Month: May 2019

«Слава Україні!» – Саакашвілі подякував Зеленському за повернення громадянства України

Колишній президент Грузії, екс-голова Одеської ОДА Міхеїа Саакашвілі подякував президентові України Володимиру Зеленському за скасування указу попереднього президента про припинення його громадянства.

«Дякую президенту Зеленському. Слава Україні!», – написав Саакашвілі на сторінці у Facebook.

Саакашвілі також розмістив уривок із тексту указу, який повертає йому статус громадянина України.

22 травня адвокат колишнього президента Грузії, екс-голови Одеської ОДА Міхеїла Саакашвілі Руслан Чорнолуцький заявив, що подав до Адміністрації президента Володимира Зеленського лист Саакашвілі з проханням повернути йому громадянство України.

Саакашвілі раніше також заявляв, що після перемоги Володимира Зеленського на президентських виборах прагне повернутися в Україну. Ще в день першого туру виборів Зеленський не заперечував проти повернення Саакашвілі до України та казав, що йому може знадобитися допомога колишнього президента Грузії.

Саакашвілі в 2015 році отримав українське громадянство та був призначений президентом України Петром Порошенком на посаду голови Одеської обласної держадміністрації. Під час роботи Саакашвілі неодноразово критикував українську владу. Восени 2016 року він пішов у відставку.

Наприкінці липня 2017 року Порошенко підписав указ про припинення громадянства України Міхеїла Саакашвілі, за повідомленнями, через свідоме подання неправдивих відомостей при набутті українського громадянства. 10 вересня 2017 року Саакашвілі потрапив на територію України, не пройшовши прикордонного контролю.

12 лютого 2018 року Міхеїла Саакашвілі затримали в одному з ресторанів у центрі Києва, а згодом Державна прикордонна служба і Державна міграційна служба України заявили, що за процедурою реадмісії його повернули до Польщі– країни, звідки він у вересні 2017 року «прибув, порушуючи українське законодавство». Із Польщі Саакашвілі поїхав до Нідерландів.

 

Данилюк указом президента став секретарем РНБО

На сайті Адміністрації президента України Володимира Зеленського опубілкований указ, яким Олександра Данилюка призначено секретарем Ради національної безпеки і оборони.

«Призначити Данилюка Олександра Олександровича Секретарем Ради національної безпеки і оборони України», – йдеться в тексті указу президента від 28 травня.

21 травня голова Адміністрації президента України Андрій Богдан повідомив, що кандидатуру екс-міністр фінансів Олександра Данилюка розглядають на посаду секретаря Ради національної безпеки і оборони України.

17 травня Олександр Турчинов подав у відставку з посади секретаря Ради національної безпеки та оборони України. Він перебував на цій посаді від грудня 2014 року.

Рада національної безпеки і оборони України, відповідно до Конституції України, є координаційним органом з питань національної безпеки і оборони при президентові України.

Серед функцій РНБО – внесення пропозицій президентові України щодо реалізації засад внутрішньої і зовнішньої політики у сфері національної безпеки і оборони; координація та контроль за діяльністю органів виконавчої влади у сфері національної безпеки і оборони у мирний час та в умовах воєнного або надзвичайного стану та при виникненні кризових ситу

Зеленський повернув Саакашвілі громадянство

На сайті Адміністрації президента України Володимира Зеленського опубілкований указ, який виключає положення щодо втрати Міхеїлом Саакашвілі українського громадянства.

«Внести до указу президента України від 26 липня 2017 року № 196 «Про припинення громадянства України Бондарєвої Т., Корнійчук О.А., Коротецького Л.О. та інших осіб» зміну, виключивши положення щодо втрати Саакашвілі Міхеїлом громадянства України», – йдеться в тексті указу від 28 травня.

22 травня адвокат колишнього президента Грузії, екс-голови Одеської ОДА Міхеїла Саакашвілі Руслан Чорнолуцький заявив, що подав до Адміністрації президента Володимира Зеленського лист Саакашвілі з проханням повернути йому громадянство України.

Саакашвілі раніше також заявляв, що після перемоги Володимира Зеленського на президентських виборах прагне повернутися в Україну. Ще в день першого туру виборів Зеленський не заперечував проти повернення Саакашвілі до України та казав, що йому може знадобитися допомога колишнього президента Грузії.

Саакашвілі в 2015 році отримав українське громадянство та був призначений президентом України Петром Порошенком на посаду голови Одеської обласної держадміністрації. Під час роботи Саакашвілі неодноразово критикував українську владу. Восени 2016 року він пішов у відставку.

Наприкінці липня 2017 року Порошенко підписав указ про припинення громадянства України Міхеїла Саакашвілі, за повідомленнями, через свідоме подання неправдивих відомостей при набутті українського громадянства. 10 вересня 2017 року Саакашвілі потрапив на територію України, не пройшовши прикордонного контролю.

12 лютого 2018 року Міхеїла Саакашвілі затримали в одному з ресторанів у центрі Києва, а згодом Державна прикордонна служба і Державна міграційна служба України заявили, що за процедурою реадмісії його повернули до Польщі– країни, звідки він у вересні 2017 року «прибув, порушуючи українське законодавство». Із Польщі Саакашвілі поїхав до Нідерландів.

Iraq Sentences 2 More French IS Members to Death

An Iraqi court sentenced on Tuesday two more French members of the Islamic State group to death, bringing the total number of French former jihadis condemned to death this week to six.

The men were identified as Karam el-Harchaoui and Brahim Nejara. They are among a group of 12 French citizens who were detained by the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces in neighboring Syria and handed over to Iraq in January.

 

The Kurdish-led group spearheaded the fight against IS in Syria and has handed over to Iraq hundreds of suspected IS members in recent months.

 

France’s foreign minister said earlier Tuesday that his government is working to spare the group of condemned Frenchmen from execution after Iraq sentenced them to death — though France has made no effort to bring back captured French IS fighters.

 

Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian also reiterated France’s position but said the IS militants should be tried where they committed their crimes.

 

“We are multiplying efforts to avoid the death penalty for these … French people,” he said on France-Inter radio. He didn’t elaborate, but said he spoke to Iraq’s president about the case.

 

France is outspoken against the death penalty globally. The sentencings in Iraq come amid a controversy about the legal treatment of thousands of foreign fighters who joined IS in Syria and Iraq.

 

 

Pulitzer Board to Honor Parkland Journalists

The Pulitzer Prize Board is set to honor journalists from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School for their work memorializing 17 classmates and coaches killed in a shooting last year.

According to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, eight students and the faculty adviser of The Eagle Eye newspaper traveled to New York for the honorary luncheon.

The Eagle Eye staff submitted their package of obituaries to the public service category of the annual Pulitzer Prize awards that recognize exceptional work by U.S. newspapers, magazines and news sites.

The student newspaper did not win, but during the April announcement of the awards, Pulitzer Prize Administrator Dana Canedy spoke of her “sincere admiration” for their entry and said they “give us all hope for the future of journalism.”

“The Eagle Eye’s submission stated that the student reporters and editors had to ‘put aside our grief and recognize our roles as both survivors, journalists and loved ones of the deceased,'” Canedy said.”These budding journalists remind us of the media’s unwavering commitment to bearing witness — even in the most wrenching of circumstances — in service to a nation whose very existence depends on a free and dedicated press.”

US, Japan Leaders Emphasize Enhanced Military Cooperation

Enhanced military cooperation between the United States and Japan in the face of a rising China was emphasized as President Donald Trump concluded a four-day state visit in the island nation. 

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, on Tuesday morning, hosted Trump on the deck of the JS Kaga, one of Japan’s helicopter carriers that will soon be converted to carry a short takeoff/vertical landing variant of the American-made F-35 supersonic stealth jet fighter. 

The two leaders did not mention China by name in their remarks, but their concern about Beijing’s assertive stance militarily in the Pacific was obvious. 

WATCH: Trump Japan visit comes to a close

Abe spoke of an “increasingly severe security environment in the region.”

Trump said Japan’s purchase of an 105 additional F-35 Lightning II jets (each with a price tag of around $100 million) “will help our nations defend against a range of complex threats in the region and far beyond.” 

Later, addressing hundreds of sailors on the nearby USS Wasp, Trump said of the F-35 planes: “The enemy has a problem with it. You know what the problem is? They can’t see it.” 

Since the end of World War Two, when the United States and Japan were enemies, the Japanese have largely depended on American forces for defense. 

“Now the Chinese are flexing their muscles eyeing two Japanese island chains,” says a source close to Prime Minister Abe. 

“There’s an increasing need for us to do something on the eastern part of the archipelago with Japanese air power,” the source explained to VOA. “It is to supplement the U.S. 7th Fleet obviously and it is not to say the U.S. fleet is less accountable.”

There has been nervousness in Japan, which has a pacifist clause in its constitution imposed on it after the war by the U.S. occupation, about America’s long-term commitment to the defense of the island nation with scant natural resources. The worry grew after Trump won the 2016 presidential election. He had been known as a prominent “Japan basher” for decades as a real estate developer and has in office continued to criticize Tokyo for what he considers Japan taking unfair advantage of the United States in trade and not paying enough to host tens of thousands of American forces on its soil. 

Trump’s latest visit to Japan is seen as assuaging some of those concerns, although trade frictions persist. 

Trump, on Monday, said finalizing a new trade pact would be postponed until after parliamentary elections in Japan in July. 

Trump restrained himself during his visit by not pushing Abe too hard on trade, according to Yuki Tatsumi, co-director of the East Asia program at the Stimson Center in Washington, D.C.

“For Trump to suggest that any trade deal will be after August was a good political gesture for Abe,” Tatsumi told VOA. “I think Abe will be put in a tougher spot in the long run, though. Atmospherics were extremely good indeed, but there was very little substance. There will be questions asked on whether it was worth it to welcome Trump with all those bells and whistles, especially when the visit achieved no concrete deliverable.” 

Trump repeatedly touted that he was honored to be the first state guest of the new Reiwa imperial era during which Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako hosted him and first lady Melania Trump for a banquet at the Imperial Palace on Monday evening. 

Abe accompanied Trump for a round of golf at a private course outside Tokyo and sat alongside him on the final day of a sumo wrestling tournament where the president awarded a large trophy, which he said he had personally purchased, to the champion wrestler. 

Trump-Abe Meeting Highlights Security Alliance Despite Differences

U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump will wrap up a trip to Japan by addressing American service personnel Tuesday at the naval base at Yokosuka outside Tokyo. Despite differences on North Korea and trade, the president’s trip is highlighting U.S. security commitments to its ally in the region, as well as an opportunity for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to show Japan is shouldering its defense burden. VOA White House correspondent Patsy Widakuswara reports.

Tensions Grow Between Russia, Iran in Syria

Russian military police last week reportedly carried out a raid against Iranian-backed militiamen stationed at Syria’s Aleppo international airport, local media reported. 

 

In the aftermath, several Iranian militia leaders were arrested in what was seen as the latest episode of tensions between Iranian and Russian forces in Syria.  

 

Since the beginning of Syria’s civil war in 2011, Russia and Iran have built a strong military presence in the country in support of forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.  

 

Iran has since deployed thousands of its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and allied Shiite militias to Syria, while Russia officially entered the Syrian conflict in September 2015 to help Assad’s regime.   

 

But as the war is waning, with Syrian regime forces reclaiming most of the territory once controlled by rebel forces, Russia and Iran seem to be vying for influence in the war-torn country.  

 

‘Slice of the pie’ 

 

Analysts say the protracted war in Syria has created a slight fissure between the two allies. 

 

“There are definite tensions that exist between Russia and Iran within Syria,” said Phillip Smyth, a researcher at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who closely follows Iranian-backed militias in Syria.  

 

“You see things like this [raid in Aleppo] that occur in flashpoint zones because there’s criminal activity going on. Each country’s proxy wants a cut of that,” he told VOA.  

Similar incidents have been taking place throughout the country in the past two years.  

 

Recently, two divisions of the Syrian military were engaged in deadly clashes in different parts of the country, local reports said.  

 

This power struggle is the result of differences among Syrian military leaders who are either loyal to Russia or Iran, observers believe.  

 

“I do believe that it comes down to who controls what, what slice of the pie they all have. But I don’t necessarily believe that this is going to lead to some major conflagration between Iranian and Russian forces there,” analyst Smyth said.  

 

Tactical differences  

 

The strategic partnership between Russia and Iran in Syria goes beyond such disagreements, especially since Russia is still dependent on Iranian forces to hold territory and to provide manpower for Syrian regime troops, some experts say.  

 

“I never believe that Russia would separate from Iran,” said Anna Borshchevskaya, a research fellow at the European Foundation for Democracy who focuses on Russia’s policy in the Middle East. 

 

“The disagreements they’re having is that they’re trying to carve out spheres of influence in Syria, which is something that Russia understands very well,” she told VOA in a phone interview. “Their relationship is a complex one, for sure. But what holds them together is their anti-Americanism and a desire to reduce American influence in the region.”  

Borshchevskaya added that “on the tactical level, [Russia and Iran] are going to have differences sometimes. But they agree on the big picture.” 

 

The U.S. has been involved in the war against Islamic State militants since 2014, when the terror group announced its so-called caliphate in Syria and Iraq.  

 

U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), who declared victory over IS in March, now control more than a third of Syria’s territory.  

 

The United States has about 2,000 troops in areas under the control of the Kurdish-led SDF. But the U.S. administration has said it will keep only about 400 soldiers in those areas after the war against IS is over.  

 

Russia and Iran have constantly opposed the U.S. military presence in Syria. 

 

Economic competition  

 

Some analysts believe that, unlike when they became involved in Syria’s war, Russian and Iranian forces now control larger territories and both countries are searching for economic opportunities in the country.  

 

“Now there are more points of friction between the two countries than ever before,” said Jowan Hemo, a Syrian economist who follows the economic patterns of the war.  

 

“So naturally, you would see them compete to win contracts with the Syrian regime, including the energy and power sectors and other types of investments,” he told VOA. 

 

In 2018, Russia was awarded exclusive rights to produce Syria’s oil and gas. Russia has also signed a contract to use the Syrian port of Tartus for 49 years, while Iran won a bid to partially use the port of Latakia. 

 

Both countries want to economically monopolize Syria for the long term, because they each have given sizable loans to the Syrian regime throughout the war, economist Hemo said.  

 

“I believe this type of competition will continue in Syria, but eventually Russia’s economic dominance will prevail,” he added. 

D-Day’s 75th Anniversary Renews Interest in Some Classrooms 

Kasey Turcol has just 75 minutes to explain to her high school students the importance of D-Day — and if this wasn’t the 75th anniversary of the turning point in World War II, she wouldn’t devote that much time to it.

D-Day is not part of the required curriculum in North Carolina — or in many other states.

Turcol reminds her students at Crossroads FLEX High School in Cary that D-Day was an Allied victory that saved Europe from Nazi tyranny and that the young men who fought and died were barely older than they are. She sprinkles her lesson with details about the number of men, ships and planes involved in the landing at Normandy while adding a few lesser-known facts about a Spanish spy and a deadly military practice conducted six months earlier in England.

Losing resonance

In the U.S. and other countries affected by the events on June 6, 1944, historians and educators worry that the World War II milestone is losing its resonance with today’s students.

In France, which was liberated from German occupation, D-Day isn’t a stand-alone topic in schools. German schools concentrate on the Holocaust and the Nazi dictatorship. And despite having been part of the Allied powers, in Russia, the schools avoid D-Day because they believe it was the victories on the Eastern Front that won the war.

“History has taken a back seat” in the U.S. because of the focus on science and math classes, said Cathy Gorn, executive director of National History Day in College Park, Md. 

In the U.S., teaching about World War II varies from state to state. It’s often up to the teachers to decide how much time they want to give to individual battles like D-Day.

California framework

California’s History-Social Science Framework, adopted in 2016, includes for sophomores an expansive unit on World War II that covers how the conflict was “a total war,” the goals of the Allied and Axis powers and how the fighting was fought on different fronts. The unit also includes a section on the Holocaust. 

In New York, school officials are using the D-Day anniversary to review the curriculum and “make recommendations on how the current average time of 90 minutes of World War II study in a school year can be strengthened, expanded and mandated.” 

There are special programs available to immerse select students in the history of D-Day. 

For eight years, National History Day sent 15 pairs of students and teachers to Normandy to immerse them in the history of D-Day. The high school sophomores and juniors would research individual soldiers close to them — relatives or people from their hometowns — who died. On the last day, the group visited a cemetery where each student read a eulogy for his or her individual soldier. 

Teachers also have outside resources. The National World War II Museum offers an electronic field trip through D-Day and provides suggested lessons plans.

In North Carolina, history is taught through “conceptual design” with connections to themes such as geography, economics and politics, said Meghan Grant, coordinating teacher for secondary social studies in Wake County schools.  

The lessons are based on a method of teaching social studies that was developed in 2013 and used by about half the states, said Larry Paska, executive director of the National Council for the Social Studies. Paska said it may focus on asking students a question like, “What makes an event a turning point in the war?” Students then will use difference sources of evidence to back up their answers.

‘This is the moment’

As part of her D-Day lesson, Turcol tells her class of juniors and seniors that the Germans thought an attack from the Allied forces wouldn’t be possible.  

“It’s too stormy. It’s too risky,” she said. “And what do we do? Yeah, we find a glimmer of hope. On June 5th, the skies kind of clear. The moon kind of shines. And we’re like, ‘This is the moment. This is what is happening.’ ”

She tells students that Gen. Dwight Eisenhower kept D-Day plans on the “down low.”  

Turcol plays a few minutes of a documentary about D-Day to “show you the true humanity of the war,” she says.  

“You saw the German praying … asking for his mother, father, asking for this to be over. Not everybody is on the same message in Germany,” she says. “Everybody here is a father, a mother, a brother, a cousin, a friend. So every life matters.”

Students in Europe also receive dramatically different lessons on D-Day depending on where they live.

Because of Germany’s history, any hint of militarism remains a taboo. While battles like D-Day, Stalingrad and the Operation Barbarossa invasion of Russia might be mentioned briefly in schools, they tend to be lumped together in broad overviews of the war. Individual teachers do have leeway, however, to pursue topics that capture the attention of students. 

The curriculum is similar from state to state. In Berlin high schools, for example, curriculum guidelines include the history of the war under the overall focus on “the collapse of the first German democracy; Nazi tyranny,” which includes classes on Nazi ideology, resistance movements, the Holocaust and World War II.

Similarly, Bavaria’s ninth-grade curriculum focuses primarily on explaining how the Nazis came to power and their anti-Semitic ideology and genocidal policies, with the war taught briefly as part of their “expansion and conquest policies.”  In the 11th grade, the focus is even more directly on the Holocaust, and the curriculum guidelines note specific dates to be learned, including the anti-Jewish “Kristallnacht” pogrom in 1938.

The Russian narrative on D-Day has remained almost unchanged since the days of the Soviet Union. Historians and schoolbooks describe the invasion as a long-awaited move, happening after the course of WWII had already been shaped by Soviet victories in the battles of Stalingrad and Kursk and other battles on the Eastern Front.

Even in the country where D-Day occurred, the assault doesn’t have a central place in the teaching of World War II. The history of 20th century conflict is taught in France as a theme and no longer as a chronological list of major battles.

A week of lessons ‘not possible’

“We no longer teach as we did before, what we called ‘the history of battles,’ ” says Christine Guimonnet, who teaches history at a high school west of Paris and is secretary-general of the APHG, a French association of history and geography teachers. “Everyone will, of course, speak about June 6 because it was a major moment in the war, but we’re not going to spend a whole week on it. That’s not possible.” 

As long as they are still teaching the broader themes, French teachers may home in on specific events, like D-Day, to organize study projects and, if they have the budget, trips to Normandy beaches, museums or screenings of The Longest Day, a 1962 film about the events of D-Day. 

As cultural director at Normandy’s Caen Memorial, Isabelle Bournier deals daily with school groups that tour the museum. French children often aren’t familiar with the details of D-Day, partially because fewer families have relatives who lived through the war and can pass on their stories, she said.

Students from Normandy are different from the broader French student population, she said.

“All families are more or less impregnated by this history. It is part of us,” Bournier said. 

Верховний суд залишив без задоволення касаційну скаргу щодо затримання Вишинського

Об’єднана палата Касаційного кримінального суду у складі Верховного суду залишила без задоволення скаргу адвокатів керівника «РИА Новости-Украина» Кирила Вишинського щодо незаконності його затримання, повідомляє портал Судової влади України.

«Проголошення повного тексту судового рішення відбудеться 3 червня, ознайомитися з ним можна буде в Єдиному державному реєстрі судових рішень», – йдеться в повідомленні.

7 травня Подільський районний суд Києва 7 травня продовжив арешт керівнику «РИА Новости-Украина» Кирилу Вишинському до 22 липня.

 

Кирило Вишинський був затриманий 15 травня 2018 року. В той же день в редакції «РИА Новости Украина» і в нього вдома в Києві відбулися обшуки, під час яких у журналіста знайшли паспорт громадянина Росії і медаль «За повернення Криму». 17 травня Вишинський був заарештований і відтоді перебуває в СІЗО.

СБУ заявила, що агенція «РИА Новости-Украина», якою керував Вишинський, проводила підривну діяльність проти України.

Сам затриманий неодноразово відкидав звинувачення на свою адресу. Після затримання він заявив про вихід з українського громадянства і звернувся за допомогою до президента Росії Володимира Путіна. Російське МЗС неодноразово вимагало від України звільнити Вишинського і називало його переслідування політично мотивованим.

 

 

КВУ закликає парламент ухвалити до виборів зміни до закону про держзакупівлі

Комітет виборців України закликає Верховну Раду ухвалити зміни до закону «Про публічні закупівлі».

«Такі зміни необхідні для належної організації виборів з боку ЦВК та окружних виборчих комісій, оскільки чинний Закон «Про публічні закупівлі» не враховує специфіки проведення закупівель під час виборчого процесу. Зокрема, варто враховувати, що виборчий процес із позачергових виборів є швидкоплиним за своєю суттю, що впливає на спроможність комісій здійснювати закупівлі відповідно до чинного законодавства», – йдеться в повідомленні.

У КВУ застерігають, що без ухвалених змін під час виборів можуть виникнути проблеми із своєчасним виготовленням виборчих бюлетенів, забезпеченням печатками окружних виборчих комісій, публікації в регіональних чи місцевих ЗМІ переліку виборчих дільниць тощо.

«Чинний закон «Про публічні закупівлі» взагалі може призвести до блокування процедур закупівель та унеможливлення проведення виборів», – вказали у КВУ.

Раніше Центральна виборча комісія України також звернулась до президента, парламенту, уряду та Мінекономрозвитку щодо необхідності внесення змін до закону про держзакупівлі до виборів 21 липня, апелюючи до браку часу для проведення процедур закупівель.

Представник президента у Верховній Раді Руслан Стефанчук в ефірі телеканалу «Інтер» 24 травня не виключив, що наступного тижня відбудеться розгляд Радою президентського законопроекту про держзакупівлі під час виборчого процесу.

23 травня набрав чинності указ президента України Володимира Зеленського, який достроково припинив повноваження парламенту восьмого скликання та призначив вибори на 21 липня. Аргументуючи своє рішення, Зеленський заявляв, що коаліції у Верховній Раді не існувало з 2016 року. Цей указ Зеленського вже оскаржили у Верховному суді.

Чергові вибори до парламенту мали відбутися 27 жовтня 2019 року.

В ООН виступили на підтримку рівної участі жінок у дочасних виборах в Україні

Координаторка системи ООН в Україні і одночасно координаторка із гуманітарних питань на підтримку рівної участі жінок у парламентських виборах Оснат Лубрані виступила на підтримку рівної участі жінок в позачергових виборах в Україні.

«З огляду на майбутні парламентські вибори, від імені Організації Об’єднаних Націй, я хотіла б звернути увагу на важливість рівної участі жінок у виборах та їх представництва у наступному скликанні Верховної Ради. Жінки становлять 54 відсотки населення України, але протягом усієї історії держави вони лише у незначній мірі були представлені в уряді та Верховній Раді, і ніколи не обіймали посади президента», – йдеться у заяві представниці ООН.

Лубрані закликала всіх, хто ухвалює рішення в політичних партіях, а також обраних політиків, «проявити політичну волю і відважність у реалізації принаймні 30-відсоткової квоти для жінок-кандидаток у виборчих списках політичних партій».

«Закликаючи до виконання виборчих квот під час формування списків політичних партій, я б хотіла апелювати на зобов’язання України, згідно з Конвенцією ООН про ліквідацію всіх форм дискримінації щодо жінок, яку вона ратифікувала. Стаття 4 вимагає від держави реалізувати тимчасові спеціальні заходи, включаючи квоти, а стаття 7 закликає до ліквідації дискримінації щодо жінок у політичному та суспільному житті країни», – вказала Оснат Лубрані.

Вона додала, що в ООН готові співпрацювати з жінками та чоловіками України задля досягнення «соціальної справедливості та сталого розвитку в країні».

24 травня перший віце-спікер Ірина Геращенко повідомила, що жінки-народні депутати та інші міжфракційні жіночі об‘єднання виступили з вимогою гендерних квот – як тимчасового механізму збільшення присутності жінок в політиці. Вона повідомила, що під час консультацій з президентом Володимиром Зеленським, крім інших тем, порушила проблему неприпустимості сексистських висловлювань.

23 травня набрав чинності указ президента України Володимира Зеленського, який достроково припинив повноваження парламенту восьмого скликання та призначив вибори на 21 липня. Аргументуючи своє рішення, Зеленський заявляв, що коаліції у Верховній Раді не існувало з 2016 року. Цей указ Зеленського вже оскаржили у Верховному суді.

Чергові вибори до парламенту мали відбутися 27 жовтня 2019 року.

Trump: Japan-Mediated Iran Talks ‘Would Be Fine’

Despite the lingering shadow of North Korea over their talks, U.S. President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also turned their attention to trade and other diplomatic issues Monday in Tokyo. Trump even suggested Japan could mediate between the United States and another intransigent foe, as VOA’s Richard Green reports.

In Italy, Anti-Migrant Populist Wins Big

The big winner in Italy’s vote in the European elections was Matteo Salvini’s anti-migrant League party which took one third of the Italian vote, strengthening his grip on government. His coalition partner, the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement was the big loser. After just one year in government, the result turned around the balance of power between the two ruling parties but Salvini immediately pledged not to dissolve the ruling coalition.

Matteo Salvini was quick to thank Italians after results of Sunday’s vote in the European elections showed him ahead by far. His victory came as no surprise as his party quickly emerged as the undisputable winner and first party in Italy, garnering more than 34 percent of the vote. His coalition partner, the 5-Star Movement took half that.

It was a sensational result for a regional party that garnered just six percent of the votes in the last EU election five years ago. Salvini, before the vote, made it clear he would not change the existing coalition government, saying “my word is worth more than some votes.” He pledged to get back down to work immediately and not dissolve the ruling coalition or reshuffle the Italian government.

Luigi di Maio, leader of the 5-Star Movement issued a brief statement blaming his party’s poor showing on low voter turnout adding “now heads down and let’s work”. But voter turnout in Italy was only slightly down from the last EU elections.

Speaking at the League headquarters in Milan during the night, Salvini said “a new Europe is born.”

He said, “Not only is Italy the first party in Italy, but Marine Le Pen is the first party in France, Nigel Farage is the first country in Britain. So, Italy, France, Britain: it’s a sign of a Europe that is changing.”

 

Salvini added that he was proud that “the League is taking part in this new European Renaissance.” With the League possibly obtaining the largest number of seats by a single party in the new European parliament, Salvini said his party would be pushing for an ‘economic’ portfolio — agriculture, competition or energy — for the next EU commissioner.

 

But the Italian leader’s exultation is tempered by results elsewhere in Europe where populists made only modest gains. They won just under a quarter of seats in the European parliament – far lower than the the one third that nationalists on the continent had hoped to get.

In Japan, Trump’s Doubles Down on ‘See No Evil’ Approach to NKorea

U.S. President Donald Trump says he is not personally bothered by North Korea’s recent short-range ballistic missile tests, suggesting “it doesn’t matter” whether those launches violated United Nations Security Council resolutions. Trump made the comments in Tokyo alongside Japan’s prime minister, who has a different take on the launches, as VOA’s Bill Gallo reports.

French Police Arrest Suspect in Last Week’s Explosion in Lyon

Police in France have arrested a suspect in connection with the last week’s bomb blast in the city of Lyon that injured 13 people.

French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner announced the development on Twitter Monday without giving further details.

The Paris prosecutor’s office which handles all terrorist investigations in France, issued a statement later confirming that a 24-year-old man was arrested in Lyon and placed in custody.

He had been the target of an extensive police manhunt since Friday night when a homemade explosive device filled with screws and ball bearings was placed outside the store of a popular bakery chain in the historic center of Lyon.

Security camera footage showed a partially masked suspect wheeling a bicycle to the scene, before leaving the bag in front of the store.

Police circulated photos of the footage on Twitter, leading to “several dozen” leads.

Eight women, four men and a 10-year-old girl, were wounded in the blast, but none of the victims were in life-threatening condition, according to French authorities.

Trump Not Bothered by North Korea Missile Tests

U.S. President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe expressed differing views Monday on whether recent North Korean missile tests violated a U.N. Security Council resolution, but remained united on the ultimate goal of achieving a denuclearized Korean Peninsula.

Speaking during a joint news conference after talks in Tokyo, Trump said he viewed the tests as a bid for attention by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and that he was not personally bothered by them.

WATCH: William Gallo’s video report

Abe said the tests did violate the Security Council resolution. He also repeatedly stressed that in negotiations with North Korea his government is most interested in resolving the issue of North Korean abductions of Japanese citizens.

​Trump’s comments focused largely on economic issues, expressing his expectations of reaching trade deals with Japan and China that would reduce U.S. trade deficits, and highlighting what he sees as the “tremendous economic potential” that awaits North Korea if it makes an agreement that includes giving up its nuclear weapons.

Abe welcomed what he called the steady progress of trade talks with the United States, particularly regarding energy, digital and infrastructure sectors. He said he looks forward to further cooperation and celebrated Trump’s visit as an exhibit to the world of the “unshakeable bond” the two countries possess.

No quick breakthrough on trade was expected although both leaders have expressed a desire for a bilateral trade pact after Trump pulled the United States out of the comprehensive 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership, which Tokyo had spearheaded with Washington under Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama.

At the start of their talks Monday, Trump said he would be fine with Abe serving as a mediator between the United States and Iran.

“The prime minister has already spoken to me about that,” Trump said in response to a question from VOA. “And I do believe that Iran would like to talk and if they’d like to talk we’d like to talk also. We’ll see what happens. But I know for a fact that the prime minister is very close with the leadership of Iran.”

Trump later at the news conference beside Abe said, “I think we’ll make a deal.”

“It has a chance to be a great country, with the same leadership. We’re not looking for regime change. I just want to make that clear. We’re looking for no nuclear weapons,” Trump added.

​U.S. – Iran tensions escalated in recent weeks as Trump ended waivers that had allowed some of Iran’s biggest oil buyers to continue making purchases despite new U.S. sanctions, and as he increased the U.S. military presence in the Gulf in response to what he said were Iranian threats.

WATCH: Richard Green’s video report

Earlier Monday, Trump became the first foreign leader to meet with Emperor Naruhito, who ascended to the throne May 1.

Trump and first lady Melania Trump took part in an elaborate welcoming ceremony at the Imperial Palace.

The U.S. delegation was greeted at the palace by several dozen elementary schoolchildren waving Japanese and American flags. A military band played the U.S. “Star Spangled Banner” and Japan’s “Kimigayo” anthems.

The emperor is hosting an imperial banquet at the palace Monday night.

“Our alliance is a rich inheritance we must pass on to our children,” Trump said in remarks he read at the start of the formal dinner in the palace’s largest banquet hall, known as the Houmei-den, which was attended by 180 guests.

Before Trump departs Japan on Tuesday, he is to visit the naval base at Yokosuka to tour a Japanese helicopter carrier and address American service personnel in conjunction with the U.S. Memorial Day holiday (observed on Monday).

New European Parliament Projected to Have More Far-Right Lawmakers

European leaders have joined voters in casting their ballots to elect a new 751-member European Union parliament. The polling began Thursday but 21 of the 28 member nations held elections on Sunday. About 400 million people were eligible to vote. VOA’s Zlatica Hoke reports the voter turnout was the highest in 20 years.

Коломойський вважає, що Україні слід оголосити дефолт

Український олігарх Ігор Коломойський вважає, що Україні слід оголосити дефолт. Про це він заявив у інтерв’ю видання Financial Times.

На думку Коломойського, Україні слід наслідувати приклад Греції, яка у 2015 році стала першою розвиненою країною, що не змогла повернути кредит МВФ, хоча відмова від співпраці була тимчасовою, пише газета. Коломойський переконаний, що Києву не слід боятися дефолту. Він зазначив, що Аргентина багато разів зазнавала дефолту, але її борги були реструктуровані і у країни «все нормально».  

Олігарх зазначив, що якщо президент Володимир Зеленський буде прислухатися до Заходу, то його чекають такі ж низькі рейтинги, як у екс-президента Петра Порошенка.

Місія Міжнародного валютного фонду розпочала роботу в Україні 21 травня. Представник МВФ в Україні Йоста Люнгман заявляв, що місія перебуватиме в Україні два тижні й оцінюватиме виконання поточної програми співпраці з фондом.

Читайте також: Відставка уряду Гройсмана може призвести до втрати Україною траншу МВФ (огляд преси)

Вранці 22 травня агентство «Українські новини» написало, що місія МВФ «сьогодні чи завтра повертається до Вашингтона» у зв’язку з рішенням розпустити парламент та через певні кадрові призначення в Адміністрації президента.

Водночас у прес-службі МВФ Радіо Свобода запевнили, що експерти Міжнародного валютного фонду «продовжують зустрічі з представниками влади України».

Прес-служба президента України повідомила, що Володимир Зеленський планує зустрітися з представниками Міжнародного валютного фонду наступного тижня.

Читайте також: П’ять економічних викликів для нового президента

18 грудня 2018 року посол України у США Валерій Чалий повідомив, що в штаб-квартирі Міжнародного валютного фонду у Вашингтоні затвердили виділення Україні фінансової підтримки для продовження реалізації важливих реформ.

Обсяг нової програми – 3,9 мільярда доларів. Згідно з повідомленням, вона має стати основою для економічної політики уряду в 2019 році – передбачається, що ця політика буде зосереджена на зниженні інфляції та реформах оподаткування, фінансового і енергетичного секторів.

21 грудня Україна отримала перший транш за новою програмою співпраці з Міжнародним валютним фондом обсягом близько 1,4 мільярда доларів.

Через негоду на заході України загинули 2 людини – ДСНС

Через несприятливі погодні умови на заході України загинули дві людини – 57-річний житель Івано-Франківської області і 11-річний хлопчик із Закарпатської області. Про це 26 травня повідомили у Державній службі з надзвичайних ситуацій.

«В результаті несприятливих погодних умов протягом останнього тижня на території Закарпатської, Івано-Франківської, Львівської, Рівненської, Тернопільської, Хмельницької та Чернівецької областей, за оперативними даними, частково підтоплено близько 2 тисячі будинків, понад 7,3 тисячі домогосподарств, 8,8 тисячі гектарів сільгоспугідь у 162 населених пунктах, розмито близько 100 кілометрів покриття автомобільних доріг, знеструмлено 197 і порушено газопостачання 2 населених пунктів», – розповів 25 травня перший заступник голови ДСНС Олег Мельчуцький.

За його словами, найскладніша ситуація у Івано-Франківській та Закарпатській областях.

«На жаль, маємо двох загиблих – 57-річного жителя Івано-Франківської області і 11-річного хлопчика із Закарпаття”, – додав головуючий на засіданні комісії віце-прем’єр-міністр Геннадій Зубко.

Рятувальники попередили про продовження пiдвищення рiвнiв води у річках у регіоні щонайменше до 27 травня.

В Україні 27 травня очікується тепла погода, подекуди дощитиме – синоптики

В Україні 27 травня очікується тепла погода, місцями можливі дощі та грози. Про це повідомили у Укргідрометцентрі.

За даними синоптиків короткочасний дощ і гроза місцями можливі вдень у західних, північних та центральних областях. Температура вночі 9-14 градусів, вдень 23-28.

У Києві завтра очікується температура до 26 градусів тепла, вдень можливий дощ.

Як вказано на сайті Центральної геофізичної обсерваторії, найвищу температуру у Києві зафіксували у 2007 році на позначці 33,6 градуса тепла, найнижчу в 1994 році – 1,7 градуса тепла.

Imprisoned PKK Leader Calls For End to Hunger Strikes

Thousands of prisoners in Turkey ended their hunger strikes Sunday that had been mounted to force Turkey to end jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan’s isolation at Imrali Island prison.

Earlier Sunday, Ocalan’s lawyers read a statement from their client calling for an end to the strikes.

“I expect the action to come to an end…” Ocalan said in a statement read by one of his lawyers at a press conference in Istanbul.

An estimated two to three thousand detainees throughout Turkey’s prison system had participated in the strikes.

Twice this month, Turkey allowed the 70-year-old imprisoned leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) to meet with his lawyers after an eight-year hiatus.

PKK had been designated a terrorist group by Turkey, the European Union and the United States.

Ocalan’s call for an end to the strikes and the resumption of a lawyers’ visits comes ahead of an election in Istanbul.

Analysts say the moves could foreshadow a new peace process, four years after government talks with Ocalan collapsed.

Israeli President Shocked by German Skullcap Comment

Israel’s president said Sunday he is shocked by a German official’s comment that he wouldn’t advise Jews to wear skullcaps in parts of the country, which is drawing mixed reactions at home.

Felix Klein, the government’s anti-Semitism commissioner, was quoted Saturday as saying: “I cannot recommend to Jews that they wear the skullcap at all times everywhere in Germany.” He didn’t elaborate on what places and times might be risky.

“The statement of the German government’s anti-Semitism commissioner that it would be preferable for Jews not wear a kippa in Germany out of fear for their safety, shocked me deeply,” Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said in a statement.

He added that “we will never submit, will never lower our gaze and will never react to anti-Semitism with defeatism – and expect and demand our allies act in the same way.”

Government statistics released earlier this month showed that the number of anti-Semitic and anti-foreigner incidents rose in Germany last year, despite an overall drop in politically motivated crimes.

Germany’s main Jewish leader, Josef Schuster, told news agency dpa “it has long been a fact that Jews are potentially exposed to danger in some big cities if they can be recognized as Jews.” He added that he pointed that out two years ago, “so it is to be welcomed if this situation gets more attention at the highest political level.”

Others were sharply critical of Klein’s comment. Michel Friedman, a former deputy leader of Germany’s main Jewish group, said it was an admission of failure and that “the state must ensure that Jews can show themselves everywhere without fear.”

Bavaria’s state interior minister, Joachim Herrmann, said that wearing a skullcap is part of religious freedom. “Everyone can and should wear his skullcap wherever and whenever he wants,” he said.

Klein himself told dpa that his statement had been “provocative” and he “wanted to initiate a debate about the safety of the Jewish community in our country.”

“Of course I believe that there must not be no-go areas anywhere in Germany for Jews or members of other minorities,” he said.

Anti-Semitic Attacks on the Rise in Germany

Germany’s anti-Semitism commissioner has advised Jews that it may be dangerous in certain parts of the country to wear the kippahs, also known as skullcaps, traditionally worn by Jewish men. He did not specify which areas of the country he was referring to.

“I cannot advise Jews to wear the kippah everywhere all the time in Germany,” Felix Klein told the Funke press group in an interview published Saturday.

Klein’s warning comes amid a rising number of anti-Semitic attacks in Germany.

The commissioner said “the lifting of inhibitions and the uncouthness which is on the rise in society” has contributed to the growing number of attacks. “The internet and social media have largely contributed to this, but so have constant attacks against our culture of remembrance.”

Anti-Semitism is “deeply rooted” in German society and “has always been here,” Claudia Vanoni, Germany’s top legal expert on anti-Semitism told AFP, the French news agency. “But I think that recently, it has again become louder, more aggressive and flagrant.”

In an interview with Handelsblatt newspaper, Justice Minister Katarina Barley said the attacks are “shameful for our country.”

Commissioner Klein has blamed the far right for the majority of anti-Semitic attacks. Another contributing factor, he said, is the arrival of a number of Muslim asylum seekers in Germany who may also be influenced by some television stations “which transmit a dreadful image of Israel and Jews.”

Experts: Combine US, S. Korean Missile Systems to Boost Defense vs. North

Kim Dong-hyun of the VOA Korean Service contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — South Korea should integrate its missile defense system with that of the U.S. to maximize the combined capabilities to counter a potential incoming flight of North Korea’s missiles across the border, experts said in the wake of Pyongyang’s two missile launches in early May.

South Korea’s missile defense system and the U.S. antimissile defense system deployed in South Korea are coordinated but operate independently.

“The whole system would work better if it was fully integrated, if it was a completely combined operation,” said Bruce Bechtol, a former intelligence officer at the Defense Intelligence Agency who is now a professor at Angelo State University in Texas.

​Why not integrate systems?

The lack of integration is rooted in regional history. The South Korean government, whether it was conservative or liberal, never merged its system with the U.S. system for political reasons, in part, because integrating it would mean joining the U.S. missile defense alliance in the region that includes Japan, South Korea’s colonial adversary toward which South Korea’s public sentiment has been historically antagonistic, according to Bruce Bennett, a senior defense analyst at the Rand Corp. research center.

Streamlining the command and control of the two missile defense systems with autonomous command and control would cut the time needed to analyze data, share information, and cue the proper system for targeting and intercepting an incoming missile, according to David Maxwell, a former U.S. Special Forces colonel and current fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

On May 17, the Pentagon announced the U.S. had approved a $314 million sale of air defense missiles to South Korea.

South Korea’s missile defense system, termed the Korean Air and Missile Defense (KAMD), includes Aegis and Patriot systems, and is designed to protect South Korea from missiles that fly at different altitudes and distance by detecting, tracking and intercepting incoming missiles in the air. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD), which currently falls under the U.S. missile defense system, is also deployed in South Korea.

Aegis, a sea-based missile defense system, and THAAD are area defense weapons that have the capabilities to defend wide areas against missiles that fly high altitudes. And, the Patriot system, known as pointed defense weapons, can intercept missiles directed against smaller areas such as air base, according to Maxwell.

​No perfect defense

But they don’t provide a perfect defense that prevents missiles from getting through, he added.

“There’s no impenetrable shield,” Maxwell said. “There [is] always going to be a gap, a seam, a weakness, that the enemy is always trying to exploit and defenders are always trying to fix and find a better way. This is constantly a game of where capabilities continue to evolve.”

This was part of what was happening when North Korea tested a new missile on May 4 that is considered to be similar to the Russian Iskander, a nuclear-capable missile that flies lower than the short-range ballistic missiles North Korea tested before.

“A ballistic missile leaves the earth’s atmosphere and glides back down,” Bechtol said. “This [test] missile does not, as far as I can tell, leave the Earth’s atmosphere. It operates more like a cruise missile than a ballistic missile.”

A cruise missile flies on a relatively straight line and at a lower altitude than a ballistic missile, which arcs up before curving down toward a target.

​Russian-like missile poses challenges

Experts said if the new missile is modeled after the Iskander, it could pose multiple challenges and could exploit gaps in the existing missile-defense coverage in South Korea. 

The new missile’s “flattened flight path” toward a target “makes it difficult to intercept” with current defense systems, said Michael Elleman, a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

The North Korean version of the Iskander does not fly higher than 50 kilometers and can travel a ground distance as far as 280 kilometers, according to Elleman.

But THAAD and the Aegis SM-3 interceptor operate at an altitude above 50 kilometers, and the Patriot system’s effective intercepting range is at an altitude of about 25 to 30 kilometers with the Patriot variant PAC-3 Missile Segment Enhancement (MSE) interceptor extending its flight to an altitude of about 40 kilometers.

That leaves “a gap in interceptor coverage” of at least 10 kilometers between the missile defense systems that operate at roughly 40 to 50 kilometers, said Ellemen. “The Iskander spends most of its flight path in this gap, making it difficult to intercept.”

The Iskander can fly at a high speed, presenting another challenge for the current missile defense system.

Bennett said, “The Iskander flies perhaps 20-25 percent faster than the Scud,” a series of tactical ballistic missiles that could travel five times the speed of sound, potentially capable of reaching South Korea in about five minutes, Bennett said.

“THAAD and the SM-3 on the Aegis [equipped] ships should be able to handle this speed. [But] the Iskander flies low, [a] potential challenge for THAAD and the SM-3,” he added.

Most accurate North Korean missile

The Iskander can be mounted on mobile launch platforms, meaning it can be moved and fired quickly.

“It’s a solid fuel missile,” Bechtol said, explaining that the fuel can be loaded ahead of launch “and moved much more quickly than liquid-fuel missiles.” The latter need fueling just before launch.

The Iskander’s maneuverability also makes it difficult for THAAD, Aegis SM-3, and the Patriot system to intercept.

“The Iskander has fins mounted at the back of the missile, which allow it to maneuver during the entire flight,” Ellemen explained. “This makes it much more difficult to predict an intercept location and launches the interceptor on the optimal path for an engagement resulting in destruction of the threat.”

Bechtol said, “It would be the most accurate missile the North Koreans have ever had, so accurate that they could actually fire out … [and] target barracks, flight lines for aircraft, headquarter buildings.”

With the missile test, “the North Koreans are showing us that they have a missile [with which] they can accurately target Osan Air Base or Camp Humphreys in a very real, in a very dangerous way,” Bechtol said, citing American installations in South Korea.

“They were able to keep in accordance with the agreement they made with [President Donald] Trump, and at the same time, threaten the United States and South Korea in a very compelling way,” he added.

When the Pyongyang government began talks with Washington last year, it pledged to suspend nuclear and long-range missile tests.

​Complicated political situation

Merging South Korean and U.S. missile defense systems could be hampered by the political situation in South Korea, according to Maxwell. Public attitudes have changed little since 2017, when hundreds of South Korean citizens protested the installation of THAAD at a U.S. military south of Seoul.

“I just don’t see the political will for that in South Korea among majority of the people or the current rule and government,” Maxwell said.

Bennett said a North Korean missile that slipped under defense systems could devastate the peninsula, depending on the type of warhead it carried, “… which in theory could be conventional, nuclear or chemical,” he said. “So the defense would turn to passive defense: protecting people in shelters with masks and protective clothing.”

According to Maxwell, a variant of the Patriot interceptor, the PACT 3 Guidance Enhanced Missile (GEM-T) under the U.S. missile defense system in South Korea is better able “to defeat tactical ballistic missiles and aircraft and cruise missiles” and could potentially intercept the new kind of missile North Korea tested.

Big Toys and a Sandbox for Grown-Ups at Las Vegas Attraction

Most kids love digging in the sand … and many never outgrow that. A new and unusual attraction nicknamed “sand box for grown-ups” is a big hit among teenagers and adults in Las Vegas, Nevada. It’s a heavy equipment playground that gives customers a change to operate gigantic, earth-moving bulldozers and hydraulic excavators, get tested on their skills and just have fun. Roman Mamonov tried his hand at operating some of the biggest construction vehicles there. Anna Rice narrates his story.

Loading...
X