

“This whole-of-government effort is destroying ISIS in its safe havens, denying its ability to recruit foreign terrorist fighters, stifling its financial resources, countering the false propaganda it disseminates over the internet and social media, and helping to stabilize liberated areas in Iraq and Syria so the displaced can return to their homes and begin to rebuild their lives,” the State Department said.

US Cutting Aid to Cambodia for Recent Democratic Setbacks

The White House announced Tuesday the U.S. is cutting aid to Cambodia because of “recent setbacks to democracy” in the southeast Asian country.

The statement said the setbacks caused the administration of President Donald Trump “deep concern” and prompted a review of U.S. aid, resulting in reductions in military and civilian aid.

The White House said the U.S. would continue to support health, agricultural, mine clearance and other programs “in support of the Cambodian people.”

The reduction in U.S. aid comes after Human Rights Watch reported in January the Cambodian government’s “broad political crackdown” last year “effectively extinguished” the country’s emerging democracy.

In its annual World Report, the rights group said the government, controlled by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party for more than three decades, disbanded the main opposition party, the Cambodia National Rescue Party, and arrested its leader on questionable treason charges. The dissolution came after a ruling the CNRP was involved in an attempt to overthrow Hun Sen’s regime.

The report said government authorities also abused the judicial system to prosecute political opponents and human rights activists and forced the closure of several independent media outlets, including radio stations that broadcast programming from Voice of America and Radio Free Asia. RFA’s Cambodian bureau was subsequently forced to close, and authorities charged two RFA journalists with spying in November for allegedly providing information to a foreign country.

“The last vestiges of democratic government in Cambodia disappeared in 2017,” said Human Rights Watch Asia director Brad Adams. “Hun Sen cemented his 33-year rule into dictatorship at the expense of the Cambodian people’s basic rights.”

The delegation to the European Union to Cambodia announced in December it was suspending funding for Cambodia’s National Election Commission after the dissolution of the CNRP and the arrest of its leader, Kem Sokha.

The EU said the party’s elimination meant the government could not organize a legitimate election in 2018 as planned. In November, the U.S. also decided to suspend funding for the NEC.

Despite the suspensions, NEC officials said it would not affect the NEC’s ability to hold an election, as it had lined up funding from government and other donors, including China, Japan, South Korea and Russia.

The increasing tensions with the EU and the U.S. come as Cambodia is becoming close to Beijing, which is offering political and economic support to Hun Sen, a former Khmer Rouge officer.

After the U.S. November announcement it was suspending funding to the NEC for the vote scheduled for July 29, 2018, the pro-government Fresh News website reported that Hun Sen said in a speech to garment workers that he welcomed the cut in U.S. aid, and urged Washington to cut all assistance.

Although U.S. assistance to Cambodia for health, education, governance, economic development and clearing unexploded ordnance was worth more than $77.6 million in 2014, China is now Cambodia’s biggest donor and lender.

According to The Economist, Chinese firms sent nearly $5 billion to Cambodia in loans and investments between 2011 and 2015, which accounts for about 70 percent of total industrial development.

 

A Cambodian court, meanwhile, ordered the seizure Tuesday of CNRP’s headquarters because former party co-leader Sam Rainsy failed to pay a $1 million judgment against him for allegedly defaming him, as well as compensation to another ruling party leader. Rainsy owns the property that was seized.

 

 

 

White House Reaches Informal Deal with Boeing for Air Force One

U.S. President Donald Trump has reached an agreement with the Boeing Co to provide two Air Force One planes for $3.9 billion, the White House said on Tuesday.

“President Trump has reached an informal deal with Boeing on a fixed-price contract for the new Air Force One Program,” Deputy Press Secretary Hogan Gidley told Reuters. He said the contract will save taxpayers more than $1.4 billion, but those savings could not be independently confirmed.

Trump has said Boeing’s costs to build replacements for Air Force One aircraft – one of the most visible symbols of the U.S. presidency – were too high and urged the federal government in a tweet to “Cancel order!”

The Boeing 747-8s are designed to be an airborne White House able to fly in worst-case security scenarios, such as nuclear war, and are modified with military avionics, advanced communications and a self-defense system.

“President Trump negotiated a good deal on behalf of the American people,” Boeing said in a news release.

U.S. aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia said the White House was engaging in “political theater.”

“There’s no evidence of a discount,” said Aboulafia, vice president of analysis at Teal Group.

Earlier this month, the Pentagon released Air Force budget documents for fiscal year 2019 disclosing the $3.9 billion cost for the two-aircraft program. The same 2018 budget document, not adjusted for inflation, showed the price at $3.6 billion.

Boeing would only have so much room to offer discounts given the high proportion of supplier content on Air Force One, from refrigerators to missile warning systems, Aboulafia said by phone.

The big U.S. defense contractor said the deal includes work to develop and build two planes, including unique items such as a communications package, internal and external stairs, large galleys and other equipment.

The “informal deal” will need to be codified in a formal contract with comprehensive, complex terms and conditions said Franklin Turner, a partner specializing in government contracts at law firm McCarter & English, suggesting a final deal was still a ways off.

Boeing stock was up 1.4 percent at $368.54, trading at an all-time high.

 

Leading Slovak Daily Points to Mafia in Journalist Murder

A leading Slovak newspaper says organized crime may have been involved in the shooting death of an investigative journalist that shocked Slovakia.

 

The bodies of 27-year-old Jan Kuciak and his girlfriend Martina Kusnirova were found Sunday evening in their house in the town of Velka Maca, east of the capital, Bratislava.

 

In an interview with the Sme daily on Tuesday, Slovakia-based Canadian journalist Tom Nicholson said he was in touch with Kuciak before his death and that he was working on a story about possible Italian mafia involvement in frauds linked to EU subsidies in eastern Slovakia. Nicholson said he was ready to testify.

 

Kuciak’s was the first murder of a journalist in Slovakia. The government is offering 1 million euros ($1.23 million) to anyone who helps the authorities find the people responsible.

 

Turkey Says Czech Release of Former PYD Leader is ‘Support for Terror’

The Turkish government said Tuesday the release of the former leader of a Syrian Kurdish political party by a Czech court was “a clear support for terror.”

Prague’s Municipal Court decided Tuesday to release former Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party leader Salih Muslim despite Turkey’s request for his extradition.

Turkey has accused the former PYD leader with disrupting the state and aggravated murder. He was detained in the Czech capital of Prague Saturday following a Turkish request for his arrest.

Turkey considers the PYD a terrorist group associated with outlawed Kurdish rebels fighting within the country’s borders. Earlier this month, the Turkish government placed Muslim on its most-wanted list and announced a $1 million reward for his capture.

Turkish government spokesman Bekir Bozdag said the ruling violated international law and predicted it would adversely affect Turkish-Czech relations.

The PYD is the the most influential political Kurdish force in northern Syria and Muslim has maintained clout within the party, even after resigning as co-chair last year.

Turkey launched a military offensive into northern Syria in late January in an effort to push the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, from the enclave of Afrin. The YPG is a U.S.-supported Syrian Kurdish militia group and the armed unit of the PYD.

 

Stalinism Resurgent in Russia as Critics Warn Against Whitewashing Soviet History

Decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, there is fierce debate over the legacy of one of its most brutal dictators.

Josef Stalin, who ruled from the 1930s until his death in 1953, is held responsible for the deaths of millions of his countrymen. Yet, an opinion poll last year crowned him as the country’s most outstanding historical figure.

Russia’s recent decision to ban the satirical British film “The Death of Stalin” appears to have fueled divisions over the legacy of the dictator.

The Gulag State Museum in Moscow attempts to convey the scale of the atrocities carried out under Stalin’s rule, alongside the individual tragedies. Anyone deemed “an enemy of the people” — from petty criminals to political prisoners — could be condemned to years of forced labor in concentration camps known as gulags, which were established across the Soviet Union.

“Twenty million people came through the concentration camps. Over a million were shot, and 6 million were deported or re-settled by force,” said museum director Roman Romanov.

Watch Henry Ridgwell’s report:

Stalin is lionized by many Russians for leading the Soviet Union to victory over Nazi Germany. His reign of terror led to the deaths of millions of his countrymen.”This was no natural disaster. This is a well-planned crime by the state against the people. And now, people do not want to accept such an idea, because people do not like thinking this way about their country, about their government,” Nikita Petrov, vice chairman of the human rights group Memorial, told VOA in a recent interview. 

“Every year, resentment against studying this subject [of Stalin’s atrocities] increases, because it hinders the glorification of the Soviet period of history.”

From the dozens of monuments to memorial plaques that are springing up in towns and cities across Russia, critics say Stalin nostalgia is permeating everyday life. In St. Petersburg, young Russian political blogger Victor Loginov organized the funding for a privately run bus emblazoned with a portrait of a smiling Stalin. It has not been universally welcomed — the bus has been vandalized several times, and the portrait painted over.

Loginov denies he’s glorifying Soviet history.

 “While Stalinism was undoubtedly and endlessly cruel, without this repression, and this shocking number of victims, there would have been no transformation of this country’s civilization — its transformation from an agricultural to an industrial nation, from economically backward to developed,” he said.

Romanov said younger generations are not taught the reality of Stalin’s rule.

“There are people still alive who came through the concentration camps, and I felt there is such gap between us. With all the programs we pursue in the museum, we try to make a sort of ‘small bridge’ between the generations.”

Deep divisions remain. During a recent debate on Stalin’s legacy aired on Russia’s Komsomolskaya Pravda radio, two prominent journalists began brawling after one accused his opponent of “spitting on the graves” of Soviet World War II soldiers.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has in the past called Stalin a “complex figure.” The president opened a monument last October to the victims of Stalin-era repression, warning that “this terrible past must not be erased from Russia’s national memory.”

Meanwhile, critics accuse him of cynicism and claim political freedom is once again under attack in modern Russia.

Уряд Словаччини обіцяє винагороду за допомогу в розкритті вбивства журналіста-розслідувача

В уряді Словаччини заявили, що готові виплатити фінансову винагороду в 1 мільйон євро тому, хто допоможе «піймати, звинуватити і засудити  винних у вбивстві» журналіста Яна Куцяка.

«Це безпрецедентна подія. Якщо буде доведено, що мотивом умисного вбивства була праця журналіста, то йтиметься про подію, яка досі не мала аналогії в історії Словаччини, – це наступ на демократію, свободу преси і свободу ЗМІ», – заявив голова уряду Словаччини Роберт Фіцо.

Убивство журналіста сьогодні засудили головні редактори словацьких ЗМІ, які у спільній заяві закликали владу зробити все для безпечної праці журналістів. Державні і політичні лідери сусідньої Чехії також засудили вбивство журналіста Куцяка.

Начальник поліції Словаччини Тібор Ґашпар повідомив, що розслідуванням вбивства журналіста і його приятельки займається спеціально сформована група фахівців.

27-річного Яна Куцяка разом із подругою знайшли застреленими в їхньому будинку в місті Велка Мака. Ян Куцяк займався розслідуваннями податкових шахрайств, зокрема, тих, що пов’язані із зведенням елітного житлового комплексу у Братиславі.


У Росії заарештували активіста, який влаштував перфоманс з надувною качкою 

Суд в російському Санкт-Петербурзі засудив активіста руху «Весна» Артема Гончаренка до 25 діб арешту за звинуваченням у порушенні порядку проведення мітингів. Гончаренко 28 січня, коли проходила акція бойкоту виборів, виставив у вікні свого будинку жовту надувну качку і плакат з написом «Поліція чекає нас».

Повідомляється, що чоловіка затримали 25 лютого, коли він йшов на акцію в пам’ять про вбитого опозиціонера Бориса Нємцова.

Згідно з рішенням суду, Гончаренко заарештований через «повторне порушення встановленого порядку» проведення мітингів. Ще один активіст Ярослав Путров також був затриманий з Гончаренком дорогою на мітинг пам’яті Нємцова. Однак Путрова звільнили того ж дня без висунення звинувачень.

Опозиціонер Олексій Навальний закликав до страйку виборців після того, як йому відмовили в реєстрації кандидатом на президентських виборах. Акції 28 січня пройшли в десятках міст Росії, в них брали участь тисячі людей. Трансляцію з протестів подивилися понад півтора мільйона людей. По всій країні були затримані 350 активістів.

Гумова качка стала символом державної корупції в Росії після того, як Навальний написав про те, що нинішній російський прем’єр Дмитро Медведєв побудував качиний будинок в одному зі своїх маєтків.

КМДА: завтра можуть обмежити в’їзд вантажівок до Києва

Київська міська держадміністрація (КМДА) попереджає водіїв про можливе обмеження в’їзду до Києва великогабаритного транспорту 27 лютого.

Як повідомляє прес-служба КМДА, обмеження можуть застосувати у зв’язку з можливим погіршенням погоди.

Міська влада закликає у разі погіршення погодних умов не користуватися особистим авто, а за можливості надавати перевагу громадському транспорту.

За даними синоптиків, у Києві вівторок, 27 лютого, буде ще холоднішим, ніж сьогодні – вночі 18-20, а вдень 10-12 градусів морозу.

Trump Says Wants to Revive Steel Jobs Even if it Takes Import Tariffs

U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday said he wants to bring the steel industry back to America even if it means applying tariffs to imports from other countries.

“I want to bring the steel industry back into our country.

If that takes tariffs, let it take tariffs, OK? Maybe it will cost a little bit more, but we’ll have jobs,” Trump told a meeting at the White House with state governors.

The U.S. Commerce Department has recommended Trump impose curbs on steel and aluminum imports from China and other countries. On Friday, the White House had said Trump has not yet made a final decision on the matter.

New York to Remember 1993 World Trade Center Bombing

Survivors and others are set to gather at ground zero for a solemn tribute to victims of the first terror attack on the World Trade Center, the deadly bombing 25 years ago.

Monday is the anniversary of the blast, which killed six people, one of them pregnant. The planned commemoration includes a Mass at a church near the trade center and a ceremony on the 9/11 memorial plaza, with the reading of victims’ names and a moment of silence at 12:18 p.m., when the bomb exploded and became a harbinger of terror at the twin towers.

“While overshadowed by 9/11, the 1993 bombing represented a pivotal moment in the history of the World Trade Center, in the history of New York City, and, frankly, our own national reckoning with terrorism in a global age,” said Sept. 11 museum president Alice Greenwald, whose institution has a permanent exhibition on the bombing and a special installation to commemorate the anniversary. “It had so many of the elements that we would later come to associate with 9/11.”

The bomb, in an underground parking garage, was set by Muslim extremists who sought to punish the U.S. for its Middle East policies, according to federal prosecutors. Six bombing suspects were convicted and are in prison, including accused ringleader Ramzi Yousef — a nephew of self-proclaimed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. A seventh suspect in the bombing remains at large.

An estimated 50,000 people fled the blacked-out twin towers, some groping their way down smoky stairs, others rescued from stalled elevators or plucked from rooftops by police helicopters. More than 1,000 were injured.

A memorial fountain dedicated to the 1993 bombing was crushed in the attacks that destroyed the towers on Sept. 11, 2001. But bombing victims’ names are now inscribed on one of the memorial pools that bear the names of the nearly 3,000 people killed on 9/11.

Merkel’s Party Backs Coalition Deal to Form new Government

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party has voted in favor of a deal to form a new coalition government with the center-left Social Democrats.

Delegates at a convention in Berlin voted overwhelmingly Monday in favor of the agreement despite criticism from some conservatives in the party.

Disquiet among the Christian Democratic Union’s members has been growing following a weak election result last September that forced Merkel into complicated coalition negotiations with smaller parties.

The agreement still requires approval from the Social Democrats. The result of a postal ballot of that party’s membership will be announced March 4.

 

US Supreme Court Rejects Trump Over ‘Dreamers’ Immigrants

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday dealt a setback to President Donald Trump, requiring his administration to maintain protections he has sought to end for hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought illegally into the United States as children.

The justices refused to hear the administration’s appeal of a federal judge’s Jan. 9 injunction that halted Trump’s move to rescind a program that benefits immigrants known as “Dreamers” implemented in 2012 by his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama.

Under Trump’s action, the protections were due to start phasing out beginning in March.

In a brief order, the justices did not explain their reasoning, but said the appeal was “denied without prejudice,” indicating they will maintain an open mind on the underlying legal issue still being considered by a lower court. The high court also said it expects that appeals court to “proceed expeditiously to decide this case.”

Under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, roughly 700,000 young adult, mostly Hispanics, are granted protect from deportation and given work permits for two-year periods, after which they must re-apply. A total of about 1.8 million people are eligible for the program, a sizable fraction of the more than 11 million immigrants living in the United States illegally.

Trump’s administration had appealed a Jan. 9 nationwide injunction by San Francisco-based U.S. District Judge William Alsup, who ruled that the DACA program must remain in place while the litigation is resolved.

The administration had challenged a nationwide injunction by San Francisco-based U.S. District Judge William Alsup, who ruled that DACA must remain in place while the litigation is resolved. In an unusual move, the administration appealed directly to the Supreme Court instead of going first to a federal appeals court.

Alsup ruled that the challengers, including the states of California, Maine, Maryland and Minnesota and Obama’s former homeland security secretary Janet Napolitano, were likely to succeed in arguing that the administration’s decision to end DACA was arbitrary.

Justice Department spokesman Devin O’Malley said in a statement that the administration will continue to defend the Department of Homeland Security’s “lawful authority to wind down DACA in an orderly manner.”

O’Malley said that “while we were hopeful for a different outcome,” the high court rarely agrees to take up cases before a lower court has ruled, “though in our view it was warranted for the extraordinary injunction requiring the Department of Homeland Security to maintain DACA.”

The DACA dispute is the second major case the Supreme Court will hear in the coming months arising from Trump’s immigration policies. The justices are due to hear arguments in April on the legality of his latest travel ban order barring entry to people from several Muslim-majority nations.

 

Congress so far has failed to pass legislation to address the fate of the “Dreamers,” including a potential path to citizenship.

Trump’s move to rescind DACA prompted legal challenges by Democratic state attorneys general and various organizations and individuals in multiple federal courts. His administration argued that Obama exceeded his powers under the Constitution when he bypassed Congress and created DACA.

On Feb. 13, a second U.S. judge issued a similar injunction ordering the Trump administration to keep DACA in place. U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis in Brooklyn acted in a lawsuit brought by plaintiffs including a group of states led by New York.

Alsup and Garaufis did not say that the administration could not at some point end the program, only that there was evidence it did not follow the correct procedures in doing so.

The rulings allow those who had previously applied for protections and whose two-year status was soon to expire to apply beyond the deadline set by the administration in September.

The original plan put on hold by the court rulings said that only those who re-applied by October and whose status was due to expire by March 5 could re-apply.

The administration is not processing new applications.

Turkish President Heads to Africa in bid to Extend Regional Influence

On Monday,Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan starts a five-day visit to northern and West Africa. The tour is the latest effort by Turkey to project its influence across the continent and enhance its global presence. Observers are voicing concerns that the Turkish leader, with his emphasis on Islamist themes, could be stoking regional rivalries and even tensions.

Erdogan is scheduled to visit Algeria, Mauritania, Senegal and Mali in his tour of the region.  Since  2005,  as then-prime minister, Erdogan has made developing deepening ties with Africa a priority, according to Emre Caliskan a Turkey, Africa analyst at Oxford University.

“Since he became prime minister he has been in Africa 24 times. Since 2009, when he became president, he has been in Africa 12 times. There are several ambitions: economy, being a global leader, and the use of Islam,” said Caliskan.

Earlier this month, Istanbul hosted African ministers for a week of meetings. Such gatherings are a regular occurrence and are part of Ankara’s efforts to court African leaders.  Turkey has tripled the number of embassies across the continent in less than a decade. Despite such investments, the economic returns have been disappointing and that has led to Ankara to shift its priorities, says Africa expert professor Mehmet Arda of the Istanbul think tank Edam.

“When you look at the Turkish trade with Africa its  basically the same as ten years ago. So, it’s more a way of projecting itself as a power in the world,” said Arda. “Moreover, Turkey puts itself as the friend of the countries that are left behind, the destitute and all that. I think from the point of view it fits with that the model (of) projecting on the world stage.”

President Erdogan has in recent visits to Africa increasingly inserted Islamic themes in his speeches, which have sometimes been colored with anti-Western rhetoric and focused on the West’s colonial past, even though the Turkish Ottoman empire once also extended to Africa.   Analyst Caliskan says courting Africa Muslims offers Ankara potential important diplomatic gains, as well as risks.

“50 percent of African countries come from the Muslim background and this gives leverage to Turkey in the eyes of Europe in the eyes of the West and in the eyes of Africa. But there is a rivalry between different Islamic groups,” said Caliskan. “These countries are Iran ,Saudi Arabia and Egypt – historically these countries are very influential in the region among the Islamic communities. Now Turkey is a latecomer, but a newcomer and strong comer and Turkey wants to be more influential.”

Last September, Turkey opened its largest overseas military base in Somalia. The opening of the base has been interpreted as a signal that Ankara is sending to the region of its growing aspirations. The Turkish navy is rapidly expanding with even plans for the construction of an aircraft carrier. Ankara’s agreement with Khartoum to redevelop the Sudanese Suakin Island that was once the Ottoman empire’s main naval base, has sent alarm bells ringing in Cairo, which is concerned about increasing Turkish military encroachment. Ankara insists its development plans on the island are non-military.

But analyst Caliskan says such denials will do little to defuse tensions given the level of mistrust between Erdogan and Egypt’s President, Abdel Fattah el Sissi.

“Turkey has a difficult relationship with Sisi regime and they are both trying to influence on the areas that actually historically Egypt had been powerful,” said Caliskan. “So actually it is a direct challenge to Egyptian hegemony in the region. If Turkey would be moving to the region more then [there] will be more rivalry with the Egyptian government as well.”

Analysts warn the rivalry in the Middle East is already spilling into Africa, a process that is likely to continue with Turkey’s growing commitment to the continent in its bid to become a global player.

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