Month: November 2018

Порошенко заявив, що просив подзвонити Путіну після обстрілу українських кораблів

Президент України Петро Порошенко просив подзвонити президенту Росії Володимиру Путіну після обстрілу російськими військовими українських кораблів.

«Хочу наголосити, що одразу вночі я замовив розмову з президентом Росії Путіним. Ми не отримали відповіді», – сказав Порошенко в інтерв’ю українським телеканалам.

Російська сторона наразі не коментувала інформацію.

25 листопада російські прикордонники у Керченській протоці відкрили вогонь по українських кораблях і захопили три човни. Шістьох українських військових поранено, двоє у важкому стані (Росія заявляє, що надала медичну допомогу трьом пораненим, про інших трьох не згадувала).

В Євросоюзі і НАТО закликали до «стриманості і деескалації».

26 листопада, після подій у Керченській протоці Верховна Рада ухвалила запровадження з 26 листопада воєнного стану у низці областей України.

Наразі затримані українські моряки в анексованій Керчі, їх звинувачують у «незаконному перетині державного кордону Росії». Українська прокуратура визнала їх військовополоненими.

27 листопада підконтрольний Росії Київський районний суд Сімферополя заарештував на два місяці 12 із 24 затриманих українських військових моряків. Згодом суд у Керчі заарештував трьох поранених українців.

 

 

 

НА ЦЮ Ж ТЕМУ:

(Радіоперехоплення переговорів російського командування з екіпажами кораблів Росії щодо атаки на човни ВМС України)

(Відео моменту, коли корабель Росії цілеспрямовано таранить український човен у Керченській протоці)

Потрібно зупинити Путіна, щоб він не пішов далі – у Європарламенті закликають до нових санкцій

Росія накопичує заручників – Фейгін про полонених моряків України

UK’s May Fights to Sell Brexit Deal to Skeptical Country

Prime Minister Theresa May made a blunt appeal to skeptical lawmakers Monday to back her divorce deal with the European Union: It isn’t perfect, but it’s all there is, and the alternative is a leap into the unknown.

In essence, she urged Parliament: Let’s agree and move on, for the sake of the voters.

Britain and the 27 other EU leaders signed off on a Brexit deal Sunday after more than a year and a half of tough negotiations. It was a day many doubted would ever come, but May was anything but triumphant as she reported back to Parliament, which now controls the fate of the deal. May confirmed that British lawmakers will vote Dec. 11, after several days of debate, on whether to approve or reject the agreement.

Scores of legislators — from both the opposition and May’s governing Conservative Party — have vowed to oppose it. Rejection would plunge Britain into a political crisis and potential financial turmoil just weeks before it is due to leave the EU on March 29.

“No one knows what would happen if this deal didn’t pass,” May told the House of Commons.

“Our duty as a Parliament over these coming weeks is to examine this deal in detail, to debate it respectfully, to listen to our constituents and decide what is in our national interest.”

Before then, May plans a frantic two-week cross-country campaign to convince both the public and lawmakers that the deal delivers on voters’ decision in 2016 to leave the EU “while providing a close economic and security relationship with our nearest neighbors.”

But May’s defense of her hard-won deal in Parliament was followed by a torrent of criticism, from hard-core Brexit-backers, pro-EU lawmakers and previously loyal backbenchers alike.

Trade with U.S.

In another potential blow for May, President Donald Trump said her deal would make it more difficult for the U.K. to strike a trade deal with the U.S. Brexiteers see a wide-ranging trade deal with the U.S. as one of Britain’s main goals after leaving the EU.

Trump said that “right now if you look at the deal they may not be able to trade with us, and that wouldn’t be a good thing.”

“I don’t think that the prime minister meant that and hopefully she’ll be able to do something about that,” Trump said outside the White House. “But right now as the deal stands, she may not, they may not be able to trade with the U.S. and I don’t think they want that at all.”

In response to Trump’s comments, May’s 10 Downing St. office said that under the deal agreed with the EU, “we will have an independent trade policy so that the U.K. can sign trade deals with countries around the world — including with the U.S.”

Criticism

But during Monday’s debate in Parliament, legislators again expressed their deep unease, if not hatred, of the deal that keeps Britain outside the EU with no say but still subject to the rules and the obligations of membership at least until the end of 2020 while a permanent new relationship is worked out.

Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said the “botched deal” would leave Britain worse off, with “no say over EU rules and no certainty for the future.”

“Plowing on is not stoic. It’s an act of national self-harm,” he said.

May argued that the British people are sick of endless debates about Brexit, and backing the deal would allow “us to come together again as a country whichever way we voted.”

“The majority of the British public want us to get on with doing what they asked us to,” she said.

The majority of lawmakers appear unconvinced. Dozens of Conservative legislators say they will reject the deal, either because they want a harder or a softer break with the EU. Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, which props up May’s minority government, also opposes it, as do all the main opposition parties.

“The Prime Minister and the whole House knows the mathematics — this will never get through,” said Brexit-backing Conservative Mark Francois, who described the deal “a surrender” to the EU.

Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay conceded that “it’s going to be a challenging vote.” But he said Britain would be in “choppy waters” if the deal was rejected.

Both Britain and the EU are adamant that the U.K. can’t renegotiate the agreement, and opponents of the deal do not agree on what should happen next if Parliament rejects it. Some want an election, others a new referendum, and some say Britain should leave the bloc without a deal.

“I can say to the House with absolute certainty that there is not a better deal available,” May said.

She said rejecting it “would open the door to more division and more uncertainty, with all the risks that will entail.”

Special Counsel: Ex-Trump Campaign Chairman Manafort Lied to FBI

Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort lied to the FBI and special counsel investigators after pleading guilty to federal charges, breaching his plea agreement, according to a court filing on Monday.

Manafort said in the same filing he disagreed with Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s assertion that he lied to investigators.

Both the special counsel and Manafort’s attorneys agreed there was no reason to delay his sentencing and asked the court to set a date for that.

Mueller, who is probing Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election and possible collusion between Moscow and the Trump campaign, said in the filing that after signing a plea agreement: “Manafort committed federal crimes by lying to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Special Counsel’s Office on a variety of subject matters.”

Mueller said in the filing that those lies breached Manafort’s plea agreement.

Manafort’s attorneys said in the same filing that Manafort had met with the government on several occasions and provided information “in an effort to live up to his cooperation obligations.”

They said Manafort disagreed with the characterization that he had breached the agreement.

Manafort, a longtime Republican political consultant who made tens of millions of dollars working for pro-Kremlin politicians in Ukraine, ran the Trump campaign as it took off in mid-2016.

He attended a meeting at Trump Tower in June 2016 with a group of Russians offering damaging information on Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, who lost in an upset to Trump in the presidential vote that November.

Since September this year when he took a plea deal in return for reduced charges, Manafort has been cooperating with Mueller’s inquiry.

Russia denies U.S. allegations it hacked Democratic Party emails and ran a disinformation campaign, largely on social media. Trump denies any campaign collusion and calls the investigation a political witch hunt.

США засуджують агресивні дії Росії проти України – держсекретар

Сполучені Штати Америки засуджують агресивні дії Росії, заявив державний секретар США Майкл Помпео, коментуючи напад Росії на українські військові кораблі. Ці дії, наголосив він, є небезпечним інцидентом і порушенням міжнародного права.

США також висловили глибоке занепокоєння цим інцидентом і закликають Росію повернути Україні її кораблі і затриманих членів команд, заявив він 26 листопада. Крім того, США закликають Росію поважати суверенітет і територіальну цілісність України в її міжнародно визнаних кордонах, включно з територіальними водами, мовиться в заяві.

«Закликаємо обидві сторони бути стриманими і дотримуватися своїх міжнародних зобов’язань. Закликаємо президентів Порошенка і Путіна безпосередньо залучитися до вирішення цієї ситуації. В цьому зв’язку повторюємо нашу підтримку форматові «нормандської четвірки», – заявив Майкл Помпео, говорячи про президентів України Петра Порошенка і Росії Володимира Путіна і про формат переговорів про врегулювання навколо російської агресії проти України, в якому, крім України і Росії, беруть участь також Німеччина і Франція.

Держсекретар знову підтвердив, що США підтримують суверенітет і територіальну цілісність України в її міжнародно визнаних кордонах, включно з її територіальними водами, а також право її кораблів на пересування міжнародними водами. «Як заявлено в нашій Кримській декларації, США відкидають намагання Росії анексувати Крим», – мовиться в заяві Помпео.

Також 26 листопада держсекретар США мав телефонну розмову з президентом України Петром Порошенком, у перебігу якої, як повідомили у Вашингтоні, сторони обговорили «агресію Росії проти України в Чорному морі біля Керченської протоки».

Помпео так само повторив тверду підтримку США суверенітету і територіальної цілісності України в її міжнародно визнаних кордонах, включно з її територіальними водами.

«Президент Порошенко висловив подяку за заяви підтримки від США і наголосив на важливості того, щоб західні держави залишалися об’єднаними, постаючи перед агресією Росії. Держсекретар Помпео погодився і високо оцінив кроки України на деескалацію ситуації з Росією», – повідомила про розмову речниця Держдепартаменту Гедер Науерт.

Ці заяви і розмови відбулися у зв’язку з нападом Росії на три українські військові кораблі 25 листопада, внаслідок якого два з них були пошкоджені, всі три захоплені силою з застосуванням зброї і шість українських моряків були поранені; двоє, за повідомленнями, перебувають у важкому стані.

Російські морські прикордонники і сили спецпризначення здійснили напад на три українські кораблі, коли ті поверталися після невдалої спроби пройти через заблоковану Росією поставленим впоперек судном Керченську протоку в Азовське море. Напад відбувся в міжнародних водах, поза 12-мильними межами вод навколо окупованого Криму, на які Росія незаконно претендує як на «свої територіальні». А ще вранці того дня, коли українські кораблі підходили до протоки, російський прикордонний корабель таранив український буксир.

В Україні нагадували, що такі дії, відповідно до норм міжнародного права, становлять акт агресії.

Trump Says Brexit Deal May Hamper US-British Trade; UK Differs

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday the agreement allowing the United Kingdom to leave the European Union may make trade between Washington and London more difficult, but the UK prime minister’s office disputed his interpretation.

Trump told reporters outside the White House that the deal sounded like it would be good for the European Union, but “I think we have to take a look seriously whether or not the UK is allowed to trade.

“Because right now if you look at the deal, they may not be able to trade with us,” he said. “And that wouldn’t be a good thing. I don’t think they meant that.”

He said he hoped British Prime Minister Theresa May would be able to address the problem, but he did not specify which provision of the deal he was concerned about.

A spokeswoman for May’s office said the agreement struck with the EU allowed the UK to sign trade deals with countries throughout the world, including with the United States.

“We have already been laying the groundwork for an ambitious agreement with the U.S. through our joint working groups, which have met five times so far,” the spokeswoman said.

Under the deal secured with EU leaders on Sunday, the UK will leave the bloc in March with continued close trade ties. But the odds look stacked against May getting it approved by a divided British parliament.

 

 

Trump Rallies for Embattled US Senator in Mississippi

President Donald Trump stumped in Mississippi on Monday for a Republican Senate appointee who wants voters to focus on her unwavering support for him, and not the racial questions that have made Tuesday’s runoff election a much closer contest than anyone expected.

 

Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith has made the Trump rallies a highlight of her runoff campaign against Democrat Mike Espy, and the president thanked her on Twitter for voting for “our Agenda in the Senate 100% of the time.”

 

But race has become a dominant issue as Hyde-Smith faces Espy, a former congressman and U.S. agriculture secretary who would become Mississippi’s first black senator since Reconstruction.

 

Hyde-Smith has drawn fire for a photo showing her wearing a replica hat of a Confederate soldier, and a video showing her praising a supporter by saying, “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.”

 

Mississippi has a history of racially motivated lynchings and violence against people who sought voting rights for black citizens. About 38 percent of the state’s residents are black, and Espy is trying to boost their turnout and pick up support from white voters who are uneasy with Trump or the racially tinged stories about Hyde-Smith.

 

Authorities discovered seven nooses and six handwritten signs on Capitol grounds Monday morning. It was not immediately known who put the nooses up.

 

The signs referred to the state’s history of lynchings and the Senate race, according to photos the state Department of Public Safety posted to social media. One sign said Mississippi needs a senator “who respects the lives of lynch victims.”

 

Tuesday’s runoff winner will serve the final two years of a term started by Republican Sen. Thad Cochran, who resigned in April amid health concerns.

 

It’s the last U.S. Senate race to be decided in 2018 and will determine whether Republicans pad their slim majority.

 

Trump praised Hyde-Smith on Monday as he departed the White House. He said she misspoke when she made her comments about a public hanging and the remarks were “taken a certain way but she certainly didn’t mean it.”

 

Hyde-Smith’s support of Trump is unmistakable. She used both her opening and closing statements of the only debate of the runoff campaign to promote Monday’s presidential rallies, citing the online address to get tickets. Even on trade and tariffs, where Trump’s decisions could hurt Mississippi farmers, Hyde-Smith praised the president.

“I have met with the president, and I proudly support him in negotiating these trades,” she said. “All the Mississippi farmers want is a fair deal, and I’m excited that the president has stepped up to renegotiate these deals.”

 

Hyde-Smith and Trump were appearing together at a late Monday afternoon event in the northeastern city of Tupelo, best known as the birthplace of Elvis Presley. Then, they were to fly to the Gulf Coast for a larger evening rally in Biloxi.

 

During a last-minute campaign stop in suburban Ridgeland on Monday, Espy said he was running his own race and wouldn’t be thrown off by Trump’s appearance. He has emphasized that he’s a moderate seeking the votes of everyone and willing to work across party lines. On Monday, he noted that he had crossed the “party chasm” to endorse the re-election of Republican Gov. Haley Barbour in Mississippi in 2007.

“Mississippi first means I value Mississippi over everything else — over party, over persons, over everybody. I am an independent person and I will be an independent senator,” he said.

 

Democrats also have used some star power. Former Vice President Joe Biden has endorsed Espy, and three Democrats who could run for president in 2020 — Sens. Kamala Harris of California and Cory Booker of New Jersey and former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick — have been to Mississippi to campaign for the former congressman who served as agriculture secretary in 1993 and 1994 under Democratic President Bill Clinton.

 

For Espy, turnout is key. He has to close the gap in a state where Trump received 58 percent in 2016. Mississippi hasn’t elected a Democrat to the U.S. Senate since 1982.

 

“I know I can’t win only with black votes,” Espy said Monday in the Jackson suburb of Ridgeland. “That’s never been where we are. We’ve got to get votes from everybody. I tell everyone. I need Republicans, I need independents, I need those who have never voted before to come out tomorrow and vote for me.”

 

About a third of Mississippi voters were African-American in the four-way race on Election Day, and Espy won support from about 80 percent of them, compared to about 20 percent from white voters, according to VoteCast, a wide-ranging survey of the electorate conducted by The Associated Press.

 

Espy hasn’t hammered Hyde-Smith on Trump at every turn. His campaign has focused more on issues such as social justice, health care and raising wages.

 

Espy also has carefully picked his time to talk about race. He does remind voters that while Hyde-Smith attended a white private school founded after court-ordered desegregation of public schools, he and his twin sister were being called racial slurs while integrating Yazoo City High School in 1969.

 

Hyde-Smith has apologized to “anyone that was offended” by the hanging comment, saying she meant no ill will. She and her campaign have refused to talk about the Confederate hat and have called the school issue a personal attack on her family meant to draw attention away from issues.

 

Walmart asked Hyde-Smith to return a $2,000 campaign contribution because of the hanging remark.

Порошенко обговорив з Помпео запровадження воєнного стану

Президент України Петро Порошенко провів телефонну розмову з державним секретарем США Майклом Помпео.

«Президент поінформував американську сторону про вчинений Росією акт збройної агресії проти України в акваторії Керченської протоки, а також відповідні кроки української сторони, зокрема запровадження режиму воєнного стану. Президент України відзначив, що такі протиправні дії Росії є абсолютно неприйнятними та мають отримати найжорсткішу реакцію міжнародної спільноти, в тому числі посилення санкцій проти Росії», – мовиться у повідомленні прес-служби Порошенка.

На Банковій зазначили, що співрозмовники скоординували кроки для подальшої протидії російській агресії проти України, в тому числі в районі Керченської протоки.

25 листопада російські прикордонники у Керченській протоці відкрили вогонь по українських кораблях і захопили три кораблі. Шістьох українських військових поранено, двоє у важкому стані.

Свій осуд з приводу дій Росії висловили представники Польщі й Естонії, а також Канада і Грузія. В Євросоюзі і НАТО закликали до «стриманості і деескалації».

26 листопада, після подій у Керченській протоці Верховна Рада ухвалила запровадження з 28 листопада воєнного стану у низці областей України.

На Дніпропетровщині двох керівників осередку Компартії засудили і одразу звільнили

Суд у Кам’янському Дніпропетровської області визнав винними в публічних закликах до насильницької зміни й повалення конституційного ладу, а також в поширенні матеріалів з такими закликами керівників місцевого осередку Комуністичної партії України. Відповідне рішення ухвалив Заводський районний суд Кам’янського.

За даними слідства, у 2014 році від невстановленої слідством особи комуністи отримали не менше 23 примірників друкованих матеріалів – газети «Новороссия», видрукованої угрупованням «ДНР», і роздавали її на площі в Кам’янському разом з виданням «Інформаційний бюлетень Дніпродзержинського міського комітету КПУ «Прометей».

Голова Дніпродзержинського міського комітету КПУ Сергій Ткаченко та його заступник Денис Тимофєєв були затримані Службою безпеки України у вересні 2014 року. Судовий процес тривав майже чотири роки.

Суд виправдав обох підсудних за звинуваченням у незаконному поводженні зі зброєю – «за недоведеністю вчинення інкримінованого кримінального правопорушення».

Водночас суд засудив їх за статтею статтею 109 Кримінального кодексу (дії, спрямовані на насильницьку зміну чи повалення конституційного ладу або на захоплення державної влади): одного з підсудних – до трьох років позбавлення волі без конфіскації майна, другого – до двох років позбавлення волі.

Обоє підсудних підпали під дію «закону Савченко» і були звільнені з-під варти.

На оскарження рішення суду відведено 30 днів.

2014 року прокуратура Дніпропетровської області повідомила, що направила до суду обвинувальний акт щодо двох депутатів міської та районної рад, які підозрюються в посяганні на територіальну цілісність і недоторканність України та незаконному поводженні зі зброєю, обидва депутати – представники Комуністичної партії України. 

Як заявили в прокуратурі, чоловіки поширювали «агітаційні матеріали із закликами до вчинення дій з метою зміни меж території України, на порушення порядку, встановленого Конституцією України». Крім того, як повідомляли в прокуратурі, за місцем їхнього мешкання знайшли боєприпаси.

В обласній організації Комуністичної партії України Радіо Свобода тоді заявили, що «справа є політичним замовленням».

2016 року обох комуністів випустили з-під варти під підписку про невиїзд.

16 грудня 2015 року Окружний адміністративний суд Києва задовольнив позов Міністерства юстиції України про заборону Комуністичної партії. Була заборонена офіційна діяльність партії або участь її в майбутніх виборах. У липні 2014 року Міністерство юстиції подало судовий позов про заборону КПУ.

Відео: Димові шашки, штовханина, спалене авто – що відбувалося біля посольства Росії в Києві

Неподалік посольства РФ в Києві згорів автомобіль з російськими дипномерами. Авто знаходилося в провулку Ярослава Хомова, недалеко від будівлі дипмісії, де пізно ввечері 25 листопада активісти проводили акцію протесту проти нападу російських військових на українські кораблі на вході до Азовського моря.

Російські прикордонники ввечері, 25 листопада, відкрили вогонь по корабельній групі Військово-Морських Сил ЗС України, є шестеро поранених. У ВМС повідомили про три захоплені українські судна. У Росії заявили про «провокацію Києва».

Відео пожежі автомобіля з російськими дипломатичними номерами в Києві

Неподалік посольства РФ в Києві згорів автомобіль з російськими дипномерами. Авто знаходилося в провулку Ярослава Хомова, недалеко від будівлі дипмісії, де пізно ввечері 25 листопада активісти проводили акцію протесту проти нападу російських військових на українські кораблі на вході до Азовського моря.

Російські прикордонники ввечері, 25 листопада, відкрили вогонь по корабельній групі Військово-Морських Сил ЗС України, є шестеро поранених. У ВМС повідомили про три захоплені українські судна. У Росії заявили про «провокацію Києва».

Агресія Росії проти України на морі: скликається засідання Ради безпеки ООН

Постійний представник США в Організації Об’єднаних Націй Ніккі Гейлі повідомила про скликання засідання Ради безпеки ООН на 11:00 понеділка 26 листопада (за часом Нью-Йорка). 

Таким чином, засідання Ради безпеки відбудеться о 18:00 за Києвом.

Як повідомляло Радіо Свобода, на 16:00 заплановано закрите засідання Верховної Ради, на якому буде розглянуто питання щодо запровадження воєнного стану в Україні.

Як повідомляло Радіо Свобода, 26 листопада після півночі на засіданні Ради національної безпеки та оборони було ухвалене рішення про підготовку до запровадження воєнного стану в Україні.

Президент України, верховний головнокомандувач ЗСУ Петро Порошенко заявив, що, відповідно до Конституції, підтримує рішення воєнного кабінету і всієї РНБО звернутися до Верховної Ради з проханням розглянути запровадження воєнного стану в Україні.


Російські прикордонники ввечері 25 листопада відкрили вогонь по корабельній групі Військово-морських сил ЗС України, є шестеро поранених. У ВМС повідомили про три захоплені українські кораблі. У Росії заявили про «провокацію Києва».​ В Генштабі Збройних сил повідомили, що станом на початок доби 26 листопада доля українських військових і кораблів не відома.

У Росії заявили про «провокацію Києва» після нападу російських військових і прикордонників на три українські кораблі і захоплення їх із застосуванням вогню на ураження.

Європейський союз закликав Україну та Росію до стриманості для деескалації напруження в Керченській протоці, а від росіян вимагає відновлення свободи руху в Азовському морі. Ввечері 25 листопада союз НАТО заявив, що уважно стежить за розвитком подій біля Керченської протоки та закликає до стриманості й деескалації напруження.

On UN Day, Thousands Protest Violence Against Women

Protesters in cities across Europe and elsewhere marked the U.N. International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on Sunday, with tens of thousands turning out in Madrid and demonstrators in Istanbul greeted by tear gas.

Hundreds of women gathered in Istanbul’s Tunel Square to march on the city’s main pedestrian Istiklal Avenue. Dozens of police formed a barricade and prevented the group from marching, saying their demonstration was not permitted. Police fired several rounds of tear gas to stop the group.

The activists instead continued their demonstration in the square with a sit-in. They chanted slogans and dispersed peacefully.

Rights groups say violence against women is widespread in Turkey, and an online database called the Monument Counter says at least 337 women were killed by domestic violence in 2018.

Protests in Turkey have been especially restricted since 2013 after a wave of anti-government demonstrations, extremist attacks and a two-year state of emergency declared following a failed coup in 2016.

The women’s activist group Mor Cati said Turkey is more concerned with stopping protests than “preventing male violence.”

Activists marched in more than 40 cities and towns in Spain, with tens of thousands in Madrid joining a feminist group and shouting “no more victims, we want freedom” as they marched through the Spanish capital’s center.

Official figures show 44 women have died this year in Spain at the hands of their current or former partners. Since 2003, when Spain started keeping records, the total number of victims has been 999 — 972 women and 27 children.

Spain is training more than 600 judges on gender violence and preparing to reform the country’s laws on sex crimes following outrage over recent court decisions.

In Brussels for the E.U. Brexit summit, European Parliament President Antonio Tajani sported a red swipe under his left eye as he addressed the media. In Italy, his home country, the mark stands for support of the U.N. day.

Tajani said on Twitter that “Nothing can justify violence against women. My mother taught it to me. I taught it to my children.”

 

 

Біля посольства Росії в Києві спалили авто – фото

Кореспондент Радіо Свобода повідомляє про охоплений вогнем автомобіль недалеко від посольства Росії в Києві, де ветерани і активісти проводять акцію на знак протесту проти агресії Росії в Чорному морі.

Дипломатичні номерні знаки авто починаються на 001, таким чином, це автомобіль посольства Російської Федерації. Авто стояло недалеко від будівлі дипмісії, в провулку Ярослава Хомова.

Пізно ввечері 25 листопада під посольством Росії у Києві активісти та ветерани проводили акцію протесту проти нападу російських військових на українські кораблі на вході до Азовського моря.​

Російські прикордонники ввечері 25 листопада відкрили вогонь по корабельній групі Військово-морських сил ЗС України, є шестеро поранених. У ВМС повідомили про три захоплені українські кораблі. У Росії заявили про «провокацію Києва».​ В Генштабі Збройних сил повідомили, що станом на початок доби 26 листопада доля українських військових і кораблів не відома.

У Росії заявили про «провокацію Києва» після нападу російських військових і прикордонників на три українські кораблі і захоплення їх із застосуванням вогню на ураження.

Європейський союз закликав Україну та Росію до стриманості для деескалації напруження в Керченській протоці, а від росіян вимагає відновлення свободи руху в Азовському морі. Ввечері 25 листопада союз НАТО заявив, що уважно стежить за розвитком подій біля Керченської протоки та закликає до стриманості й деескалації напруження.

Як повідомляло Радіо Свобода, 26 листопада після півночі на засіданні Ради національної безпеки та оборони було ухвалене рішення про підготовку до запровадження воєнного стану в Україні.

Президент України, верховний головнокомандувач ЗСУ Петро Порошенко заявив, що, відповідно до Конституції, підтримує рішення воєнного кабінету і всієї РНБО звернутися до Верховної Ради з проханням розглянути запровадження воєнного стану в Україні.

US Lawmakers Split With Trump on Khashoggi Killing

Several U.S. lawmakers broke with President Donald Trump on Sunday, disagreeing with his assessment that it was uncertain whether Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was involved in the killing of a Saudi dissident journalist inside Riyadh’s consulate in Istanbul.

Congressman Adam Schiff, set to become the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee when Democrats take control of the House in January, told CNN, “I have been briefed by the CIA and, while I cannot discuss the contents of the briefing in any way, I can say that I think the president is being dishonest with the American people.”

Schiff said, “It causes our standing in the world to plummet, it telegraphs to despots around the world that they can murder people with impunity, and that this president will have their back as long as they praise him.”

Trump last week said the U.S. would stand by Saudi Arabia and that he did not know whether the crown prince had knowledge in advance of the killing of Jamal Khashoggi. While living in the U.S., Khashoggi wrote opinion columns for The Washington Post that were critical of Mohammed bin Salman and Riyadh’s involvement in the long-running Yemen conflict.

“It could very well be that the crown prince had knowledge of this tragic event – maybe he did and maybe he didn’t!” Trump said.

Trump concluded, “In any case, our relationship is with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. They have been a great ally in our very important fight against Iran. The United States intends to remain a steadfast partner of Saudi Arabia to ensure the interests of our country, Israel and all other partners in the region.”

Saudi Arabia has indicted 11 of its agents in connection with the Khashoggi killing, with five of them facing the death penalty if convicted.

Senator Mike Lee, a Utah Republican, also disputed Trump’s equivocation on whether the crown prince had knowledgeable of the Khashoggi killing.

“I disagree with the president’s assessment,” Lee told NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “It’s inconsistent with the intelligence I’ve seen,” which implicates the crown prince.

Human rights factor

Another Republican, Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa, said on CNN, “I do think we need to look into this further.” She said that while Saudi Arabia is a strategic partner of the U.S., “We also are a very strong nation when it comes to human rights, when it comes to the rule of law. And if there are indicators that the [crown] prince was involved in this murder, then we need to absolutely consider further action.”

Ernst said she did not think Trump was exonerating Saudi Arabia, but added, “I think at such a time when it becomes necessary, the president also needs to speak directly to the Saudis and say enough is enough.”

Republican Senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska, a frequent Trump critic, said on Fox News, “Making the realist case (about the need for a U.S.-Saudi alliance) is a different thing than being so weak that we failed to tell the truth.” He said Mohammed bin Salman “contributed to murdering somebody abroad and it is not strength to sort of mumble past that. Strength is telling the truth even when it’s hard.”

Numerous U.S. lawmakers have said they intend to push for U.S. sanctions against Saudi Arabia because of Khashoggi’s killing. Trump, in his statement last week, said, “I will consider whatever ideas are presented to me, but only if they are consistent with the absolute security and safety of America.”

He said, “After the United States, Saudi Arabia is the largest oil producing nation in the world. They have worked closely with us and have been very responsive to my requests to keeping oil prices at reasonable levels – so important for the world. As president of the United States I intend to ensure that, in a very dangerous world, America is pursuing its national interests and vigorously contesting countries that wish to do us harm. Very simply it is called America First!”

 

Washington Digests New Warning on Climate Change

Washington is digesting the U.S. government’s starkest-ever warnings and most dire predictions to date on climate change. VOA’s Michael Bowman reports, the White House is issuing no calls for action in response to the National Climate Assessment, and President Donald Trump continues to mock the very concept of global warming.

Soldier from Washington State Killed in Afghanistan

U.S. Department of Defense officials say a 25-year-old soldier from Leavenworth, Washington, was killed during combat operations in Afghanistan.

Army Sgt. Leandro A.S. Jasso died Saturday in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, while supporting Operation Freedom’s Sentinel.

 

Army spokesman Lt. Col. Loren Bymer said Sunday that Jasso was wounded by small arms fire and was immediately treated and evacuated to the nearest medical treatment facility, where he died of his wounds.

 

The incident is under investigation.

 

Jasso was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington.

 

He was on his third deployment to Afghanistan after enlisting in the Army in 2012.

 

Lt. Col. Rob McChrystal, Commander 2nd Battalion, said Jasso was a humble professional who will be deeply missed.

 

 

France Braces for Economic Blow from ‘Yellow Vest’ Protests

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire will meet retailers and insurers on Monday to assess the economic impact of nationwide protests against rising fuel costs, he said on Sunday.

Protesters clad in fluorescent jackets, dubbed “yellow vests,” have blocked highways across France since Nov. 17, setting up burning barricades and deploying convoys of slow-moving trucks, often denying access to shopping centers and some factories.

French retailers have warned that prolonged protests could hit the Christmas shopping season and threaten jobs, while President Emmanuel Macron has shown no sign of backing down on taxes introduced last year on diesel and petrol to encourage people to switch to cleaner forms of transport.

The unrest reached new heights in Paris on Saturday, when police clashed violently with thousands of demonstrators on the Champs-Elysees.

“Tomorrow I will bring together at the Economy and Finance Ministry representatives from retailers, merchants, craftsmen, chambers of commerce and employers federation Medef to assess the economic situation, its impact on sales and on our economy and the consequences we must draw,” Le Maire told BFM TV.

Police detained 101 people in Paris and there 24 people were injured in the clashes on the Champs Elysees.

“I saw a violence that is not acceptable. It is urgent to rebuild the nation’s unity and restart a dialogue,” Le Maire said.

Some yellow vests have called for a third weekend of protests on the Champs Elysees via a Facebook page called “Act 3 Macron resigns!”

British Lawmakers Warn They Will Vote Against Brexit Deal

It took Britain’s Theresa May and 27 other European Union leaders just 40 minutes to sign the Brexit deal after two years of tortuous negotiations, but the trials and tribulations of Britain’s withdrawal agreement approved Sunday in Brussels are far from over.

As they endorsed the 585-page the agreement, and a 26-page accompanying political declaration that sets out the parameters of negotiating a possible free trade deal between Britain and the European Union, powerful political foes in London plotted strategies to undo it.

There is little evidence Britain’s embattled prime minister will have sufficient support to win legislative endorsement of the deal in a House of Commons vote next month. That was clearly on the minds of European Commission officials Sunday as EU leaders gave their backing to the terms of Britain’s split from Brussels after 44 years of membership.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker warned that Britain cannot expect to get a better deal, if its parliament rejects the agreement. “Now it is time for everybody to take their responsibilities, everybody,” he said.

“This is the deal, it’s the best deal possible and the EU will not change its fundamental position when it comes to this issue, so I do think the British parliament — because this is a wise parliament — will ratify this deal,” he added.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte warned British lawmakers that no better deal was on offer from the European Union, urging them to back the agreements.

“If I would live in the UK I would say yes to this, I would say that this is very much acceptable to the United Kingdom,” Rutte said, because the deal “limited the impact of Brexit while balancing the vote to leave”. In a bid to help the prime minister, he said May had “fought very hard” and now there was “an acceptable deal on the table”.

“You know I hate [Brexit], but it is a given,” he told reporters. “No one is a victor here today, nobody is winning, we are all losing.”

Opposition in Britain

Maybe it is a “given” in Brussels, but in Britain that is another matter altogether.

Both Remainers and Leavers in the British Parliament are warning that May doesn’t have the necessary support with the all the opposition parties lined up against the deal and as many as 100 lawmakers, Remainers and Leavers among them, from May’s ruling Conservatives pledging to vote against it as well.

Iain Duncan Smith, a former Conservative leader, said he would continue to oppose the deal because it “cedes huge amounts of power” to the European Union.

In Scotland, first minister and leader of the Scottish Nationalist Party Nicola Sturgeon said, “This is a bad deal, driven by the PM’s self defeating red lines and continual pandering to the right of her own party. Parliament should reject it and back a better alternative.”

She wants a second Britain-wide referendum, like a majority of Britons, according to recent opinion polls.

The agreement calls for Britain to stay in the bloc’s customs union and largely in the EU single market, without the power to influence the rules, regulations and laws it will be obliged to obey for a 21-month-long transition period following formal withdrawal on March 29. The deal would allow an extension of “up to one or two years” should the negotiations over “the future relationship” not be completed by the end of 2020.

May is campaigning to sell the agreement to the British public, hoping she she can build enough support in the wider country to pressure the House of Commons to endorse the deal. European Parliament approval is almost certain.

May’s warning

In an open letter to the British public published Sunday, May promised to campaign “with my heart and soul to win that vote and to deliver this Brexit deal.” If she is unable to do so, Britain would be plunged into what May herself has called, “deep and grave uncertainty.”

Her aides say she is banking on the “fear factor,” daring the House of Commons to vote down a deal which if rejected would leave Britain most likely crashing out of the bloc, its largest trading partner, without any agreements, which would be costly economically and would almost certainly push the country into recession.

Ominously, the Northern Ireland party, the Democratic Unionist Party, whose 10 lawmakers May’s minority government relies on to remain in power, says it will vote against the deal. And DUP leader Arlene Foster warned Sunday she is ready to collapse the government to block a deal that would see Northern Ireland treated differently than the rest of Britain.

And a senior Labour lawmaker Tony Lloyd said there was a “coalition of the willing” in the Parliament ready to reject May’s deal and support a softer Brexit. So, if the deal is voted down, what then? A vote against could trigger a general election, a second Brexit referendum or even more negotiations, despite Brussels’ threat there can be no other deal.

 

Italian Pasta Company Works to Improve Global Staple

Countries around the world have their own versions of pasta. In Germany there is spaetzle, in Greece there is orzo, throughout Asia there are dishes with noodles, and in Latin America you can find countless variations of spaghetti and other pastas. Voice of America reporter Iacopo Luzi visited the famed company Pasta Mancini in Monte San Pietrangeli, Italy, to see how they make this global staple.

Global Catholic Nuns Urge Reporting of Sex Abuse to Police

The Catholic Church’s global organization of nuns has denounced the “culture of silence and secrecy” surrounding sexual abuse in the church and is urging sisters who have been abused to report the crimes to police and their superiors. 

 

The International Union of Superiors General, which represents more than 500,000 sisters worldwide, vowed to help nuns who have been abused to find the courage to report it, and pledged to help victims heal and seek justice. 

 

The statement, issued on the eve of the U.N.-designated International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, was the first from the Rome-based UISG since the abuse scandal erupted anew this year and as the sexual abuse of adult nuns by clergymen has also come to light. The Associated Press reported earlier this year that the Vatican has known for decades about the problem of priests and bishops preying on nuns but has done next to nothing to stop it. 

 

In the statement Friday, the UISG didn’t specify clergy as the aggressors. While such abuse is well known in parts of Africa, and an Indian case of the alleged rape of a nun by a bishop is currently making headlines, there have also been cases of sexual abuse committed by women against other women within congregations. 

Festering mistreatment

 

The UISG statement was broad, condemning what it called the “pattern of abuse that is prevalent within the church and society today,” citing sexual, verbal and emotional abuse as types of mistreatment that festers in unequal power relations and demeans the dignity of its victims. 

 

“We condemn those who support the culture of silence and secrecy, often under the guise of ‘protection’ of an institution’s reputation or naming it ‘part of one’s culture,’ ” the group said. 

 

“We advocate for transparent civil and criminal reporting of abuse whether within religious congregations, at the parish or diocesan levels, or in any public arena,” the statement said. 

 

To mark the U.N. day calling for an end to violence against women, the head of the Italian bishops conference, Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti, issued a video message on the subject — but didn’t mention sexual violence against sisters by fellow clergymen, evidence of how taboo the subject is within the church hierarchy. 

 

An AP investigation found that cases of priests abusing nuns have emerged in Europe, Africa, South America and Asia, underscoring how sisters’ second-class status in the church has contributed to a power imbalance where women can be mistreated by men with near impunity. 

Reluctance to talk

 

While some nuns are finding their voices, buoyed by the #MeToo movement, many victims remain reluctant to come forward. Experts told AP sisters have a well-founded fear they won’t be believed and will instead be painted as the seducer who corrupted the priest. Often the sister who denounces abuse by a priest is punished, including with expulsion from her congregation, while the priest’s vocation is preserved at all cost. 

 

The Vatican has known for years about the problem in Africa after a series of major studies were commissioned in the 1990s. Religious sisters reported that African nuns were being particularly targeted by priests seeking to avoid HIV transmission from prostitutes or other women. 

 

In the wake of the AP report, the umbrella organization of U.S. sisters, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, urged sisters who had been abused to report to both civil and church authorities. Many of the LCWR’s members also belong to the global UISG, which can provide a point of contact with the Vatican.  

Memos to Nobody: Inside the Work of a Neglected Fed Agency

Mark Robbins gets to work at 8:15 each morning and unlocks the door to his office suite. He switches on the lights and the TV news, brews a pot of coffee and pulls out the first files of the day to review.

For the next eight hours or so, he reads through federal workplace disputes, analyzes the cases, marks them with notes and logs his legal opinions. When he’s finished, he slips the files into a cardboard box and carries them into an empty room where they will sit and wait. For nobody.

He’s at 1,520 files and counting.

Such is the lot of the last man standing in this forgotten corner of Donald Trump’s Washington. For nearly two years, while Congress has argued and the White House has delayed, Robbins has waited to be sent some colleagues to read his work and rule on the cases. No one has arrived. So he toils in vain, writing memos into the void.

Robbins is a one-man microcosm of a current strand of government dysfunction. His office isn’t a high-profile political target. No politician has publicly pledged to slash his budget. But his agency’s work has effectively been neutered through neglect. Promising to shrink the size of government, the president has been slow to fill posts and the Republican-led Congress has struggled to win approval for nominees. The combined effect isn’t always dramatic, but it’s strikingly clear when examined up close.

“It’s a series of unfortunate events,” says Robbins, who has had plenty of time to contemplate the absurdity of his situation. Still, he doesn’t blame Trump or the government for his predicament. “There’s no one thing that created this problem that could have been fixed. It was a series of things randomly thrown together to create where we are.”

Robbins is a member of the Merit Systems Protection Board, a quasi-judicial federal body designed to determine whether civil servants have been mistreated by their employers. The three members are presidentially appointed and Senate-confirmed for staggered seven-year terms. After one member termed out in 2015 and a second did so in January 2017, both without replacements lined up, Robbins became the sole member and acting chairman. The board needs at least two members to decide cases.

That’s a problem for the federal workers and whistleblowers whose 1,000-plus grievances hang in the balance, stalled by the board’s inability to settle them. When Robbins’ term ends on March 1, the board probably will sit empty for the first time in its 40-year history.

It’s also a problem for Robbins. A new board, whenever it’s appointed and approved, will start from scratch. That means while new members can read Robbins’ notes, his thousand-plus decisions will simply vanish.

“There is zero chance, zero chance my votes will count,” the 59-year-old lawyer says, running his fingers over the spines leather-bound volumes lined up neatly on a shelf. Inside are the board’s published rulings. None of the opinions he’s working on will make it into one of them.

“Imagine having the last year and half of your work just … disappear,” he said.

Despite the choke of files piled up everywhere else, Robbins’ office is remarkably orderly. Three paperweights rest on stacks of papers on his desk: a stone from Babel province, a memento from his time working for the State Department in Iraq; a model of the White House, to commemorate his tenure under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush; and a medallion bearing the merit board’s seal. This job, which pays about $155,000 a year, “has been the honor of my life,” he says.

In the corner, a potted plant he rescued from a trash can outside his condo six years ago is now so tall that it’s bumping up against the ceiling, growing in circles.

He swears it’s not a metaphor.

Robbins, a Republican, was excited when Trump won the election. The president chooses two board members of his or her own party, and the Senate minority leader picks a third. Robbins assumed he’d finally be in the majority after years of serving alongside Democrats, soon able to write opinions rather than just logging dissent.

No such luck.

Trump was in office a year before he nominated two board members, a pair of Republicans, including Robbins’ replacement. A third nominee, a Democrat, was named three months later, in June.

Assuming they’d be swiftly confirmed, Robbins quickly began preparing for their arrival, leaving customized notes with comments and suggestions for the nominees based on their distinct personalities and experience on each case.

He’d at least impart a little wisdom, he thought.

But months went by and still no vote. Robbins said he was told the Democrats were refusing to confirm the two Republicans by unanimous consent, insisting instead on a full debate for each. In late September, the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs subcommittee that screens nominees told Robbins it probably would not be able to confirm the appointees before the end of the current Congress. That meant that the entire process, which typically takes several months when there are no complications, will begin again come January, with no guarantee the nominees will be the same.

Now his pile of personalized sticky notes is bound for the trash, too.

Tall, slim and bald, Robbins is an eternal optimist. He sees the futility of the piles of paper and empty offices. But he’s determined to keep the trains running, even if he’s the only one on the ride.

“It’s not like I’m sitting around on the sofa watching soap operas and eating bonbons. I’m still doing my job,” he said. “It’s only when the agency stops working that people realize what we do and the value we bring.”

“Maybe someday they’ll say, `Good old Robbins, he just kept plugging along.”’

Frustrating? Yes. But at least it makes for a good story at parties.

“When I say to people, And then my votes just disappear,' the crowd usually goesOh, no!”’ he said. “And there’s empathy, there’s real empathy.”

The board, established in 1978, is responsible for protecting 2.1 million federal employees from bias and unfair treatment in the workplace. The board handles appeals from whistleblowers and other civil servants who say they were mistreated or wrongly fired, and want to challenge an initial ruling by an administrative judge. The board also conducts independent research and writes policy papers destined for the president’s desk.

Or it used to.

Robbins is quick to point out the staffing crisis began under President Barack Obama, back when Robbins’ first colleague termed out without a replacement.

Others say it’s the Trump administration’s fault.

Trump has lagged slightly behind his predecessors in nominating political appointees. As of Nov. 19, he had nominated people for 929 positions, compared with Obama’s 984 and Bush’s 1,128 at the same point in their presidencies. Congress has acted on just 69 percent of those nominations, according to data provided by the Partnership for Public Service, a nonpartisan organization promoting government efficiency.

Max Stier, the partnership’s CEO, blames the administration, the Senate and a dysfunctional system of appointing and confirming political nominees.

“There are many different flavors of the same problem,” he said. He cited several other vacancies, including assistant secretary for South Asian affairs at the State Department, deputy secretary and undersecretary for health at the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the deputy secretary at the Homeland Security Department, among others. “There is so much going on, but the underlying reality is that our basic government is suffering.”

John Palguta, former director of policy and evaluation for the merit board, called the delay “outrageous.”

“We’re setting a new standard, and it’s particularly severe and unfortunate at MSPB because of the structure of the agency. It just can’t operate. And to let it go for this long, that’s really unconscionable,” Palguta said. “The administration simply hasn’t done its job.”

Sen. James Lankford, who chairs the Senate Home Security and Government Affairs’ Subcommittee on Regulatory Affairs and Federal Management said in a statement he understands the urgency in filling these positions.

“There are over 1,500 individuals waiting for their cases to be heard, but there are not board members in place which means the backlog cannot be addressed,” said Lankford, R-Okla.

Robbins keeps plugging away and the cases keep piling up.

“We are running out of space,” he said, shimmying between towers of boxes in a storage closet close to 6 feet tall. More boxes are stacked against the hallway wall and piled up in the clerk’s office.

“Any additional cases I work from now on are just, grains of sand on a beach.”

Thousands in Europe Protest Violence Against Women

Tens of thousands of people rallied across Europe on Saturday against sexist violence, with more than 30,000 turning out in Paris, where a separate protest against rising fuel prices brought clashes. 

 

Anti-violence rallies across France drew around 50,000 people in all, according to organizer Caroline de Haas, to answer a citizen collective’s call for a “feminist tidal wave” of outrage against gender violence brought into sharp focus by the #MeToo movement. 

 

Elsewhere, a thousand people braved driving rain in Rome, while similar protests drew several hundred demonstrators in Geneva and Athens. 

 

“The fight against violence against women is progressing daily but our society has a long way to go — everyone must act and fight as this is everybody’s business,” President Emmanuel Macron tweeted in offering his moral support. 

 

Authorities put the Paris turnout at 12,000 and similar marches in Lyon, Marseille and Rennes at between 1,000 and 2,400, but de Haas felt moved to salute “the largest [feminist] mobilization France has known,” far bigger than a rally that drew 2,000 last year.  

 

Participants clad in purple, the color of the #NousToutes women’s activist protest movement, shouted slogans including “Sick of rape,” “End impunity for aggressors” and “A woman is never responsible for the violence she suffers,” while also demanding government resources to tackle the issue. 

 

“I am here to support all the victims and continue this struggle, which started long before I came along,” said French actress Muriel Robin, who had organized a similar rally last month in the capital. 

Men, too

 

The rallies drew a number of men, including Tanguy, a 19-year-old student who turned out in the western city of Rennes to declare backing for “a movement which is not based on sex — it’s not a fight pitting men against women but a fight by men and women, together, against inequality.” 

 

The #NousToutes movement started out in France in September, inspired by the #MeToo campaign that began last year. Since then, the number of cases of sexual violence reported to police in France has risen 23 percent. 

 

Latest French government figures say 2017 saw 225,000 cases of domestic violence against women by their partners, while 2016 saw 123 deaths. 

 

A day ahead of Sunday’s U.N.-designated International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, there were further marches in a number of cities across Europe.  

 

Macron last year made sexual equality a priority of his presidency. 

 

But “if the money is not forthcoming, public policy won’t follow on,” warned de Haas, speaking two days after several civil organizations called for a huge increase in public resources dedicated to the problem.  

ГПУ розповіла, як розслідує справу щодо організаторів та підбурювачів убивства Гонгадзе

Головне слідче управління Генпрокуратури продовжує розслідування справи щодо організаторів та підбурювачів до умисного вбивства українського журналіста Георгія Гонгадзе. Про це йдеться у відповіді ГПУ на запит Радіо Свобода.

За даними відомства, наразі проводиться низка комплексних експертиз.

«Слідчим шляхом перевіряється на причетність до вчинення злочину значне коло вищих посадових осіб України… На теперішній час будь-кому з вищезазначеного кола осіб повідомлення про підозру не оголошувалися. Водночас касаційне оскарження вироку Олексія Пукача – виконавця вбивства Георгія Гонгадзе – унеможливлює слідству з’ясування остаточної кваліфікації дій замовників та організаторів злочину», – мовиться у листі.

5 листопада під час круглого столу на тему «Міжнародні зобов’язання України: стан виконання зобов’язань України щодо розслідування та правосуддя в справах Гонгадзе, Подольського та Єльяшкевича» у Верховній Раді урядовий уповноважений у справах ЄСПЛ Іван Ліщина зазначив, що Генпрокуратура проводить слідство щодо факту організації і підбурення до умисного убивства журналіста Гонгадзе. Від ГПУ тоді на круглий стіл ніхто не прийшов.

Олексій Подольський, який раніше також проходив у справі Гонгадзе як потерпілий (його викрали, вивезли до лісу поблизу Прилук і побили), заявив, що у цьому провадженні його потерпілим не визнають. У своїй відповіді Генпрокуратура це підтвердила.

Український журналіст Георгій Гонгадзе зник у Києві 16 вересня 2000 року. У листопаді того ж року в лісі на Київщині було виявлено тіло без голови, яке, за висновками експертів, могло належати Гонгадзе. Останки зберігалися у київському морзі. Поховали його тільки у березні 2016.

Замовників убивства так і не було встановлено.

29 січня 2013 року Печерський райсуд Києва засудив екс-начальника головного управління кримінального розшуку МВС Олексія Пукача до довічного позбавлення волі, визнавши його винним у вбивстві Георгія Гонгадзе. Апеляційний суд залишив у силі вирок.

Як повідомляли ЗМІ, суд продовжить касаційний розгляд у його справі 28 листопада.

Incoming Mexico Government: No Deal to Host US Asylum-Seekers

Mexico’s incoming government denied a report Saturday that it planned to allow asylum seekers to wait in the country while their claims move through U.S. immigration courts, one of several options the Trump administration has been pursuing in negotiations for months. 

 

“There is no agreement of any sort between the incoming Mexican government and the U.S. government,” future Interior Minister Olga Sanchez said in a statement. 

 

Hours earlier, The Washington Post quoted her as saying that the incoming administration of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador had agreed to allow migrants to stay in Mexico as a “short-term solution” while the U.S. considered their applications for asylum. Lopez Obrador will take office Dec. 1. 

 

The statement shared with The Associated Press said the future government’s principal concern related to the migrants was their well-being while in Mexico. Sanchez said the government did not plan for Mexico to become a “third safe country.”  

The Post reported Saturday that the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump had won support from the Mexican president-elect’s team for a plan dubbed “Remain in Mexico.” 

The newspaper also quoted Sanchez as saying: “For now, we have agreed to this policy of Remain in Mexico.” 

 

Sanchez did not explain in the statement why the Post had quoted her as saying there had been agreement. 

 

The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 

 

U.S. officials have said for months that they were working with Mexico to find solutions for what they have called a border crisis. 

 

Approximately 5,000 Central American migrants have arrived in recent days at Tijuana, just south of California, after making their way through Mexico via caravans. 

 

Tijuana Mayor Juan Manuel Gastelum on Friday declared a humanitarian crisis in his border city, which is struggling to accommodate the influx. Most of the migrants are camped inside a sports complex, where they face long wait times for food and bathrooms. 

 

Julieta Vences, a congresswoman with Lopez Obrador’s Morena party who is also president of Mexico’s congressional migrant affairs commission, told the AP that incoming Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard had been discussing with U.S. officials how to handle a deluge of asylum claims at the border. 

 

“They’re going to have to open the borders [for the migrants] to put in the request,” Vences said. “They will also give us dates, on what terms they will receive the [asylum] requests and in the case that they are not beneficiaries of this status, they will have to return here,” Vences said. 

 

She spoke to the AP after a visit to the crowded sports complex in Tijuana. 

Прокуратура АРК передала до суду понад сотню справ про державну зраду ­– заява

Українська прокуратура Криму направила до суду 101 обвинувальний акт щодо кримських чиновників, обвинувачених у державній зраді. Інформацію про це розміщено на сайті відомства.

Наразі, за даними прокуратури, вирок є в одному із таких проваджень.

19 листопада Дніпровський районний суд Києва засудив екс-депутата Верховної Ради АРК Василя Ганиша до 12 років позбавлення волі. Засуджений також зобов’язаний виплатити 5 789 гривень судових витрат.

Ганиша визнали винним у державній зраді. Суд вважає, що колишній депутат сприяв підривній діяльності Росії на території України, коли брав участь в голосуванні за російську «Конституцію Криму». Суд також розцінив як протизаконну його участь у виборах у міську раду Феодосії в анексованому Криму, які Росія провела у вересні 2014 року.

Адвокат Василя Ганиша Андрій Руденко заявив, що має намір подати апеляцію. 

Іспанія та Велика Британія домовились, як будуть надалі вести переговори щодо Гібралтару – Санчес

Іспанія та Велика Британія досягнули домовленостей про майбутнє їхніх переговорів щодо Гібралтару, розчистивши шлях для саміту ЄС щодо Brexit 25 листопада, повідомив прем’єр-міністр Іспанії Педро Санчес.

«Ми отримали достатні гарантії, щоб мати змогу вирішувати конфлікт, який тривав понад 300 років між Сполученим Королівством та Іспанією», ­– заявив він.

Раніше Санчес заявляв, що може голосувати проти Brexit, наполягаючи, аби в угоді про вихід Великої Британії з Європейського союзу було окремо зафіксоване питання Гібралтару.

Британія вже понад 300 років контролює Гібралтар, маленький півострів у південній частині середземноморського узбережжя Іспанії, яка також має претензії на цю територію.

Мадрид вимагає, щоб у декларації про умови «Брекзиту» було внесене положення про те, що майбутні договори про торгівлю Британії з ЄС автоматично не стосуватимуться Гібралтару, якщо на це не буде двосторонньої домовленості Лондона з Мадридом.

На референдумі щодо «Брекзиту» 2016 року 96% гібралтарців голосували за збереження членства в ЄС.

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