Month: February 2018

Олімпіада: 23 лютого – останній шанс українських біатлоністів здобути нагороди

Збірна України 23 лютого боротиметься тільки в командній чоловічій естафеті з біатлону в рамках Олімпіади у Південній Кореї. Змагання розпочнуться о 13:15. На перший етап вийде Артем Прима, другим буде Сергій Семенов, третім – Володимир Сємаков, а фінішуватиме Дмитро Підручний.

Раніше жіноча збірна України з біатлону не змогла підтвердити титул олімпійських чемпіонів 2014 року. Квартет Варвинець-Семеренко-Джима-Меркушина фінішував одинадцятим. «Золото» здобула збірна Білорусі, яка подолала дистанцію з часом 1 година 12 хвилин 3,4 секунди. Це друга нагорода вищого гатунку для білоруської збірної.

«Срібло» вибороли біатлоністки зі Швеції, а «бронза» – на рахунку збірної Франції.

У командному заліку продовжує лідирувати збірна Норвегії, яка здобула 35 нагород (13 золотих, 12 срібних та 10 бронзових). Також у кращій п’ятірці команди з Німеччини, Канади, США та Нідерландів.

Україна стала 19-ою, маючи в своєму активі «золото» Олександра Абраменка. Сходинку у турнірній таблиці «синьо-жовті» розділяють з Угорщиною.

Дніпровська міськрада вдруге ухвалила рішення про перейменування проспекту Калініна на Сергія Нігояна

Дніпровська міськрада перейменувала проспект Калініна на проспект Сергія Нігояна. Відповідне рішення ухвалили на черговій, 30-й сесії міськради. Рішення ухвалили, зокрема, «враховуючи результати проведення громадського обговорення питання перейменування» у Чечелівському та Новокайдацькому районах міста, якими пролягає проспект.

За документом, рішення про перейменування від 28 січня 2015 року визнано таким, що втратило чинність.

Водночас у четвер жителька Дніпра Елеонора Кузнецова, яка оскаржила попереднє рішення про перейменування проспекту в суді, заявила Радіо Свобода, що вважає нове рішення міськради необґрунтованим. За її словами, справа щодо попереднього рішення все ще перебуває в суді. Як вона повідомила, касаційну скаргу міськради мали розглядати в столичному Вищому адміністративному суді України 20 грудня 2017 року, однак через ліквідацію суду засідання не відбулось.

«Вищий адміністративний суд України ліквідований, засідання не відбулось. Зараз справа перебуває на тій стадії, що й раніше. Буде створений касаційний суд, де слухатиметься ця справа, тому зрушень поки ніяких немає. Міська влада сама подала на касацію. І поки справа перебуває в касаційній інстанції, вони не мали ухвалювати ніяких рішень. Зараз я чекаю рішення суду», – зазначила Елеонора Кузнецова.

У грудні 2017 року жителі Дніпра підтримали перейменування проспекту Калініна на проспект Героя Небесної сотні Сергія Нігояна. Відповідне рішення було ухвалене на громадських слуханнях у будівлі Новокайдацької райради. 

Учасники слухань не підтримали пропозицію мешканки проспекту Елеонори Кузнецової щодо перейменування його на проспект Чечелівський. За проспект Нігояна проголосували понад 150 учасників зібрання проголосували, 19 були проти.

У червні 2017 року Дніпрі апеляційний адміністративний суд скасував рішення міської ради про перейменування проспекту Калініна на проспект Сергія Нігояна. За словами позивача – жительки проспекту Елеонори Кузнєцової, розгляд справи в судах тривав понад два роки від часу перейменування. Як зазначила Елеонора Кузнецова, обурення жителів викликала не нова назва проспекту, а недотримання процедури: перейменування відбулось без попередніх громадських слухань.

У Дніпровській міськраді визнали, що під час перейменування проспекту відповідна процедура була не дотримана. Як зазначив тоді керівник юридичного управління міськради Артем Павлов, процедуру належало пройти заново, зокрема, провести громадські слухання. У мерії також повідомили, що подали касаційну скаргу на рішення суду.

20-річний українець вірменського походження Сергій Нігоян загинув від вогнепального поранення в Києві під час Революції гідності, в ніч на 22 січня 2014 року. Він був першим із протестувальників, які загинули на столичному Майдані під час протистоянь між активістами та силовиками.

Уряд спростив погодження документації на будівництво в історичних місцях

Кабмін спростив процедуру розроблення і погодження науково-проектної документації на будівництво в історичних населених місцях. Про це йдеться в постанові від 21 лютого, оприлюдненій на урядовому порталі.

Як йдеться в роз’ясненні, це рішення схвалене з метою врегулювання в історичних населених місцях режиму забудови, у тому числі її граничних параметрів. 

У Кабміні сподіваються, що рішення забезпечить вирішення питання будівництва, реконструкції будівель і споруд у межах історичних ареалів історичних населених місць України.

У свою чергу, у Мінкульті зауважують, що документ скасовує необхідність розробки історико-містобудівного обґрунтування (ІМО) в тих історично населених місцях, де розроблені та затверджені історико-архітектурні опорні плани, а з 1 січня 2019 року інститут ІМО ліквідовується взагалі. 

 

UK Police Investigating Package Sent to Harry and Meghan

London police say they are investigating a suspicious package that was sent to Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle.

The Metropolitan Police force says “a package containing a substance” was delivered to St. James’s Palace, where Harry has his office, on Feb. 12.

 

It says the substance “was tested and confirmed as non-suspicious.”

 

The force said Thursday that detectives are investigating an offense of malicious communication in relation to the package. The Evening Standard newspaper says it contained a racist message.

 

The prince and Markle are due to marry May 19 at Windsor Castle.

 

Earlier this month a letter containing white powder was sent to an office at Parliament, leading to a partial evacuation of the building. It also was found to be non-toxic.

 

 

Book Trump? Interest Groups Press Case at His Properties

Payday lenders got regulators to rethink rules on how closely to vet borrowers. E-cigarette makers got a delay in federal oversight of many vaping products. Candy makers praised a decision to hold off on more stringent labeling standards. And title insurers declared “victory” for getting changes that benefited them in the tax overhaul.

What do all these American special-interest groups have in common? They were among those that booked meetings, retreats and conferences at hotels and golf resorts owned by President Donald Trump.

While it’s impossible to draw a direct link between where groups seeking to influence the Trump administration hold their events and what they received, one thing is certain: Never before in American history have such groups had the opportunity to hold an event at a property owned by the president, paying for event space, rooms and food with money that ultimately heads into the president’s pockets.

An Associated Press analysis of the special interests that visited Trump properties in the first year of his presidency found several instances that at least created the appearance of “pay for play.” And lobbying experts say as long as the president fails to divest from his businesses and can still profit from such bookings, special interests will take full advantage.

“The name of the game is to have your message heard, and frankly, if you’re helping put money in the family pocket, that’s a good way of getting heard. And it’s legal,” said Bob Schneider, a former lobbyist who worked in Washington for 25 years.

“If I were still doing that business, I would run to the Trump Hotel and have every event I could there,” Schneider said, “because I can’t imagine anyone believing that Donald Trump Jr. doesn’t tell his dad what’s going on with the business.”

Before taking office, Trump made a series of promises to draw a “red line” between his businesses and his administration. They included setting up a trust to hold his assets [which he can still access at any time], handing day-to-day management responsibilities to his two oldest sons and hiring an ethics lawyer to vet business deals. He also pledged to always act “beyond reproach” and never give “even the appearance of a conflict.”

In the first year of the Trump presidency, the watchdog group Public Citizen counted at least 19 interest groups that held events at Trump properties, including those representing miners, oil drillers, hedge fund operators, insurers, funeral home directors and commercial real estate investors.

But it’s difficult to know exactly how many such meetings were held and how much money those groups spent because, unlike political organizations or campaigns, interest groups are not required to reveal their expenditures at private facilities.

And the Trump Organization declined to even discuss such meetings.

Several special-interest groups contacted by the AP repeatedly said price, location and availability — not trying to influence public policy — were their primary reasons for booking with Trump.

Government ethics watchdogs say that while these actions may be legal, they can cause the public to question some of the Trump administration’s decisions.

“There’s a pretty big difference from lobbying and giving business to the president, which essentially means actually enriching the president,” said Noah Bookbinder, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

“When you have these kinds of business relationships, it creates the risk that the president is instead going to be motivated by what’s in his financial interest instead of what’s in the best interest of the American people.”

A look at several special interests that met at Trump properties, their lobbying priorities, and the real-world results:

Bankers

Hedge fund managers, bankers and payday lenders have been opening their wallets at Trump properties.

In March, the Palm Beach Hedge Fund Association, members of an industry that Trump once said were “getting away with murder” with tax breaks, held a meet-and-greet gathering at his Mar-a-Lago club in town.

A few days later, executives from dozens of banks converged for a three-day conference at the Trump National Doral Miami that was sponsored by a trade magazine. Its panel discussions included one titled “The Trump presidency

Next up, a payday lending group will be heading to the Doral in April for its annual conference.

Trump administration goals often align with business groups, but those groups have nevertheless notched significant concessions from lawmakers and regulators in recent months.

Federal regulators recently announced they would reconsider rules requiring payday lenders to make sure potential borrowers can pay back loans. And a law passed late last year will make it harder for consumers to join together to sue their banks.

Also, the tax overhaul left open a loophole for hedge fund operators to claim much of their income as “carried interest” taxed at lower rates than ordinary income. But after Senate questioning, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said last week that he plans to close the loophole.

Money manager Tom Brown, who spoke at the Doral event for bankers, said he didn’t believe attendees saw it as an opportunity to curry favor with the Trump administration.

For its part, the Community Financial Services Association, a payday lending group, said it first held an annual meeting at the Doral 16 years ago and added, “We look forward to returning.” A board member of the Palm Beach hedge fund group, Jonathan Beaton, said it was a just a social club, not a lobbying organization.

“No one is trying to get to Trump or change policy,” he said.

Vaping victory

In July, a Washington-based trade association for the vaping and e-cigarette industry held its annual two-day conference at the Trump International Hotel in Washington. The keynote speaker was Sen. Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican who had just written the Food and Drug Administration asking that it rein in a 2016 rule requiring e-cigarette makers get federal approval to sell the products, something the association says stunts innovation and places heavy costs on small businesses.

Ten days later, the FDA announced that, as part of its efforts to strike the “appropriate balance” between regulation and innovation, manufacturers of e-cigarettes and cigars already on the market would have another four years before they would be required to get agency approval. The delay also applies to regulations on flavored vaping products, which studies show to be especially appealing to young people.

Tony Abboud, executive director of the Vapor Technology Association, said in a statement that it was “overly simplistic” to suggest the July event at Trump’s hotel had anything to do with the FDA delay. He said the venue was selected based on budget and proximity to Capitol Hill.

Sweet success

The lobbying group that represents “Big Candy” interests such as Mars and Hershey’s held two events at Trump properties in the past two years — at the Doral in Miami in March 2017 and in 2016 at the Trump International Hotel in Washington.

The group appears to have found receptive ears in the administration.

In September, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb proposed delaying Obama-era rules that would have imposed new labeling standards on candy. An official at the lobbying group, the National Confectioners Association, wrote Gottlieb a congratulatory letter, saying that the delay to January 2020 would “significantly reduce the burden” on the industry.

Christopher Gindlesperger, a spokesman for the group, said the Miami event was booked in 2014, a year before Trump entered the presidential race, and the Washington event in 2015 before Trump became president. He added the group’s use of Trump properties was based on its event needs only, adding that its choice of venues is “completely unrelated to our advocacy efforts.”

Title insurers

A trade association for the title insurance industry has spent more than half a million dollars each year over a decade lobbying Congress and the White House. But never before has it had the opportunity to host an event at a property owned by a U.S. president.

In October, the American Land Title Association held a three-day annual conference at Trump National Doral Miami, with rooms advertised to members at the rate of $279 a night.

Two months later, ALTA wrote about a “significant victory” on its blog. The insurers sell more policies when people buy and sell more homes, but the initial versions of both the Senate and House versions of the tax overhaul would have hurt business by forcing home sellers to hold on to properties longer to claim tax-free capital gains on sales.

The final law cut out those restrictions. Meanwhile, Trump said last month that he would look into another priority for the group, loosening rules on consumer lending.

Representatives for ALTA did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Train training

What do rules about training programs for railroad workers have to do with a dinner of sweet corn bisque, saffron paella and roasted rockfish accompanied by Trump wine from his Virginia vineyard and Trump Signature coffee?

Well, maybe nothing, but it’s worth watching.

The backstory is that the National Railroad Association doesn’t like a 2008 Transportation Department rule requiring what it considers excessive training for railroad workers. It has spent years trying to repeal it, spending $120,000 last year alone on lobbying on this issue and others.

The Federal Railroad Administration had been authorized by Congress in 2008 to enact training rules, but a final rule had been repeatedly delayed.

In March 2017, the association held a lavish dinner at the Trump International Hotel Washington down the street from the White House. “I am drinking Trump coffee,” enthused one guest, Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley, who posted a photo of the menu on his Instagram account.

The next day U.S. railroad executives and lobbyists fanned out to Capitol offices for their annual “Railroad Day” lobbying rounds.

In December, the Federal Railroad Administration announced a proposal to delay implementation of its training rules for another year.

The association did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

The pop-in

In at least once instance, Trump himself stopped by during a corporation’s event at the president’s exclusive Mar-a-Lago club.

It came in December during the Christmas party for Oxbow Carbon LLC, a Florida-based energy company owned by William Koch, a longtime dues-paying member of Mar-a-Lago and brother of billionaires and conservative activists Charles and David Koch.

Oxbow’s main product, petroleum coke, a fuel used in oil refining and often stored in bulk, could be affected by the Trump administration’s push to ease air and water pollution regulations.

Oxbow spokesman Brad Goldstein said no business was discussed during Trump’s visit to the party and stressed that Koch has long held events at Trump’s club.

“This was an event to reward Oxbow employees and the president was just visiting as he has in the past,” Goldstein said. “It had nothing to do with public policy.”

This story has been corrected to reflect that the National Confectioners Association has met twice at Trump properties in the past two years, not in the past year. The most recent was March 2017 at the Trump National Doral Miami. The group also did not schedule another event at the Trump Washington hotel in September.

US Law Enforcement Officials Announce Largest Ever Elderly Fraud Case

U.S. law enforcement officials on Thursday announced what they labeled as the largest ever fraud enforcement action involving elderly Americans in U.S. history, charging more than 200 people and bringing civil actions against dozens more.

The defendants, many of them foreign nationals living outside the United States, are accused of robbing more than one million elderly Americans of more than $1 billion, the officials said.

The action was made public at a press conference in Washington by top officials from the Justice Department, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Federal Trade Commission and other law enforcement agencies.

“It’s a despicable crime these people are doing,” U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said. “They’re the kind of people we need to be effective in targeting.”

The enforcement action was coordinated among state, federal and international law enforcement agencies.

Over the past month, the Justice Department’s Consumer Protection Branch and U.S. Attorney’s office have filed cases against more than 40 defendants who were collectively responsible for a majority of the cases, Sessions said.

 

In recent days, agents from the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the enforcement arm of the U.S. Postal Service, have executed search warrants at 14 locations that some of the same fraudsters have run for years, Postal Chief Inspector Guy Cottrell said.

And on Thursday, officers from the Vancouver Police Department in Canada served dozens of search warrants as part of the enforcement action, Sessions said.

“These warrants are being carried out against members of transnational criminal organizations that have allegedly defrauded tens of thousands of Americans and people all over the world,” Sessions added.

The alleged fraudsters targeting elderly Americans typically notified them via mail that they’d won a sweepstakes prize and all they needed to do to claim it was to pay a processing fee and money for taxes. While many stopped sending money after realizing they had been duped, others continued to do so in hopes of claiming the prize.

Millions of people around the world fall for the scam.

“The losses are staggering: More than $30 million a month in the United States and globally it’s over $100 million,” said Cottrell.

According to the Justice Department, an estimated $3 billion is stolen or defrauded from millions of elderly Americans every year.

“And this threat is only growing,” said Sessions.

In 2016, the Senate Special Committee’s fraud hotline received twice as many reports as it did in 2015, Sessions said.

Last year, the FBI opened more than 1,500 financial crimes cases, including 200 involving senior Americans, said Acting FBI Deputy Director David Bowdich.

The cases involved investment fraud, such as Ponzi schemes, internet fraud such as romance and lottery schemes, reverse mortgage scams and outright theft, Bowdich told the press conference.

The perpetrators included people the victims “should have trusted, including attorneys, financial advisers, guardians and caretakers,” said Bowdich.

In one case, the FBI apprehended a lawyer who stole money from the estate of an elderly person with dementia and then used it to support a lavish lifestyle, he added.

Turkey’s Syria Operation Showcases Domestic Weapons Industry

Turkey’s ongoing military offensive against a Kurdish militia in Syria’s Afrin enclave is showcasing the growing prowess of the Turkish armaments industry. In recent years, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sought to dramatically reduce his country’s dependency on imported arms.

“Almost all of the armored carriers (operating) in Afrin are domestically produced. I thank our friends who produced them,” said Erdogan Wednesday at a meeting at his presidential palace. The Turkish military, alongside allied Syrian rebels, is seeking to seize Afrin, a Kurdish enclave, from the control of a Kurdish militia that Ankara accuses of being a terrorist group linked to an insurgency inside Turkey.

Erdogan went on to blame the deaths of Turkish soldiers fighting in Afrin on the failure of countries to sell Turkey sophisticated weapons, including armed drones. He did not name the countries to which he was referring.

Last year, Erdogan issued a presidential decree putting Turkey’s armament industry directly under his control. The government has poured billions of dollars’ worth of investments into expanding the defense industry. Further investments are on the way. “A total of 55 projects worth $9.4 billion were evaluated,” according to a presidential statement in January at a meeting of Turkey’s Undersecretariat for Defense Industries.

 

 “In the past there was no money, but now there is a lot of money slushing around, and the AKP has the vision to realize this project. This is a success story of the AKP,” said political analyst Atilla Yesilada of Global Source Partners, referring to the ruling party. “We used to procure 80 percent of our (armament) needs from abroad; now we are producing our own rifles, simple drones, armored vehicles. It saves foreign currency, it develops an industry which has some export potential and reduces foreign dependency.”

Trimming foreign dependency on imported weapons is a key priority of the Turkish government. The current Afrin operation has served as a reminder to Ankara of the vulnerability of such dependency. Germany is currently blocking a key upgrade of Turkish-owned, German-made Leopard tanks because of their use in the Afrin operation.

 

But the Afrin campaign is also showcasing Turkey’s armaments industry.

“There are many new military technologies. Turkey has developed armed drones, helicopters, smart munitions and for the first time, they are all being tested in action abroad,” said defense analyst Metin Gurcan, who also served in the Turkish military. “I am sure all these new systems will be tested and after that, upgraded accordingly. Systems that are combat proven result in their prices going up,” Gurcan added.

 

Along with developing strategic arms independence, Ankara has an eye on the lucrative international arms market. Analysts suggest Turkey is unlikely to try and compete with the world’s major players, but rather will try and find a niche. “Turkey has been trying to become a very important player in the arms exports market, in the region of the Middle East, Central Asia, Africa,” said Gurcan.

“Turkey is very flexible, ready to accept proposals for technology transfer joint production, also at a cheaper price, than the normal market prices. I think Turkey’s arms industry is emerging as a new exporter that can provide, more efficient, low cost, battle tested, and less problematic for arms buyers,” he said.

 

Gurcan points out Ankara is using close diplomatic ties, with central Asian countries and Qatar, to secure several arms contracts.

 

Turkey’s defense industry, however, may be approaching a ceiling in reducing its dependency on arms imports.

“Turkey does not produce its own microchips, not even the general use chips. So anything that requires specialized circuitry you have to buy from abroad,” points out analyst Yesilada. “If you are producing a guided missile you can’t (in Turkey) because you don’t have a similar domestic industry where you can draw on their experience.”

 

The Turkish defense industry says it has started to produce so-called smart bombs, but analysts suggest they fall short of the capability of munitions imported from the United States and Europe. Turkish forces are relying heavily on such specialized munitions in their ongoing Afrin operation, with hundreds of air sorties already carried out. A Western diplomat with knowledge of the subject says Ankara is starting to reach out to allies to replenish its stocks of such weapons.

Bridging the technology gap is a priority for Ankara. It has made technology transfers a key demand for purchases of sophisticated weapons, particularly its efforts to buy a surface-to-air missile system. Several bids, including from the United States, of its Patriot missile system broke down in part because of disputes over technology transfers. Such failings are reasons given by Ankara for its controversial decision to buy  an S-400 missile system from Russia. Turkey’s NATO allies had warned against doing so, citing compatibility issues. 

“It’s (a deal) already done. Turkey paid 40 percent of it and the rest is given as a credit by Russia, and the first delivery is by 2020,” said international relations expert Huseyin Bagci of Ankara’s Middle East Technology University.

It remains unclear whether Moscow has met Ankara’s technology transfer demands and the details of the deal remain unclear. Bagci suggests that Turkey’s defense industry has hit a ceiling for now.

“Turkey is buying big jet fighters, smart bombs, etc., and is selling small munitions, artillery, etc. Turkey is definitely not yet a giant of weapons production; it is not,” Bagci said.

Lawsuit: Trump’s Ending Immigrant Program Racially Motivated

Haitian and Salvadoran immigrants sued President Donald Trump on Thursday, arguing that the Republican administration’s decision to end special protections shielding them from deportation was racially motivated.

 

The lawsuit filed in federal court in Boston seeks to block the administration from terminating temporary protective status for thousands of immigrants from Haiti and El Salvador. It claims Trump’s move to rescind the program was rooted in animus against immigrants of color, citing comments made by Trump on the campaign trial and in office.

 

“Many of the plaintiffs have lived in the United States for decades,” said Patricia Montes, executive director of Centro Presente, a Massachusetts-based Latin American immigrant organization that’s also a plaintiff in the case. “If TPS is terminated, they are at risk of losing everything — the homes and the businesses they have built, the families they have raised and the money they have invested into their communities,” she said in a statement.

 

Temporary legal status provides temporary safe havens for people from countries experiencing armed conflicts, natural disasters and other challenges.

 In January, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said it was ending special protections for Salvadoran immigrants, giving them until Sept. 9, 2019, to leave the U.S. or face deportation. Months earlier, the administration ended the protection for Haitians, requiring them to leave or adjust their legal status by July 22, 2019, and for Nicaraguans, giving them until Jan. 5, 2019. A decision is expected later this year for Honduran immigrants.

 

The Department of Homeland Security said that conditions in Haiti have improved significantly since the 2010 earthquake and the country is now able to “safely receive traditional levels of returned citizens.”

 

The Obama administration had extended protections for Salvadorans in 2016, saying the country was still suffering the lingering effects of earthquakes in 2001 that killed more than 1,000 people. The Trump administration said last month that the country has received significant international aid to recover from the earthquake, and homes, schools and hospitals there have been rebuilt.

 

The lawsuit calls the administration’s stated reasons for ending the protections “nothing but a thin pretextual smoke screen for a racially discriminatory immigration agenda.”

 

The complaint was filed by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice on behalf of eight immigrants enrolled in the program, including a Salvadoran restaurant owner in Massachusetts and a 19-year-old Haitian immigrant living and attending community college in Boston.

 

It points to reports that Trump questioned why the U.S. would want to admit more people from Haiti, used a vulgarity to describe countries in Africa and said he would like to see more immigrants from countries like Norway. It also cites separate reports that Trump said Haitians who received visas to enter the U.S. last year “all have AIDS” and comments he made about immigration during the campaign, including that Mexican immigrants were “bringing crime” and were “rapists.”‘

 

The NAACP and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund filed a similar lawsuit in Maryland last month challenging the termination of the protections for Haitian immigrants.

 

 

 

Montenegro Police Official: US Embassy Attacker Ex-Soldier

The man who hurled a bomb into the U.S. Embassy compound in Montenegro’s capital, and then killed himself, was an ex-soldier apparently decorated by former Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic after NATO’s bombing of Serbia and Montenegro in 1999, authorities said Thursday.

A police official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation, said the man was 43-year-old Dalibor Jaukovic, who was identified by a close relative.

 

At a news conference, police formally identified the suspect by his initials D.J., in line with what the police official said earlier. The man had no criminal record and the attack wasn’t an act of terrorism, police said.

Police added they were investigating his motives and whether he had acted alone. They said security was beefed up around all foreign embassies in Montenegro.

 

“Measures are being taken together with the FBI agents to check the social networks this individual has used,” senior police official Enis Bakovic said.

 

Photos posted on Jaukovic’s Facebook profile include a plaque honoring his contribution in the fight against NATO during the bombing. The plaque appears to be personally signed by Milosevic. In a Facebook post in May, Jaukovic said “no to NATO.”

Police said in a statement earlier that an assailant threw a bomb into the embassy yard and then killed himself by activating another one around midnight Wednesday.

The blast created a crater but caused no other material damage to the embassy property, the statement said. The embassy said Thursday all staff are safe and accounted for after the incident.

 

Police sealed off the area around the embassy after the explosion. Officers came to the scene after receiving reports about two explosions and found a lifeless male body in the area of the Moraca river that runs through Podgorica, the statement said.

 

Police said Jaukovic was a Montenegrin citizen born in neighboring Serbia.

 

Many in Montenegro remain opposed to the country’s NATO membership because of the air war the alliance waged to stop the war in Kosovo when Montenegro was still part of Yugoslavia.

 

Montenegro borders the Adriatic Sea in southeastern Europe. It joined NATO last year despite strong opposition from Russia, its traditional Slavic ally. Several people, including two Russian secret service operatives, are on trial in Podgorica on charges that they wanted to overthrow Montenegro’s government in 2016 because of its pro-Western policies.

 

The U.S. established diplomatic ties with the tiny Balkan state in 2006 after it split from much larger Serbia.

 

Під генконсульством України у Санкт-Петербурзі провели акцію до річниці Майдану

У російському Санкт-Петербурзі ввечері 21 лютого біля будівлі генерального консульства України відбулася акція до четвертої річниці подій на Майдані. Близько 10 активістів прийшли до дипустанови, щоб влаштувати пам’ять загиблих під час Революції гідності.

Як повідомила організатор акції, представниця петербурзького демократичного руху «Солідарність» Ольга Смирнова, активісти передали генконсулу України сині і жовті квіти та листівку. У листівці, як вказала Смирнова, активісти написали, що громадяни Росії, які поділяють ліберальні та демократичні цінності, засуджують політичне керівництво Росії і президента Володимира Путіна через агресію щодо України.

Поліцейські знімали все на відео, але не перешкодили активістам у проведенні заходу.

Повідомляється, що поки активісти спілкувалися зі співробітниками українського консульства, проти їхньої акції виступали представники «Народно-визвольного руху», які теж прийшли до будівлі консульства з плакатами і прапорами неіснуючої «Новоросії».

З 18 до 22 лютого в усіх регіонах України вшановують загиблих під час Революції гідності. 20 лютого визначено як День Героїв Небесної сотні.

У період з 21 листопада 2013 року по 21 лютого 2014 року під час сутичок протестувальників із силовиками в центрі Києва загинули понад сто людей, найбільше – 20 лютого. Більшість людей загинули від куль снайперів, які влучали протестувальникам у голову, серце і шию. Згодом загиблих учасників акцій протесту почали називати «Небесною сотнею».

За даними Генпрокуратури, всього під час Євромайдану постраждали 2,5 тисячі осіб, 104 з них загинули.

Florida Students Anti-Gun Rally Spreads

Hundreds of students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, rallied Wednesday at the Florida Capitol in Tallahassee to pressure lawmakers to approve tougher gun control laws one week after one of the most deadly U.S. school shootings.

A gunman killed 17 people at the Parkland school, triggering a wave of protests by students in Tallahassee and elsewhere in the U.S. Teachers and Florida state representative Sean Shaw joined the students on the grounds of the capitol, where the Democratic lawmaker criticized a state House vote Tuesday along party lines against a bill to ban assault weapons. The vote drew the ire of student shooting survivor Florence Yared, who directed her comments to lawmakers who voted against the measure.

“Your children might become victims, too,” Yared said. “You have the power to change this, and if you don’t we will change you! We will vote you out,” she said emphatically to cheers and applause.

Student survivor Ryan Deitsch told the Tallahassee crowd, “The more [the lawmakers] don’t act, the more they don’t deserve to be in office. I can vote, and I know who I am not voting for!”

In Photos:  High School Students Protest in Tallahassee

The mass shooting also has sparked a wave of rallies elsewhere in Florida and in other areas of the country in an attempt force local and national leaders take action to prevent such attacks.

Mothers from across Georgia converged Wednesday on the state capitol of Atlanta to attend a Moms Demand Action advocacy group rally. The rally’s purpose is to advocate for responsible gun ownership and not to ban guns.

More than 200 students at Montgomery Blair High School in the Washington suburb of Silver Spring, Maryland, walked out of school Wednesday to attend a planned protest for gun control at the U.S. Capitol. Protest organizers said students from two other suburban Maryland high schools, Richard Montgomery and Bethesda-Chevy Chase, also are participating in the demonstration.

And in Washington, hundreds of high school students rallied in front of the White House, chanting, “No more silence, end gun violence.” They held their hands in the air during 17 seconds of silence in observance of the victims.

The Stoneman Douglas students began taking buses over the past couple of days to Tallahassee to take part in Wednesday’s rally and to meet with legislative leaders.

“We [students] are the ones most involved in this,” student Ariana Ortega told VOA before boarding one of the buses. “We are the ones who lived through this whole tragic experience, and we are going to be the future leaders of America.”

Students were in the gallery of the Florida House on Tuesday as lawmakers rejected a Democratic proposal to consider a bill to ban assault rifles. Republicans accused the Democrats of forcing the issue after 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz allegedly used an AR-15 to carry out the Stoneman Douglas shooting.

Lizzie Eaton, a junior at Stoneman Douglas, called the legislature’s vote “heartbreaking.” But she said: “We’re not going to stop. We’re going to keep fighting for what we believe in. We’re not going to let this bring us down.”

In addition to Wednesday’s rally in Tallahassee, President Donald Trump will host parents, teachers, and students for what the White House calls a “listening session” on school safety. Survivors from the Parkland, Sandy Hook, and Columbine school massacres have been invited.

Students are also planning a March 24 rally in Washington and other major cities called “March for Our Lives.”

Music stars Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga and Cher have thrown their support behind the march. Actor George Clooney and his wife, Amal, a human rights attorney, said they are donating $500,000 to help pay for it, and media mogul Oprah Winfrey said she would match their contribution.

“Our family will be there on March 24 to stand side by side with this incredible generation of young people from all over the country,” Clooney said.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll released Monday said 86 percent of respondents who identified themselves as Democrats said stricter gun control laws could have prevented the Florida shooting, while 67 percent of Republicans said stricter laws could not have prevented the massacre.

More than three-quarters of both groups, however, said more effective mental health screening and treatment could have prevented the attack.

Overall, 77 percent of respondents said Congress is not doing enough to prevent mass shootings in the United States, while 62 percent said Trump was not doing enough.

Police say shooting suspect Nikolas Cruz confessed to gunning down 14 students and three adults at the high school he was expelled from last year. He was able to buy an AR-15 rifle to carry out the mayhem after clearing a background check.

In Washington, Democratic lawmakers often call for tighter controls on gun purchases, while Republicans often oppose them, saying they would violate the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution sanctioning gun ownership.

 

Порошенко і Салліван обговорили розміщення миротворчої місії ООН на Донбасі

Президент України Петро Порошенко і заступник державного секретаря США Джон Салліван обговорили розміщення  миротворчої місії ООН на Донбасі.

Як повідомляє прес-служба Адміністрація президента, також в ході зустрічі було обговорено безпекову ситуацію на Донбасі і подальші кроки в рамках мирного врегулювання. 

За повідомленням, співрозмовники порушили питання реалізації програми реформ в Україні, зокрема у рамках продовження співробітництва України з МВФ, було наголошено на важливості ухвалення законопроектів про створення антикорупційного суду та про національну безпеку України.

Заступник державного секретаря США Джон Салліван, який перебуває в Києві, сьогодні заявив, що для України важливо продовжувати боротися з корупцією.

Росія, яка подала до Ради безпеки ООН пропозицію щодо сил організації на Донбасі, домагається, щоб ці сили дислокувалися тільки поблизу лінії контакту в місцях, де працюють спостерігачі ОБСЄ, і мали за завдання тільки охорону цих спостерігачів.

Україна і її західні союзники відкинули такі обмеження і наполягають, що ці сили повинні працювати на всій окупованій території Донбасу, включно з неконтрольованою нині ділянкою українсько-російського кордону, і мати широкий миротворчий мандат.

Крім того, Київ і Захід відкидають будь-яке узгодження подробиць можливої місії ООН із бойовиками, які не є стороною мінських домовленостей про врегулювання на окупованій частині Донбасу. Обговорення можливості та умов розміщення сил ООН на окупованій території Донбасу все ще обговорюється.

 

Прикордонники заборонили Саакашвілі в’їзд до України, він обіцяє «скоро повернутися»

Державна прикордонна служба заборонила на три роки в’їзд до України екс-президенту Грузії, колишньому голові Одеської облдержадміністрації Міхеїлу Саакашвілі. Про це свідчать документи ДПСУ, які Саакашвілі оприлюднив на своїй сторінці в Facebook.

«Зі мною чи без мене, цій владі вже прийшов кінець, а я повернуся додому, в Україну, вже зовсім скоро, набагато, набагато раніше, ніж через три роки», – написав він.

12 лютого Міхеїла Саакашвілі затримали в одному з ресторанів у центрі Києва, а згодом Державна прикордонна служба і Державна міграційна служба України заявили, що за процедурою реадмісії його повернули до Польщі – країни, звідки він у вересні 2017 року «прибув, порушуючи українське законодавство».

У липні 2017 року Міхеїл Саакашвілі указом президента України втратив українське громадянство. Чинність його закордонного паспорта громадянина України після втрати громадянства скасована.

Проти Саакашвілі порушена низка кримінальних справ у його рідній Грузії, яка вже тривалий час домагається від України його видачі.

Trump Demands Probe of Obama Response to Russia Election Meddling

President Donald Trump on Wednesday again questioned why, if Russia was interfering in the 2016 U.S. election, former President Barack Obama and his administration did little to thwart it and why they are not now being investigated.

Trump virtually demanded his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, undertake an investigation of Obama and officials in that administration.

It has been a recurring theme for Trump in recent days: casting aspersions on several months-long investigations of his campaign’s links to Russian interests during the run-up to the November 2016 election and afterward, and attempting to divert attention to the Obama administration that was in office ahead of the vote and for weeks after it.

Trump’s admonishment of Sessions also showed the president’s continuing upset that the attorney general removed himself from oversight of the Russia probe because of his own 2016 contacts with Russia’s then-ambassador to Washington, eventually leading to the appointment of Special Counsel Robert Mueller to head the ongoing criminal investigation.

Trump’s comments came in the aftermath of Mueller filing charges last week against 13 Russian individuals and three Russian entities for allegedly conducting an “information warfare” campaign against the U.S. with fake stories and commentary about divisive U.S. issues in an effort to help Trump defeat Democratic contender Hillary Clinton.

Trump has only reluctantly supported the finding of the U.S. intelligence community, and now Mueller, that Russia carried out a campaign to help him win the White House. He has not condemned Moscow for its 2016 election interference and, according to his intelligence chiefs’ congressional testimony last week, has not directed them to take any action to thwart Russian interference in the U.S. congressional elections set for November.

Trump has so far declined to impose sanctions on Russia for its election interference that were overwhelmingly approved by Congress and sought to improve relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

A month ahead of the 2016 election, the U.S. intelligence community voiced concern about the Russian interference. At that point, Obama wanted to issue a bipartisan statement about the Russian meddling, but was rebuffed by Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

After the election, in the last weeks of his presidency, Obama issued sanctions against nine Russian individuals and entities for election meddling. Obama also expelled 35 Russian government officials and ordered two waterfront compounds closed that the U.S. said the Russians were using for intelligence-gathering operations.

Trump praised Putin when the Russian leader subsequently ordered the dismissal of 755 workers at U.S. outposts in Russia, many of them Russians. Trump said it would help the U.S. save money with a diminished payroll in Russia.

Earlier this week, Trump said Obama failed to act against Russian meddling because he thought Clinton would win.

In another tweet, Trump said, “I have been much tougher on Russia than Obama, just look at the facts. Total Fake News!” He praised his favorite television show, Fox and Friends for laying out a timeline he said showed “all of the failures of the Obama Administration” in combating Russian military involvement in Syria and its takeover of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula.

Florida School Shooting Survivors Are Not ‘Crisis Actors’

Two students who survived the Florida school shooting and spoke publicly about it are not “crisis actors,” despite the claims of several conspiracy-oriented sites and an aide to a Florida lawmaker.

The Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students, David Hogg and Emma Gonzalez, are among those targeted by conspiracy theories about the Feb. 14 shooting that killed 17 people.

Similar hoaxes were spread online following other mass shootings, including the 2012 assault on Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut.

In Florida, an aide to a state representative on Tuesday emailed a Tampa Bay Times reporter a screenshot of them being interviewed on CNN and said, “Both kids in the picture are not students here but actors that travel to various crisis when they happen.”

Broward County Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie told the Times that the legislative aide’s comments were “outrageous and disrespectful.”

“These are absolutely students at Stoneman Douglas. They’ve been there. I can verify that,” Runcie told the newspaper.

The aide, Benjamin Kelly, sent a second email to Times reporter Alex Leary with a link to a conspiracy video saying, “There is a clip on you tube that shows Mr. Hogg out in California. (I guess he transferred?)” In the clip, a news reporter interviewed Hogg while on vacation in 2017 in Redondo Beach as a witness to a friend’s confrontation with a lifeguard. On Wednesday, YouTube had replaced one link to a video about Hogg as an actor with a notice saying it violated the site’s policy on harassment and bullying, but other videos remained.

Kelly tweeted later Tuesday that his comments were a mistake. The speaker of the Florida House, who oversees all House employees, subsequently fired him.

Runcie called such attacks “part of what’s wrong with the narrative in this country. If someone just has a different type of opinion, it seems that we want to somehow demonize them or color them as being somehow illegitimate instead of listening. . We’ll never get beyond that if, as soon as you show up, you’re demonized.”

Hogg also responded to the erroneous claims, telling CNN, “I am not a crisis actor. I’m somebody that had to witness this and live through this and I continue to have to do that.”

Amid a Flood of Plastic, Big Companies See Opportunity

Once a month, accountant Michael Byrne pulls on his rubber boots and makes his way to a spot on the banks of the River Thames.

He carefully marks out a one-square meter (11-square foot) patch and, with gloved hands, catalogues each bit of plastic he finds, meticulously reporting the data to the environmental group Thames21. On Aug. 20, for example, he and other volunteers found an average of 31 food wrappers, the sticks from 29 cotton swabs, 12 bottle tops and about 100 pieces of small chewed up plastic in each patch.

“We are the data gatherers” who provide evidence of the plastic that’s clogging the world’s rivers and oceans, he said. “We are building up a picture all along the river of what is washing up.”

Public awareness of the problem of plastic waste is swelling after alarming forecasts that there could be more plastic than fish in the oceans by 2050. Plus the shocking images are rolling in: Britain’s Sky News’ campaign against ocean plastic featuring whales bloated by plastic bags; National Geographic’s chilling picture of a seahorse curled around a pink cotton swab, and filmmaker David Attenborough’s documentary “Blue Planet II” footage of sea turtles shrouded in plastic.

 

And where consumers’ attention goes, so does that of companies.

In the last few months, Amcor, Ecover, Evian, L’Oréal, Mars, M&S, PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, Unilever, Walmart and Werner & Mertz – which together use more than 6 million metric tons of plastic packaging per year – have committed to using only reusable, recyclable or compostable packaging by 2025, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, an innovation think-tank.

Adidas, meanwhile, is making a line of clothing from recycled plastic bottles and promoting the products with an online video underscoring the health threat to humans of ingesting plastic particles found in fish. Negozio Leggero, a high-end food store in Italy and Switzerland, features 1,500 package-free products. British supermarket chain Iceland is planning to remove all plastic packaging from its own-brand products by 2023.

“Some of the companies that might have been seen as the worst offenders are the ones moving forward,” said Abigail Entwistle of Fauna & Flora International, a 115-year-old conservation organization. “They have the most to lose.”

These are the companies, after all, that have profited from a business model that wraps everything from spring water to cleaning products in plastic packaging that is used once and thrown away.

Global plastic production increased to 380 million metric tons (418 million tons) in 2015 from 2 million metric tons in 1950, according to research by Roland Geyer, a professor of industrial ecology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

About 60 percent of the 8.3 billion metric tons of plastic produced throughout history has ended up as waste, with more than three-fourths of that going into landfills or the natural environment, Geyer estimates. In 2010 alone, between 4 million and 12 million metric tons of plastic entered the marine environment.

The material kills and maims wildlife and makes its way into the food chain.

The Ellen MacArthur Foundation highlighted the issue last year in a report that said the weight of plastic in the oceans would equal that of fish by 2050 if current trends continue. Only 14 percent of plastic packaging is currently collected for recycling, according to the foundation, which works with companies like Google, Nike and Danone. Action is needed on multiple fronts, it says.

“It’s not about one innovation, one regulation, one action. We need all of them at the same time.” Rob Opsomer, who leads the foundation’s New Plastics Economy project. “We need to have more and bolder ambitions.”

 Market research group Mintel says we may eventually see “social stigmatization” of plastic cups and cling film, with firms developing soluble packaging and more retailers shunning products encased in plastic.

 “There is money to be made, but more importantly there’s money to be lost,” said Ben Punchard, global packaging analyst at Mintel. “It is being used as a virtue signal. It’s showing you are doing the right thing.”

 Governments and other institutions have also begun to focus on the issue.

 The EU has set a target to recycle 65 percent of urban waste by 2035. Britain last year outlawed the use of plastic microbeads, and the government says it will consider taxes on single-use plastic as part of an effort to eliminate all “avoidable plastic waste” within 25 years. The Church of England suggested its members reduce their plastic use for Lent.

 Geyer says initiatives are nice, but recycling and reuse campaigns have done little to stem the tide of plastic pollution over the past 30 years. He believes society needs to contain its rising demand for plastic as companies and governments pursue ever-increasing growth. Oceans are simply “collateral damage” in the consumer economy, he said.

 “That’s how we build our lives, that’s how we consume, that’s how the economy is set up now,” he said. “On the one hand, everyone says this is terrible, we have to stop it. On the other hand, everyone gets terribly upset if the economy doesn’t grow by 3 percent. Honestly, I think we can’t have our cake and eat it, and that’s what we’re trying to do here, I think.”

 That’s not stopping people like Byrne from trying to spread the word.

 The accountant has 60 sets of rubber boots to loan to anyone who joins him on the banks of the Thames. He gives everyone a safety briefing, and there’s a promise of an afternoon at the pub after the cold and often grueling work of trash counting and pickup.

 “We have a problem with plastic,” he said. “Everyone knows that, but let me say it again – we have a problem with plastic. We have to do something.

Oxfam Investigates New Claims Of Sexual Misconduct

British aid agency Oxfam says it is investigating dozens of new allegations of sexual misconduct. It follows revelations last week that some Oxfam staff in Haiti paid sex workers in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake. As Henry Ridgwell reports from London, the scandal looks set to mark a watershed moment for the aid sector.

Macron to Propose Tighter Asylum Rules in Test of Parliamentary Majority

Emmanuel Macron’s government will on Wednesday propose toughening France’s immigration and asylum laws amid strident criticism from human rights groups, in a move that will test the unity of his left-and-right majority.

The bill will double to 90 days the time for which illegal migrants can be detained and shorten deadlines to apply for asylum, and it will make the illegal crossing of borders an offense punishable by one year in jail and fines.

The government says it wants to be both firm and fair on immigration, and the bill will also make it easier for minors to get asylum and will aim to cut by half the time it takes for authorities to process any asylum request.

But while Macron’s parliamentary majority, a mix of lawmakers who have their roots both in right-wing and left-wing parties, has so far been very united, the government’s migration plans have triggered disquiet in its ranks.

Mathieu Orphelin, a lawmaker from Macron’s Republic on the Move party, on Tuesday said increasing the detention time from 45 days to 90 days was problematic, adding that he intended to table amendments to modify the bill.

Another lawmaker from Macron’s party, Sonia Krimi, has accused the government of “playing with people’s fears” with its migration reform. “All foreigners in France are not terrorists. All foreigners do not cheat with social welfare,” she told Interior Minister Gerard Collomb in parliament in December.

Macron is accustomed to glowing international tributes as a breath of fresh air since his election in May last year on promises of a break with government framed by left-vs.-right politics.

But the migration bill has concentrated criticism at home.

The prominent left-wing magazine l’Obs in January featured a black-and-white photo of his face, wrapped in barbed wire, on its cover, above the words: “Welcome to the country of human rights.”

This bill “represents a vertiginous drop of refugees’ and migrants’ rights in France,” said Jean-Claude Mas of the Cimade charity, which helps migrants and asylum seekers.

It might, however, prove popular with voters. A BVA opinion poll this month showed that 63 percent of French voters think there are too many immigrants in France.

The number of people filing asylum requests in France hit a record in 2017, topping 100,000. That is still well below the 186,000 arrivals of asylum seekers registered that same year in Germany.

Trump Denounces Women Who Accused Him of Sex Abuse

U.S. President Donald Trump Tuesday denounced Rachel Crooks, one of 19 women who have accused Trump of sexual assault, and the Washington Post, for publishing an article about her allegations.

The Post story offers her detailed account of how Trump allegedly forcibly kissed the then 22-year-old on January 11, 2006 while the two were waiting for an elevator in Trump Tower in New York. The article also describes how nothing has come of the allegations from her and the other women, despite repeating her story, which she first described to The New York Times several months prior to the 2016 presidential election.

Like other allegations, Trump has denied them — as he did Tuesday on Twitter.

“A woman I don’t know and, to the best of my knowledge, never met, is on the FRONT PAGE of the Fake News Washington Post saying I kissed her (for two minutes yet) in the lobby of Trump Tower 12 years ago. Never happened! Who would do this in a public space with live security……

 

…cameras running. Another False Accusation. Why doesn’t @washingtonpost report the story of the women taking money to make up stories about me? One had her home mortgage paid off. Only @FoxNews so reported …doesn’t fit the Mainstream Media narrative.”

In response to the Republican president’s tweets, Crooks, who is running as a Democrat for a seat in the Ohio State House of Representatives, challenged Trump to release video of their alleged encounter.

“Please, by all means, share the footage from the hallway outside the 24th floor residential elevator bank on the morning of January 11, 2006. Let’s clear this up for everyone. It’s liars like you in politics that have prompted me to run for office myself.”

Most of the sex abuse accusations from the other women were made after Trump began campaigning for president in 2015, describing experiences spanning five decades.

Trump has consistently denied the allegations, calling them “total fabrications” and tweeting once that “Nobody has more respect for women than me.”

 

У ЄС засудили дозвіл Польщі на лісозаготівлю у Біловезькій пущі

Суд Європейського союзу вважає, що Польща порушила законодавство ЄС щодо довкілля, дозволивши лісозаготівлю в одному з найстаріших лісів континенту – Біловезькій пущі, повідомив 20 лютого юрисконсульт суду Ів Бот.

Заготівля лісу в Біловезькій пущі розпочалася торік після того, як міністерство з питань довкілля Польщі дозволило збільшити майже втричі вирубування. Влада пояснила рішення наявністю шкідників, які псували кору дерев.

Єврокомісія минулого року передала справу щодо Біловезької пущі до Суду ЄС, який наказав зупинити лісозаготівлю доти, доки не буде ухвалене рішення у справі.

Європейський суд, який, як очікується, винесе рішення у справі наприкінці цього року, зазвичай поділяє думку свого провідного правового радника, яким є Бот, але не завжди.

Новий міністр з питань довкілля Польщі Генріх Ковальчик заявив 20 лютого, що його країна «буде поважати остаточне рішення суду про Біловезьку пущу».

Один з останніх пралісів Європи, розташований на території Польщі та Білорусі, є об’єктом Всесвітньої спадщини ЮНЕСКО і домівкою для найбільшої концентрації тут сімейства зубрів.

Захист фігуранта «справи українських диверсантів» Присич подав скаргу до ЄСПЛ

Адвокат фігуранта «справи українських диверсантів» Володимира Присича Сергій Насонов подав скаргу до Європейського суду з прав людини. Про це повідомляє Кримська правозахисна група.

За інформацією правозахисників, у скарзі зазначено, що «право українця на справедливий судовий розгляд, передбачене статтею 6 Конвенції про захист прав людини й основних свобод, було порушено внаслідок фальсифікації доказів, відмови суду від аналізу аргументів Володимира Присича з цього питання і використання неприпустимих доказів у обгрунтуванні вироку».

Про те, що Володимир Присич – четвертий фігурант «справи українських диверсантів», повідомляла Кримська правозахисна група в листопаді 2016 року. Але тоді його доля була невідома адвокатам, у 2017 році в анексованому Криму Володимира Присича засудили до трьох років позбавлення волі. Однак вирок йому винесли за іншою статтею – за зберігання наркотиків.

ФСБ Росії 10 серпня повідомила, що в ніч на 7 серпня в Криму затримали групу «українських диверсантів», які нібито готували теракти на півострові. Цьому передувало триденне блокування російськими прикордонниками підконтрольних їм кримських пунктів в’їзду і виїзду на адміністративному кордоні з окупованим півостровом.

Влада України заперечує звинувачення Москви й назвала їх «провокацією» російських спецслужб.

Мінсоцполітики: постраждалим під час Євромайдану виплатили 250 мільйонів гривень допомоги

Пораненим та членам сімей загиблих під час подій Революції гідності виплатили 255,8 мільйона гривень допомоги станом на 20 лютого 2018 року, повідомляє Міністерство соціальної політики України.

У відомстві заявили, що допомогу надали 1080 людям.

У період з 21 листопада 2013 року до 21 лютого 2014 року під час сутичок протестувальників із силовиками в центрі Києва загинули понад сто людей, найбільше – 20 лютого. Більшість людей загинули від куль снайперів, які влучали протестувальникам у голову, серце і шию. Згодом загиблих учасників акцій протесту почали називати «Небесною сотнею».

За даними Генпрокуратури, всього під час Євромайдану постраждали 2,5 тисячі осіб, 104 з них загинули.

Oxfam Probing New Sexual Misconduct Claims as Scandal Engulfs Aid Sector

British aid agency Oxfam says it is investigating 26 new allegations of sexual misconduct. It follows revelations last week that some Oxfam staff paid sex workers in Haiti in 2011, in the aftermath of the earthquake that struck the Caribbean country the previous year.

As several other aid agencies begin investigating their own handling of abuse complaints, the scandal looks set to mark a turning point for the sector.

Summoned to appear before a committee of British lawmakers Tuesday, Oxfam directors apologized for the damage caused to the people of Haiti and to the aid workers whose efforts have been tarnished.

“This is about aligning our people with the values of Oxfam. Some hideous men came to our organization and abused the trust of the British people. They support us. But they were able to get away, to get a recommendation to leave. This was wrong. So, we are going to change the culture,” Winnie Byanyima, Oxfam International’s executive director, told MPs.

Oxfam’s Haiti country director at the time of the 2011 allegations, Belgian national Roland van Hauwermeiren, was allowed to resign before the end of the investigation. He denies any wrongdoing.

“It was decent. It was as if I was meeting a lady in Belgium – by the way I have a girlfriend here now – and I would fall in love with her. There is nothing wrong with that,” van Hauwermeiren told Belgian media last week.

​‘Brushed underneath the carpet’

Several other charities including Save the Children and Doctors Without Borders are now investigating their own handling of abuse allegations. Many governments, including Haiti’s, are urgently reviewing their relationships with aid organizations.

“There has been a working culture where this has been brushed underneath the carpet and victims of this kind of abuse have not had the opportunity to speak up. We’re already talking about an existing power imbalance that exists between the aid giver and the aid beneficiary. Now, if that’s abused, that sends out a really very, very negative message against the entire sector,” said Gemma Houldey of the University of Sussex, a former aid worker who now researches the working culture of the sector.

Oxfam received $45 million from the British government in 2017, and almost the same amount from the European Union. Both are now reviewing that funding. The British secretary of state for international development, Penny Morduant, warned charities that their practices are under scrutiny.

“Unless you safeguard everyone, your organization that comes into contact with you, including beneficiaries, staff and volunteers, we will not fund you. Unless you create a culture that prioritizes the safety of vulnerable people and ensures victims and whistleblowers can come forward without fear, we will not work with you,” Morduant said in a recent speech.

Funding from members of the public has already been impacted. Oxfam says seven thousand regular donors have ceased payments in the past week-and-a-half.

“This of course has an immediate impact on the people who are receiving the aid, the people that are living in disaster areas, recovering from conflict situations. They’re the ones who are going to bear the brunt of this straight away, and that’s what we should be considering,” said Houldey.

Victims of alleged abuse in the aid sector are beginning to speak up, and that has been widely welcomed; but there are also fears that aid funding could be cut, just as the world faces numerous humanitarian crises.

 

US Says Ready to Talk Mideast Peace; Abbas Calls for Conference

The United States is “ready to talk” Middle East peace with the Palestinians, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said on Tuesday in remarks directed at Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas during a meeting of the U.N. Security Council.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner, and U.S. Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt, who are working on a new peace plan, sat behind Haley. Speaking after Abbas made a rare address to the 15-member council, she gave no details of the U.S. plan.

“Our negotiators are sitting right behind me, ready to talk. But we will not chase after you. The choice, Mr. President, is yours,” Haley said. Abbas did not stay in the council chamber to listen to her.

The Palestinians no longer view Washington as a neutral negotiator and Abbas on Tuesday called for an international Middle East peace conference to be convened later this year.

The Palestinians are furious over the Trump administration’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in December and its decision to cut to U.S. funding for the U.N. agency that helps Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

“It has become impossible today for one country or state alone to solve a regional or international conflict,” Abbas said. “It is essential to establish a multilateral international mechanism emanating from an international conference.”

Abbas, who shunned a visit by U.S. Vice President Mike Pence to the region last month, said the conference should include the Palestinians, Israel, the five permanent U.N. Security Council members – the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France – and the United Nations.

Israel’s U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon told the Security Council that Abbas was part of the problem, not the solution, and that the “only way to move forward is direct negotiations” between Israel and the Palestinians.

 

Vatican Special Envoy Hears Sex Abuse Victim Testimony in Chile

The Vatican’s top sexual abuse investigator said he had started taking testimony on Tuesday from victims in the Chilean capital, where he is looking into accusations that a bishop appointed by Pope Francis covered up crimes against minors.

Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta was sent to Chile after the pope was criticized during his visit last month for defending Bishop Juan Barros, who he appointed in 2015 despite accusations he had covered up sexual abuse of minors.

Several men have accused Barros of protecting his former mentor, Father Fernando Karadima, who was found guilty in a Vatican investigation in 2011 of abusing them and others when they were boys.

Scicluna, known for his role in the sex abuse investigation that led to the removal of late Mexican priest Marcial Maciel in 2005, arrived in Santiago on Monday. On Tuesday, he had his first interviews with victims in Providencia, the wealthy Santiago neighborhood that is home to Karadima’s former parish, and issued a short statement to reporters afterward.

“I have come to Chile, sent by Pope Francis, to gather useful information concerning Monsignor Juan Barros,” Scicluna said. “I want to express my gratitude to the people who have expressed their willingness to meet me in the next few days.”

Before his trip to Chile, Scicluna spent four hours hearing testimony in New York from a key witness in the case against Barros.

Juan Carlos Cruz, who was sexually abused by Karadima as a teenager, told reporters he gave “eye opening” testimony to Scicluna on Saturday. Cruz, who now lives in Philadelphia, has said Barros was present for the abuse.

Following his meeting with Scicluna, Cruz said he felt for the first time that someone was listening. He urged the Church to hear all victims with the same respect he received from Scicluna.

Barros, of the diocese of Osorno, has said he was unaware of any wrongdoing by Karadima.

During his visit to Chile last month, the pope testily told a Chilean reporter: “The day I see proof against Bishop Barros, then I will talk. There is not a single piece of evidence against him. It is all slander. Is that clear?”

The comments were widely criticized and Francis later issued a statement saying Scicluna would go to “listen to those who want to submit information in their possession.”

Scicluna was due to hear victim testimony until his scheduled departure from Chile on Friday.

Turkish Forces Shell Syrian Militias in Contested Kurdish Enclave

Pro-Syrian government forces reportedly have crossed into the Kurdish-held enclave of Afrin. The deployment is in response to an ongoing military offensive by Turkish-led forces against the YPG Syrian Kurdish militia.

“The Syrian government responded to the call of duty and they sent military units today, Tuesday, 20 February, 2018, to be deployed along the borders and to be involved in defending the unity of Syrian territory,” said YPG spokesman Nuri Mahmoud.

Ankara claims the convoy of several hundred heavily armed fighters was forced to retreat after coming under Turkish artillery fire.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sought to play down the incident, claiming the fighters belonged to local militias that were acting on their own, without Damascus’s support. Erdogan added the “matter was closed for now.”

Damascus has not commented on the incident.

The forces being deployed to Afrin are believed to be made up of Syrian government and Iran-backed militias, including elements of Hezbollah. Unverified videos circulating on social media show heavily armed forces, including armored cars and tanks, being sent to the Kurdish enclave. One fighter reportedly declared, “We are coming for Erdogan.”

Russia, Iran consulted

Erdogan said Tuesday he had warned his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, in a telephone conversation Monday that Damascus would “face serious consequences” if it sent its forces to Afrin in support of the YPG militia. On Monday, Syrian state TV reported Damascus had reached an agreement with the YPG to deploy forces to secure Afrin.

In a speech to parliamentary deputies Tuesday, Erdogan declared Afrin’s main town, also called Afrin, would be put under siege in the “coming days.” Erdogan also claimed after speaking to his Iranian and Russian counterparts he had thwarted an agreement between Damascus and the YPG to support the Kurdish militia against the Turkish incursion.

Last month, Ankara launched its military offensive into Afrin against the YPG militia, which it accuses of being linked to a decades long Kurdish insurgency in Turkey. Erdogan has pledged the operation would continue until the militia is removed from the enclave.

Damascus has opposed the operation, calling it a violation of its territorial integrity and pledged to resist it, but until now has not taken action.

“I don’t think Ankara and Damascus are so eager for a direct confrontation,” said Metin Gurcan, a Turkish defense analyst. “But the real danger, is that Turkey has the Free Syrian Army proxies and Assad has too pro-Assad militia. Those proxies have this bloody feud with one another, a clash is possible between them.”

Russia calls for talks

The rising tensions pose a major headache for Russia. Moscow is a strong backer of the Assad regime, but at the same time sees Ankara as crucial to its ongoing efforts to bring an end to the Syrian civil war because of Turkey’s strong ties with Syrian rebel forces.

Russian Foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said Tuesday the situation in Syria’s Afrin could be resolved only through direct dialogue between Damascus and Ankara.

Erdogan has ruled out any dialogue with Assad, claiming it is impossible to speak with a man responsible for the deaths of a half-million people. Analysts argue it is a key strategic goal of Moscow to open dialogue between Ankara and Damascus in its ongoing efforts to end the civil war.

The risk of Ankara and Damascus-backed forces sliding into a direct confrontation could force Moscow into choosing sides, given it controls Syria’s airspace and currently allows Turkish jets to support the ongoing offensive in Afrin.

“The Turkish operation — with jets, tanks and howitzers — has been possible so far due to the indirect support of Russia, the main ally of the al-Assad regime, together with Iran,” Murat Yetkin wrote Tuesday in the Turkish daily Hurriyet.

Ultimately, Moscow could have the most at stake in the rising Turkish-Syrian tensions.

“Russia, at the end of the day, needs both Damascus on the one side of the table, and Ankara, to control the Sunni armed opposition and to turn them into a political actor, to maintain the political transformation process,” noted analyst Gurcan. “I don’t think Moscow will let the destruction of this very fragile, very complex negotiating table which it has been constructing for more than one year.”

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