Month: June 2018

Справа Єфремова: наступне засідання призначили на 4 липня, допитуватимуть свідка

Старобільський районний суд Луганської області призначив на 4 липня засідання у справі колишнього голови фракції Партії регіонів Олександра Єфремова.

Як повідомляє Генеральна прокуратура у Facebook, у ході цього засідання запланований допит свідка сторони обвинувачення.

У ГПУ додають, що сьогодні  в ході судового засідання досліджувались письмові докази сторони обвинувачення.

15 червня суд продовжив запобіжний захід у вигляді тримання під вартою Олександру Єфремову, арешт продовжили до 13 серпня.

Єфремова затримали 30 липня 2016 року в аеропорту «Бориспіль», звідки він, за даними ГПУ, намагався вилетіти до Відня. 13 січня 2017 року Єфремова з Києва конвоювали до Старобільська, де він і нині перебуває під арештом.

 

4 січня 2017 року Генеральна прокуратура України направила до суду обвинувальний акт стосовно Єфремова. Йому інкримінують організацію захоплення будівлі Луганської ОДА; пособництво в захопленні Управління СБУ в Луганській області; вчинення умисних дій з метою зміни меж території та державного кордону України; організаційне сприяння створенню й діяльності угруповання «ЛНР»; державну зраду.

Азію та Європу відвідали більше туристів у 2018 році – ВТО

Всесвітня туристична організація заявляє про зростання міжнародного туризму протягом перших чотирьох місяців 2018 року загалом на 6%.

Як повідомила 25 червня організація, що входить до системи ООН, найбільше зростання зафіксували в Азії і країнах Тихого океану (на 8%),  а також в Європі (7%).

«Міжнародний туризм продовжує демонструвати значне зростання в усьому світі, і це означає створення робочих місць у багатьох країнах. Це зростання нагадує нам про необхідність збільшити свій потенціал для розвитку і управління туризму», – сказав Генеральний секретар ВТО Зураб Пололікашвілі.

За даними організації, з січня по квітень 2018 року міжнародні поїздки збільшились до всіх регіонів, на чолі Азія та Тихоокеанський регіон (на 8%) – Південно-Східна Азія ( зростання на 10%) та Південна Азія (на 9%).

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Протягом перших чотирьох місяців 2018 року Європа загалом продемонструвала популярність серед туристів зі зростанням на 7 відсотків, зокрема туристичні напрямки Південної та Центральної Європи і Західної Європи (зростання на 8%).

Ukraine Says Russian Hackers Preparing Massive Strike

Hackers from Russia are infecting Ukrainian companies with malicious software to create “back doors” for a large, coordinated attack, Ukraine’s cyber police chief told Reuters on Tuesday.

The hackers are targeting companies, including banks and energy infrastructure firms, in a roll out that suggests they are preparing to activate the malware in one massive strike, cyber police chief Serhiy Demedyuk said. Ukrainian police are working with foreign authorities to identify the hackers, Demedyuk added.

The Kremlin denied the allegations. “No, that is not true,” said spokesman Dmitry Peskov, in comments conveyed to Reuters by his office on Wednesday.

Law enforcement and corporate security teams around the world pay close attention to cyber threats in Ukraine, where some of the most destructive hacks in history have originated. A virus dubbed “NotPetya” hit Ukraine in June 2017, taking down government agencies and businesses before spreading to corporate networks around the globe, causing companies billions of dollars in losses.

“The fact that the Ukraine government has decided to go public with this shows that they are scared that this could have a big impact and want people to be aware,” said Jaime Blasco, chief scientist with cybersecurity firm AlienVault.

It is difficult to contain the impact of a cyberattack within one nation, so it is possible this new threat could spread around the globe, he added.

Since the start of the year, Ukraine police have identified viruses in phishing emails sent from legitimate domains of state institutions whose systems were hacked and fake webpages mimicking that of a real state body.

Hackers have sought to evade detection by breaking malware into separate files, which are put onto targeted networks before they activate them, Demedyuk said.

“Analysis of the malicious software that has already been identified and the targeting of attacks on Ukraine suggest that this is all being done for a specific day,” he said.

Relations between Ukraine and Russia plunged following Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, and Kyiv has accused Russia of orchestrating large-scale cyberattacks as part of a “hybrid war” against Ukraine, which Moscow repeatedly denies.

Some attacks have coincided with major Ukrainian holidays.

Demedyuk said another strike could be launched on Thursday – Constitution Day – or on Independence Day in August.

The United States and Britain joined Ukraine in blaming Russia for the NotPetya campaign in 2017. It took a costly toll on quarterly results of major global corporations including Cadbury chocolate maker Mondelez International Inc and freight logistics company FedEx Corp.

Representatives with the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation could not be reached for comment on Tuesday afternoon.

The scale of the current campaign is the same as NotPetya, according to Demedyuk.

“This is support on a government level – very expensive and very synchronized. Without the help of government bodies, it would not be possible. We’re talking now about the Russian Federation,” he said.

“Everything we’re seeing, everything we’ve intercepted in this period: 99 percent of the traces come from Russia.”

Ukraine is better prepared to withstand such attacks thanks to cooperation with foreign allies including the United States, Britain and NATO, Demedyuk said.

Still, there are some Ukrainian companies that have not cleaned their computers after NotPetya struck, which means they are still infected by that virus and vulnerable to being used for another attack.

“We are sounding the alarm to remind people – come to your senses, check your equipment,” he said.

 

Exhibition Explores Michael Jackson as Artists’ Inspiration

A new art exhibition in London depicts Michael Jackson as a savior, a saint, an entertainer, an icon, a monarch, a mask and a mystery.

The National Portrait Gallery show, opening Thursday, reveals the extent to which contemporary artists have been drawn to the late King of Pop, as an artistic inspiration, a tragic figure and a fascinating enigma.

Gathering work by 48 artists from around the world, the show includes Jackson-inspired paintings, photographs, videos, textiles and ceramics. It ranges from 1980s pop-art portraits by Andy Warhol and Keith Haring to David LaChapelle’s depictions of a Christ-like Jackson and Kehinde Wiley’s vast portrait of the entertainer as a king on horseback.

Curator Nicholas Cullinan said Wednesday that, nine years after Jackson’s death, the show explores “how he could mean so many different things to so many people.”

Jackson had already been a child star when he became an international icon in 1983 with the release of “Thriller,” one of the best-selling albums of all time. His music, moves, style and innovations in staging and video had a huge impact on popular culture. He also struggled with the limelight, and died in 2009 of a prescription drug overdose at age 50.

The exhibition includes works that reflect on what Jackson meant to his fans, his place in African-American culture, the way he manipulated fame — and the way fame manipulated him.

 U.S. artist Todd Gray, who worked for Jackson as a photographer in the 1970s and 80s, recalled him as a sweet-natured youth — “If he stepped on an ant, he would cry” — but also someone keenly aware of his image. He remembered Jackson refusing to change his mismatched socks for a photo shoot, saying: “`People will talk. That’s what I want.'”

Gray has reworked his old photos by layering other pictures over Jackson’s face, including images from Ghana, where the artist has a home.

“It’s my way to place Michael in the African diaspora,” he said.

The show has the support of Jackson’s family, though not all the works are flattering. American artist Jordan Wolfson shows nothing but Jackson’s darting, blinking eyes, taken from a 1993 TV interview in which the star denied child molestation allegations.

Several works depict Jackson in a mask, most famously Mark Ryden’s cover art for the “Dangerous” album. Isaac Lythgoe has turned that image of Jackson’s masked eyes into a plush headboard.

Other images are heroic. German artist Isa Genzken juxtaposes Jackson and Michelangelo’s David. Wiley — who has also painted Barack Obama’s official portrait — depicts Jackson in armor on horseback, in a painting modeled on Peter Paul Rubens’ portrait of King Philip II of Spain. The portrait was the last one Jackson commissioned, and was completed after his death.

One work, filling a whole room, focuses not on Jackson but on his fans. South African artist Candice Breitz filmed 16 German-speaking Jackson fans of myriad ages and races, singing “Thriller.” It’s an engaging and moving work that shows just how much Jackson means to those who love his music.

Scottish artist Donald Urquhart, who created an illustrated Michael Jackson alphabet for the exhibition, thinks Jackson’s “manipulation of fame” has inspired many artists. But he says Jackson will be most widely remembered for his boundary-crossing music.

“I’ve been to tiny villages in Sumatra where they just play Michael Jackson all day long,” Urquhart said. “They don’t speak English, but there’s something in his music that is beyond language.”

“Michael Jackson: On the Wall” runs in London from Thursday until October 21. It moves to the Grand Palais in Paris from November to Feburary, then travels to the Bonn, Germany and Espoo, Finland.

Дуда підписав зміни до закону про Інститут національної пам’яті

Президент Польщі Анджей Дуда підписав зміни до закону про Інститут національної пам’яті.

Як повідомляється на офіційному сайті польського президента, Дуда  вирішив підписати законопроект у найкоротші терміни на особисте прохання прем’єр-міністра країни від імені парламентської більшості.

27 червня польський парламент ухвалив зміни до закону про Інститут національної пам’яті, скасувавши статтю про запровадження кримінальної відповідальності за звинувачення поляків в співучасті в Голокості.

Після цього директор Українського інституту національної пам’яті Володимир В’ятрович на своїй сторінці в Facebook написав, що «польські парламентарі  продемонстрували, що не все втрачено, і є здатність визнавати свої помилки і виправляти їх».

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Закон про покарання за публічне звинувачення поляків у причетності до Голокосту передбачав кримінальну відповідальність (тюремне ув’язнення на термін до трьох років) за поширення ідей про вину польського народу або держави в Голокості. Покарання передбачене і за висловлювання про причетність поляків до «злочинів Третього рейху». До таких правопорушень відноситься, зокрема, використання формулювання «польські концтабори».

Закон також забороняє пропаганду в Польщі «бандерівської ідеології».

Документ, ухвалений Семом Польщі в січні, викликав критику США і особливо Ізраїлю, які закликали внести зміни до закону.

МЗС України також засуджувало рішення Сейму Польщі про заборону пропаганди «бандерівських націоналістів», назвавши це «черговою спробою нав’язати однобічне трактування історичних подій».

Supreme Court Justice Kennedy to Retire

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announced Wednesday he plans to retire, giving President Donald Trump a coveted opportunity to replace him with a more conservative judge and fundamentally change the makeup of the nation’s highest court.

Kennedy has served on the court for 30 years and has often cast the decisive vote on significant cases, including those involving abortion, gun control, and voting rights.

WATCH: Explainer on Supreme Court Justices

A Trump appointee would very likely create a solid five-member conservative majority. Without him, the court will be split between four liberal justices who were appointed by Democratic presidents and four conservatives who were named by Republicans.

Minutes after Kennedy’s retirement was announced, Trump said he will “immediately” begin the search for a replacement and said Kennedy was a man of “tremendous vision.”

Kennedy said his retirement would become effective at the end of July.

OPCW Given Power to Lay Blame in Chemical Weapons Attacks

Member countries of the global chemical weapons monitoring group voted in the Hague Wednesday to give the organization expanded authority to assign blame for toxic weapons attacks.

Members of the Organization for the Prohibition for Chemical Weapons voted 82 to 24, easily exceeding the two-thirds majority need for approval.

The proposal was presented by Britain and was supported by the United States and the European Union. It was opposed, however, by 24 countries including Russia, Syria and their allies.

British representative Peter Wilson said passage will allow the OPCW “not to just say when chemical weapons are used, but by whom.”

Before the vote, OPCW lacked the ability to say who was responsible for chemical attacks that had occurred in Syria and elsewhere.

The vote followed a diplomatic stalemate at the two-day meeting between Western allies and Russia and Syria.

US Begins to Dismantle Iran Nuclear Deal Sanctions Relief

The Trump administration on Wednesday began dismantling the sanctions relief that was granted to Iran under the 2015 nuclear deal, a step that follows President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the international accord.

The Treasury Department announced it had revoked licenses that allowed U.S.-controlled foreign firms to export commercial aircraft parts to Iran as well as permitted Americans to trade in Iranian carpets, pistachios and caviar. It said businesses engaged in any such transactions have to wind down those operations by Aug. 6 or face penalties under U.S. sanctions. Another set of licenses covering other types of commerce, including oil purchases, will be revoked in coming weeks, with firms given until Nov. 4 to end those activities.

The step had been expected since May when Trump pulled the U.S. out of the landmark agreement under which Iran was given relief from sanctions in return for curbs on its nuclear program. Trump said the accord, a signature foreign policy achievement of his predecessor, President Barack Obama, was the worst deal ever negotiated by the United States because it gave Iran too much in return for too little. Trump also complained that the agreement did not cover Iran’s non-nuclear malign behavior.

Other parties to the deal — Britain, China, Germany, France, Russia and the European Union — have criticized the U.S. withdrawal, which has left the agreement at risk of collapse. The Trump administration is stepping up efforts to isolate Iran and its faltering economy from international financial and trading systems.

On Tuesday, the administration said it was pushing foreign countries to cut their oil imports from Iran to zero by Nov. 4. Previously, the administration had said only that countries should make a “significant reduction” in their imports of Iranian oil or be subject to separate U.S. sanctions prohibiting all transactions between their central banks and Iran’s central bank.

A senior State Department official said the administration is now telling European and Asian countries that the U.S. expects their imports to hit zero by the time the grace period ends. A U.S. team from the State Department and the National Security Council is currently in Europe delivering the message, said the official who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter and spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity. The official added that the U.S. is working with other Middle Eastern countries to increase production so the global oil supply isn’t harmed.

Some close U.S. allies are among the largest importers of Iranian crude oil, including India and South Korea. Japan and Turkey also import significant amounts of Iranian oil, according to statistics from the U.S. Energy Information Agency. The biggest importer of Iranian oil last year was China.

US Supreme Court Deals Major Blow to Public Unions

In a blow to organized labor, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that unions representing public workers such as teachers and police officers may not charge non-members fees, cutting off a major source of revenue.

The decision Wednesday in Janus v. AFSCME overturned a 1977 ruling by the High Court, which originally permitted the “fair share fees.” The court’s conservative majority ruled the earlier decision, Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, violated non-union members’ First Amendment rights, saying mandatory payments to unions constituted an endorsement of a political message that might contrast with their personal beliefs.

“Forcing free and independent individuals to endorse ideas they find objectionable raises serious First Amendment concerns,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the court’s majority opinion. All four liberal justices on the court dissented.

The ruling is seen as a major victory for conservative activists, who have long worked to curtail the power of public unions. Labor unions are a significant voting bloc for the Democratic Party.

“Supreme Court rules in favor of non-union workers who are now, as an example, able to support a candidate of his or her choice without having those who control the Union deciding for them,” President Donald Trump tweeted Wednesday, following the decision. “Big loss for the coffers of the Democrats!”

The court was expected to strike down the Abood decision in 2016. Yet Justice Antonin Scalia, who was expected to vote against Abood, died suddenly after the case was argued — forcing a 4-4 deadlock.

U.S. Senate Republicans successfully filibustered then-President Barack Obama’s nominee to replace Scalia, Merrick Garland. President Trump subsequently was able to appoint his own justice pick, Neil Gorsuch, who voted with the conservative majority in Wednesday’s case.

The New York Times reported Wednesday this decision could cost public unions tens of millions of dollars. While the ruling does not affect private union workers, unions represent just 6.5 percent of employees within the private sector, the Times reported.

Patty Murray, the top Democrat on the U.S. Senate’s labor committee, expressed disagreement with the court’s ruling.

“Today’s decision is a loss for working people and yet another win for corporate special interests that have spent decades funding political campaigns and lawsuits designed to chip away at workers’ rights,” Murray said in a statement. “For more than a century, unions have organized to lift up the voices of workers who were otherwise unheard, and fought for fair pay, safer working conditions, and better benefits.”

Representative Donald Norcross, a New Jersey Democrat and member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, attacked the court’s claim that the Abood decision violated workers’ First Amendment rights, and called the Janus decision a “dangerous precedent.”

“If you applied this decision outside the scope of public unions, government would cease to function,” Norcross said. “How many people would stop paying their taxes if we said the First Amendment allowed it?”

Norcross is a co-sponsor of the Workplace Democracy Act, introduced in Congress in May. The bill would eliminate right-to-work laws, which reduce the power of unions and are currently in effect in 28 states.

Representative Mark Pocan, a Wisconsin Democrat and a Progressive Caucus member who introduced the bill in the House of Representatives, said the decision was a “real blow” to the working class, but would not destroy public unions. 

EU Puts Off Balkan Membership Talks as France Demands Reforms

European Union governments on Tuesday delayed by at least a year a decision to allow membership negotiations with Macedonia and Albania after France and the Netherlands faced down Germany and demanded more reforms.

The unexpected outcome, despite broad EU support, showed French President Emmanuel Macron’s determination to postpone the decision until after European Parliament elections in May, for fear of stoking anti-immigrant sentiment, diplomats said.

It also puts a brake on the momentum Germany and the European Union’s Chief Executive Jean-Claude Juncker had sought in the Western Balkans to counter Russian influence by offering the six countries a path to EU membership.

EU governments will “set out the path towards accession negotiations in June 2019”, for Macedonia and Albania, according to a document agreed by the bloc’s 28 Europe ministers at what diplomats said was a long, fraught meeting in Luxembourg.

“It was a very difficult birth,” Germany’s EU minister Michael Roth said of the compromise decision.

Germany, Austria, Sweden, Slovakia and many other EU countries had hoped for an agreement on Tuesday that would give clear approval for membership talks to start. EU leaders were due to have signed off at a summit on Thursday in Brussels.

Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia all hope to join the European Union and are considered future members by many in the bloc.

While membership talks with Serbia and Montenegro are under way, Albania, which is already a member of NATO, and Macedonia, which has reached an agreement to resolve a dispute over its name with Greece, had won the support of the European Commission, which recommended that membership talks be opened.

Even with the delay, Macedonia’s deputy prime minister for European Affairs, Bujar Osmani, said on Twitter his country was now “on the path to open the accession negotiations next June”.

COUNTERING CORRUPTION

Macron, backed by the Netherlands, has said the bloc must first reform itself before taking on new members, although EU diplomats say Paris is mainly concerned about stoking anti-immigrant sentiment at home.

The rushed accession of Romania and Bulgaria in 2007 and the poorly managed migration of eastern European workers to Britain, which turned many Britons against the European project, have made so-called EU enlargement more difficult, officials say.

The Dutch parliament has approved opening EU membership talks with Macedonia after an agreement with Greece to change the country’s official name from Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia to Republic of North Macedonia.

But the Dutch government was unwilling to move before France, diplomats said.

In their statement, EU ministers said both Albania and Macedonia needed to do more on judicial reforms, endemic corruption and organized crime. Depending on progress next June and another report by the Commission, which oversees membership talks, EU governments could formally open negotiations at an so-called intergovernmental conference by the end of next year.

Both countries have to show “a track record both in improving the rule of law and fighting organized crime”, Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok told reporters. “We’ll look carefully at next year’s Commission report to judge whether we see this progress,” he added.

Many European countries, including Austria which will chair the EU rotating presidency from July, want to send a signal to Albania, Macedonia and other Western Balkan countries that the way to EU membership is still is open, especially as Macedonia looks set to be welcomed into the NATO alliance in July.

“There has been a lot of progress. It only enforces our point that the Western Balkans should have a clear membership perspective,” Austria’s EU minister Gernot Bluemel said.

 

Денісова може просити про зустріч з Сущенком після набрання чинності вироку – російський суд

Уповноважена Верховної Ради з прав людини Людмила Денісова зможе попросити Мосміськсуд про дозвіл на зустріч із засудженим в Росії журналістом Романом Сущенком тільки після набрання вироком законної сили.

Як заявила речниця Мосміськсуду Уляна Солопова, дозвіл на зустріч може надаватися тільки консульським співробітникам, ким уповноважена Верховної Ради з прав людини не є.

За її словами, питання про надання такого дозволу Денісовій може вирішуватися тільки на загальних підставах, після набрання вироку щодо Сущенка законної сили. 

Солопова додала, що наразі вирок оскаржений і законної сили не набрав.

Український омбудсмен Людмила Денісова 26 червня заявила, що їй знову відмовили в зустрічі із Романом Сущенком. За її словами, всі необхідні документи надала 14 червня, а наступного дня отримала дозвіл Московського міського суду на відвідування Сущенка й передала копію до СІЗО «Лефортово», де утримують журналіста.

Денісова повідомила, що 18 червня надала інші документи до слідчого ізолятора, однак у цей день їй відмовили в зустрічі із Сущенком. Омбудсмен розповіла, що 20 червня знову звернулася до Московського міського суду..

Український омбудсмен із 15 червня перебуває в Росії, де намагається отримати доступ до Олега Сенцова, Романа Сущенка та інших українських в’язнів у Росії. Жодної зустрічі досі так і не відбулося.

Натомість її російська колега Тетяна Москалькова 26 червня в Києві зустрілася із затриманими в Україні моряками кримського корабля «Норд», однак потім її не впустили до Лук’янівського СІЗО в Києві, де вона хотіла зустрітися із засудженим у «справі кримських дезертирів» військовослужбовцем Максимом Одинцовим.

Суд у Москві 4 червня засудив українського журналіста Романа Сущенка до 12 років позбавлення волі за звинуваченням у шпигунстві. Сущенко своєї провини не визнає, правозахисники називають справу проти нього політично мотивованою.

 

Wall Street Rebounds from Selloff on Trade Worries

U.S. stocks rose on Tuesday as gains in technology, consumer discretionary stocks and General Electric helped Wall Street recover from a sharp sell-off a day earlier on spiraling global trade tensions.

GE rose 8.2 percent, on track for its biggest one-day gain in over three years, after the company said it would spin off its healthcare business and divest its stake in oil-services company Baker Hughes.

Technology stocks rose, after plunging on Monday after reports of possible restrictions on foreign investment in U.S. technology firms. Apple was up 1.8 percent, Amazon rose 1.9 percent and Netflix gained 4.6 percent.

“We’re still in a tug-of-war between daily twists and turns of a potential trade war and the reality of a strong underlying U.S. economy,” Brent Schutte, chief investment strategist at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Co said.

Mnuchin turns to Twitter

The benchmark S&P 500 index on Monday saw its worst day in more than two months, dropping 1.37 percent after conflicting messages from Trump administration officials on the proposed foreign investment restrictions.

After initial reports that only Chinese investments would be curbed, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Twitter that restrictions would apply “to all countries that are trying to steal our technology.”

White House trade and manufacturing adviser Peter Navarro later said only China would be targeted.

Harley-Davidson fell 0.8 percent after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened the company with higher taxes, a day after the company said it would move production of motorcycles, shipped to the EU, to its international facilities.

At 12:57 p.m. ET the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 81.61 points, or 0.34 percent, at 24,334.41, the S&P 500 was up 10.83 points, or 0.40 percent, at 2,727.90 and the Nasdaq Composite was up 46.43 points, or 0.62 percent, at 7,578.44.

Oil crude prices rise

Seven of the 11 major S&P sectors were higher, led by a 1.27 percent gain in the energy index.

Oil prices jumped over 2 percent as Washington pushed allies to halt imports of Iranian crude.

U.S. homebuilder Lennar jumped about 6.3 percent as strong housing demand helped it report better-than-expected quarterly results.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners for a 1.89-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and for a 1.67-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.

The S&P index recorded five new 52-week highs and nine new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 43 new highs and 44 new lows.

Гнап: ведуться переговори про створення нової політичної сили

Журналіст-розслідувач Дмитро Гнап заявив, що «ведуться розмови» про створення нової політичної сили.

За його словами, такі перемовини ведуться, зокрема, з колишнім журналістом, народним депутатом від фракції «Блок Петра Порошенка» Мустафою Найємом. 

«Ми про це ведемо переговори з Мустафою Найємом. Він, наскільки я розумію, представляє не лише себе, а й своїх колег – Сергія Лещенка, Світлану Заліщук, є в них ще однодумці. Важко це назвати переговорами, швидше ведуться розмови про створення нової політичної сили», – сказав він під час прямої трансляції у Facebook.

Гнап не виключає, що цю політсилу можуть створити на базі вже існуючих зареєстрованих партій – «Демократичного альянсу» або «Сили людей».

Напередодні журналіст-розслідувач Дмитро Гнап заявив про намір йти в політику. В оприлюдненому відеозверненні журналіст заявив про намір брати участь у парламентських виборах, які заплановані на 2019 рік.

Читайте також – «Чи стане сильний журналіст сильним політиком?»: соцмережі про Дмитра Гнапа

З 2013 року Гнап є керівником проекту журналістських розслідувань «Слідство.інфо» на «Громадському ТБ».

 

Трамп відреагував на рішення Верховного суду США щодо його міграційного указу

Президент США Дональд Трамп називає сьогоднішнє рішення Верховного суду величезною перемогою для американського народу та Конституції. 

«Верховний Суд підтримав чіткі повноваження президента для захисту національної безпеки Сполучених Штатів. У цю епоху глобального тероризму та екстремістських рухів… ми повинні маємо перевіряти тих, хто прибуває в нашу країну», – йдеться у заяві Трампа. 

Верховний суд США 26 червня підтримав указ президента Дональда Трампа обмежити в’їзд до Сполучених Штатів для громадян декількох мусульманських країн. Суд не погодився з твердженням, що заборона на в’їзд дискримінує мусульман або є перевищенням влади.

Читайте також: Політика Трампа щодо мігрантів: жорстка, чи жорстока?

Нижчі судові інстанції визнали цю заборону неконституційною. Його також критикували біженці та правозахисні групи.

Указ забороняє громадянам Ірану, Лівії, Північної Кореї, Сомалі, Сирії, Венесуели та Ємену в’їжджати до Сполучених Штатів.

US Official Warns Turkey on F-35 Deal Over Russia System

A top U.S. State Department official warned Turkey on Tuesday that its purchase of Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jets would be jeopardized if it does not drop a plan to buy S-400 missile defense systems from Russia.

If it buys the system, Turkey would also be subject to sanctions under a bill President Donald Trump signed into law last summer, Wess Mitchell, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, testified in the Senate.

That sweeping sanctions law, known as CAATSA, seeks to punish companies that do business with Russia’s defense industry.

“We’ve also been very clear that across the board, an acquisition of S-400 will inevitably affect the prospects for Turkish military-industrial cooperation with the United States, including F-35,” Mitchell told a Foreign Relations subcommittee hearing on U.S. relations with Europe.

Ties between Washington and Ankara have been strained in recent months over a host of issues, including U.S. policy in Syria and legal cases against American citizens detained in Turkey, notably a U.S. pastor named Andrew Brunson, who is being held on terrorism charges.

Mitchell estimated there are about two dozen detained Americans in Turkey, many of them dual nationals.

But Mitchell also praised Turkey, a member of NATO, as “a crucial ally and partner,” citing its support for the campaign against the Islamic State militant group.

“We work with them very closely in intelligence and in other areas, but this has the potential to spike the punch,” he said.

Separately, Trump congratulated Turkey’s Tayyip Erdogan by telephone on Tuesday on his victory in Sunday’s presidential election and the two leaders agreed to improve bilateral defense and security ties, Erdogan’s office said.

Various pieces of legislation have been making their way through Congress that would block the transfer of the jets to Turkey over its plan to purchase the Russian system.

Mitchell said the administration believes it has the legal authority to withhold the transfer of the military jets to Turkey, if need be, without Congress passing legislation.

Lockheed Martin held a ceremony last week to mark the “rollout” of the first F-35 jet for Turkey, but that aircraft was headed for Arizona, where F-35 training takes place.

Delivery of the jets into Turkey is not expected until next year.

 

 

US Supreme Court Strikes Required Disclosure of Abortion Options

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down a California law that required anti-abortion crisis clinics to let patients know about the availability of free state-provided abortions, ruling that it violated the free-speech rights of the Christian-based centers.

Under a 1973 ruling, abortions are legal in the United States in most instances. But the new 5-4 decision handed anti-abortion activists a significant victory, approving of the way the clinics — often called crisis pregnancy centers — advise women with unplanned pregnancies against having an abortion.

The majority opinion said the California law “imposes an unduly burdensome disclosure requirement” on the clinics to pass on information they do not believe in. California said the law was needed to let poor women know of all options related to their pregnancies.

Justice Clarence Thomas said in his majority opinion that the crisis centers “are likely to succeed” in their constitutional challenge of the law.

Justice Stephen Breyer, writing for four liberal dissenters, said that among the reasons the law should have been upheld is that the Supreme Court had previously ruled in favor of state laws requiring doctors to tell women contemplating an abortion about the availability of adoption services.  

“After all,” Breyer wrote, “the law must be evenhanded.”

Crisis centers say they provide legitimate health services for women, but that their mission is to steer women with unplanned pregnancies away from abortion. Abortion rights activists say there are about 2,700 such clinics in the U.S., including 200 in California, far outnumbering the number of clinics that perform abortions.

In 2014, the most recent year for which statistics have been released, the government said 652,639 abortions were performed in the U.S.

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the administration of President Donald Trump was pleased that the decision upheld freedom of speech for the clinics.

“Speakers should not be forced by their government to promote a message with which they disagree, and pro-life pregnancy centers in California should not be forced to advertise abortion and undermine the very reason they exist,” Sessions said. He said the Justice Department “will continue to vigorously defend the freedom of all Americans to speak peacefully in accord with their deeply held beliefs and conscience.”

 

Суд арештував двох підозрюваних у нападі на ромів у Львові

Пустомитівський районний суд Львівської області обрав запобіжний захід у вигляді тримання під вартою для двох підозрюваних у нападі на ромів і вбивстві однієї людини без права внесення застави.

Підозрювані, 2000 року і 2002 року народження​, проведуть 60 днів у слідчому ізоляторі Львова. Обоє неповнолітніх – львів’яни, один цього року закінчив школу, інший – ще школяр.

Судове засідання було закритим від медіа.

26 червня районний суд Пустомитівського району продовжить розгляд справ про обрання запобіжних заходів для ще шести підозрюваних у цій справі. 

У ніч на 24 червня біля села Сокільники на Львівщині стався напад на табір ромів. За даними прокуратури, загинула одна людина, ще троє були поранені, зокрема й 10-річний хлопчик.

Читайте також: Били і нападали з ножами – потерпілий ром від нападу молодиків у Львові

Правоохоронці зазначили, що затримали одного повнолітнього і сімох неповнолітніх, їм повідомили про підозру за статтями «умисне вбивство, вчинене за попередньою змовою групою осіб», «умисні дії, спрямовані на розпалювання національної, расової ворожнечі та ненависті», «хуліганство», «втягнення неповнолітніх у злочинну діяльність».

У СБУ заявили, що за нападом на ромів у Львові може стояти Росія.

Це не перший напад на ромський табір протягом останніх місяців. Подібні випадки траплялися, зокрема, у Львівській та Тернопільській областях, а також у Києві.

Денісова: Росія не відповідає на запити щодо затриманих в Криму українських рибалок

Російський омбудсмен Тетяна Москалькова не відповідає на запити Уповноваженого Верховної Ради України з прав людини Людмили Денісової з приводу екіпажу затриманого біля берегів Криму українського судна «ЯМК-0041». Про це Денісова повідомила в Facebook 25 червня.

Український омбудсмен оприлюднила лист до Тетяни Москалькової, в якому вказує, що 16 травня направляла їй запит щодо екіпажу «ЯМК-0041», але досі не отримала відповідь.

Денісова зазначила, що моряки оголосили голодування, але до них не допускають адвокатів. «На скарги окупаційні адміністрації Криму не реагують», – зазначила український омбудсмен.

4 травня російські прикордонники затримали українське риболовне судно (порт приписки Очаків) на захід від мису Тарханкут у Криму.

Російський глава Криму Сергій Аксьонов повідомив, що членів затриманого співробітниками ФСБ Росії судна доставили до Криму «для проведення процесуальних дій».

Держприкордонслужба України повідомила, що затримане судно мало всі необхідні документи на вилов риби на українській території. На борту перебувало п’ять членів екіпажу..

Суд в анексованому Криму заарештував капітана затриманого судна «ЯМК-0041» Віктора Новицького, йому загрожує до 5 років позбавлення волі. Пізніше стало відомо, що морякам затриманого судна не висунули жодних звинувачень.

Міжнародні організації визнали окупацію і анексію Криму незаконними і засудили дії Росії. Країни Заходу запровадили економічні санкції. Росія заперечує окупацію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості». Верховна Рада України офіційно оголосила датою початку тимчасової окупації Криму і Севастополя Росією 20 лютого 2014 року.

Журналіст-розслідувач Гнап заявив, що йде в політику

Журналіст-розслідувач Дмитро Гнап заявив про намір йти в політику.

«…Скільки порядних народних депутатів ви можете назвати? 10? 20? І це з понад 400…Відтак, я прийняв рішення залишити журналістику. І йти в політику», – написав він на своїй сторінці в Facebook.

В оприлюдненому відеозверненні журналіст заявив про намір брати участь у парламентських виборах, які заплановані на 2019 рік. 

«Бачимо величезний саботаж з боку влади» – Гнап про розслідування розстрілу Небесної сотні

З 2013 року Гнап є керівником проекту журналістських розслідувань «Слідство.інфо» на «Громадському ТБ».

Migrant Detainees to Be Housed at 2 Bases in Texas

U.S. defense officials say the Trump administration has chosen two military bases in Texas — Fort Bliss and Goodfellow Air Force Base — to house detained migrants.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record about a pending announcement.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis had said Sunday that two bases had been selected but he would not identify them.

One official said unaccompanied children detained after crossing the U.S. border would be sheltered at one of the bases and the other base would house families of migrant detainees. Under the arrangement, the Defense Department would provide the land but the operations would be run by other agencies.

OSCE, EU Criticize Campaign Conditions in Turkey as Unequal

An election observation mission found Monday that though voters had a genuine presidential election in Turkey, which incumbent Recep Tayyip Erdogan decisively won, the conditions for campaigning were not equal.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said in a preliminary statement Monday the incumbent enjoyed “undue advantage, including in excessive coverage by government-affiliated public and private media outlets.”

In a joint statement released later, EU diplomatic chief Federica Mogherini and enlargement commissioner Johannes Hahn cited the results of the mission, refusing to congratulate Turkey’s president, not even mentioning him by name.

“The elections trigger the entry into force of the new presidential system which has far reaching implications for Turkish democracy – as raised by the Venice Commission – regarding checks and balances,” the statement read.

“In general, Turkey would benefit from urgently addressing key shortcomings regarding the rule of law and fundamental rights.”

The European Union has been highly critical of Turkey’s arrest of tens of thousands of people, many of them members of the media, under a state of emergency following a failed coup launched against Erdogan in 2016.

Showered with media accolades

Erdogan secured his hold on power Sunday, winning more than 52 percent of the votes and avoiding a run-off in what was seen as one of the most contested Turkish elections in recent years.

 

“Superdogan,” is the headline of pro-president Takvim newspaper Monday, “Prayer, Effort, Glory” declared the Islamic daily Akit.  Similar headlines echoed across nearly all the media, most of which are under direct or indirect control of Erdogan and his supporters.

 

“We have received the message that has been given to us in the ballot boxes,” Erdogan said to thousands of supporters at his AKP Party headquarters in Ankara in a pre-dawn appearance Monday.  “We will fight even more with the strength you provided us with this election,” Erdogan said.

Erdogan supporters celebrated in towns and cities across the country.  In Taksim Square in the heart of Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city, people danced and chanted slogans.

 

The opposition initially contested the outcome Sunday, claiming the result was announced before all the votes had been counted.  Opponents posted photos of sacks containing what they claimed were uncounted ballots on social media.

 

Erdogan’s main challenger, Muharrem Ince sent a message via “WhatsApp” to a Turkish television news anchor acknowledging Erdogan’s victory, but also claiming the election was unfair.

 

Ince scored nearly 31 percent of the vote in a hotly contested campaign, with his political rallies drawing millions.  Before the polls, the opposition had voiced fears of vote rigging.

Sweeping powers

Erdogan now assumes the sweeping new powers passed in last year’s constitutional referendum, which was marred by fraud allegations.

 

Under those changes, the 64-year-old leader now has the power to rule by decree, along with greater control over appointments of top judges and a parliament whose role is greatly diminished following the abolition of the position of prime minister.  Erdogan will now appoint ministers who will directly report to him.

 

Erdogan’s main challengers had warned during their campaigns the new presidential powers were tantamount to an elected dictatorship, a charge dismissed by the president.

 

The president’s grip on power was strengthened further in simultaneous parliamentary elections.  Erdogan’s AKP Party is set to continue to control parliament, although it will need the support of the nationalist MHP Party, with which it formed an electoral alliance.  The two parties have been closely cooperating in parliament since 2016.

 

The pro-Kurdish HDP Party accused by Erdogan of being terrorists, also entered parliament.  HDP supporters danced and held celebrations in main towns and cities across Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeast.

 

Sunday’s comprehensive victory came as most opinion polls suggested many in Turkey believe the contest was closer than reported.

But observers say Erdogan, with his new presidential powers and a new electoral mandate, appears to have emerged more powerful than ever.

 

Trump Again Assails Court Hearings for Illegal Border Crossers

U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday again assailed judicial review for illegal border crossers, contending that the migrants ought to immediately be sent back to their homelands.

The American Civil Liberties Union said Sunday that the U.S. leader’s call to end legal hearings for undocumented immigrants seeking asylum in the U.S. was unconstitutional. But Trump rejected that view in a pair of new Twitter comments.

“Hiring many thousands (sic) of judges, and going through a long and complicated legal process, is not the way to go – will always be dysfunctional (sic),” he said. “People must simply be stopped at the Border and told they cannot come into the U.S. illegally.”

He contended that if children and their parents are sent home, “illegal immigration will be stopped in it’s (sic) tracks – and at very little, by comparison, cost. This is the only real answer – and we must continue to BUILD THE WALL!”

Trump’s latest comments echoed his thoughts Sunday when he first called for ending judicial review of asylum claims, saying “when somebody comes in, we must immediately, with no Judges or Court Cases, bring them back from where they came.”

“We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country,” he said. “Our system is a mockery to good immigration policy and Law and Order.” Trump claimed that the U.S. immigration law is “laughed at all over the world, is very unfair to all of those people who have gone through the system legally and are waiting on line for years!”

The ACLU said what Trump is suggesting “is both illegal and unconstitutional. Any official who has sworn an oath to uphold the Constitution and laws should disavow it unequivocally.”

The United States for years has granted court hearings to migrants fleeing violence in Mexico and Central American countries and from elsewhere in the world, and who are looking for better economic fortunes in the United States.

Trump’s demand to end that legal process would face stiff opposition in Congress, which for years has been stalemated on changes to U.S. immigration policies and has been unable to enact new migration laws.

The Republican-controlled House of Representatives is planning to vote this week on comprehensive immigration policy changes after last week defeating a tougher version of new immigration controls.

Also last week, Trump signed an executive order maintaining his “zero tolerance” policy of detaining and prosecuting everyone entering the country illegally, but ending the practice of separating immigrant parents and children.

Logistical questions about those being detained have sent multiple government agencies in search of solutions, including how to provide housing.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis told reporters traveling with him on a trip to China that the Pentagon is working closely with the Department of Homeland Security to build temporary camps on two military bases. Mattis said he could not yet name them, but promised to provide those details Monday.

He said military personnel do not play any enforcement role that is carried out by DHS, but have experience in supporting refugees and victims of natural disasters.

“This is something that we can do again — whether it be refugee boat people from Vietnam, people who have been knocked out of their homes by a hurricane — absolutely it’s appropriate the military provide logistics support however it’s needed,” Mattis said.

The U.S. says it knows the location of 2,053 children it is holding who were separated from their parents in recent weeks as they entered the country illegally along its southern border with Mexico. The U.S. said it is now working to reunite the families. The Department of Homeland Security said over the weekend it has returned 522 children to their parents, with many of them held together in detention centers while awaiting court proceedings to consider their bids for asylum.

But how quickly the remaining reunifications might occur remains an open question. A processing center in the southwestern state of Texas has been set up for the reunifications, which could lead to the deportation of some of the families.

Prince William Arrives in Israel for Historic Royal Visit

Prince William arrived in Israel on Monday for the first-ever official visit of a member of the British royal family to the tumultuous region London once ruled.

Arriving from neighboring Jordan, the Duke of Cambridge landed at Israel’s Ben-Gurion International Airport and then departed to Jerusalem, where he will stay at the elegant King David Hotel, site of the former administrative headquarters of the British mandate.

Three decades of British rule between the two world wars helped establish some of the fault lines of today’s Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and Britain’s withdrawal in 1948 led to the eventual establishment of Israel and Jordan.

Britain has since taken a back seat to the United States in mediating peace efforts, and the royal family has mostly steered clear of the region’s toxic politics.

For the 36-year-old William, second in line to the throne, it marks a high-profile visit that could brandish his international credentials.

Though the trip is being billed as non-political, and places a special emphasis on technology and joint Israeli-Arab projects, William will also be meeting with Israeli and Palestinian leaders, and visiting landmark Jerusalem sites at the heart of the century-old conflict.

On Tuesday he will visit Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, where he will meet two survivors who escaped Nazi Germany for the safety of Britain. The memorial has recognized Prince William’s great-grandmother, Princess Alice, as Righteous Among the Nations for her role in rescuing Jews during the Holocaust.

In a 1994 visit to Yad Vashem, Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, planted a tree there in his mother’s honor. Princess Alice hid three members of the Cohen family in her palace in Athens during the Nazi occupation of Greece in World War II. Thanks to her, the Cohen family survived and today lives in France. The princess died in 1969, and in 1988 her remains were brought to Jerusalem.

Later, the prince will meet Israeli President Reuven Rivlin and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu before heading to coastal Tel Aviv to attend a football game of young Jewish and Arab players. He’ll also meet the mayor of Tel Aviv and attend a reception the British ambassador is holding in his honor.

“It is the right moment we think for a visit to really shine a light on that relationship and show how strong the contemporary relationship is between the two countries,” Ambassador David Quarrey told The Associated Press. “The Duke is very clear that he wants to come and get under the skin of the country, he wants to get a feel for Israel. He wants to get a flavor of the country.”

Later in the week, he’ll be traveling to the West Bank, where he will meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah before wrapping up the trip in east Jerusalem to visit his great-grandmother’s gravesite.

The royal itinerary managed to anger Israeli politicians by mentioning Jerusalem as being part of “the Occupied Palestinian Territories.” Jerusalem Affairs Minister Zeev Elkin — who is running for mayor of the city in this year’s elections — called the reference a “distortion” that cannot “change reality.”

Israel captured east Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war and annexed it in a move not internationally recognized. Israel considers the city, home to holy sites sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, as an inseparable part of its capital. The Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as their future capital.

Ambassador Quarrey insisted the wording merely reflected decades of terminology used by British governments.

“It is important to emphasis that the Duke is not a political figure, this is not a political visit,” he said.

The prince arrived from Jordan, where he kicked off his five-day Middle East tour by meeting young scientists, refugees and political leaders. He was hosted by Crown Prince Hussein, 23, a member of the Hashemite dynasty Britain helped install in then-Transjordan almost a century ago. The pair later watched the England-Panama World Cup match together.

In Jordan, the prince attended a reception marking the birthday of his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, and toured the ruins of the Roman city of Jerash, a major tourist attraction his wife had visited as a child when she and her family lived in Jordan.

West Faces Deepening Turkey Conundrum

Despite Turkey’s economic woes, many Turks who voted Sunday for Recep Tayyip Erdogan see him as the architect of recent boom years that have seen massive improvements in their standard of living.

Turks who voted for him say they trust him to lead Turkey through current turbulent economic times back to recovery and to continue to position the country as a powerful player on the world stage. They also approve of his championing of Muslim causes, say analysts.

The re-elected Erdogan struck a combative tone in his victory speech before a crowd of thousands in Ankara. From the balcony of the headquarters of the AKP, he led his supporters in chanting, “One nation, one flag, one country, one state.” Erdogan promised to press on with his “reforms” and to increase Turkish influence.

“Turkey has no moment to waste, we know that,” he said.

He vowed to “fight decisively” against Turkey’s enemies at home and abroad. He signaled a renewed military drive against Kurdish militants in southeast Turkey. “We never bow down in front of anyone except God,” he declared.  

Analysts expect him to use his powers to the full and forecast even more dissenters, and those suspected of disloyalty, will be dispatched to jails to join the tens of thousands of former officials, Kurdish activists, and journalists who have been filling the country’s prisons since the 2016 abortive military coup against him.

“Erdogan’s preference for sticks over carrots in domestic politics will continue,” forecasts commentator Abdullah Bozkurt. “His first order of business will be making sure there is no backlash against his rule,” he predicts.

“With direct control over the security forces, both police and military, Erdogan can easily squelch any potential unrest in the coming days,” he argued. 

Other analysts say they expect Erdogan’s election win to push some dejected opponents to throw in the towel and to accept government patronage, but much will depend on how Turkey weathers its economic challenges.

Overseas reaction

In neighboring war-wracked Syria, an Erdogan win won’t displease President Bashar al-Assad, say analysts. Although Erdogan backed the uprising against Assad, the Turkish leader’s priority in Syria has switched from regime change to boxing in Syrian Kurdish forces, which he sees as an extension of Turkish Kurdish separatists.

Russian President Vladimir Putin wasted no time congratulating Erdogan on his re-election.

“The head of the Russian state stressed that the outcome of the vote fully confirms Erdogan’s great political authority, broad support of the course pursued under his leadership towards solving vital social and economic tasks facing Turkey, and enhancing the country’s foreign policy positions,” according to a Kremlin statement.

Warming up to Russia, Iran

Erdogan and Putin have enjoyed warming ties in recent months, a development that’s alarmed NATO and made it question whether Turkey is a reliable friend.

On a personal level, U.S. President Donald Trump and Erdogan are said by American officials to get along. But U.S. lawmakers have been blocking the sale of F-35A fighter aircraft to the Turkish air force.

The lawmakers are angered by Turkey’s intervention in northern Syria against the Kurds, American allies in the fight against the Islamic State terror group, as well as a purchase by Erdogan of Russian S-400 anti-aircraft missiles.

Pentagon officials have also expressed frustration with signs of an Erdogan rapprochement with Iran.

Last week, members of the U.S. Congress issued an open letter criticizing Erdogan. 

“Contrary to its NATO obligations, Turkey is actively operating to undermine U.S. interests around the world. Turkey’s repeated military actions against American interests, relentless degradation of human rights and democracy under President Erdogan, and clear intention to build a strategic partnership with Russia have completely eroded the U.S.-Turkey relationship,” they said.

Other issues

For Western powers Erdogan’s burgeoning relationship with Putin isn’t the only worry. Brussels has repeatedly clashed in recent years with the Turkish leader over human rights and rule-of-law issues, his counter-insurgency operations against Kurdish militants, and his moving Turkey away from secular political traditions. But the European Union has had to balance its disapproval with its need for Turkish assistance on the migration crisis and counter-terrorism.

But Turkey is a NATO member and Washington has needed Ankara’s assistance in the fight against IS in Syria and Iraq, and the use of the Incirlik airbase in southern Turkey.

In a Brookings Institution report earlier this year, analyst Amanda Sloat noted the West has a “Turkey conundrum.”

“What makes the country such a conundrum is that its problematic leadership faces real threats,” she said. “Turkey is confronting challenges from the aftermath of the July 2016 coup attempt and the destabilizing effects of the Syrian war. Yet the country’s president is growing more authoritarian, using virulent anti-Western rhetoric, and making foreign policy choices contrary to the interests of the trans-Atlantic alliance.”

Former Turkish lawmaker Aykan Erdemir says the elections will likely complicate relations with the West. Now an analyst at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a policy research group in Washington, he says with Erdogan dependent on the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) for his majority in the parliament, hardline nationalism will be even more to the fore.

“Turkey’s nationalist Zeitgeist will further undermine relations with the European Union and the U.S, and put Ankara on a crash course with the transatlantic alliance,” he said.

US VP to Focus on Venezuela in 3rd Trip to Latin America

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence will visit Brazil this week, but the focus of his trip will be the deteriorating humanitarian situation in neighboring Venezuela.

It’s the vice president’s third trip to the region, and previous visits also emphasized efforts to isolate the socialist government of President Nicolas Maduro.

 

The trip also comes at a time when U.S.-Brazil relations are in a holding pattern. The South American country is reeling from a colossal corruption scandal, struggling to recover from a deep recession and trying to look beyond the remaining months of President Michel Temer’s lame duck administration ahead of October elections.

 

 

 

Поліція: підозрювані в нападі на ромів визнали себе членами угруповання «Твереза і зла молодь»

Підозрювані в нападі на табір ромів у Львівській області визнали себе членами угруповання «Твереза і зла молодь», яке використовує символіку ультраправої націоналістичної організації Misanthropic Division, повідомила старша інспекторка Управління з додержання прав людини Національної поліції України Оксана Санагурська в коментарі «Громадському».

За її словами, восьмеро юнаків, яким оголосили про підозри, перебувають у районному відділенні поліції з батьками та надають свідчення. Усі підозрювані ідентифікують себе як члени «Тверезої і злої молоді».

У поліції заявили, що нападники мали чіткий план погрому табору ромів: вона заздалегідь визначили свої позиції, дії та завдання.

Голова громадської організації «Рома України Терніпе» Микола Юрченко у коментарі «Громадському» зазначив, що поліція затримала нападників під час погрому. На його думку, якби поліція приїхала пізніше, можливо, ніхто б не вижив. Він розповів, що у таборі було 10 дорослих, серед яких вагітна жінка, та четверо дітей. На вагітну жінку також напали.

Санагурська, зі свого боку, розповіла, що раніше правоохоронцям дали розпорядження патрулювати ромські поселення у посиленому режимі, однак про цей табір, який перебуває в лісі на околиці Львова, поліція не знала. Їй вдалося швидко приїхати на місце погрому, оскільки про напад оперативно повідомив чоловік, який став свідком цього.

Читайте також: Били і нападали з ножами – потерпілий ром від нападу молодиків у Львові

У ніч на 24 червня біля села Сокільники на Львівщині стався напад на табір ромів. За даними прокуратури, загинула одна людина, ще троє отримали травми, зокрема й 10-річний хлопчик. Водночас у поліції повідомляють про чотирьох поранених.

У прокуратурі вважають, що до нападу причетні 11 мешканців Львова та прилеглих сіл. Правоохоронці зазначили, що затримали одного повнолітнього та сімох неповнолітніх, їм повідомили про підозру.

Читайте також: Як в Україні вирішити ромську проблему?​

Це не перший напад на ромський табір протягом останніх місяців. Подібні випадки траплялися, зокрема, у Львівській та Тернопільській областях, а також у Києві.

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