Month: December 2018

Фігуранти «справи українських диверсантів» закінчили представляти суду заяви про фальсифікації – адвокат

В анексованому Росією українському Криму фігуранти «справи українських диверсантів» Володимир Дудка та Олексій Бессарабов закінчили представляти підконтрольному Росії суду свої заяви про фальсифікації слідства. Про це кореспонденту проекту Радіо Свобода «Крим.Реалії» розповів адвокат Сергій Легостов.

«В обвинувачених є низка запитань до слідства. Наприклад, на карті міста, де нібито були позначені точки планованих диверсій, є біологічні сліди обох фігурантів справи. Але експертиза показує, що сліди залишені тільки на торці карти, а не по всій її поверхні. Як так виходить, що тільки на одній частині предмета, а не на всій її поверхні залишені ці біологічні сліди, незрозуміло. Раніше і Дудка, і Бессарабов вже заявляли, що біологічні сліди у них брали не процесуальним шляхом. Сьогодні Володимир подав клопотання про допит експерта ФСБ, який робив такі висновки», – розповів адвокат.

Фігуранти «справи українських диверсантів» заявили про необхідність дослідження інших речових доказів. Зокрема, телефонів, які, за словами обвинувачених, їм підкинули співробітники російського ФСБ.

«З телефонами аналогічна історія. За версією слідства, якийсь співробітник розвідки в Харкові просить абсолютно сторонню людину в Криму купити телефони і передати їх обвинуваченим. У детективах такого не напишуть. Володимир Дудка вже заявляв раніше, що телефон, який фігурує в матеріалах справи, йому підкинули під час обшуку. Зараз він хоче, щоб речові докази, які викликають у захисту питання, були також досліджені в суді», – пояснив адвокат.

Легостов також розповів, що під час сьогоднішнього засідання було вивчено приблизно десять CD-дисків із аудіо- і відеостеженням за обвинуваченими.

«Це записи, які ніяк не стосуються справи. Наприклад, на одній із них всі троє фігурантів зустрічаються в кафе з нагоди дня народження одного з них», – додав адвокат.

Наступне засідання у «справі українських диверсантів» в підконтрольному Росії Севастопольському міському суді призначене на 22 січня.

На засіданні суду 20 грудня Володимир Дудка та Олексій Бессарабов вже заявляли про фальсифікації слідства під час проведення оперативно-розшукових заходів.

У вересні підконтроольний Росії Севастопольський міський суд на чотири місяці продовжив арешт Володимиру Дудці і Олексію Бессарабову.

9 листопада 2016 року в анексованому Росією Криму затримали Дмитра Штиблікова, Олексія Бессарабова і Володимира Дудку, яких підконтрольні Москві кримські силовики назвали членами «диверсійно-терористичної групи головного управління розвідки Міністерства оборони України».

Читайте також: «Штибліков має добрий вигляд, скарг не висловлює» – український консул після відвідин колонії в Омську

Підконтрольний Кремлю Ленінський районний суд Севастополя пізніше заарештував затриманих. Після цього термін утримання під вартою щодо Штиблікова, Бессарабова і Дудки продовжували кілька разів.

Штибліков і Бессарабов до 2014 року працювали військовими експертами в центрі «Номос». Володимир Дудка – капітан 2-го рангу запасу, в минулому – капітан корабля радіоелектронної розвідки.

У Службі безпеки України заявляли, що затримані в Криму громадяни України не є ані співробітниками служби, ані контактними особами з боку СБУ.

Remarks by Belarusian Leader Upstage Sensitive Kremlin Talks

Less than a day before arriving in Moscow to salvage frayed ties with his Russian counterpart, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said he no longer considers Russia a “brotherly nation.”

According to a television broadcast by Belsat, a Belarus-focused satellite channel headquartered in Warsaw, Poland, Lukashenko told a Monday Cabinet session that he no longer considered Minsk’s longtime regional ally a fraternal state “because I was informed that Russia is not receptive to it.”

News of Lukashenko’s comments, which were prompted by Russia’s refusal to provide financial compensation for changes to recently implemented export fees, filtered into the Kremlin midday Tuesday, just hours before he was set to head into a closed door meeting with President Vladimir Putin to discuss a range of topics aimed at improving bilateral cooperation.

Less than an hour before the high-level talks kicked off – their 12th face-to-face meeting this year – Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov countered Lukashenko’s comments by declaring a “loss of trust lately” with Moscow’s closest historical ally.

“We don’t trust the work of your customs,” Siluanov was quoted as telling an informal press gaggle in the Kremlin.

Bilateral ties faltered after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, which Lukashenko called “a bad precedent,” likely because the small former Soviet republic, which does not being to the European Union or NATO, is economically dependent on Moscow for trade, natural gas and other natural resources.

Diplomatic relations have been further strained by accusations of what Belarus calls artificially inflated taxes on oil and gas, while Russia has repeatedly expressed concerns about customs violations.

Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan have a duty-free arrangement under which Moscow sends crude and oil products to Minsk with no export fee. Belarus then re-exports some of those goods, pocketing the associated charges.

Russia has used cheap energy exports and loans to Belarus as a way of keeping its former Soviet neighbor in Moscow’s geopolitical orbit, but the arrangement has become harder to sustain as Russia’s budget tightens, partially as a result of Western sanctions.

Russia also has accused Belarus of skimming payments on Russian duties by exporting gasoline and other oil products under the guise of aftermarket oil-based products, such as solvents and commercial chemicals.

Russia unexpectedly refused a request from Belarus for $310 million in compensation from a 2018 change in Russian oil taxes, Belarus’s deputy prime minister, Igor Lyashenko, told Reuters last week.

The Russian government in June approved changes in oil taxes that will see oil export duties being gradually cut over the next six years; but, as a result, Belarus believes it could lose $10.8 billion by 2024.

Finance Minister Siluanov said Russia never promised any compensation to Belarus over the tax changes.

“We consider such changes, including the tax maneuver in the oil and gas sector, as an internal matter of the Russian Federation,” he said.

According to The Moscow Times, the ongoing tensions didn’t stop the men from shaking hands before Tuesday’s meeting, where Lukashenko called on Putin to “not to drag old disputes into the new year.” 

“Overall, I believe our relations have been developing quite well,” Putin said upon opening the meeting, according to an official Kremlin press statement.

“Of course there are some problems, which is natural given the scope of our interaction,” Putin added, saying that both sides had come well prepared to address the most pressing issue – energy relations. “I suggest we listen to both sides even if we fail to reach any agreement,” he said.

Some information in this story is from Reuters.

Turkey Invites Trump, White House Says Nothing Being Planned

A Turkish official said Monday that U.S. President Donald Trump has accepted Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s invitation to visit the country.

Presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin told reporters after a Cabinet meeting that Trump wants to make the trip in 2019 but a date hasn’t been set.

The White House confirmed the invitation for Trump to visit next year, adding: “While nothing definite is being planned, the president is open to a potential meeting in the future.”

Kalin said Erdogan extended the invitation during a weekend phone call between the presidents on the withdrawal of American troops from Syria.

Trump tweeted Sunday that he had a “long and productive” call with Erdogan in which they discussed “the slow & highly coordinated” pullout of U.S. military personnel.

 

Actor Kevin Spacey to Face Charge in Sexual Assault of Teen

U.S. actor Kevin Spacey is facing a felony charge for allegedly sexually assaulting the teenage at a Nantucket, Massachusetts, restaurant more than two years ago.

The Oscar-winning actor is set to be arraigned on a charge of indecent assault and battery on January 7.

In November last year, Boston-based news anchor Heather Unruh held a news conference to share her son’s allegation of sexual assault against Spacey.

She said her then-18-year-old son was was sexually assaulted by Spacey in a late-night encounter at the Club Car restaurant and bar in Nantucket on July 7, 2016. She said her son didn’t report the assault right away because he was embarrassed.

On Monday, soon after the charge became public, Spacey posted a video on YouTube titled “Let Me Be Frank,” breaking his year-long silence on the accusation.

On the video, Spacey delivers a monologue in the voice of Frank Underwood, his character on Netflix’s House of Cards, who was written off the show after the sexual misconduct allegations emerged.

He tells his audience, ““Of course some believed everything and have just been waiting with bated breath to hear me confess it all, they’re just dying to have me declare that everything they said is true and I got what I deserved. … I’m certainly not going to pay the price for the thing I didn’t do.”

It is unclear whether Spacey is referring to the charge he faces.  

Spacey is also being investigated for an alleged assault in Los Angeles in 2016. He had also faced accusations of sexual misconduct while he was the artistic director of London’s Old Vic Theatre.

Christmas Day Funeral Planned for Guatemalan Migrant Girl

Christmas 2018 will be a day of sadness in the tiny Guatemalan village of San Antonio Secortez.

It is the day when the family of seven year-old Jakelin Caal will hold her funeral.

Jakelin died earlier this month while in the custody of the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol after she crossed into the United States with her father, Nery. They were part of one of the caravans of Central American migrants.

Jakelin’s small white coffin arrived at the airport in Guatemala City Sunday and was brought 354 kilometers north to the dirt-poor village.

Among the while balloons and flowers surrounding the casket was a hand-written message to Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales saying “We ask you for jobs, electricity, potable water, roads…so we don’t have to emigrate.”

Nery Caal entered the U.S. in the hopes of finding work, which does not exist across much of Guatemala.

It is still unclear exactly how Jakelin became ill.

She was apparently well when agents arrested her and her father along with other migrants when they crossed the U.S. border into New Mexico on December 6.

She became sick on the bus ride to a border patrol station and arrived with 41 degree Celsius fever.

Emergency medical teams flew her to a hospital in El Paso, Texas, where she died two days later. Her brain was swollen and her liver had failed.

U.S. agents say the child likely had little to eat and drink before arriving at the U.S. border.

Critics of U.S. immigration policy point to Jakelin’s death as an example of the harsh treatment many migrants can expect when they cross the U.S. borders.

President Donald Trump has said all immigrants are welcome to the U.S. but must come to the country legally.

Pope: Forgo Greed and Gluttony of Christmas for Simple Love

Pope Francis urged Christians on Monday to forgo the greed, gluttony and materialism of Christmas and to focus instead on its message of simplicity, charity and love.

Francis celebrated a Christmas Eve Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica, opening a busy week for the pope that includes a Christmas Day message and blessing, a Dec. 26 prayer, New Year’s Eve vespers and a Jan. 1 Mass.

During his homily Monday, Francis lamented that many people find their life’s meaning in possessions when the biblical story of Christ’s birth emphasizes that God appeared to people who were poor when it came to earthly possessions, but faithful.

“Standing before the manger, we understand that the food of life is not material riches but love, not gluttony but charity, not ostentation but simplicity,” Francis said, dressed in simple white vestments.

“An insatiable greed marks all human history, even today, when paradoxically a few dine luxuriantly while all too many go without the daily bread needed to survive,” he said.

Francis has focused on the world’s poor and downtrodden, its refugees and marginalized, during his five-year papacy. The Catholic Church’s first pope from Latin American instructed the Vatican to better care for the homeless around Rome, opening a barber shop, shower and medical clinic for them in the embracing colonnade of St. Peter’s Square.

To extend his outreach this Christmas, Francis sent his trusted secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, to Iraq to celebrate with the country’s long-suffering Christians.

Catholics are among the religious minorities targeted for Islamic State-inspired violence that has driven tens of thousands from their homes.

Parolin met Monday in Baghdad with Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi. He is scheduled in the coming days to travel to northern Iraq to meet with Kurdish leaders in Irbil and to celebrate Mass in Qaraqosh in the Nineveh plains, near Mosul, according to the Vatican.

The Vatican has for years expressed concern about the exodus of Christians from communities that have existed since the time of Jesus, and urged them to return when security conditions permit.

Francis is likely to refer to the plight of Christians in Iraq and Syria during his Christmas Day “Urbi et Orbi” (To the city and the world) speech. He is scheduled to deliver it Tuesday from the loggia of St. Peter’s and again at Mass on New Year’s Day, which the church marks as its world day for peace.

 

Russian Envoy: Bad Relations With US Unlikely to Improve

Russia’s U.N. ambassador says relations between Moscow and Washington are “practically non-existent,” which he says is bad not only for both countries but for the world. And he sees little prospect for improvement anytime soon.

Vassily Nebenzia said in a recent wide-ranging interview with several journalists that the Trump administration should offer some incentives to North Korea to move forward toward denuclearization, saying the situation “is stalemated at the moment.”

He said he’s “concerned that it doesn’t roll back” to the 2017 era of increasing nuclear and missile tests and escalating rhetoric, he said.

As for Iran, Nebenzia said he worries about U.S. strategy if its sanctions don’t bring about the changes in behavior the Trump administration wants. He sees “a danger if they go to the limits.”

Суд у Росії відмовив у достроковому звільненні фігуранту севастопольської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір»

Суддя Совєтського районного суду російської республіки Марій Ел Олена Якимова відмовила в умовно-достроковому звільненні фігуранту севастопольської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» Нурі Прімову.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, причиною відмови стала негативна характеристика, яку надала колонія №5 республіки, де Прімов відбуває покарання. У характеристиці було вказано 35 випадків дисциплінарних стягнень. Прімов відмовився від адвоката на час засідання і захищав себе сам.

Раніше в Росії Курганський міський суд 21 грудня відмовив в умовно-достроковому звільненні ще одному фігуранту севастопольської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» Рустему Ваїтову.

У вересні 2017 року Північнокавказький окружний військовий суд у російському Ростові-на-Дону оголосив вирок, згідно з яким севастопольці Ферат Сайфуллаєв, Рустем Ваїтов і Нурі Прімов, що проходили у справі «Хізб ут-Тахрір», отримали по п’ять років виправної колонії загального режиму.

Захисники заарештованих і засуджених у «справі Хізб ут-Тахрір» кримчан вважають їхнє переслідування мотивованим за релігійною ознакою. Адвокат Еміль Курбедінов зазначає, що переслідувані в цій справі російськими правоохоронними органами – переважно кримські татари, а також українці, росіяни, таджики, азербайджанці та кримчани іншого етнічного походження, які сповідують іслам.

ДСНС попереджає про небезпеку лавин у Карпатах

Українські рятувальники попереджають про небезпеку сходження снігових лавин у Карпатах.

Як розповіли у Держслужбі з надзвичайних ситуацій, посилаючись на дані Укргідрометцентру, 24-25 грудня у високогір’ї Івано-Франківської та Закарпатської областей очікується сніголавинна небезпека 3-го рівня. 

Також у ДСНС додають, що у гірських районах центральної і східної частин Закарпаття є загроза сходження снігу на дороги. 

Раніше в ДСНС попередили про погіршення погоди найближчим часом у більшості регіонів України.

Суд у США зобов’язав КНДР виплатити півмільярда доларів компенсації через смерть студента

Суд у Вашингтоні постановив, що Північна Корея має виплатити 501 мільйон доларів компенсації родині студента Отто Вормбієра, який помер у червні 2017 року, невдовзі після звільнення з північнокорейської в’язниці.

Рішення суду, ухвалене 24 грудня, є здебільшого символічним, тому що не існує механізму, як примусити Пхеньян заплатити. Водночас це рішення може ускладнити намагання президента США Дональда Трампа поліпшити відносини між двома країнами.

Родина Вормбієра домагалася відшкодування мільярда доларів як покарання і 46 мільйонів доларів за пережиті страждання.

У 2016 році 22-річного студента Отто Вормбієра затримали під час відвідин Пхеньяна у складі тургрупи, звинувативши в намаганні вкрасти пропагандистський плакат із закритого для відвідувачів службового приміщення готелю, і засудили до 15 років каторжних робіт.

Після 17 місяців в ув’язненні Вормбієра врешті повернули 13 червня 2017 року до США – у стані коми. Американські лікарі заявили, що Вормбієр зазнав неврологічної травми невідомого походження.

19 червня 2017 року Вормбієр помер у себе вдома у штаті Огайо.

Влада Північної Кореї відкинула звинувачення у жорстокому поводженні чи катуванні американського студента Отто Вормбієра.

 

US Treasury Chief Calls Top Bank CEOs Amid Market Plunge

U.S. President Donald Trump’s Treasury secretary called top U.S. bankers on Sunday amid an ongoing rout on Wall Street and made plans to convene a group of officials known as the “Plunge Protection Team.”

U.S. stocks have fallen sharply in recent weeks on concerns over slowing economic growth, with the S&P 500 index on pace for its biggest percentage decline in December since the Great Depression.

“Today I convened individual calls with the CEOs of the nation’s six largest banks,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Twitter shortly before financial markets were due to open in Asia.

U.S. equity index futures dropped late on Sunday as electronic trading resumed to kick off a holiday-shortened week.

In early trading, the benchmark S&P 500’s e-mini futures contract was off by about a quarter of a percent.

The Treasury said in a statement that Mnuchin talked with the chief executives of Bank of America, Citi, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo.

“The CEOs confirmed that they have ample liquidity available for lending,” the Treasury said.

Mnuchin “also confirmed that they have not experienced any clearance or margin issues and that the markets continue to function properly,” the Treasury said.

Mnuchin’s calls to the bankers came amid a partial government shutdown that began on Saturday following an impasse in Congress over Trump’s demand for more funds for a wall on the border with Mexico. Financing for about a quarter of federal government programs expired at midnight on Friday and the shutdown could continue to Jan. 3.

The Treasury said Mnuchin will convene a call on Monday with the president’s Working Group on Financial Markets, which includes Washington’s main stewards of the U.S. financial system and is sometimes referred to as the “Plunge Protection Team.”

The group, which was also convened in 2009 during the latter stage of the financial crisis, includes officials from the Federal Reserve as well as the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Wall Street is also closely following reports that Trump has privately discussed the possibility of firing Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell. Mnuchin said on Saturday Trump told him he had “never suggested firing” Powell.

Trump has criticized the U.S. central bank for raising interest rates this year, which could further dampen economic growth. The Fed’s independence is seen as a pillar of the U.S. financial system.

Mnuchin’s calls come as a range of asset classes have suffered steep losses.

In December alone, the S&P 500 is down nearly 12.5 percent, while the Nasdaq Composite has slumped 13.6 percent. The Nasdaq is now in a bear market, having declined nearly 22 percent from its record high in late August, and the S&P is not far off that level.

Corporate credit markets have been under duress as well, and measures of the investment grade corporate bond market are poised for their worst yearly performance since the 2008 financial crisis.

The high-yield bond market, where companies with the weakest credit profiles raise capital, has not seen a deal all month.

The last time that happened was in November 2008.

 

Синоптики попереджають про негоду в Україні наступного тижня

Державна служба з надзвичайних ситуацій заявляє про ймовірність сильного погіршення погодніх умов наступного тижня, що може ускладнити роботу автотранспорту, комунального господарства, органів енергетики. Такі дані із посиланням на Український гідрометцентр зазначені на сайті установи.

«25 грудня у зв’язку з виходом південного циклону у східних, Херсонській, Запорізькій, Дніпропетровській, Полтавській та Сумській областях складні погодні умови: сніг, місцями сильний сніг, хуртовини, у Приазов’ї та східних областях сильний мокрий сніг та дощ, налипання мокрого снігу, ожеледь. У всіх вказаних областях пориви вітру 15-20 м/с, в Приазов’ї місцями 25 м/с. Температура вночі 4-9 градусів морозу, вдень 1-6 градусів морозу, в Приазов’ї та східних областях протягом доби близько 0 градусів», – мовиться у повідомленні.

Синоптик Наталія Діденко у свою чергу прогнозує, що вже із понеділка сніг і мокрий сніг присунуть на захід та північ України, а на Одещині литиме дощ.

«Вже ввечері 24 грудня та вночі 25 грудня жвавий вітряний циклон з південного заходу зумовить якусь просто синоптичну сніго-дощову какофонію (цікаво, що ось це слово нікого не бентежить) вже на Півдні, Сході, в районах Дніпра, виверне потім зранку та вдень у вівторок снігом на Полтавщину та Сумську область», – зазначає вона.

Між тим, у Києві, за даними Українського гідрометцентру, у понеділок йтиме мокрий сніг, і буде слизько.

Крим: син фігуранта «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» записав відеозвернення напередодні оголошення вироку

Син фігуранта Бахчисарайської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» Ремзі Меметова, координатор «Кримської солідарності» Ділявер Меметов записав відеозвернення,у якому заявив, що кримськотатарський народ не прийме ярлик «терористів», передає проект Радіо Свобода Крим.Реалії.

«Сьогодні цих людей звинувачують у тероризмі і насильницькому захопленні влади. Всі ці огульні звинувачення на їхню адресу будуються лише на свідченнях лжесвідків та експертизах, що не витримують ніякої критики. Я з упевненістю можу сказати, що мій батько – не терорист. Я також впевнено можу сказати, що всі інші хлопці не мають ніякого стосунку до тероризму. Мусульмани – не терористи», – сказав Меметов в зверненні, яке опублікував у Facebook.

Північнокавказький окружний військовий суд у Ростові-на-Дону у понеділок, 24 грудня, винесе вирок чотирьом кримським татарам, фігурантам Бахчисарайського «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» Ремзі Меметову, Руслану Абільтарову, Енверу Мамутову і Зеврі Абсеїтову.

Фігуранти бахчисарайської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» 21 грудня виступили в Північно-Кавказькому окружному військовому суді в Ростові-на-Дону (Росія) з останнім словом. Жоден із них не визнав своєї провини. Всі вказали на «політично вмотивований» характер кримінальної справи.​

Російські прокурори просять призначити обвинувачуваним покарання у вигляді ув’язнення терміном від 10 до 17 років.

12 травня 2016 року в Бахчисараї російські силовики провели низку обшуків у будинках мусульман, кримських татар, а також у місцевому кафе. В результаті були затримані і звинувачені в тероризмі четверо бахчисарайців: Зеврі Абсеїтов, Ремзі Меметов, Рустем Абільтаров і Енвер Мамутов. Їх підозрюють в участі в організації «Хізб ут-Тахрір», визнаної в Росії терористичною.

Захисники заарештованих і засуджених у «справі Хізб ут-Тахрір» кримчан вважають їхнє переслідування мотивованим за релігійною ознакою. Адвокати відзначають, що переслідувані у цій справі російськими правоохоронними органами – переважно кримські татари, а також українці, росіяни, таджики, азербайджанці і кримчани іншого етнічного походження, які сповідують іслам. Міжнародне право забороняє запроваджувати на окупованій території законодавство держави, що окуповує.

Волкер висловив бажання зустрітися з Сурковим, як тільки звільнять українських моряків – ЗМІ

Спеціальний представник Держдепартаменту США Курт Волкер заявив, що зустрінеться із представником Росії Владиславом Сурковим у Москві, як тільки та сторона звільнить незаконно утримуваних українських моряків, повідомляє ТСН.Тиждень. За словами Волкера, він скасував свій грудневий візит до російської столиці, назвавши його наразі «неможливим» у зв’язку з обставинами.

«Нещодавно, як мені відомо, у президента Путіна була розмова з канцлером Меркель, де він послався на так званий законний процес всередині Росії, який, звісно, не є законним. Утім, навіть, якщо він послався на законний процес, через який мають пройти моряки, ми сподіваємося, що це буде зроблено якомога швидше, якщо докладати зусиль. Але найголовніше – це звільнити моряків якнайшвидше. В ідеалі – до Різдва», – зазначив він.

Спеціальний представник Держдепартаменту США щодо України Курт Волкер прибув 18 грудня з дводенним візитом до Києва. Тут він провів декілька зустрічей, зокрема, зустрівся із президентом України, спікером Верховної Ради та очільником оборонного відомства.

Читайте також: Волкер про полонених моряків, Керченську протоку і нові санкції проти Росії за Азов

Міністерство оборони України вказує, що міністр Степан Полторак обговорив із ним «питання регіональної безпеки та ситуацію в Азовському та Чорному морях, а також динаміку мілітаризації Росією окупованих територій Донбасу та Криму».

Попередній візит Волкера в Україну відбувся у вересні, коли він брав участь у форумі «Ялтинська європейська стратегія» в Києві.

No End in Sight for Partial US Government Shutdown

The U.S. government is partially closed until at least Thursday, and possibly for days or even weeks beyond, as President Donald Trump holds firm in demanding funds for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and Democrats remain resolutely opposed.

“The only way to stop drugs, gangs, human trafficking, criminal elements and much else from coming into our Country is with a Wall or Barrier,” Trump tweeted on Sunday.

“At midnight, President Trump decided to shut down the government over his demand for a medieval border wall,” the Senate’s No. 2 Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois, tweeted. “This is senseless and cruel.”

This marks the fourth time in the last five years that Congress and the White House have been unable to agree on how much money the federal government should spend and for which objectives, failing to meet a funding deadline that causes non-essential services and operations to be halted.

Last Wednesday, a shutdown seemed unlikely as the Republican-led Senate unanimously passed a temporary funding bill. The White House originally signaled support for the bill, which boosted overall border security funding but did not set aside funds for a wall. But Trump ultimately rejected it, demanding $5.7 billion for wall construction.

“Our great country must have border security … with a wall or a slat-fence or whatever you want to call it,” the president said in a video message Friday.

The Republican-led House of Representatives has approved a spending bill with wall funding, but the measure does not have enough votes to pass the Senate, where Democrats have lined up in fierce opposition.

‘Abandon the wall’

“It will never pass the Senate. Not today, not next week, not next year,” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York said. “So Mr. President, President Trump: If you want to open the government, you must abandon the wall. Plain and simple.”

Most Republican lawmakers, meanwhile, have rallied around Trump’s demand.

“One would think that securing our homeland, controlling our borders and protecting the American people, would be bipartisan priorities … a core duty of any nation’s government,” Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said.

McConnell adjourned the chamber on Saturday, with no votes expected until Thursday, December 27 at the earliest.

In the past, Democrats have been flexible on additional border security funding, including for a wall, as part of a larger deal on thorny immigration issues.

Earlier this year, Democrats were willing to support wall funding in return for protections for undocumented immigrants brought to America as children  a deal Trump initially hailed but later abandoned.

In 2013, the Senate passed bipartisan legislation to dramatically boost border security funding as part of a comprehensive reform of U.S. immigration laws. But that bill died when the Republican-led House refused to consider it.

Now Trump is demanding wall funding while so far offering nothing Democrats want in return. On Sunday, White House officials hinted that could change.

“The president has made it very clear, however, that he is willing to discuss a larger immigration solution,” incoming acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney said on ABC’s This Week program.

Campaign promise

Throughout the 2016 campaign, then-candidate Trump repeatedly pledged that Mexico would pay for a border wall. Now, the White House says Mexico is contributing, indirectly, as a result of economic benefits to America stemming from a renegotiated free trade accord between the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Democrats have repeatedly reminded Trump of his promise.

“We arrived at this moment because President Trump has been on a destructive two-week temper tantrum demanding the American taxpayer pony up for an expensive and ineffective border wall that the president promised Mexico would pay for,” Schumer said.

Trump, Erdogan Agree to Coordinate US Pullout From Syria

U.S. President Donald Trump says Turkey will eliminate the rest of the Islamic State militants in Syria after the U.S. military withdraws its forces.

In a tweet late Sunday, Trump said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan “has strongly informed me that he will eradicate whatever is left of ISIS in Syria…and he is a man who can do it plus, Turkey is right ‘next door.'”

“Our troops are coming home!” Trump added.

Earlier Sunday, Trump said the two leaders discussed his withdrawal plan during a “long and productive call.”

Trump gave few details about his conversation. But he tweeted he and Erdogan discussed Islamic State, trade, and what he called “the slow and highly coordinated pullout of U.S. troops from the area.”

Erdogan’s office said in a statement he and Trump agreed to “ensure coordination between their countries’ military, diplomatic, and other officials to avoid a power vacuum which could result following any abuse of the withdrawal and transition phase in Syria.”

Erdogan said late last week that Turkey is postponing an operation against Kurdish forces in Syria in the wake of Trump’s decision.

Trump has declared Islamic State defeated and says it is time for other members of the anti-Islamic State coalition to step in and clean up the last remaining pockets. 

But his decision to leave Syria is unpopular among many in Washington, including within his own administration.

Trump’s Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and special envoy to the global coalition fighting Islamic State Brett McGurk have both resigned, at least in part, because of Syria.

But acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney said on ABC’s This Week broadcast Trump will not change his mind 

“I think the president has told people from the very beginning that he doesn’t want us to stay in Syria forever…you’re seeing the end result now of two years of work.”

Mulvaney was asked about the Mattis and McGurk resignations and said it is “not unusual” for Cabinet members to resign “over these types of disagreements.”

Republican Senator Bob Corker, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said Sunday he is “devastated” by the decision and calls the United States “unreliable.”

French President Emmanuel Macron said that he “deeply regrets” Trump’s decision to withdraw from Syria.

Meanwhile, witnesses say Turkish forces have started massing on the border of the northern Syrian town of Manbij controlled by U.S. forces and their Kurdish allies.

Turkish military officials have not given an exact reason why their troops have headed to Manbij.

But Turkey has angrily accused the United States and the Kurds of failing to carry out their deal to pull out of Manbij.

Turkey accuses the U.S.-backed YPG Kurdish militia, of being a terrorist group and tied to the Kurdistan Workers Party — which has been fighting a long insurgency for more Kurdish autonomy in Turkey.

US Allies Reeling from ‘Trump Withdrawal’ Scramble in Syria

British and French officials are scrambling to determine how they can maintain military pressure on the Islamic State terror group once the United States has pulled out its ground forces from northeast Syria.

Both countries have said they plan to continue airstrikes and ground operations in Syria, but the timing and scope of the U.S. withdrawal, say officials still reeling from President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw U.S. forces, remains unclear and is complicating war-planning in London and Paris.

The British and French governments are trying also to gain a clearer understanding, say officials, of Turkish military intentions in northeast Syria, and when or if the Turks, as they have threatened, launch an offensive east of the Euphrates River to attack the Western-allied Kurdish Peoples’ Protection Units, or YPG.

The YPG is the main formation in the Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF, the West’s only ground partner in the fight against IS. Turkey has been restrained from moving into Syria’s Kurdish-controlled northeast in the past by the presence of U.S. troops. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he would delay an offensive possibly for several months, although the Kurds say his concession shouldn’t be taken at face value.

President Erdogan has threatened to smash the Western-allied Kurdish forces in northern Syria, arguing they are indistinguishable from militant Kurdish separatists in Turkey, who have waged a three-decade-long insurgency. Kurdish leaders hope Washington will continue to press the Turks to hold off. “It’s their duty to prevent any attack and to put an end to Turkish threats,” says Aldar Khalil, a senior Kurdish official.

In the meantime, they are renewing talks with Damascus, using the northeastern oil fields, which they control, as leverage to strike a semi-autonomy deal with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

A critical question for London and Paris, say defense officials in both capitals, is whether the YPG will be able to keep control of the 800 IS prisoners it holds, many from European countries.

Kurdish officials warned Friday French President Emmanuel Macron’s representative to Syria, François Senemand, that if Turkey does attack, it would create a chaotic situation in which they might not be able to spare the guards to make sure IS detainees are secure — let alone continue with an offensive against remaining IS formations along the border with Iraq.

The IS prisoners include two Britons accused of being members of the so-called “Beatles” murder cell, responsible for the torture and beheading of Western journalists and aid workers, including American reporters James Foley and Steve Sotloff.

The Kurds have long pleaded with European governments to repatriate foreign fighters to be prosecuted in their home countries, but to no avail, despite the Kurdish pleas being echoed by Washington and the families of journalists and aid workers murdered by IS.

Now there’s rising alarm in Western capitals that the U.S. withdrawal may trigger a chain of events that will lead to IS prisoners either escaping or being released by the Kurds, with the risk they could find their way back to the West, posing a major security headache for European governments. The Kurds say the only way to ensure their detention is for France and Britain to play a bigger military role in northern Syria. Some observers view the Kurds’ warning about IS detainees as an ultimatum.

“Under the threat of the Turkish state, and with the possibility of Daesh [Islamic State] reviving once again, I fear the situation will get out of control and we will no longer be able to contain them,” Ilham Ahmed, a Kurdish official told reporters Friday in Paris.

France has 200 special forces soldiers operating in Syria’s Kurdish northeast as well as artillery units, part of an anti-IS international coalition trying to root out remaining pockets of militant fighters.

French Defense Minister Florence Parly told a French radio station she disagrees with President Trump’s assessment that IS has all but been annihilated.

“It’s an extremely grave decision and we think, the job must be finished,” she said speaking three days after Trump tweeted his order for U.S. ground troops to depart Syria, declaring IS defeated. U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis resigned in protest midweek after he and other U.S. military and national security staff failed to persuade the U.S. leader to reverse his decision.

On Saturday, it emerged Brett McGurk, the special presidential envoy for the global coalition to counter IS, has also resigned in protest.

When Trump made his pull-out decision, McGurk was in Iraq briefing coalition partners about how the U.S. remained committed to keeping troops in Syria, both to finish off IS and counter Iran. His departure has added to fears that without the U.S. playing a leading role the 77-nation anti-IS coalition will fall apart.

Britain’s defense minister has also pledged to maintain British airstrikes on IS targets in Syria, saying that although the anti-IS coalition has rolled up the militant’ territorial caliphate, IS “as an ideology and as an organization has become more dispersed. He warns of a possible IS resurgence. “We recognize we’ve got to continue to keep a foot on the throat of Daesh,” said Gavin Williamson, using an Arab acronym for IS.

As well as mounting airstrikes, British commandos have been deployed in northern Syria. They are currently engaged with American special forces alongside the SDF in the mid-Euphrates valley, where an offensive has been underway since early September against 2,000 to 8,000 IS fighters, most of whom fled from Raqqa and Mosul when those cities fell.

Despite progress, including capturing the town of Hajin, the offensive there have been episodic reversals with IS mounting mobile counter-attacks under the cover of winter sandstorms and fog, say British and American officials. U.S. airstrikes have been crucial in the battle.

In October, the Kurds halted the offensive after Turkey bombarded Kurdish positions near Kobani, a town on the Turkish-Syrian border, where some of the Kurds’ IS prisoners are being detained.

Asked if British forces could continue to operate without considerable American military support, Williamson responded: “We’re going to continue to look at all our options.” Officials acknowledge Anglo-French options would be much reduced, if they’re unable to call on U.S. air support, something that the Pentagon has so far not clarified.

Some independent analysts have warned also that declaring victory over IS is premature. In a report issued last month by the International Center for Counter-Terrorism, a think tank based in The Hague, three analysts, Liesbeth van der Heide, Charlie Winter and Shiraz Maher, warned the militant group has the capacity to regroup.

“Its shift towards clandestine tactics has left it a more slippery foe,” they argued. “The organization has now changed trajectory, its overt insurgency devolving back into covert asymmetric warfare. Now, its focus is on hit-and-run operations geared towards undermining stability and discrediting the state. These are being deployed through a careful strategy of destabilization: IS sleeper cell networks are systematically working to subvert security in liberated territories,” they added in their report entitled, “The Cost of Crying Victory.”

Since Trump’s decision, other analysts have echoed their warning. “A U.S. pullout in Syria is a win for ISIS, Iran, Russia, & Assad,” tweeted Mike Pregent, an analyst at the Hudson Institute, a U.S.-based think tank, and former U.S. army intelligence officer. Pregent, who’s been highly critical of both Mattis and McGurk, arguing they have overseen a flawed strategy in Iraq and Syria, added: “We’ll see an ISIS resurgence & a further entrenched & aggressive Iran in Syria — all before Nov 2020.”

But President Trump, who has long favored a U.S. withdrawal from the Middle East, has received praise from some quarters. “Staying in Syria offers grave risk for the United States with no justifying security payoff,” says Kurt Couchman of Defense Priorities, a libertarian-leaning think tank. “Now that the Islamic State is reduced to remnants, and local forces are committed to containing them, it is in America’s interest to bring our troops home for the holidays.”

UN: Rights Violations Continue in E. Ukraine Conflict

As Ukraine enters its fifth winter of conflict, the United Nations says civilians continue to be victimized by widespread human rights violations and abuse perpetrated by both the government and Russian-backed rebels in Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine. The report issued by the U.N. Human Rights Office covers the three-month period between mid-August and mid-November.

Ukraine’s civil conflict, which began April 2014 appears to be at a stalemate. However, this has not stopped the warring parties from subjecting the civilian population to gross violations of human rights on both sides of the contact line. This refers to the 500-kilometer line of separation between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed separatist rebels.

The U.N. has documented hundreds of abuses of the right to life, deprivation of liberty, enforced disappearance, torture and ill-treatment, sexual violence, and unlawful or arbitrary detention.

The report describes the hardships endured by the population due to Ukraine’s worsening economic situation. U.N. Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, Kate Gilmore, said large segments of the population suffer from the socio-economic barriers created by the armed conflict. She said the elderly, children, disabled people and those displaced by the conflict are particularly vulnerable.

“Disproportionate restrictions on the freedom of movement along and across the contact line continue to disrupt people’s access to social entitlements, such as pensions and social benefits. This in turn unduly impedes their access to basic services, those that are essential for daily dignity, including, for example water, sanitation, heating and health care,” she said.

The U.N. report harshly criticizes Russia for continuously violating its international obligations as the occupying power in Crimea.

It documents dozens of human rights violations including stifling dissent, instilling fear and denying individuals their freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly. It notes Crimean Tatars are disproportionately affected by these measures.

Fewer French ‘Yellow Vests’ Take to Streets Ahead of Holidays

Fewer “yellow vest” protesters turned out across France on Saturday, yet tensions between demonstrators and police boiled over in Paris later in the evening on the well-known Champs-Elysees thoroughfare.

Police fired tear gas and used water cannons against demonstrators. A video showed a group of protesters surrounding and attacking several police officers who were on motorcycles. One officer appeared to point his gun at the protesters, but Paris police told the Associated Press he did not fire his weapon.

Nationwide protests, which began Nov. 17 against a planned fuel tax increase, have continued into a sixth week. They have morphed into protests largely against President Emmanuel Macron’s liberal economic reform policies.

Reacting to the movement, on Dec. 10 Macron made tax and salary concessions. He has largely kept out of the public eye since then.

​Smaller crowds

French officials estimated about 38,000 people had taken part in protests around the country Saturday, with Paris police estimating about 2,000 in the capital. By comparison, more than 280,000 people took part in nationwide protests Nov. 17. As many as 4,000 protesters were in Paris on Dec. 15.

On Saturday, police arrested 81 people nationwide, compared with several hundred arrests during nationwide protests two weeks ago, officials said.

Police were also called to protesters setting up roadblocks near France’s borders with Spain, Belgium, Italy and Germany.

Death toll rises to 10

Media reports said the death toll from the protests rose to 10 on Saturday, after a driver was killed overnight in southern France after driving into a truck that had been stopped by a roadblock.

The “yellow vest” movement was named after the safety vests French motorists are required to keep in their vehicles, which the protesters wear at demonstrations.

Ashdown, British Marine Who Led Bosnia, Dies at 77 

Paddy Ashdown, who died Saturday at age 77, was a former marine and British opposition politician who served as the top international envoy in Bosnia following the Yugoslav wars.

Ashdown stepped down from his post in Bosnia in 2006 after nearly four years in charge but had been at the forefront of peace efforts in the Balkans long before his stint. 

 

Taking over the role after Sweden’s Carl Bildt, Carlos Westendorp of Spain and Austria’s Wolfgang Petritsch, Ashdown quickly built a reputation as a no-nonsense implementer of tough measures to help the country recover from its 1992-95 war. 

 

During his mandate, Ashdown sacked corrupt officials and Bosnia completed some painful reforms aimed at strengthening central institutions at the expense of the two postwar entities — the Serbs’ Republika Srpska and the Muslim-Croat Federation.

Defense, tax reforms

They notably included defense reforms aimed at merging two ethnically divided armies into one, as well as police force and customs and tax reforms. 

 

In 2008, he was on the brink of being appointed as the U.N. envoy to Afghanistan but withdrew from the role, saying that he did not have the backing of the Afghan government. 

 

Born in India in 1941, and known as “Paddy” after the accent he acquired from spending part of his childhood in Northern Ireland, John Jeremy Durham Ashdown left school at 18 and joined the marines. 

 

He left the armed forces in 1971 after spending his early years in uniform in Northern Ireland, Borneo and Malaya. He joined the Foreign Office, which sent him as part of the British delegation to the United Nations in Geneva. 

 

Five years later he returned to Britain, where before entering politics he worked as a businessman and social worker. 

 

Ashdown’s gritty attitude and enormous energy levels were largely responsible for transforming the Liberal Democrats from political also-rans into a viable opposition party. 

 

Shortly after he took the reins of the party in 1988, support had dwindled to 3 percent. But Ashdown soon made some significant gains from the Conservative government and was polled in the early 1990s as the most-liked British party leader. 

 

His profile soared again in 1992 when he disclosed that, five years earlier, he had had a five-month-long affair with his former secretary, earning him the nickname “Paddy Pantsdown” in The Sun tabloid.  

At his final elections in 1997, the Liberal Democrats won 19 percent of the vote, securing the party 46 seats, then a record showing for a third party in Britain. 

 

Ashdown was staunchly pro-federalist toward Europe and favored a common European foreign and defense policy independent of the United States. 

 

He campaigned for Britain to stay in the European Union in the 2016 referendum and, after losing, founded a cross-party centrist movement called More United.

 

He was knighted under his real name of Jeremy in 2000 and was made a member of Parliament’s upper House of Lords. 

 

Married, with two children, Ashdown lived in Yeovil, southwest England. 

Federal Shutdown Compounds Risks for US Economy 

Now in its 10th year, America’s economic expansion still looks sturdy. Yet the partial shutdown of the government that began Saturday has added another threat to a growing list of risks. 

 

The stock market’s persistent fall, growing chaos in the Trump administration, higher interest rates, a U.S.-China trade war and a global slowdown have combined to elevate the perils for the economy. 

 

Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, said he thinks the underlying fundamentals for growth remain strong and that the expansion will continue. But he cautioned that the falling stock market reflects multiple hazards that can feed on themselves. 

 

“What really matters is how people perceive these headwinds — and right now markets and investors perceive them as leading us into a recessionary environment,” Daco said. 

 

Many economic barometers still look encouraging. Unemployment is near a half-century low. Inflation is tame. Pay growth has picked up. Consumers boosted their spending this holiday season. Indeed, the latest figures indicate that the economy has been fundamentally healthy during the final month of 2018. 

 

Still, financial markets were rattled Thursday by President Donald Trump’s threat to shut down the government unless his border wall is funded as part of a measure to finance the government — a threat that became reality on Saturday. As tensions with the incoming Democratic House majority have reached a fever pitch, Trump warned Friday that he foresees a “very long” shutdown. 

 

The expanding picture of a dysfunctional Trump administration grew further with the surprise resignation of Defense Secretary James Mattis in protest of Trump’s abrupt decision to pull U.S. troops out of Syria — a move that drew expressions of alarm from many Republicans as well as Democrats. 

 

How markets and government officials respond to such risks could determine whether the second-longest U.S. expansion on record remains on course or succumbs eventually to a recession.

 

A closer look at the risks: 

 

Administration chaos 

 

It has been a tumultuous few days, even for a White House that has been defined by the president’s daily dramas. 

 

Trump faces an investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 elections that has led to indictments and criminal convictions of some of his closest confidants. He is coping with a wave of top staff defections, having lost both his chief of staff and defense secretary. He is in the process of installing a new attorney general. 

 

Then there is the partial government shutdown that Trump himself has pushed. 

 

The shutdown is unlikely to hurt economic growth very much, even if it lasts awhile, because 75 percent of the government is still being funded. S&P Global Ratings estimates that each week of the shutdown would shave a relatively minuscule $1.2 billion off the nation’s gross domestic product. 

 

Still, the problem is that the Trump administration appears disinclined to cooperate with the incoming House Democratic majority. So the federal support through deficit spending that boosted the economy this year will likely wane, Lewis Alexander, U.S. chief economist at Nomura, said in his 2019 outlook. 

 

That, in part, is why the economy is widely expected to weaken from its roughly 3 percent growth this year, which would be the strongest performance since 2005. 

 

Tumbling stocks

Stock investors have been trampled since October, with the Dow Jones industrial average sinking nearly 15 percent. The plunge followed a propulsive winning streak for the stock market that began in 2009. But investors are internalizing all the latest risks, including Trump’s trade war with China and higher borrowing rates, and how much they might depress corporate profits and the economy.  

“Markets people are forward-looking, so they’re taking into account the latest information,” said Jim O’Sullivan, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics. 

 

Markets can often fall persistently without sending the economy into a tailspin. But O’Sullivan warned of a possible feedback loop in which tumbling stock prices would erode consumer and business confidence, which in turn could send stocks sinking further. At that point, the economy would likely worsen, the job market would weaken and many ordinary households would suffer. 

 

Trade war

For economists, this may pose the gravest threat to the economy. Trump has imposed tariffs against a huge swath of goods from China, which has retaliated with its own tariffs on U.S. products. These import taxes tend to dampen economic activity and diminish growth. 

 

“The trade war with China is now the biggest impediment to U.S. economic growth,” Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said in his forecast for the first half of 2019. 

 

In part because of the taxes Trump imposed on Chinese imports, manufacturing growth appears to be slowing, with factory owners facing higher costs for raw materials. The president has held off on further escalating tariffs to see if an agreement, or at least a lasting truce, can be reached with China by March. 

 

Any damage from trade wars tends to worsen the longer the disputes continue. So even a tentative resolution in the first three months of 2019 could remove one threat to economic growth. 

 

Interest rate hikes 

 

The Federal Reserve has raised a key short-term rate four times this year and envisions two more increases in 2019. Stocks sold off Wednesday after Chairman Jerome Powell laid out the rationale. Powell’s explanation, in large part, was that the Fed could gradually raise borrowing costs and limit potential U.S. economic growth because of the job market’s strength. 

The Fed generally raises rates to keep growth in check and prevent annual inflation from rising much above 2 percent. But inflation has been running consistently below that target. 

 

If the central bank were to miscalculate and raise rates too high or too fast, it could trigger the very downturn that Fed officials have been trying to avoid. This has become a nagging fear for investors. 

 

Global slowdown 

 

The world economy is showing clear signs of a downshift, with many U.S. trading partners, especially in Europe and Asia, weakening or expected to expand at a slower speed. Their deflating growth can, in turn, weigh down the U.S. economy. 

 

Several other global risks abound. There is Britain’s turbulent exit from the European Union. Italy appears close to recession and is struggling to manage its debt. China, the world’s second-largest economy after the U.S., is trying to manage a slowdown in growth that is being complicated by its trade war with Trump. 

 

“Next year is likely to be challenging for both investors and policymakers,” Alexander, the Nomura economist, concluded in his outlook. 

States Help Run US National Parks During Shutdown 

U.S. national parks will be left with just a skeleton staff during the federal government shutdown, and several states are using their own funds to make sure public restrooms get cleaned and visitor centers stay open. 

 

The shutdown of all but essential federal services because of a Capitol Hill fight over U.S. President Donald Trump’s funding demands for a Mexico border wall comes at the height of the Christmas travel season. 

 

The National Park Service said this week that parks will remain “as accessible as possible.” During a three-day government shutdown in January, the gates to about two-thirds of national parks and monuments remained open. 

 

“Services that require staffing and maintenance such as campgrounds and full-service restrooms will not be operating,” Jeremy Barnum, the National Park Service chief spokesman, said in a statement. 

 

The Republican governors of Utah and Arizona have promised to step in, in part to help protect local businesses in and around some of the country’s most spectacular natural landscapes that depend on tourist spending. 

Not ‘on our watch’

 

“Regardless of what happens in Washington, the Grand Canyon will not close on our watch,” Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey said in a statement on Friday. The Arizona Office of Tourism will help ensure restrooms are cleaned, trash is collected and shuttle buses operate, Ducey said. 

 

All five of Utah’s national parks will remain open, and the three most popular will have maintenance costs underwritten by the state during the shutdown, according to Vicki Varela, the Utah Office of Tourism’s managing director. 

 

Zion National Park drew 107,000 visitors between Dec. 22 and Dec. 27 a year ago, Varela said. 

 

“This time of year is the most remarkable time of year to experience it because the snow against that red rock is just breathtaking,” she said. 

 

Utah Gov. Gary Herbert authorized the temporary funding for custodial and visitor center services, which will cost an estimated $18,000 to $19,000 for Zion. 

 

“It’s really modest on the part of the state to protect the quality of the experience for visitors,” Varela said. 

 

New York state has provided funding to keep the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island open during the shutdown, according to the park’s website. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, slammed Trump over the federal shutdown on Twitter on Saturday. 

 

Officials from the Great Smoky Mountains Association said the nonprofit group would provide funding to maintain visitor center staffing, restroom cleaning and trash hauling at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park on the Tennessee-North Carolina border. 

 

The National Park Service said it would not be updating its social media accounts during the shutdown, and that while some park areas remain accessible, access could change without notice. 

 

Better to stay closed?

Some conservationists said it would be better to close parks entirely, as happened under President Barack Obama’s administration during a 2013 shutdown, rather than keep them open with skeleton staff. 

 

During the January shutdown, a pregnant elk was killed in Zion and tourists in Yellowstone National Park drove snowmobiles dangerously close to the Old Faithful geyser, said Theresa Pierno, president of the National Parks Conservation Association. 

 

“It’s unrealistic and dangerous to think that parks can remain open with only a skeleton crew and continue with business as usual,” Pierno said in a statement.

Departments Affected by Partial US Government Shutdown 

Following weeks of talks between President Donald Trump and congressional leaders, parts of the U.S. government shut down on Saturday after negotiators reached an impasse over a deal to keep the government fully funded.

The majority of agencies and departments, including the Department of Defense and the Postal Service, already have secured funding and will continue operations. Still, 800,000 employees from the Homeland Security, Transportation and other departmets are affected. According to the American Federation of Government Employees, 420,000 people who have been deemed “essential” must work without pay, while 380,000 others will not be able to report for work at all. 

Trump administration officials say anyone working without pay will receive back pay once a deal is reached. Below is what will happen at some of the agencies and departments affected by the shutdown. 

 

Homeland Security

 

The department that oversees Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Transportation Security Administration, the Coast Guard and the Secret Service is affected by the shutdown. 

 

But most of those agencies’ employees are considered essential, so they will need to work without pay until a government funding bill is passed. 

 

Of the 245,000 people who work under the department’s umbrella, nearly 213,000 have been deemed essential, according to the department’s contingency plan. 

 

Housing and Urban Development

 

Of the department’s 7,500 employees, only 343 are expected to work. Nearly 1,000 other people may be called in to work on specific tasks, for which they will not be paid until a funding bill is passed.  

Though public housing authorities and tribally designated housing entities are not part of the federal government and are not required to shut down, some of their funding is provided by the federal government, so they may need to reduce or change normal operating hours. 

 

The department, which is also responsible for some housing loans and low-income housing payments, said in its contingency plan a shutdown would likely not significantly affect the housing market. 

 

But, it added, “a protracted shutdown could see a decline in home sales, reversing the trend toward a strengthening market that we’ve been experiencing.” 

 

Interior 

 

The National Park Service, under the umbrella of the Interior Department, will have a skeleton staff. Under its contingency plan, no national parks will be open and no visitor services — including restrooms, facility maintenance and trash collection — will be provided. 

 

But some governors have pledged to step in, including in Arizona, the site of the Grand Canyon, and New York, where the state has provided funding for the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island to stay open. 

 

Transportation 

 

Of the department’s 55,000 employees, 20,400 will be put on leave. Those employees do not include most of the Federal Aviation Administration, where 24,200 will be working, or the Federal Highway Administration, where all 2,700 employees are funded through other sources. 

 

Air traffic control, hazardous material safety inspections and accident investigations will continue, but some rulemaking, inspections and audits will be paused. 

 

Executive Office of the President 

 

An estimated 1,100 of the office’s 1,800 employees would be placed on leave. This will include most of the Office of Management and Budget, which helps the president implement his budget and policy goals.  

У Росії «розчаровані» голосуванням Генасамблеї ООН щодо резолюції про ракетний договір

46 членів Генасамблеї проголосували проти проекту резолюції, який запропонувала Росія, 43 – за. 78 представників країн утрималися

Справа «Хізб ут-Тахрір»: суд у російському Ростові винесе вирок бахчисарайцям 24 грудня

Північно-Кавказький окружний військовий суд у російському Ростові-на-Дону у понеділок 24 грудня винесе вирок чотирьом кримським татарам із анексованого Бахчисараю: Ремзі Меметову, Руслану Абільтарову, Енверу Мамутову і Зеврі Абсеітову.

Про це повідомляє об’єднання «Кримська солідарність», яке координує син Ремзі Меметова Ділявер Меметов. Активісти об’єднання переконані, що кримські татари не мають стосунку до тих злочинів, в яких їх звинувачує російське слідство.

«Всі докази побудовані на «експертизах» і підставних «засекречених свідках». Стоматолог, кухар, будівельник і підриємець не скоювали жодного адміністративного чи кримінального правопорушення. Сьогодні їх судять не за вчинки, а за переконання», – йдеться в повідомленні.

 

Фігуранти бахчисарайської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» 21 грудня виступили в Північно-Кавказькому окружному військовому суді в Ростові-на-Дону з останнім словом. Жоден із них не визнав своєї провини. Всі вказали на «політично вмотивований» характер кримінальної справи.​

Російські прокурори просять призначити обвинувачуваним покарання у вигляді ув’язнення терміном від 10 до 17 років.

12 травня 2016 року в Бахчисараї російські силовики провели низку обшуків у будинках мусульман, кримських татар, а також у місцевому кафе. В результаті були затримані і звинувачені в тероризмі четверо бахчисарайців: Зеврі Абсеїтов, Ремзі Меметов, Рустем Абільтаров і Енвер Мамутов. Їх підозрюють в участі в організації «Хізб ут-Тахрір», визнаної в Росії терористичною.

 

Представники міжнародної ісламської політичної організації «Хізб ут-Тахрір» називають своєю місією об’єднання всіх мусульманських країн в «ісламському халіфаті», але відкидають терористичні методи досягнення цього й кажуть, що зазнають несправедливого переслідування в Росії, а з 2014 року і в окупованому нею Криму. Верховний суд Росії заборонив «Хізб ут-Тахрір» у цій країні 2003 року, включивши до списку об’єднань, названих «терористичними».

Захисники заарештованих і засуджених у «справі Хізб ут-Тахрір» кримчан вважають їхнє переслідування мотивованим за релігійною ознакою. Адвокати відзначають, що переслідувані у цій справі російськими правоохоронними органами – переважно кримські татари, а також українці, росіяни, таджики, азербайджанці і кримчани іншого етнічного походження, які сповідують іслам. Міжнародне право забороняє запроваджувати на окупованій території законодавство держави, що окуповує.

Вибухи в Сомалі: мінімум 16 людей загинули

Принаймні 16 людей загинули внаслідок двох вибухів вранці 22 грудня біля президентського палацу в столиці Сомалі Мокадішо, повідомляє місцева поліція.

Загиблі – солдати і мирні жителі, а також троє працівників каналу Universal TV, що базується в Лондоні. Серед них – відомий у Сомалі журналіст Авіль Дагір Салад.

За даними каналу Al Jazeera, внаслідок першого вибуху зазнав поранень заступник губернатора району Бенадір з питань безпеки Мохамед Тула.

Читайте також: 62 бойовики «Аш-Шабаб» загинули внаслідок авіаударів – США

Відповідальність за вибух взяла на себе екстремістська організація «Аш-Шабаб», пов’язана з «Аль-Каїдою».

Бойовики «Аш-Шабаб» закликають повалити уряд Сомалі, який підтримують Сполучені Штати і 20-тисячна армія Африканського союзу, розміщена в країні.

У 2011 році угруповання було витіснене зі столиці Сомалі Могадішо. Наразі бойовики контролюють значні території в сільській місцевості.

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