Month: September 2018

Italy on Collision Course With EU Over Budget Deficit


Party leaders in the Italian coalition government signalled they will seek leeway from the EU to increase next year’s budget deficit, heading on a collision course with the European Commission and investors who want it cut.

Following Fitch agency’s decision to lower the outlook on Italy’s debt rating on Friday, neither Matteo Salvini nor Luigi Di Maio — the heads of the League and 5-Star Movement respectively — backed away from promises to reduce taxes and boost welfare spending.

Salvini said on Monday he wanted to increase spending, but not exceed the European Union’s deficit limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product. The previous day Di Maio stuck to 5-Star’s promise made during this year’s election campaign to introduce a universal income for the poor.

“We can’t think about listening to the ratings agencies and reassuring the markets, and then stab Italians in the back,” Di Maio said. “We’ll always choose Italians first.”

Merely sticking to the EU’s upper deficit limit is unlikely to satisfy either Brussels or investors, who want Italy to reduce its huge debts rather than add to them.

Last year, the Commission gave the previous government spending leeway before the national election. But for 2019 the Commission expects Italy to lower its structural deficit, which is adjusted for the economic cycle and one-off measures, by 0.6 of a percentage point.

Italy must disclose its economic growth and budget targets for next year by Sept. 27.

Economy Minister Giovanni Tria, an academic and not a member of either of the governing parties, has taken a more moderate line than the party leaders. He’s pushing to keep next year’s deficit below 2 percent of GDP, sources familiar with the government budget talks said on Monday.

Italy’s populist government took office in June after promising it would go on a spending spree to lift economic growth and create jobs. That has put the country’s debt, the third-biggest debt in the world, in the market spotlight.

Since mid-May, when the coalition published its program, the gap between Italian benchmark 10-year bonds and the safer German equivalent has more than doubled to 286 basis points on Monday.

“It’s in Italy’s interest to control public debt,” Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner, Pierre Moscovici, said last week.

The previous government targeted a budget deficit of 1.6 percent of GDP in 2018 and 0.8 percent in 2019. But Tria said last month that next year’s deficit, without introducing any new measures, would be around 1.2 percent of GDP.

Over the weekend, after the Fitch move to cut its rating outlook, Tria promised to respect EU commitments and said bond yields would settle after the government provided its budget intentions over the next two months.

On top of the universal income, the coalition has said it wants to slash taxes, partly roll back a 2011 pension reform, head off an automatic VAT rise next year, and increase investments in public works.

But recent data have indicated that Italy’s economy, the euro zone’s third biggest, is slowing this year, further reducing the government’s room to manoeuvre.

Growth in Italian manufacturing slowed in August to the lowest rate in two years, a survey showed on Monday.

 

Правоохоронці зловили на хабарі в.о. голови Держгеонадр – ГПУ

Виконувача обов’язків голови Державної служби геології та надр України викрили на хабарі, коли той вимагав та одержав 3 тисячі доларів за сприяння в оформленні документів на видобуток торфу, зазначив на своїй сторінці у Facebook Генпрокурор Юрій Луценко.

На його переконання, за цим дрібним хабарем насправді проглядається глобальна проблема тіньових оборудок Держгеології.

«З 2014 року лише 43 з 722 ліцензій було видано на аукціонах! Все решта – в ході чиновницьких ігор. Тому поки в держсекторі не пройде велика приватизація, на митниці не запрацює система електронних сканерів, а в Геонадрах не стануть обов‘язковими аукціони – будемо разом з колегами брати на хабарях великих і малих корупціонерів», – заявив Луценко.

Як повідомив на Facebook речник Генеральної прокуратури Андрій Лисенко, зараз тривають слідчі дії та вирішується питання про затримання чиновника та оголошення йому про підозру.

Лисенко нагадав, що санкція статті про одержання неправомірної вигоди передбачає покарання у виді позбавлення волі на строк від 5 до 10 років з позбавленням права обіймати певні посади чи займатися певною діяльністю на строк до 3 років, з конфіскацією майна.

 

 

 

Українська поліція почала розслідування захоплення Росією ще одного риболовецького судна біля Криму

Українська поліція відкрила провадження щодо захоплення представниками ФСБ Росії риболовецького судна «ЯОД 2105» та членів його команди в акваторії Чорного моря, повідомляється на сайті відомства.

За даними поліції, інцидент трапився 28 серпня.

«Четверо українських рибалок утримуються на прикордонній заставі міста Севастополя по теперішній час», – мовиться у повідомленні.

Як зазначається, справу розслідує Головне управління Нацполіції в Автономній республіці Крим та місті Севастополі за статтями «незаконне позбавлення волі» та «захоплення залізничного рухомого складу. повітряного, морського чи річкового судна за попередньою змовою групою осіб».

Це не перший випадок затримань суден у Чорному та Азовському морях за останній час. Як повідомлялося, після завершення будівництва автомобільної частини Керченського мосту, Росія затримала понад 148 українських та іноземних торговельних кораблів і допитувала членів екіпажів та інших людей, які перебували на таких суднах.

Окрім того, у березні українські прикордонники затримали кримське судно «Норд» разом із командою, коли воно рухалося під прапором Росії. 30 серпня українська прокуратура Криму заявила про завершення досудового розслідування у цій справі, звинувативши моряків у порушенні порядку в’їзду на непідконтрольну територію та виїзду з неї, а також незаконному промисловому рибальстві.

Незабаром після затримання екіпажу «Норду», 4 травня 2018 року, російські прикордонники затримали в Чорному морі українське риболовецьке судно «ЯМК-0041» із п’ятьома членами екіпажу на борту, звинувативши, у свою чергу, цих людей у незаконному рибальстві на підконтрольній їм території.

Окрім того, у Херсонському порту залишається заблокованим і російський танкер «Механік Погодін», про що стало відомо 10 серпня. Уповноважена Верховної Ради України з прав людини Людмила Денісова повідомила, що екіпажу судна дії української влади не стосуються. 12 членів екіпажу включно із капітаном, які є громадянами Росії, «вільні у своїх пересуваннях, їх ніхто не утримує».

 

Журналістів Reuters засудили до семи років в’язниці у М’янмі – відео

Журналістів Reuters, які займалися розслідуванням вбивства мусульман-рохінджа у М’янмі (колишня Бірма) і були заарештовані після отримання «секретних урядових документів», засудили до семи років ув’язнення. (Відео Reuters)

Deaths Spike on Mediterranean Sea Crossing to Europe

The U.N. refugee agency is calling for safe and legal pathways for migration as the death toll among refugees and migrants crossing the Mediterranean Sea into Europe reaches new heights.

There has been a significant reduction this year in the number of asylum seekers and migrants reaching European shores via the Mediterranean Sea. The U.N. refugee agency reports arrival rates are down by 41 percent compared to last year.

UNHCR spokesman, Charlie Yaxley tells VOA one in every 42 people died or went missing last year while crossing the Mediterranean Sea, compared to a substantial increase of one in 18 during the first eight months of this year.

During the peak arrival period in June, he says the number of fatalities in the Central Mediterranean accounted for as many as one in seven.

“Now, that is a pretty bleak portrait that exists because that means that for every seven men, women and children who are leaving appalling conditions in Libya, one of their fellow travelers did not reach European shores,” he noted.

Despite the substantial decrease in refugee and migrant arrivals, xenophobia in Europe is growing. This has resulted in boatloads of people being stranded at sea for many days while nations argue about which one will accept them.

In recent months, the UNHCR and International Organization for Migration have been calling for a predictable, regional approach for the rescue and disembarkation of people in distress in the Mediterranean Sea.

The UNHCR says alternatives must be found to these potentially deadly journeys. It recommends the adoption of safe and legal pathways for refugees to come to Europe. These could include increasing resettlement places and removing obstacles to family reunification.

 

 

UN Agency: Trips Across Mediterranean Fall, But Risks Rise

The U.N. refugee agency says people smugglers are taking greater risks to ferry their human cargo toward Europe as Libya’s coast guard intercepts more and more boats carrying migrants, increasing the likelihood that those on board may die during the Mediterranean journeys.

That’s one of the key findings from the latest UNHCR report about efforts to reach Europe. The report, released early Monday and titled “Desperate Journeys,” says that even though the number of crossings and deaths has plunged compared to recent years, the voyage is more deadly in percentage terms for those who venture across.

The report says 2,276 people died last year while trying to cross, or one death for every 42 arrivals.

This year, it’s 1,095 deaths, or one out of every 18 arrivals. In June alone, the proportion hit one death for every seven arrivals.

On the Central Mediterranean route so far this year, there have been 10 separate incidents in which 50 or more people died — most after departing from Libya. Seven of those incidents have been since June alone, UNHCR said.

“The reason the traffic has become more deadly is that the traffickers are taking more risk, because there is more surveillance exercised by the Libyan coast guards,” said Vincent Cochetel, UNHCR’s special envoy for the central Mediterranean. “They are trying to cut the costs: It costs them more to keep those people here longer in their warehouses, under captivity.”

Libyan authorities intercepted or rescued 18,400 people between August last year and July this year — a 38-percent increase from the same period of 2016 and 2017. Arrivals by sea from Libya to Europe plummeted 82 percent in those comparable periods, to 30,800 in the more recent one.

UNHCR says a growing worry these days is deaths on land by people trying to get to Libya in the first place, or getting stuck in squalid, overcrowded detention centers: Many get returned there after failing to cross by sea to Europe.

“The problems after disembarkation (is that) those people are sent back to detention centers, and many disappear,” Cochetel said. “Many are sold to militias, and to traffickers, and people employing them without paying them.”

He said the drop in departures means that traffickers attempt to “monetize their investment, which means they have to exploit more people. That results in more cases of slavery, forced labor, prostitution of those people — because they (smugglers) want to make money on those people.”

Would-be workers and migrants are still pouring into Libya: Some are fleeing injustice, abuse or autocrats in their home countries further south in Africa. Others are looking for work in the oil industry or agriculture.

“I think you have more deaths on land,” Cochetel said, referring to treks across the desert in Sudan, Algeria, Chad and Niger. “Many people in Libya are reporting having seeing people dead in the desert on the way to Libya.”

In Libya, instability continues even seven years after the fall of Moammar Gadhafi. French medical aid group Doctors Without Borders said Friday that fighting between rival militias in Tripoli, the capital, has endangered the lives of people trapped there and worsened humanitarian needs — especially at migrant detention centers.

Cochetel said Europe — where some countries have shown “appalling” squabbles about who would take in rescue ships carrying migrants — should look at the root causes of such journeys. European populations need to shun anti-migrant rhetoric and realize that figures are down sharply, and migrant flows are clearly manageable at current levels, he said.

“Europe has to show the lead, has to be exemplary in its response, but it’s quite clear that it’s already too late when the people are in Libya,” he said. “We need to work downstream in country of first asylum, in country of origin, and that takes time.”

 

Report: Experts Suspect Microwave Weapons Injured US Diplomats in Cuba

Experts are growing more and more suspicious that microwave weapons were responsible for inflicting brain damage on nearly 40 U.S. diplomats and their families in Cuba and possibly China, the New York Times reports.

The Americans reported strange high-pitched sounds outside their Havana homes and hotels in 2016 and 2017, followed by severe headaches, nausea, fatigue, dizziness and hearing loss.

A report on the injuries earlier this year did not mention a cause.

But after examining more than 20 victims, the report’s author, Dr. Douglas Smith, head of the brain injury center at the University of Pennsylvania, tells VOA a microwave weapon looks more and more like the culprit.

“What kind of mechanical forces can change the brain in the way that’s ultimately very similar to a head blow, but there is no evidence of having that very large mechanical injury,” he asked.

Dr. Smith said he and his team examined the victims at the request of the State Department and all had the same symptoms as if they suffered concussions.

Smith brushed off suggestions that this may have been some kind of mass hysteria among the diplomats, saying they were examined separately and that no one can fake such injuries as balance and cognition problems.

Allan Frey, a U.S. scientist, discovered in 1960 that the human brain can perceive microwaves as sounds.

According to the New York Times, the United States had researched using microwaves as weapons, including ways to beam speech into an enemy’s head and possibly paralyze him.

U.S. intelligence warned more than 40 years ago that the Soviet Union was also looking into microwave weapons.

The Times also reported that a Washington lawyer obtained a National Security Agency statement saying that a foreign power built a weapon “designed to bathe a target’s living quarters in microwaves, causing numerous physical effects, including a damaged nervous system.”

The precise cause of the sonic attacks on the Americans is still unknown, including who was behind them and why.

President Donald Trump has directly blamed Cuba and, and last year expelled 15 Cuban diplomats from Washington.

Cuba denies any involvement and calls Trump’s move political.

The U.S. also brought home a number of Americans from the consulate in Guangzhou, China, in June after diplomats there showed the same symptoms of a sonic attack. A Chinese spokesman said officials investigated and found nothing suspicious.

Rights Group Calls for End of Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia

Human Rights Watch is calling for an immediate end to all arms sales to Saudi Arabia in the aftermath of the bombing of a schoolbus last month that killed 51 people, including 40 children.

In a report released Sunday, the HRW called the attack an “apparent war crime,” saying it only added to the Saudi-led coalition’s “already gruesome track record of killing civilians at weddings, funerals, hospitals and schools in Yemen.”

The coalition, which has the support of the United States, has been fighting the Houthi rebels since March 2015. The coalition backs Yemen’s internationally recognized government of Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and aims to restore it to power.

The HRW report comes just a day after the coalition said it has accepted the conclusions of its investigative body that there were “mistakes” made in the attack, including failing to take measures to minimize collateral damage.

The coalition vowed to “take all the legal measures to hold accountable those who were proven to have committed mistakes” once it officially receives the findings. It also pledged to coordinate with Yemen’s government to compensate civilians.

The U.S. State Department on Sunday welcomed the coalition’s statement as “an important first step toward full transparency and accountability.”

But, Bill Van Esveld, senior children’s rights researcher for HRW, urged the U.S. and other countries to “immediately stop weapons sales to Saudi Arabia and support strengthening the independent U.N. inquiry into violations in Yemen, or risk being complicit in future atrocities.”

Chinese Billionaire Liu of JD.com Arrested in Minneapolis

Chinese billionaire Liu Qiangdong, also known as Richard Liu, the founder of the Beijing-based e-commerce site JD.com, was arrested in Minneapolis on suspicion of criminal sexual conduct, jail records show.

Liu, 45, was arrested late Friday night and released Saturday afternoon pending possible criminal charges, Hennepin County Jail records show. The jail records don’t provide details of the alleged incident.

Minneapolis police spokesman John Elder said Sunday that he couldn’t provide any details because the investigation is considered active. He declined to say where in Minneapolis Liu was arrested or what Liu was accused of doing.

Minnesota law defines five degrees of criminal sexual misconduct, ranging from a gross misdemeanor to felonies, covering a broad array of conduct ranging from nonconsensual touching to violent assaults with injuries. The jail records for Liu don’t indicate a degree.

JD.com, the main rival to Alibaba Group, said in a statement posted Sunday on the Chinese social media site Weibo that Liu was falsely accused while in the U.S. on a business trip, but that police investigators found no misconduct and that he would continue his journey as planned.

“We will take the necessary legal action against false reporting or rumors,” the company said.

Liu recently tried to distance himself from a sexual assault allegations against a guest at a 2015 party at Liu’s penthouse in Australia. Liu was not charged or accused of wrongdoing, but Australian media reported he tried unsuccessfully to get a court to prevent the release of his name in that case. The guest was convicted.

In June, Google said it would invest $550 million in JD.com. The investment reflected an effort by the U.S. tech company to expand its reach into Asian e-commerce.

JD.com is China’s second-largest e-commerce company after Alibaba. Among its other investors is Chinese internet gaming and social media giant Tencent Holdings, the developer of the WeChat messenger app and a major rival of Alibaba, and U.S. retailer Walmart Inc.

Українці Чехії відсвяткували День Незалежності

Українська громада Чехії провела в Празі 2 вересня урочистості з нагоди Дня Незалежності своєї історичної батьківщини. 

Не свято прийшли десятки українських громадян із сімями. Воно відбулося в найбільшому празькому парку Стромовка на териториції виставкового центру Vystaviste, де зазвичай проводяться великі концерти, фестивалі та акції.

Свято відбулося за підтримки посольства України в Празі та найбільшої української фірми-перевізника між Чехією та Україною. 

Акція розпочалося з державного гімну «Ще не вмерла Україна» та хвилини мовчання на честь усіх, хто бореться та віддає своє життя за незалежність України.

«Я думаю, сьогодні ми маємо всі підстави святкувати, але, святкуючи, ми маємо памятати про те, що боротьба за нашу державу триває. Що наші хлопці на сході продовжують захищати Україну», – зазначив український посол у Чехії Євген Перебийніс.

Друзі української громади – переважно чехи, які завітали на урочистості, – мали можливість побачити українців у національному вбранні, послухати українську музику та скуштувати традиційні страви і напої.

Вхід на святкування був безкоштовний. 

24 серпня Україна відсвяткувала 27-й День Незалежності.

Українсько-італійський фільм «Ізі» здобув премію у Венеції

Українсько-італійський фільм «Ізі» здобув премію Kineo Diamond Award на 75-му Венеційському міжнародному кінофестивалі, повідомив 2 вересня голова Держкіно Пилип Іллєнко.

«Сьогодні українсько-італійська стрічка «Ізі» була відзначена премією Kineo Diamond Award у Венеції. А так усе починалося три роки назад. Це був перший підписаний мною як головою Держкіно контракт на створення нового фільму, і вдалося це зробити лише через рік і три місяці роботи на посаді!» – вказує Іллєнко і додає у Facebook фотографію з авторами фільму.

Фільм розповідає про 40-річного італійця-невдаху на ім’я Ісідоро, який на прохання брата везе із Італії у високогірне карпатське село труну із тілом загиблого на будівництві українського заробітчанина. Світова прем’єра стрічки відбулася на 70-му міжнародному кінофестивалі у Локарно 2017 року.

Фільм «Ізі» режисера Андреа Маньяні на 58% профінансувала Україна (Держкіно та виробнича компанія Fresh Production), на 42% – Італія (міністерство культури країни та регіональний аудіовізуальний фонд Фріулі – Венеція – Джулія).

Сили НАТО в Афганістані отримали нового командувача

Американський генерал Скотт Міллер очолив командування силами НАТО в Афганістані. Це сталося в час, коли Вашингтон має проблеми в реалізації свого плану – змусити талібів до мирних переговорів із урядом у Кабулі.

«Для того, щоб бути успішними, ми повинні постійно навчатися та пристосовуватися до ворога та навколишнього середовища», – наголосив Міллер 2 вересня на церемонії зміни командування в штаб-квартирі місії НАТО «Рішуча підтримка».

Генерал Джон Ніколсон, який командував силами НАТО в Афганістані дотепер, закликав «Талібан» дослухатися до мирних вимог афганського народу

Сполучені Штати посилили тиск на рух «Талібан», збільшивши інтенсивність авіаударів, а також посилили підтримку урядових сил Афганістану, але наразі немає чітких ознак успішності цієї діяльності. Бойовики продовжують атакувати державні та військові цілі, число жертв серед цивільного населення перебуває на рекордному рівні. 

Талібам не вдалося захопити жодних великих міст, але вони контролюють великі території в сільській місцевості.

Scientists: Less Food for People as Global Warming Makes Insects Eat More

A new U.S. study finds that when temperatures around the world start creeping up, insects that eat crops will not only become hungrier, their numbers will grow. Scientists say this will mean more insect damage to wheat, corn and rice crops, and therefore less food on the dinner table. VOA’s Mariama Diallo reports.

Islamic State ‘Not Growing’ in Afghanistan, Nicholson Says

The Islamic State terror group is losing its grip on parts of Afghanistan, slowly succumbing to pressure from U.S. and Afghan forces, the outgoing commander of U.S. Forces-Afghanistan said Saturday.

General John Nicholson rejected the notion that IS-Khorsasan, also known as ISIS-K or IS-K, has been able to meaningfully expand its presence following a concerted effort to wipe it out, which began last year. That effort included use of the largest non-nuclear bomb in the U.S. arsenal.

“ISIS-K is not growing,” said Nicholson, who hands over command of U.S. Forces-Afghanistan on Sunday to Lieutenant General Austin Miller. 

“They have been able to replenish a portion of their losses by recruiting from other violent extremist organizations,” he added in an email statement to VOA. “Despite this recruiting, they are losing fighters and losing ground.”

Recent estimates from U.S. counterterrorism officials put the number of IS-Khorasan fighters at more than 1,000, even after the defeat last month of IS-K in northern Jowzjan province, where 250 fighters surrendered along with their commander.

More recently, on August 26, the Afghan government announced the death of the IS-Khorasan emir, Abdu Saad Erhabi, along with his nine commanders in a U.S. airstrike, calling it a “major blow” to the terror group.

Staying power

But U.S. defense and intelligence officials have been cautious of predicting the group’s demise, noting that IS-Khorasan, like IS in Iraq and Syria, has been resilient.

Erhabi was the third IS-Khorasan emir killed by U.S. or Afghan forces since April 2017, when the estimated number of fighters dropped to about 600.

For now, senior U.S. counterterrorism officials believe the bulk of the remaining IS fighters, mostly local Afghans, as well as fighters from Pakistan and Uzbekistan, are in Afghanistan’s southern Nangarhar province, with a small number also operating in the country’s eastern Kunar province.

Some Afghan officials worry more may be lurking, warning that the terror group has been bolstered by an influx of foreign fighters — first a surge of about 3,000 from Pakistan and Uzbekistan, and later from hundreds of jihadists fleeing Iraq and Syria.

U.S. defense officials, including some familiar with border security measures that have been put in place by the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan and by Afghanistan’s neighbors, are skeptical.

In either case, Nicholson said, there will be no letup in the effort against IS-Khorasan.

“United States counterterrorism forces and Afghan Special Security Forces will keep up the pressure until they are defeated,” he said. “This reinforces the importance of the United States and NATO mission in Afghanistan, to prevent the resurgence of international terrorist groups from the region.”

Pentagon Cancels Aid to Pakistan Over Record on Militants

The U.S. military says it has decided to cancel $300 million in aid to Pakistan that had been suspended over Islamabad’s perceived failure to act decisively against militants, in a new blow to deteriorating ties.

The so-called Coalition Support Funds were part of a broader suspension in aid to Pakistan announced by President Donald Trump at the start of the year, when he accused Pakistan of rewarding past assistance with “nothing but lies & deceit.”

The Trump administration says Islamabad is granting safe haven to insurgents who are waging a 17-year-old war in neighboring Afghanistan, a charge Pakistan denies. 

But U.S. officials had held out the possibility that Pakistan could win back that support if it changed its behavior.

U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, in particular, had an opportunity to authorize $300 million in CSF funds through this summer if he saw concrete Pakistani actions to go after insurgents. Mattis chose not to, a U.S. official told Reuters.

“Due to a lack of Pakistani decisive actions in support of the South Asia Strategy the remaining $300 [million] was reprogrammed,” Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Kone Faulkner said.

Faulkner said the Pentagon aimed to spend the $300 million on “other urgent priorities” if approved by Congress. He said another $500 million in CSF was stripped by Congress from Pakistan earlier this year, to bring the total withheld to $800 million.

The disclosure came ahead of an expected visit by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the top U.S. military officer, General Joseph Dunford, to Islamabad. Mattis told reporters on Tuesday that combating militants would be a “primary part of the discussion.”

Experts on the Afghan conflict, America’s longest war, argue that militant safe havens in Pakistan have allowed Taliban-linked insurgents in Afghanistan a place to plot deadly strikes and regroup after ground offensives.

Increasing pressure

The Pentagon’s decision showed that the United States, which has sought to change Pakistani behavior, is still increasing pressure on Pakistan’s security apparatus.

It also underscored that Islamabad has yet to deliver the kind of change Washington seeks.

“It is a calibrated, incremental ratcheting up of pressure on Pakistan,” said Sameer Lalwani, co-director of the South Asia program at the Stimson Center think tank in Washington.

Reuters reported in August that the Trump administration had quietly started cutting scores of Pakistani officers from coveted training and educational programs that have been a hallmark of bilateral military relations for more than a decade.

The Pentagon made similar determinations on CSF in the past, but this year’s move could get more attention from Islamabad and its new prime minister, Imran Khan, at a time when its economy is struggling.

Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves have plummeted over the past year and it will soon decide on whether to seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund or friendly nations such as China.

“They are squeezing them when they know that they’re vulnerable and it is probably a signal about what to expect should Pakistan come to the IMF for a loan,” Lalwani said. The United States has the largest share of votes at the IMF.

Khan, who once suggested he might order the shooting down of U.S. drones if they entered Pakistani airspace, has opposed the United States’ open-ended presence in Afghanistan. In his victory speech, he said he wanted “mutually beneficial” relations with Washington.

A Pakistani official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said he was unaware of a formal notification of the U.S. decision on assistance but said one was expected by the end of September.

Pakistan has received more than $33 billion in U.S. assistance since 2002, including more than $14 billion in CSF, a U.S. Defense Department program to reimburse allies that have incurred costs in supporting counterinsurgency operations. Pakistan could again be eligible next year for CSF.

Цуренко вийшла в 1/8 фіналу Відкритого чемпіонату США з тенісу

У Нью-Йорку завершився матч 3-го кола Відкритого чемпіонату США з тенісу в жіночому одиночному розряді, в якому українка Леся Цуренко обіграла Катерину Синякову з Чехії.

Матч завершився з рахунком 6:4, 6:0, повідомляє офіційний сайт змагань. Гра тривала 1 годину і 06 хвилин.

За цей час українка мала проблеми тільки на початку матчу, програючи у середині першої партії з рахунком 1:4. Втім, потім українка різко перевернула хід гри і надалі виграла одинадцять геймів поспіль – п’ять у першій партії і шість – у другій.

Раніше Цуренко обіграла в матчі 2-го кола 2-у ракетку світу Каролін Возняцкі з Данії.

У матчі 1/8 фіналу українка зіграє проти іншої представниці Чехії Маркети Вондрушової.

Напередодні до 1/8 фіналу US Open вийшла і українська тенісистка Еліна Світоліна.

US General: Russia Trying to ‘Undercut’ Progress in Afghanistan

Russia is not giving up on efforts to destabilize Afghanistan and drive divisions between the United States and its coalition partners, according to the outgoing commander of U.S. forces in the country.

The commander of U.S. Forces-Afghanistan and of Operation Resolute Support, General John Nicholson, is scheduled to step down Sunday after serving in the position for more than two years.

But before relinquishing command, he took time to cast doubts on Russia’s intentions in the region, despite recent overtures from Moscow to help the Taliban reconcile with the Afghan government.

“We know that Russia is attempting to undercut our military gains and years of military progress in Afghanistan, and make partners question Afghanistan’s stability,” Nicholson said in an email to Voice of America, following on questions from his August 22 briefing with Pentagon reporters.

“It is no secret that Russia seeks any opportunity it can find to drive a wedge between the United States and our Central Asian partners, including Afghanistan,” Nicholson added.

Aid to Taliban

U.S. and Afghan officials have previously accused Russia of meddling in Afghanistan by providing Taliban insurgents with both weapons and training.

Moscow has rejected the allegations, saying it has only political ties with the Taliban. Still, Russia has faced growing suspicion from the U.S. and its allies, who say the Kremlin has been increasingly working to expand its influence in Afghanistan and beyond.

Most recently, the U.S. and Russia have been competing over efforts to kick-start peace negotiations between the Taliban and the U.S.-backed Afghan government.

Russia was set to host both parties, along with the U.S. and other countries, for talks starting September 4, but was forced to postpone after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani declined the invitation.

The U.S. also has been hoping for talks between the government and the Taliban.

“We talk about an Afghan-led, Afghan-owned reconciliation process,” U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis said during a briefing with reporters this past week. “We believe that the best way to get there is to ensure Taliban recognizes they can’t win on the battlefield, they must negotiate.”

But while U.S. officials have touted what they see are signs of progress, including increased support for a peace process from various sectors of the Afghan population, the government’s recent cease-fire offer to the Taliban appears to have fallen on deaf ears.

Meanwhile, U.S. officials have been angered by what they see as Russian efforts to derail peace and stabilization efforts with disinformation campaigns.

​Charges repeated

Just over a week ago, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova raised concerns about “unidentified” helicopters flying missions in support of fighters for the Islamic State terror group, also known as IS-Khorasan or IS-K, in the northern Sar-e-Pul province, suggesting the U.S. and NATO might be responsible.

“Who is arming the terrorists and secretly creating their bases?” she asked. “Why is this happening if NATO command is effectively in control of Afghanistan’s airspace?”

Pentagon officials rejected the suggestion of U.S. or NATO involvement as “completely untrue,” noting it was not the first time Moscow had levied such charges.

“As they [Russia] perpetuate false narratives about ISIS-K, the United States and the Afghan Special Security Forces eliminated the Jowzjan ISIS-K enclave and are killing ISIS-K leaders and fighters in Nangarhar,” Nicholson said in his statement to VOA.

Still, the outgoing commander said he held out hope Russia could play a constructive role. 

“We have shared interests with Russia in Afghanistan — peace, counterterrorism and counternarcotics,” Nicholson said. “We hope to see Russia support Afghanistan and the NATO-led coalition in these areas going forward.”

VOA’s Ayaz Gul contributed to this report.

Прощання з Джоном Маккейном у Вашингтоні: Обама, Буш, Клінтон, Трамп вшановують пам’ять – фото

Сенатора Маккейна називали добрим другом України, він відвідував зону бойових дій на Донбасі наприкінці 2016 року. Приїжджав до України під час Революції гідності, виступав на майдані Незалежності

Ще одна бригада морської піхоти України має з’явитися до кінця жовтня – генерал-майор Юрій Содоль

До кінця жовтня цього року планується сформувати ще одну бригаду морської піхоти. Про це Радіо Свобода повідомив командувач морської піхоти генерал-майор Юрій Содоль.

Він зазначив, що командир бригади та його заступники вже визначені, зараз вони перебувають в пункті постійної дислокації формування.

Як уточнює кореспондент Радіо Свобода, йдеться по село Дачне, яке розташоване в Біляївському районі приблизно за 30 кілометрів від обласного центру.

Спеціально для морських піхотинців у Дачному створюється військове містечко сучасного зразка – із гуртожитками покращеного типу для військовослужбовців-контрактників, гуртожитком для офіцерського складу, спортивно-оздоровчим комплексом, медичною частиною та таке інше. 

Наразі в структурі Командування морської піхоти (КМП) як єдиного органу управління частинами морських піхотинців та берегових артилеристів налічуються бригади морської піхоти і артилерійська, три окремих батальйони морської піхоти, реактивний артилерійський полк тощо.

Відповідно до плану реформування Військово-морських сил України, поділ ВМС на морське командування і командування морської піхоти був зроблений на початку 2018 року для оптимізації управління окремими напрямами. Командувач морської піхоти генерал-майор Юрій Содоль перебуває у прямому підпорядкуванні командувача ВМС ЗС України Ігоря Воронченка. 

Читайте також: США нададуть Україні кораблі та протикорабельні ракети – військовий експерт

Морська піхота є універсальним родом військ, який може діяти на воді, суші, у повітрі (як самостійно, так і у взаємодії з іншими підрозділами).  

Як зазначив генерал-майор Содоль, нині зона відповідальності морської піхоти України простягається від Маріуполя до Болграда на Одещині. Йдеться про  близько тисячі кілометрів Азовського моря і понад 1,7 тисячі Чорного моря.

Раніше командувач ВМС ЗС України Ігор Воронченко повідомив, що на Азовському напрямку буде збільшено корабельне угруповання, присутність артилерії та морської піхоти.

«Дійсно перед морською піхотою поставлені певні задачі, але озвучувати їх через зрозумілі причини не стану», – зазначив у розмові з Радіо Свобода генерал-майор Юрій Содоль.

Sex Abuse Claims Increase Urgency to Reunite Immigrant Families

The Trump administration is under increasing pressure to speed up the reunification of immigrant families it separated at the Mexican border, following allegations three youngsters were sexually abused while in U.S. custody.

The government of El Salvador said the three, ages 12 to 17, were victimized at shelters in Arizona, and it asked the U.S. to make their return a priority.

“May they leave the shelters as soon as possible, because it is there that they are the most vulnerable,” Deputy Foreign Relations Minister Liduvina Magarin said in San Salvador on Thursday.

Deadline a month ago

The U.S. government already is facing heavy criticism over its slow pace in reuniting more than 2,600 children who were separated from their parents last spring before the Trump administration agreed to stop the practice. Most have since been reunited, but hundreds remain apart more than a month after the deadline set by a judge.

Before the Trump administration reversed course, many of the parents had been deported to their home countries while their children remained in shelters in the U.S.

Attorneys for the U.S. government and the immigrant families discussed how to accelerate the process at a hearing Friday in San Diego in front of U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw, who set the deadline.

Magarin gave few details on the three cases other than to say they involved “sexual violations, sexual abuses.” She said her government is ready with lawyers and psychologists to help the families, adding: “The psychological and emotional impact is forever.”

“It’s unbelievable that children who were fleeing violence here were met in the United States with the worst violence a child could encounter,” said Cesar Rios, director of the Salvadoran Migrant Institute.

More information is needed to investigate, the U.S. Department Health and Human Services said in a statement Friday, that adding that “without additional details, we are unable to confirm or deny these allegations took place” at a facility overseen by the Office of Refugee Resettlement. It contracts with nonprofits and other third parties to run shelters for unaccompanied minors arriving at the border.

Administration asks ACLU to find the families

In trying to reunite families, the Trump administration has put the onus on the American Civil Liberties Union, asking that the organization use its “considerable resources” to find parents in their home countries, mostly Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

The governments of those countries and nonprofit organizations have been trying to locate the families. Those efforts have included posting public notices and putting hotline numbers on billboards in the hope a parent missing a child might see the signs and call.

“Every day that these children are separated and left in government facilities does more damage,” said Lee Gelernt, an ACLU attorney representing separated families. “Even if the facilities were palaces, the separation of young children from their parents causes potentially permanent trauma.”

The government and ACLU indicated in the hearing Friday that the process should start to speed up.

200 cases could be resolved soon

Gelernt told the judge as many as 200 cases could be resolved in the next week or two. Those include families who want to be reunited in their home countries and those who want to waive their right to reunification and keep their child in the United States to pursue asylum.

The judge also said the administration can expedite cases where families have expressed the desire for the child to be sent back and not worry about it violating a temporary halt on deportations of families seeking asylum.

Justice Department attorney Scott Stewart said the government wants to remove any roadblocks.

“There are a lot of folks that want to move forward with reunification,” he told the judge.

Parents increasingly anxious

More than 300 parents who have been deported are waiting for their sons and daughters to be returned to them in their homelands. Many are growing increasingly anxious.

Among them is Evelin Roxana Meyer, whose 11-year-old son, Eduardo Almendarez Meyer, was told this week that he won’t be leaving the U.S. until Nov. 27. He has been held at a government-contracted shelter in Brownsville, Texas, since he was separated from his father in early June.

The boy’s mother said her husband was told when he signed his deportation papers that his son would be waiting for him in Honduras.

“Now it’ll be six months before we see him? Oh my God,” Meyer said Friday, crying during a telephone interview from her hometown of La Union. “I don’t know why it’s taking so long. My son is worried. He tells me, ‘More time here, Mommy? Oh, no. Why?’ I don’t know what to tell him.”

Child psychologist Barbara Van Dahlen, founder of Give an Hour, a network of mental health professions that is offering to counsel the separated families, said the reports of abuse are likely to worsen the immigrant parents’ anxieties.

“I can’t imagine the stress, the anxiety, the terror, if I was separated from my child, and then the thought that possibly some of these kids are being abused,” Van Dahlen said. “It would be so debilitating and destructive that it would be hard for some parents to function.”

US Cuts Funding to UN Agency Helping Palestinian Refugees

The Trump administration has cut funding to the U.N. agency that helps Palestinian refugees, calling the organization “irredeemably flawed.”

The U.S. State Department ended decades of support to the organization Friday, saying “the administration has carefully reviewed the issue and determined that the United States will not make additional contributions to UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency).”

State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said the U.N. agency’s “endlessly and exponentially expanding community of entitled beneficiaries is simply unsustainable and has been in crisis mode for many years.”

UNRWA provides health care, education and social services to Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon. The agency says it provides services to about 5 million Palestinian refugees, most of whom are descendants of Palestinians who fled or were forced from their homes during the war that led to Israel’s establishment in 1948.

The United States supplies nearly 30 percent of the total budget of UNRWA and donated $355 million to the agency in 2016. However, in January, the Trump administration withheld $65 million it had been due to provide UNRWA and released only $60 million in funds.

Last week, the Trump administration announced it would cut more than $200 million in economic aid to the Palestinians, following a review of the funding for projects in the West Bank and Gaza. A senior State Department official said the decision took into account the challenges the international community faces in providing assistance to Gaza, where “Hamas control endangers the lives of Gaza’s citizens and degrades an already dire humanitarian and economic situation.”

Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist group that runs Gaza, seized the coastal territory in 2007 from the internationally recognized Palestinian Authority. That led to Israel and Egypt placing severe economic restrictions on the region.

Under the Trump administration, Washington has taken a number of actions that have angered the Palestinians, including recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in December and moving the U.S. embassy there from Tel Aviv in May. The Palestinian leadership has been boycotting Washington’s peace efforts since the Jerusalem announcement.

US to Proceed With Mexico Trade Pact, Keep Talking to Canada

U.S. President Donald Trump notified Congress on Friday of his intent to sign a trade agreement with Mexico after talks with Canada broke up earlier in the day with no immediate deal to revamp the tri-nation North American Free Trade Agreement.

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said U.S. officials would resume talks with their Canadian counterparts next Wednesday with the aim of getting a deal all three nations could sign.

All three countries have stressed the importance of NAFTA, which governs billions of dollars in regional trade, and a bilateral deal announced by the United States and Mexico on Monday paved the way for Canada to rejoin the talks this week.

But by Friday the mood had soured, partly on Trump’s off-the-record remarks made to Bloomberg News that any trade deal with Canada would be “totally on our terms.” He later confirmed the comments, which the Toronto Star first reported.

“At least Canada knows where I stand,” he later said on Twitter.

Ottawa has stood firm against signing “just any deal.” 

​’Making progress’

But at a news conference Friday afternoon, Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland expressed confidence that Canada could reach agreement with the United States on a renegotiated NAFTA trade pact if there was “goodwill and flexibility on all sides.”

“We continue to work very hard and we are making progress. We’re not there yet,” Freeland told reporters.

“We know that a win-win-win agreement is within reach,” she added. “With goodwill and flexibility on all sides, I know we can get there.”

The Canadian dollar weakened to C$1.3081 to the U.S. dollar after The Wall Street Journal first reported that the talks had ended Friday with no agreement. Canadian stocks remained 0.5 percent lower.

Global equities were also down following the hawkish turn in Trump’s comments on trade.

Lighthizer has refused to budge despite repeated efforts by Freeland to offer some dairy concessions to maintain the Chapter 19 independent trade dispute resolution mechanism in NAFTA, The Globe and Mail reported Friday.

However, a spokeswoman for USTR said Canada had made no concessions on agriculture, which includes dairy, but added that negotiations continued.

The United States wants to eliminate Chapter 19, the mechanism that has hindered it from pursuing anti-dumping and anti-subsidy cases. Lighthizer said on Monday that Mexico had agreed to cut the mechanism. For Ottawa, Chapter 19 is a red line.

Trump argues Canada’s hefty dairy tariffs are hurting U.S. farmers, an important political base for his Republican Party.

But dairy farmers have great political clout in Canada too, and concessions could hurt the ruling Liberals ahead of a 2019 federal election.

At a speech in North Carolina on Friday, Trump took another swipe at Canada. “I love Canada, but they’ve taken advantage of our country for many years,” he said.

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