Month: January 2019

Refugee Group: Use Frozen Billions to Aid World’s Displaced 

The World Refugee Council called Thursday for up to $20 billion stolen by government leaders and now frozen in the United States, Britain and other countries to be reallocated by courts to help millions of displaced people forced to flee conflict, persecution and victimization. 

 

The council also called for people responsible for the growing crisis of refugees and internally displaced people — including government leaders, military officers, and opposition and rebel figures — to be held accountable, all the way to the International Criminal Court. 

 

Chaired by former Canadian Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy, the 24-member council, which was formed in May 2017, includes former heads of state and ministers, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Leymah Gbowee, and leading business, civil society and human rights officials. 

 

Displacement at postwar peak

The 218-page report it launched Thursday goes beyond what the United Nations has done, at a time when the number of people forcibly displaced from their homes is 68.5 million, the highest since World War II. Its release also comes as populist and nationalist political figures “are exploiting people’s anxieties, fears” about refugees, Axworthy said, 

 

Tanzania’s former President Jakaya Kikwete, a council co-chair, said the current crisis is a consequence of some countries’ internal policies, authoritarianism, sectarianism, violence and conflicts, “but the other aspect is that the attitude towards refugees has changed.” 

 

“In the past people have been welcoming, friendly,” he said. “Now people are … closing the doors for people who are … fleeing from danger. But they say, ‘No, no, you can’t come’ … and refugees are being blamed as being the problem.”  

Kikwete said “unscrupulous politicians” are using refugees to get votes “because when you tell your people they’re dangerous,” they react, and the politicians become popular. 

 

At the same time, the report said, “the humanitarian commitment of nations, once a norm, has given way to nativism. Xenophobia — fear and exclusion of the ‘outsider’ — has gathered force in America, Europe, Australia and elsewhere.” 

 

The U.N. refugee agency, which relies on voluntary contributions, is seriously underfunded, and its head, Filippo Grandi, called in his latest report on forced displacement for “a new and far more comprehensive approach” to the crisis “so that countries and communities aren’t left dealing with this alone.” 

 

Axworthy told a news conference: “What we’ve really proposed is a way in which you have to get out of the box in which refugees are seen simply as ‘a humanitarian issue.’ ”  

“There has to be a much stronger level of involvement,” he said, in matters of security, development, human rights, accountability and finance for the world’s 25.4 million refugees and 40 million internally displaced, along with 3.1 million asylum seekers. 

 

Axworthy said the World Bank has estimated that there are between $15 billion and $20 billion “in purloined assets that various political leaders have stolen from their people.” 

 

Swiss actions

How much of that can be recovered, he said, depends on how many governments and countries are prepared to give their courts the right to reallocate the money. He pointed to Switzerland, which has done just that, as a model. 

 

Fen Osler Hampson, the council’s executive director, said Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s regime has complained it doesn’t have access to $3 billion in bank accounts frozen in the United States. He said there are several hundred million dollars belonging to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s family frozen in London bank accounts. And in the case of South Sudan, he said, “the generals have several hundred millions that are frozen in bank accounts in Nairobi.” 

 

“All it takes is political will to introduce that legislation” to give courts the right to reallocate that money, Hampson said.  

The World Refugee Council’s argument is that refugees and internally displaced people, the majority of them women and children, are the most vulnerable in the world and should therefore have the primary claim on those assets, he said. 

 

Other prospects for new money, Hampson said, are to leverage the vast resources of the private sector and create “refugee bonds,” similar to “green bonds” to tackle climate change. 

 

Another proposal is a kind of cap-and-trade system in which a country unwilling to resettle refugees for political reasons could contribute money to developing countries saddled with the huge costs of hosting millions of refugees, Hampson said. 

 

Remove the ‘impunity’

As for accountability, Axworthy said using the International Criminal Court to prosecute Myanmar’s military leaders for alleged crimes against humanity for the crackdown that led over 700,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to Bangladesh would “take away the impunity” for those responsible for massive displacement. 

 

The council also called for the drafting of a new protocol to the 1951 Refugee Convention requiring “collective responsibility for refugees.”  

  

And it urged nations to promote the achievements and contributions of refugees to counter the negative narrative of opponents and populists. 

 

“For example, Syrian refugees in Turkey have established an estimated 6,000 businesses providing 100,000 jobs,” the report said. “In Sweden, the intake of about 600,000 refugees and migrants has produced some of the highest growth rates in Europe and aided in addressing the challenges of an otherwise aging population.”

Agency: Deadly California Fire Caused by Homeowner Equipment

In a long-awaited report, state investigators said Thursday that a 2017 wildfire that killed 22 people in Northern California wine country was caused by a private electrical system, not equipment belonging to embattled Pacific Gas & Electric Corp.

The state firefighting agency concluded that the blaze started next to a residence. It did not find any violations of state law.

“I eliminated all other causes for the Tubbs Fire, with the exception of an electrical caused fire originating from an unknown event affecting privately owned conductor or equipment,” CalFire Battalion Chief John Martinez wrote in his report.

Some details about the property, including its owner and address, were blacked out of the report. It said the Napa County property about 3 miles (5 kilometers) north of Calistoga was built in 1946 on about 10.5 acres (4.2 hectares) with a wine cellar, pool and several outbuildings.

PG&E said in a Jan. 2 court filing that it believed a handyman performing unlicensed electrical work started the wine country fire. In that filing, it identified the owner of the Napa County compound as Ann Zink. The utility said it provided electricity to Zink’s property by a line that connected to a service riser but that Zink had a private system to carry power to other buildings as well as equipment such as a water pump and water storage tank. 

PG&E said it had no responsibility to maintain or inspect the private system.

Zink, 91, told the San Francisco Chronicle in 2017 that her house was unoccupied at the time of the fire and she was at her other home in Riverside County when the blaze began.

PG&E bankruptcy filing

The Tubbs Fire was one of more than 170 that torched the state in October 2017. It destroyed more than 5,600 structures over more than 57 square miles (148 sq. kilometers) in Sonoma and Napa counties.

PG&E previously said it plans to file for bankruptcy protection next week, citing billions of dollars in potential damages from lawsuits linking its equipment to other deadly blazes for which it has been determined to be at fault.

The company said in a statement that despite Thursday’s finding, PG&E “still faces extensive litigation, significant potential liabilities and a deteriorating financial situation.”

Gov. Gavin Newson said it’s up to PG&E to decide whether to move ahead with a planned bankruptcy given that more than half of its expected damages stemmed from the 2017 Tubbs Fire.

He said his goal is not to rescue PG&E but to make sure victims are made whole, that the state has “safe, reliable and affordable service” and that rate payers “are not paying the price of the neglect” that has been established in past wildfires.

Newsom also said he doubts the report will end litigation related to the wildfire.

Michael Kelly, an attorney for victims of the fire, said the findings wouldn’t have much effect on the lawsuits he has filed.

“We’re going to stick by our guns,” Kelly said, adding that there are still questions about why PG&E didn’t cut power to the area despite a high fire danger. He said there is also evidence that contradicts the findings of state fire investigators.

Reform, compensation

Trading of PG&E Corp. stock was halted twice after news about the cause of the fire prompted a surge of buy orders. Once trading resumed, the price rocketed up, closing up $5.96, or nearly 75 percent, at $13.35 a share.

A state senator said that just because a private electric line caused the wine country fire does not let the utility off the hook for the role of its equipment in other devastating fires in the state.

State Sen. Bill Dodd, a Napa Democrat, cited system-wide issues plaguing California’s largest utility.

Lawmakers are under pressure to find a solution that addresses utility reform and compensates wildfire victims.

“This underscores the idea that we all have a role to play in wildfire prevention,” said Dodd a frequent critic of PG&E, who noted that the company has already been found at fault for more than a dozen other Northern California wildfires.

In the report released Thursday by the state, one witness reported seeing a transformer explode. Another reported seeing the fire approach a PG&E power pole.

One witness, Charlie Brown Jr. of Calistoga, said the electrical wiring leading from the property where investigators concluded the fire started had not been used in years.

Kansas City to Rename Street to Honor Martin Luther King Jr.

Leaders in Kansas City, Missouri, one of the nation’s largest cities without a public memorial to Martin Luther King Jr., settled a yearlong debate Thursday by voting to rename a 10-mile stretch of roadway after the civil rights leader.

Nearly 51 years after King was assassinated, the Kansas City Council voted 8-4 to rename the Paseo as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. The Paseo is a 10-mile boulevard the runs through Kansas City’s mostly black eastern sections.

Supporters, including Rep. Emmanuel Cleaver, fought since early last year to honor King, the Kansas City Star reported.

Objections centered mostly on whether residents and businesses along the Paseo had been given sufficient notice or didn’t want the street renamed. Others thought a better site could be found to honor King.

“We have overcome a borderline regressive electoral body that almost didn’t do this, but we thank God for the progressive leaders on this council that rose up today and are a reflection of what one Kansas City can look like,” said Vernon Howard Southern Christian Leadership Conference of Greater Kansas City, one of the strongest proponents of the name change.

The Board of Parks and Recreation, which oversees the city’s boulevards, rejected the suggestion last year to rename The Paseo for King. That’s when ministers led by the local chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference began collecting signatures to put the question on the August or November 2018 ballot, but the organization didn’t gather enough signatures.

Mayor Sly James, who said he thought there were better ways to honor King than renaming the Paseo, formed a citizens’ commission to gather public input and recommend which sites could be renamed for King. That panel favored naming a new terminal at the Kansas City International Airport after King, a suggestion that airport officials did not support.

The second option was 63rd Street, an east-west thoroughfare that stretches from majority-white neighborhoods through eastern Kansas City. The commission’s third option was the Paseo.

Bosnian Muslims Anger Serbs With Name Change Plan

A Muslim party said it would launch a legal bid to change the name of Bosnia’s Serb region, enraging all Serbian parties in the volatile country and 

prompting calls for calm from the European Union. 

The largest Bosnian Muslim party, SDA, said Wednesday that the name Republika Srpska (Serb Republic) discriminated against 

Bosniaks and Croats there, and that it would challenge it in the 

constitutional court.

Under the 1995 Dayton peace accords that ended Bosnia’s 1992-95 war, the country is split into two highly autonomous regions, the Serb-dominated Serb Republic and the federation dominated by Muslim Bosniaks and Croats, linked via a weak central government.

SDA leader Bakir Izetbegovic said the legal challenge was a response to “intensified attacks on Bosnia and its integrity” by Bosnian Serb nationalist leader Milorad Dodik. 

Dodik, who heads the Serb SNSD party, said the initiative was anti-constitutional and that Serbs will halt their work in the central government.

“If the appeal is accepted, we will call a special session of the Republika Srpska National Assembly at which we will 

decide about the future status of the RS [Serb Republic],” Dodik said after meeting other Serb politicians. He currently chairs Bosnia’s inter-ethnic three-man presidency as its Serb member.

‘Polarizing’ actions

The EU delegation in Bosnia issued a statement saying: “We call on all political parties to refrain from political maneuvers aimed at distracting attention from the real issues facing Bosnia.

“Polarizing statements and actions … will not facilitate the formation of new authorities at a crucial moment for the country’s EU path,” the delegation added. 

Bosnia is hoping to become an EU candidate this year. 

Bosnia’s international peace overseer, Valentin Inzko, said the name challenge “in the midst of discussions on government formation is irresponsible and counterproductive, and further undermines the trust between constituent peoples and their political representatives.”

Following parliamentary and presidential elections in October, a dispute between Serb, Croat and Bosniak presidency members over Bosnia’s integration into NATO has delayed the formation of the central government.

The Bosniak and Croat pro-NATO presidency members refuse to approve Dodik’s candidate for the job of prime minister unless 

he pledges support for NATO integration. But pro-Russian Dodik is strongly against it.

Журналісти-розслідувачі заявили про непрозорість конкурсу для вибору управлінця резиденції «Межигір’я»

Українські журналісти-розслідувачі з редакцій різних ЗМІ, об’єднаних довкола проекту «ЯнуковичЛікс», висловили занепокоєння непрозорістю відбору нового управлінця для резиденції «Межигір’я».

25 січня 2019 року Агентство з виявлення, розшуку та управління активами (АРМА) має оголосити переможця в конкурсі на управління резиденцією «Межигір’я» – утім, журналісти заявили, що конкурс на обрання керуючого таким важливим об’єктом виявився непрозорим і прихованим від громадськості.

«Днями стало відомо, що претендентів на керування було всього двоє: громадська організація, яка останні п’ять років управляє «Межигір’ям», а також комерційна компанія, деталі якої АРМА досі тримає в секреті. Наскільки нам відомо, жоден представник громадськості не мав можливості оцінити якість пропозицій учасників – попри те, що саме завдяки зусиллям громадськості парк та резиденції не були по-варварськи розграбовані», – мовиться у їхній заяві.

​Журналісти повідомляють, що у четвер, 24 січня, провели кількагодинну зустріч з Антоном Янчуком – головою Агентства, на якій повідомили йому про своє занепокоєння щодо непрозорості процесу.

Вони також, у відповідь на його запитання про варіанти виходу із ситуації, запропонували провести публічне обговорення стратегії управління «Межигір’ям» від усіх охочих узяти участь у конкурсі.

​Антон Янчук пообіцяв журналістам, що спробує взяти до уваги їхні аргументи.

Серед підписантів заяви – Анна Бабінець, Наталія Седлецька, Денис Бігус, Дарина Шевченко, Катерина Каплюк, Максим Опанасенко, Марія Землянська, Олександр Акименко, Катя Горчинська, Влад Лавров і Олег Хоменок.

Іще 11 червня 2018 року, під час зустрічі з журналістами та активістами, які управляли «Межигір’ям» майже з моменту втечі охорони колишнього президента Віктора Януковича, Віталій Різник, один із керівників АРМА, обіцяв, що процес вибору нового розпорядника буде прозорим і з урахуванням думки громадськості.

2018 року слідчі Генеральної прокуратури України передали «Межигір’я» АРМА для пошуку керуючого для колишньої резиденції Віктора Януковича. Згодом, у листопаді 2018 року, АРМА оголосило конкурс на управління активами резиденції. Документи, необхідні для участі в конкурсі, потрібно було подати до 12 грудня 2018 року.

«Межигірʼя» раніше було резиденцією Віктора Януковича, але після його втечі з країни в лютому 2014 року територія стала національним парком і музеєм корупції, де щорічно бувають мільйони українців та іноземців. Нині в резиденції проходять екскурсії й громадські заходи, знімаються фільми. Будівлями і зоокуточком «Межигір’я» опікуються волонтери, які збирають на це кошти з відвідувачів.

США: Сенат відхилив плани поновити роботу уряду, подані демократами і республіканцями

У США Сенат, як і очікували, відхилив обидва проекти резолюцій, що мали на меті поновити роботу уряду країни, подані сторонами-суперниками, демократами і республіканцями.

При цьому, хоча в Сенаті мають більшість республіканці, резолюція демократів отримала на два голоси більше, ніж резолюція республіканців.

План республіканців передбачав задовольнити вимогу президента Дональда Трампа надати 5,7 мільярда доларів на будівництво стіни вздовж усього кордону з Мексикою; план демократів не передбачав надання цих коштів.

У відповідь на нинішнє голосування Трамп знову повторив свою позицію, що не підпише ніякого бюджетного документа, який не буде передбачати коштів на стіну.

Тим часом часткове зупинення роботи уряду у США триває рекордний час – уже 34-й день. Близько 800 тисяч працівників уряду весь цей час не отримують платні. Причиною є відсутність рішення про бюджетне фінансування уряду.

Трамп раніше заявляв, що готовий залишати такий стан «місяцями й роками», якщо законодавці не нададуть коштів на прикордонну стіну.

Nuclear, Climate Threats Keep Doomsday Clock Close to Apocalypse

A renewed nuclear arms race, rising greenhouse gas emissions and the emergence of state-sponsored disinformation campaigns have left the modern world as close to annihilation as it was at the height of the Cold War, atomic scientists said on Thursday.

The Doomsday Clock, created by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists as an indicator of the world’s susceptibility to apocalypse, remained at two minutes to midnight for a second year running in what the scientists called a dangerous “new abnormal.”

“Though unchanged from 2018, this setting should be taken not as a sign of stability but as a stark warning to leaders and citizens around the world,” the Chicago-based group said in a statement.

Humanity’s two simultaneous existential threats of nuclear war and climate change were exacerbated during the past year by the “increased use of information warfare to undermine democracy around the world,” the group said.

“In many forums, including particularly social media, nationalist leaders and their surrogates lied shamelessly, insisting that their lies were truth, and the truth ‘fake news,'” it said.

Since the election of U.S. President Donald Trump in 2016, the clock has closed in on midnight in successive 30-second moves in 2017 and 2018, in part because of escalating tensions with North Korea over its nuclear program.

The last time the clock was as close to midnight as it has been in the past two years was in 1953, when the U.S.-Soviet arms race escalated as Moscow tested a hydrogen bomb in August after the detonation of an American H-bomb the previous November.

Despite a softening of barbed rhetoric between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un over the past year, the group saw rising threats in nuclear-armed nations’ programs of ‘nuclear modernization’ that are all but indistinguishable from a worldwide arms race.”

On climate, the group said carbon dioxide emissions resumed an upward climb in the past two years.

To turn back the clock, it recommended steps including fortifying and extending U.S.-Russian nuclear treaties with limits on modernization programs, adopting safeguards to prevent peacetime military incidents along NATO countries’ borders, citizen demands for action on climate change and multilateral talks to discourage the misuse of information technology.

The bulletin was founded by scientists who helped develop the United States’ first atomic weapons. When the clock was created in 1947, it was set at seven minutes to midnight.

Клімкін порівняв події у Венесуелі з українським Майданом

Міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін порівняв протистояння між владою і опозицією у Венесуелі з подіями української Революції гідності.

«У кожного свій шлях до свободи і гідності. Намагаюсь уникати порівнянь у зовнішній політиці, але боротьба венесуельців чимось нагадує мені наш драйв часів Майдану. Маємо підтримати дух свободи та справедливості та тих, хто відстоює своє право на вільне майбутнє», – написав він у твітері про Венесуелу, де Хуан Гуайдо, голова Національних зборів, парламенту країни, який протистоїть владі президента Ніколаса Мадуро і не визнає його другого терміну, тимчасово взяв на себе президентські повноваження.

Перед цим в іншому дописі з приводу Венесуели Клімкін також написав іспанською мовою: «Відповідати силою на вимоги мирних учасників протесту – це найкоротший шлях для влади до того, щоб втратити легітимність. Покладаємо сподівання на Національні збори і на мудрість їхнього голови Хуана Гуайдо в пошуках виходу з політичної кризи».

У Венесуелі тривала політична криза з протистоянням між демократичною опозицією і президентом-соціалістом Ніколасом Мадуро різко загострилася 23 січня, коли один із лідерів опозиції, голова опозиційних до влади президента країни Національних зборів, парламенту країни, 35-річний Хуан Гуайдо оголосив себе тимчасовим виконувачем обов’язків президента. При цьому він послався на конституцію країни, яка тимчасово покладає такі обов’язки на голову парламенту в разі, коли посада голови держави стає вакантною. Мадуро 10 січня офіційно вступив на посаду президента на новий термін за результатами виборів, що відбулися у травні 2018 року – але опозиція, яка бойкотувала ці вибори, не визнає їхніх результатів, заявляючи про масові фальсифікації і тиск влади, і 15 січня парламент оголосив Мадуро узурпатором влади. Президент, зі свого боку, заявляє про «спробу державного перевороту» з боку опозиції.

У відповідь на крок Гуайдо Сполучені Штати Америки майже відразу визнали його легітимним виконувачем обов’язків президента і заявили, що відтепер не визнають ніяких кроків влади Мадуро. Про визнання Гуайдо законним керівником заявила і ще низка держав. Це в першу чергу 13 із 14 країн Америки, членів так званої «Групи Ліми», створеної 2017 року для допомоги у вирішенні кризи у Венесуелі і в поверненні цієї держави до демократії. У Європі спершу висловлювалися обережніше, але 24 січня про пряму підтримку дій Гуайдо заявила й Німеччина, ще в деяких країнах ЄС роблять дедалі прихильніші до нього заяви. Натомість Росія, Іран, Куба, Нікарагуа, Болівія, а також Туреччина прямо підтримали Мадуро.

Fight for Gender Equality at U.N. Faces Resistance, Report Says

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has inched up slightly in the eyes of women’s groups who said on Wednesday he has delivered on some promises to make the global organization a feminist institution but faces a major backlash and resistance.

The Feminist U.N. Campaign, a coalition of women’s rights groups, advocates and U.N. staff, gave him a grade of B-, up from the C+ it gave him a year ago.

The coalition launched its report card after the secretary-general said he would be a feminist leader when he took office two years ago.

Global movement

In that time, the #MeToo campaign against sexual harassment and assault has become a global movement.

Guterres has promoted women’s rights and equality publicly, sought gender parity in leadership and rolled out efforts against sexual harassment and gender-based violence, the report said.

But an internal backlash and bureaucracy threaten his progress. His efforts to make structural changes have met “considerable resistance” from staff and member states that resist women’s rights, it said.

Lyric Thompson, an author of the report and a director at the Washington-based International Center for Research on Women, said she thinks Guterres has “a genuine intent and interest in being a champion” of women’s rights.

“The question is can he do everything in his power to be a feminist leader who enables that transformation and who makes it the new normal?” she said to the Thomson Reuters Foundation. The U.N. is “years away” from being a feminist institution, and attitudes of immunity and privilege operate to scuttle equality efforts, she said.

Just last week, a U.N. survey showed one third of its staff and contractors experienced sexual harassment in the past two years.

More than 30,000 people answered the survey, complaining of offensive jokes, remarks and sexual stories and of being touched in ways that made them uncomfortable.

The U.N. has tried to increase transparency and strengthen how it deals with such accusations over the past few years after a string of sexual exploitation and abuse accusations against U.N. peacekeepers in Africa.

The head of the U.N. agency for HIV and AIDS is stepping down in June, six months before his term ends, after an independent panel said his “defective leadership” tolerated “a culture of harassment, including sexual harassment, bullying, and abuse of power.”

‘Considerable progress’

The secretary-general’s office said it was pleased that the women’s groups saw improvement in Guterres’ handling of gender issues and agreed that more needs to be dome.

“At the same time, we believe the secretary-general has achieved considerable progress within the complex U.N. system at achieving real reforms to make the U.N. a better workplace for women and men alike,” his office said.

Guterres, the former prime minister of Portugal, was sworn in December 2016 after a campaign in which many countries urged selection of a woman. The U.N. has not been headed by a woman since its creation in 1945.

N. Korea’s Kim Expresses ‘Satisfaction’ With Trump Letter 

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un has expressed “great satisfaction” after receiving a letter from U.S. President Donald Trump ahead of a second summit between the two leaders, Pyongyang’s state media reported Thursday. 

 

Kim is making “good technical preparations” for the meeting, the official KCNA news agency said, in the isolated nation’s first comments on the talks scheduled for next month. 

 

The letter was handed to Kim by one of his right-hand men, Vice Chairman Kim Yong Chol, who met Trump at the White House last week as the two countries seek a denuclearization accord that could ease decades of hostility. 

‘Great interest’ in second meeting

 

“[Kim] spoke highly of President Trump for expressing his unusual determination and will for the settlement of the issue with a great interest in the second DPRK-U.S. summit,” KCNA said, referring to the North by its official initialism. 

 

The strongman said North Korea will “believe in the positive way of thinking of President Trump” as the countries advance “step by step” toward their goals, the agency added.  

 

On Saturday, Trump said a location for the summit has been decided, without giving more details. 

 

However, a Vietnamese government source told AFP “logistical preparations” were under way to host the encounter, most likely in the capital, Hanoi, or coastal city of Danang. 

 

The White House has confirmed the summit will go ahead in February.  

The pair first met in June in Singapore, where they signed a vaguely worded document in which Kim pledged to work toward the “denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.” 

 

But progress stalled soon afterward as Pyongyang and Washington — which stations 28,500 troops in South Korea — disagree over what that means. 

 

The United States expects Pyongyang to give up its nuclear arsenal, doggedly built by the Kim dynasty despite sanctions and nationwide famines. 

 

Regime survival

Kim, whose family has brutally ruled North Korea for three generations, is seeking guarantees of the regime’s survival as well as relief from biting U.N. sanctions. 

 

Analysts say that a second summit has to make tangible progress on the issue of Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons if it is to avoid being dismissed as “reality TV.”

Police: 5 Fatally Shot Inside Florida Bank, Suspect Arrested

A gunman opened fire inside a Florida bank Wednesday afternoon, killing five people before surrendering to negotiators, police said.

Zephen Xaver, 21, was arrested after the shooting at a Sebring SunTrust Bank branch, Sebring police Chief Karl Hoglund said at a news conference.

“Today’s been a tragic day in our community,” Hogland said. “We’ve suffered significant loss at the hands of a senseless criminal doing a senseless crime.”

The victims were not immediately identified.

A man called police dispatch Wednesday afternoon to report that he had fired shots inside the bank, Hoglund said. Initial negotiations to get the barricaded man to leave the bank were unsuccessful, so the Highlands County Sheriff’s Office SWAT team entered the bank to continue negotiations, and the man eventually surrendered. 

Police didn’t say what charges Xaver would face or indicate a motive.

Gov. Ron DeSantis was in the region for an infrastructure tour and traveled to Sebring after news of the shooting broke. He said the Florida Department of Law Enforcement would assist Sebring police and the Highlands sheriff in any way possible.

“Obviously, this is an individual who needs to face very swift and exacting justice,” DeSantis said of the gunman.

SunTrust Chairman and CEO Bill Rogers released a statement saying the bank is deeply saddened by the tragic shooting.

“We are working with officials and dedicating ourselves to fully addressing the needs of all the individuals and families involved,” Rogers said. “Our entire team mourns this terrible loss.”

Порошенко обговорив із генеральним секретарем ООН миротворчу місію на Донбасі

Президент України Петро Порошенко зустрівся з генеральним секретарем Організації об’єднаних націй Антоіну Ґутеррішем 23 січня в рамках Всесвітнього економічного форуму в Давосі. Про це повідомляє прес-служба президента.

«Під час зустрічі з Генеральним секретарем ООН Антоніу Ґутеррішем детально обговорили перспективи розгортання повноцінної багатонаціональної миротворчої місії під егідою ООН на Донбасі. Генеральний секретар ООН підтвердив готовність продовжити вживати заходи з надання гуманітарної допомоги внутрішньо переміщеним особам, а також постраждалому цивільному населенню Донбасу», – йдеться в заяві.

Читайте також: В ОБСЄ спростували заяву Клімкіна про спільну миротворчу місію з ООН – ЗМІ​

Крім того, згідно з повідомленням, Порошенко й Ґутерріш обговорили агресію Росії в Керченській протоці, та порушення прав людини в анексованому Криму.

«Співрозмовники наголосили на необхідності негайного звільнення РФ українських моряків, суден та забезпечення вільного судноплавства Керченською протокою відповідно до міжнародного права», – повідомляє прес-служба.

Читайте також: Поранених полонених моряків планують перевести до Лефортовського СІЗО – Денісова​

Раніше 23 січня в рамках свого візиту до Давоса Порошенко зустрівся з головою Міжнародного валютного фонду Крістін Лагард.

Щорічний Всесвітній економічний форум у Давосі почався 22 січня і триватиме до 25 числа.

Трамп висловив свою підтримку лідеру опозиції Венесуели

Президент Сполучених Штатів Дональд Трамп заявив, що визнає лідера опозиції Венесуели Хуана Гуайдо тимчасовим президентом цієї країни, повідомляють західні ЗМІ.

За словами Трампа, він готовий застосувати «всю повноту економічної і дипломатичної сили Сполучених Штатів, аби сприяти відновленню демократії у Венесуелі».

«Громадяни Венесуели надто довго страждали від нелегітимного режиму Мадуро», – стверджує президент США.

Свою підтримку висловив також генеральний секретар Організації американських держав Луіс Альмагро.

«Вітаємо Хуана Гуайдо на посаді виконувача обов’язків президента Венесуели», – написав він у Twitter.

23 січня 35-річний президент опозиційної Національної асамблеї Гуайдо проголосив себе виконувачем обов’язків президента в столиці Каракасі після того, як по всій країні прокотилися багатотисячні марші проти президента Ніколаса Мадуро.

10 січня Ніколас Мадуро в черговий раз вступив на посаду президента Венесуели. Нинішній президентський термін має тривати до 2025 року. Він обіймав посаду президента Венесуели з 2013 року після смерті Уго Чавеса.

Парламент Венесуели оголосив Мадуро узурпатором влади в країні.

У 2018 році економічне становище Венесуели продовжувало погіршуватися: показник інфляції в країні перевищив позначку одного мільйона відсотків за рік. У більшості міст спостерігається нестача товарів повсякденного користування, мільйони людей емігрували з країни в пошуках роботи.

У «Батьківщині» прокоментували заяву Коельйо про те, що він не підтримував Тимошенко на виборах президента

«Я ніколи не записував жодного повідомлення на підтримку її поточного кандидатства» – письменник Паоло Коельйо

Italy Accuses France of ‘Impoverishing Africa’ As Migration Tensions Erupt

A diplomatic spat between Italy and France over migration to Europe is a likely forerunner of coming political battles in the run-up to European Parliament elections, according to analysts.

Paris summoned the Italian ambassador this week after Italy’s Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio accused France of “impoverishing African countries.”

“If today we still have people leaving Africa, it is due to several European countries, first of all France, that didn’t finish colonizing Africa,” Di Maio told reporters Sunday.

“The European Union should sanction all those countries, like France, that are impoverishing African countries and obliging those people to leave. The place for African people is Africa and not at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea,” he added. “If we want to stem the departures (of migrants), let’s start addressing this issue, let’s start coping with it also within the United Nations, not only at the European Union level. Italy has to make itself heard.” 

Di Maio said France was manipulating the economies of 14 African countries that use the CFA franc, a currency underwritten by the French Treasury and pegged to the Euro.

​Analyst Luigi Scazzieri of the Center For European Reform says while there is opposition to the CFA franc in some African countries, Di Maio’s accusations are misleading.

“Now there’s two reasons for that. One of them being that at the moment the latest data suggests they (migrants) are not from countries using the CFA franc. And the second point is that in any case, if countries remain poor, migration is actually lower,” Scazzieri told VOA.

The latest EU figures show that many African migrants to Europe come from former Italian colonies, such as Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea.

The Franco-Italian dispute follows the drowning of hundreds of migrants off Libya in recent days. The deaths have renewed the focus on Italy’s decision to end search-and-rescue operations in the Mediterranean – and on the European Union’s failure to agree a system to share quotas of refugees, analyst Scazzieri said.

“Italy (is) wanting France to take migrants who arrive on its shores, or at least part of them. And also disagreements over how to handle Libya, with Italy and France backing different sides in the Libyan civil war,” he said.

French President Emmanuel Macron has not responded directly to the Italian accusations. He has sought to renew EU political momentum with a new Franco-German treaty, signed Tuesday in the border town of Aachen.

“The eurosceptics, nationalists, benefit from the fear in Europe’s people, and they say: ‘The answer on your fears is nationalism,’ and we don’t believe this,” Macron said in a speech to mark the signing of the treaty.

The dispute is a taste of what’s to come as populist forces like Italy’s 5-Star Movement and the League join battle with pro-Europeans.

“This contraposition has been created whereby Italy is the populists and Macron is the Europeanists. And it suits both sides in a sense to have each other as the bogeyman. Of course this is especially important in light of the upcoming European Parliament elections,” Scazzieri said.

The battle lines are being drawn for what is set to be a bitter election campaign – with migration at the heart of the debate over Europe’s future.

Activist Urges California Leaders to Halt PG&E Bankruptcy

Consumer activist Erin Brockovich, who famously took on Pacific Gas & Electric Co. in the 1990s, urged California lawmakers Tuesday not to let the utility go bankrupt because it could mean less money for wildfire victims.

“I’m mad, I think we should all be mad,” Brockovich said as she stood outside the Capitol in Sacramento alongside people who lost their homes to destructive fires.

PG&E announced last week it plans to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy because it can’t afford to pay at least $30 billion in expected damages due to deadly 2017 and 2018 Northern California wildfires.

California law makes utilities entirely liable for damage caused by wildfires sparked by their equipment, even if the utility isn’t found to be negligent.

The cause of a 2017 fire that swept through Santa Rosa and the 2018 fire that destroyed Paradise are still under investigation. PG&E is under scrutiny in both cases, and lawsuits have been filed by people who lost their homes and are underinsured or lack insurance.

Brockovich is part of the legal team representing victims of the 2017 fires.

Under a PG&E bankruptcy, wildfire victims likely won’t get all of the money they have sued for, experts have said. Brockovich and Noreen Evans, a former state lawmaker representing wildfire victims, suggested the Legislature should allow PG&E to take out state-backed bonds to cover the costs of the 2018 fire and potentially pass some costs to ratepayers to avoid bankruptcy.

Lawmakers allowed the utility to pay for 2017 wildfires in a similar manner but did not apply the same standard to 2018 fires, something the lawyers called a serious oversight.

Critics, including Evans, have called the law a “bailout” for the utility in the past. Now, she said, 2018 wildfire victims deserve to be treated the same way as 2017 wildfire victims.

“It’s not a bailout, although I’ve referred to it as a bailout in the past,” she said.

State Sen. Bill Dodd of Napa, who authored last year’s wildfire bill, said 2018 was not included because lawmakers didn’t want to discourage PG&E from focusing on its safety if it thought it would have a guaranteed way to pay for wildfire damage.

Beyond the short term, Brockovich urged state lawmakers to adopt stricter oversight of PG&E, a utility that she said has a well-documented history of negligent or dangerous behavior that the state has let continue for too long.

“Be at the head of the table and take control of this runaway monopoly,” she said.

PG&E response

PG&E is “committed to working cooperatively with regulators, policymakers, and other stakeholders to continue to provide PG&E customers the safe gas and electric services they expect and need,” utility spokeswoman Lynsey Paulo said.

The company’s board has decided bankruptcy under Chapter 11 is “the only viable option,” she said.

Brockovich rose to fame while fighting PG&E in the 1990s over a toxic chemical in the water supply of a Southern California community.

Currently U.S. Judge William Alsup is overseeing a jury verdict against PG&E stemming from a deadly 2010 gas pipeline explosion, and he is considering whether the company’s role in recent wildfires was a violation of its probation in the criminal case.

Alsup has noted that California fire investigators referred 12 wildfires caused by PG&E equipment for possible criminal prosecution. He has proposed imposing new probation terms on the utility, including that it remove or trim all trees that could fall onto its power lines, poles or equipment in high-wind conditions and re-inspect its entire electric grid.

The judge gave PG&E until Wednesday to respond to his proposal.

Brockovich said regulators should consider forcing the company to bury or cover its lines.

Evans also suggested a PG&E bankruptcy could threaten electric service to the utility’s millions of Northern California customers. But Governor Gavin Newsom has said the state is not at risk of power shutoffs as it was during PG&E’s 2001 bankruptcy amid the state’s energy crisis.

The utility said Tuesday in a regulatory filing it has lined up $5.5 billion in credit and loans to continue operating as it prepares for the bankruptcy.

Newsom said last week it’s his goal to prevent the bankruptcy from going through but it may not be possible.

Explainer: What Happens Next in Huawei CFO Meng’s Case?

The U.S. Justice Department said Tuesday it will pursue the extradition of Huawei Technologies Co Ltd’s Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou, arrested in Canada in December on allegations she participated in a conspiracy to defraud banks.

Meng, 46, is due to reappear in a Vancouver court on Feb. 6 to set further court dates. Her Dec. 1 arrest sparked a diplomatic row between Canada and China. China has since arrested and detained two Canadian citizens and sentenced another — a convicted drug smuggler — to death.

What is the extradition process in Canada?

The process begins with a provisional warrant from a country Canada has an extradition agreement with, like the one with which the United States authorities requested Meng’s arrest.

The requesting country has 60 days from the initial arrest to make a formal extradition request. Canada’s new Justice Minister David Lametti, appointed last week in a cabinet shuffle, will then have 30 days from receipt of the request to decide whether to issue an authority to proceed. If he grants it, as expected, Meng’s case would be sent to the British Columbia Supreme Court for an extradition hearing.

What happens next?

The hearing can take weeks or months. The judge will determine whether the case meets a prima facie standard, meaning a judge or jury hearing and believing the evidence would be enough for a conviction.

If a judge decides the U.S. evidence is strong enough, they will issue a committal order effectively recommending extradition to the Justice Minister.

The Canadian Justice Minister decides whether to issue the surrender order that would extradite Meng to the United States.

There are avenues for Meng to contest either a committal order from a judge or a surrender order from the minister, which could stretch her case out for years, lawyers told Reuters.

Could the new Canadian minister ask for extra time?

“When there’s a deadline, generally speaking, the minister doesn’t have any power to get an extension,” said Vancouver-based lawyer Brock Martland, adding that the minister would likely want to go by the book in this highly scrutinized case.

What does the justice minister take into consideration?

Legal factors loom large, said Martland, but so do political and humanitarian ones, such as if a wanted person is elderly and may not fare well in a U.S. jail. Those circumstances do not arise commonly, he added.

There tends to be a strong sense of obligation to an extradition partner, Martland said.

“But I think there are cases where the minister is maybe concerned about whether the process has been compromised or the fairness of the process isn’t what it should be.”

U.S. President Donald Trump told Reuters in December he would intervene in Meng’s case if it would serve trade or security interests.

“If time marches on and more things are said and it becomes clear this isn’t a meritorious prosecution they’re running … that could lead the minister to say, ‘At the end of the day, I’m not prepared to order surrender, here’,” Martland said.

How do U.S. authorities arrange arrests in foreign countries?

Federal and state prosecutors in the United States cannot simply ask that foreign counterparts arrest and turn over an individual. Such requests must be made through the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs (OIA).

The OIA maintains lines of communication with authorities in other countries and is responsible for the next steps leading to an arrest and an extradition.

Trump, Democrats Stand Firm on Opposite Sides of Border Wall

While President Donald Trump resolutely demanded wall construction along the U.S.-Mexico border, Democratic lawmakers rejected a White House proposal with wall funding and temporary immigration provisions that would end a partial government shutdown now in its second month.

“Without a Wall our Country can never have Border or National Security,” Trump tweeted Tuesday. 

At the Capitol, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, promised votes Thursday on Trump’s proposals, contained in a 1,200-page bill unveiled by Republicans.

The Senate will also vote on a Democratic proposal for stopgap federal funding through Feb. 8. Both bills would require bipartisan support to pass.

“The opportunity to end all this is staring us right in the face,” McConnell said, describing the bill as “the only proposal, the only one currently before us that can be signed by the president and immediately reopen the government.”

Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida called for a compromise.

“This shutdown will tragically continue until there’s another side willing to negotiate,” he said. “It requires both sides to compromise. … The president has taken the first step.”

Democrats, who can block most legislation in the Senate, heaped scorn on the proposal, noting it would only temporarily suspend the threat of deportation for a fraction of immigrants brought illegally to America as children — a group placed at risk by Trump’s own executive orders.

“The president’s proposal is one-sided, harshly partisan, and was made in bad faith,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat. “Now offering some temporary protections back in exchange for the wall is not a compromise, it’s more hostage-taking … like bargaining for stolen goods.”

Even if the White House package cleared the Senate, it would be dead on arrival at the Democratic-led House of Representatives, said Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California, who called it “a nonstarter” and promised House votes on border security bills that do not include wall funding. 

McConnell cautioned Democrats against a rush to judgment on the Senate Republican bill.

“To reject this proposal, Democrats would have to prioritize political combat with the president ahead of federal workers, ahead of DACA recipients, ahead of border security, and ahead of stable and predictable government funding. Is that really a price that Democrats want to pay to prolong this episode?” he said.

While the Republican bill appears unlikely to become law, it could be a starting point for further negotiations and deliberations, said one Democrat.

“I do believe it is a proposal that deserves to be treated seriously,” Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine said, adding that the bill should go through committee and be subject to amendments by senators of both parties in order to attract bipartisan support.

“These are issues we could debate. These are issues where amendments could be offered and we could find, I believe, a compromise,” Kaine said. “We ought to have that discussion and offer Democrats and Republicans the ability to take some sandpaper to it and try to make it better.”

Shutdown

The shutdown has furloughed 800,000 government employees, with at least 420,000 forced to continue working without pay and the remainder sent home, some of whom have been forced to look for temporary work elsewhere to help pay their household bills. All are set to miss their second biweekly paycheck on Friday.

Some government services have been curtailed, as about 10 percent of airport security agents ordered to work have instead called in sick, some food inspections have been cut back, and museums and parks are closed. Federal courts could run out of money by Friday.

Ruling on DACA

Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court dealt the Trump administration a setback. The court ruled it would not immediately act on an administration request to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program started by former President Barack Obama that protects nearly 700,000 so-called “Dreamers” from deportation.

Various proposals to end the stalemate between Trump and Democrats opposed to his wall along part of the 3,200-kilometer border with Mexico have gone nowhere. Democrats have demanded that he reopen the government and then negotiate border security measures, but Trump has refused.

Republican proposal

The Senate Republican proposal includes $5.7 billion for Trump’s wall, a favorite pledge of his during his successful 2016 run for the White House, although he has abandoned his claim that Mexico would pay directly for it and now is seeking U.S. taxpayer funding. He says the border barrier is needed to stop illegal immigration and drug trafficking.

The Republican plan would add 750 Border Patrol agents and 375 customs officers, as well as technology upgrades at ports of entry.

It also would boost funding for immigration enforcement, including adding 2,000 law enforcement, support and legal personnel, and thousands of vehicles.

Rules for children from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras seeking asylum would become stricter. The proposal calls for those minors to apply for asylum at one of several processing centers to be set up in Central America.

Republicans say the changes would reduce the incentives for people to make the dangerous trip to seek asylum at the U.S. border.

The Democrat-controlled House of Representatives has passed several bills aimed at reopening the government, but McConnell has refused to put them up for a vote in the chamber because Trump does not support them. House Democrats are promising to vote for more border security measures this week, but none that includes money for Trump’s wall.

Michael Bowman on Capitol Hill and Steve Herman at the White House contributed to this report.

Помічник держсекретаря США Мітчелл іде у відставку

Помічник державного секретаря США з питань Європи і Євразії Весс Мітчелл йде у відставку, повідомив у Twitter представник прес-служби Держдепартаменту Роберт Палладіно 22 січня.

За його словами, Мітчелл офіційно покине пост 15 лютого, а виконувати його обов’язки буде перша заступниця Елізабет Міллард.

Як зазначив у цій же соцмережі держсекретар США Майк Помпео, Весс Мітчелл «виконав вражаючу роботу на посаді». Про причини відставки наразі не повідомляється.

 

Весс Мітчел посів пост помічника держсекратаря восени 2017-го, ставши наступником Вікторії Нуланд. До цього був президентом і виконавчим директором Центру аналізу європейської політики (СЕРА).

Talk About Highway Speed Limit Divides Germans

A leaked proposal to impose universal speed limits on the Autobahn is causing outrage among car-loving Germans.

The country’s transport minister, Andreas Scheuer, has said the idea “goes against all common sense.” But prominent Green Party lawmaker Cem Ozdemir defended the proposal Tuesday, calling it an “act of reason.”

Germany is one of the few countries in the world that doesn’t impose speed limits on its beloved Autobahn highways.

The idea — still very much just a notion — would limit speeds on the country’s highways to 130 kph (80 mph). Proponents say this would reduce air pollution, help fight climate change and reduce the number of car accidents.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman, Steffen Seibert sought to smooth the waves created by the leaked report, saying Monday that a government-appointed committee examining various proposal isn’t finished yet. 

12 постраждалих у пожежі на танкерах поблизу Криму госпіталізували у Керчі – ЗМІ

Дванадцятьох постраждалих внаслідок пожежі на танкерах у Чорному морі госпіталізовано у Керчі, повідомляє російське державне інформаційне агентство ТАСС з посиланням на виконувача обов’язків директора Кримського республіканського центру медицини катастроф Сергія Олефіренка.

За словами Олефіренка, усі постраждалі перебувають у стані середньої тяжкості.

Таку ж інформацію передає місцеве видання Керч.ФМ.

В результаті вибуху і пожежі на двох танкерах «Маестро» і «Кенді», що сталися 21 січня​ біля берегів окупованого Росією українського Криму, загинули 14 осіб. Про це повідомляє спецпроект Радіо Свобода «Крим.Реалії», посилаючись на дані морського порталу FleetMoon та повідомлення призначеної Кремлем влади окупованого півострова. Крім того, ЗМІ повідомляють про 12 врятованих. Ще доля п’яти невідома, пише FleetMoon.

Слідчий комітет Росії за фактом загибелі людей в результаті пожежі на танкерах біля берегів окупованого Росією українського Криму порушив кримінальну справу за статтею «заподіяння смерті з необережності двом та більше особам».​

Міністерство з питань тимчасово окупованих територій України повідомляє, що судна «Маестро» і «Кенді»​ були задіяні в незаконному перевезенні скрапленого газу в Сирію.

За словами українського журналіста Андрія Клименка, танкери належать турецькій компанії Milenyum Denizcilik Gemi, що перебуває в «сирійському списку санкцій США».

Засудженого у Білорусі українського журналіста Шаройка етапували у колонію в Бобруйську

Засудженого у Білорусі українського журналіста Павла Шаройка етапували із СІЗО КДБ до колонії №2 у Бобруйську, повідомляє білоруська служба Радіо Свобода з посиланням на посла України в Білорусі Ігоря Кизима.

За його словами, етапування відбулося ще до нового року, з того часу Шаройка у в’язниці відвідала його дружина.

Як зазначив Кизим, 23 січня із журналістом у колонії має зустрітися український консул. Питання щодо помилування або обміну не лежать у компетенції МЗС, цим займається СБУ, зауважив посол.

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Журналіста Українського радіо Павла Шаройку в Білорусі цього року засудили до 8 років ув’язнення за шпигунство, суд відбувався непублічно. Арештували його 25 жовтня 2017 року. Тоді ж із Білорусі було вислано українського дипломата.

Раніше в Україні затримали білоруського громадянина Юрія Політику, якого звинуватили у шпигунстві на користь іноземної держави. Суд над Політикою відбувається в Чернігові. Спостерігачі припускають, що можливий обмін Політики на Шаройка.

Russian Lawyer: Suspected US Spy Had Classified Material on Him

The lawyer for an American man being held in Moscow on suspicion of spying said on Tuesday that his client was given a flash drive containing Russian “state secrets” before he was arrested, but did not know he had them and had not looked at them.

His family insisted that he was entrapped and denied that he is guilty of espionage.

Paul Whelan, a former U.S. Marine, was detained in Moscow at the end of December. The arrest raised speculation that he could be swapped for one of the Russians held in the U.S., such as gun rights activist Maria Butina, who has pleaded guilty to acting as a foreign agent in the U.S.

Whelan made his first public appearance in court on Tuesday to hear the appeal of his arrest. The judge upheld the previous ruling that ordered him to be kept behind bars at least until the end of February.

Whelan was kept in a glass cage and did not speak to reporters.

Spying charges carry a prison sentence of up to 20 years in Russia.

Whelan’s lawyer, Vladimir Zherebenkov, said Tuesday that when his client was detained at a Moscow hotel at the end of December he had something with him that contained “state secrets.”

The lawyer said that Whelan was a frequent visitor to Russia and that he asked an unnamed person to email him something about travel around the country. Whelan reportedly was not able to download it and then asked that person to put it on a flash-drive.

“He was expecting to see on the flash drive some personal information like pictures or videos, something like that, about that person’s previous trips around Russia,” Zherebenkov told reporters. “We don’t know how the materials that contain state secrets ended up there.”

The lawyer said the American was detained before he could open the files. He added that it was not clear what has happened to the person who reportedly gave the flash drive to Whelan.

Zherebenkov said the investigators have not yet disclosed which country he is accused of spying for.

Family disappointed

Paul Whelan’s twin brother, David, said in a statement that the family was disappointed but hardly surprised by the denial of bail.

“While we still lack any details from the Russian government about why Paul is thought to be a spy, and who provided him with the alleged state secrets, we are certain that he was entrapped and is not guilty of espionage,” he said in a statement. “We have not had any information about a USB drive, what was on it, or how it might have materialized in Paul’s possession.”

“Unfortunately, today’s ruling merely confirms that Paul will remain wrongfully detained for many more months,” Whelan’s brother said, adding that “Paul was able to let us know that he is worried about some health conditions and his ability to communicate with prison medical staff.”

He added that his brother is “also concerned about translator support and his ability to present his defense in English.”

Additional concerns

David Whelan noted that the Russian authorities’ refusal to allow British diplomats to visit his brother in prison and the cancellation of a U.S. consular visit last week raised additional concerns, but said that Canadian diplomats were scheduled to visit Thursday.

Whelan holds U.S., Canadian, British and Irish citizenships.

Whelan, 48, was discharged from the Marines for bad conduct. He works as the global security director for a U.S. automobile parts manufacturer and lives in Michigan. His family has said he was in Moscow to attend a wedding.

British Labour Leader Takes Step Closer to 2nd Brexit Vote

British opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn moved a step closer to paving the way for another referendum on European Union membership by trying to use parliament to grab control of Brexit from Prime Minister Theresa May.

With the clock ticking down to March 29, the date set in law for Brexit, the United Kingdom is in the deepest political crisis in half a century as it grapples with how, or even whether, to exit the European project it joined in 1973.

After May’s Brexit divorce deal was rejected, 432-202, by lawmakers last week, the biggest defeat in modern British history, some lawmakers are trying to take control of Brexit from May’s weakened minority government.

May on Monday proposed tweaking her deal, a bid to win over rebel Conservative lawmakers and the Northern Irish party, which props up her government, but Labour said May was in denial about the crushing defeat of her plans.

Labour put forward an amendment seeking to force the government to give parliament time to consider and vote on options to prevent a “no deal” exit, a course May has repeatedly refused to rule out. 

Among the options, Labour said, should be a permanent customs union with the EU and “a public vote on a deal,” both proposals that May has ruled out.

As the British parliament, which traces its roots through a 1,000 years of history, tries to avoid what most lawmakers think would be a disorderly Brexit without an approved deal, there is still no clear majority for an alternative option.

Lawmakers will debate and vote on the next steps Jan. 29.

Migrants to Europe Are Not Carrying ‘Exotic Diseases,’ WHO Says

Refugees and migrants arriving in Europe are not bringing infectious diseases with them, according to a report from the World Health Organization. In the first large-scale survey of migrant health on the continent, the WHO report calls for European governments to ensure migrants get access to health services. Henry Ridgwell reports.

Economists: Political Uncertainties, Trade Tensions Affect Economic Growth

Economists warn that political uncertainties and trade tensions could undermine global economic growth. Rights groups warn of the dangers of growing economic inequality. About 3,000 political and economic leaders have gathered in the Swiss resort town of Davos to discuss global business and economic trends at an annual economic forum. VOA’s Zlatica Hoke reports.

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