НСТУ: Росія хоче створити негативну інформаційну атмосферу довкола «Євробачення»

Національна суспільна телерадіокомпанія України як мовник-організатор конкурсу «Євробачення-2017» заявляє, що у співпраці з Європейською спілкою мовлення (EBU) продовжує підготовку заходу, а позицію Росії в виборі учасниці розцінює як бажання створити негативну інформаційну атмосферу навколо конкурсу.

«Відмова Першого каналу (Росія) від трансляції «Євробачення» доводить, що попри задекларовану повагу до основоположних цінностей Євробачення, ключовими серед яких є взаємоповага та аполітичність, метою російської сторони від самого початку була не участь у конкурсі, а створення негативної інформаційної атмосфери навколо підготовки та проведення конкурсу», – йдеться в заяві НСТУ від 14 квітня.

Національна суспільна телерадіокомпанія України також нагадала, що офіційно повідомила EBU про заборону Службою безпеки України в’їзду на територію України учасниці від Росії Юлії Самойлової.

«Поважаючи бажання ЄМС забезпечити участь у пісенному конкурсі представників 43-х країн, підтримуючи традиційний дух «Євробачення», українська сторона неодноразово пропонувала Росії направити в Київ учасника, який не порушував законодавство України. Однак, російська сторона залишила своє рішення незмінним», – додали в НСТУ.

Напередодні в Європейському союзі мовлення «рішуче засудили» рішення України заборонити в’їзд російській учасниці конкурсу популярної пісні «Євробачення» в Києві після того, як у Москві заявили про відмову транслювати цьогорічний конкурс на території Росії. Російський телевізійний «Перший канал», що мав цього року транслювати конкурс, заявив, що відмовляється від трансляції через ситуацію навколо російської конкурсантки, якій заборонений в’їзд до України через порушення українських законів.

Півфінали конкурсу «Євробачення-2017» відбудуться в Києві 9 і 11 травня, фінал – 13 травня. Україну цього року на «Євробаченні» представлятиме представлятиме гурт О. Тorvald із піснею Time.

 

 

 

НА ЦЮ Ж ТЕМУ:

​(Офіційне відео пісні Time гурту О.Тorvald, який представлятиме Україну на «Євробаченні-2017»)

Відлік до «Євробачення»: готовність МВЦ, квитки, ремонт «Лівобережної»

Наглядова рада «UA: Перший» закликала організаторів «Євробачення» поважати суверенітет України

«Євробачення-2017»: влада Росії підступно використовує Юлію Самойлову

«Євробачення-2017» і Самойлова. Це гидкий цинізм пропаганди Кремля – Кузьменко​

Журналісти-розслідувачі заявляють про обстріли знімальної групи під Києвом

Журналісти-розслідувачі проекту «Слідство.Інфо» заявляють, що їх обстріляли зі зброї під час збору інформації для програми. Під селищем Плюти Київської області група вела зйомку з дрона маєтку одного з українських олігархів, розповів Радіо Свобода журналіст Максим Опанасенко.

Коли журналісти вже завершили зйомку, з боку лісу по них відкрила вогонь зі зброї невідома особа. Знімальній групі довелося терміново втікати з місця події.

«Фактично, це Конча-Заспа. Відзнялися абсолютно спокійно. При цьому ми намагаємося не порушувати приватний простір – ми максимально підіймаємо дрон для того, щоб було видно, але не залітаємо на територію об’єкту», – розповідає в коментарі Радіо Свобода журналіст Максим Опанасенко.

«Коли ми почали розбирати дрон, щоб сховати у багажник, то почули постріли, десь метр-півтора над автівкою. Водій, дякувати Богу, дуже швидко зреагував, сказав нам ховатися, заскочив на водійське місце і дав по газах. Ми чули п’ять пострілів», – згадує журналіст.

Постраждалих немає, автомобіль також не зазнав пошкоджень. Максим Опанасенко переконаний, що метою стрілка було залякування. Окрім знімальної групи і її автомобіля нікого навкруги не було, тож журналісти впевнені, що мішенню були саме вони.

До поліції журналісти не зверталися. Як пояснює Максим Опанасенко, залишатися на місці було небезпечно, а зараз не бачить сенсу заявляти до поліції через те, що пояснити тепер ситуацію правоохоронцям буде надто складно. Журналісти намагають самостійно вирахувати, з якого маєтку велися постріли і, можливо, проведуть власне розслідування. Поки що вони не розкривають інформацію, чий будинок знімали.

За словами Максима Опанасенка, ідентифікувати їх як журналістів здалеку було неможливо, а для з’ясування мети їхнього перебування в зазначеному місці до них ніхто не підходив.

«Слідство.Інфо» займається журналістськими розслідуваннями, зокрема щодо корупції в органах влади.

Seasonal Businesses Scramble to Stay Afloat Without Foreign Workers

Along northeastern Cape Cod off the coast of Massachusetts, April doesn’t usually equate with sunshine and sandcastles. The month is mostly a time of waiting for the fog and chill to lift off the Atlantic Ocean and the tourists to arrive.

But this year is a problem for seasonal businesses, whose model is built around five-to-six-month, low-skilled jobs in areas like hospitality. Few Americans are willing to fill them and now, thousands of foreign seasonal workers may not be allowed into the U.S. to take them.

Changes to the U.S. temporary work visa program, called H2B, are keeping out the workers that businesses count on.

For affected businesses, the financial loss could be plenty.

“It could be 20 percent,” said Allen Sylvester, president of American Tent & Table, Inc., a family-owned tent rental and party accessory business in Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

Sylvester, who has been with the company since 1996, says it earns roughly 85 to 90 percent of its profits in five months — the region’s outdoor wedding season. Fully staffed, the company employs seven to eight Americans and 13 H2B visa workers.

Normally it’s the former group Sylvester has a hard time hiring. But last September, Congress failed to renew a provision that effectively quadrupled the number of H2B visas available in 2016 by not counting returnees against the annual cap. This year, instead of potentially 264,000 visas, there are 66,000 — half allocated in the spring, the other half in the fall.

Businesses in colder areas like Cape Cod, which typically have later start dates, find themselves at a loss. By the time many could complete their visa applications, the cap had been reached.

“Instead of bringing 3,000 workers here, we right now are bringing 300 workers,” said Jane Nichols Bishop, president of Peak Season Workforce, a family-owned business that helps local companies secure annual H2B visas.

Bishop, who calls herself “Mama Visa,” says the 90-day application process that businesses must follow to gain seasonal employment is stringent, including evidence of advertising to recruit American workers.

Of the 171 applications she personally filed for clients, Bishop says 24 made their way through the Department of Homeland Security before all the visas were gone.

Why not hire more Americans?

At 3.4 percent, the February unemployment rate in Massachusetts is lower than the current national average, 4.5 percent, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

But as Falmouth, Massachusetts, resident Paul Skudder said, the numbers don’t paint the whole picture on Cape Cod, a community with a growing number of retirees and decreasing number of youth.

“There is a limited number of job opportunities on the Cape for college-educated professional or near professional people, which overall leads to a little bit of an exodus of bright, educated young people,” Skudder said.

Eligible job seekers who are willing to accept low-skilled employment, generally need a permanent source of income. And students can offer just three months of labor during their summer breaks, not five or six.

The well-being of the younger population is also a factor. In 2015, Cape Cod suffered the highest per capita death rate by opioid overdose in Massachusetts and remains one of the most affected areas in the country.

“A lot of the kids I used to know have now passed away,” said Prince Wright, who attended high school in Falmouth. “That’s the big problem right now … most of our locals are not coming in no more. Either they’re locked up or they moved away because of the changes on the Cape.”

More effort needed?

But along Main Street in the Cape’s largest town, not all are convinced that businesses are trying their best to hire local.

“It’s good for the [foreigners] that are coming over here on work visas, but it also takes away from the people that are living on the streets that can work,” said Mary Richard. “I just think it’s hard on the people here too.”

Politicians are divided on the H2B visa program, seeing it as either economically exploitative or a job-killer for Americans.

Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress, send mixed messages. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the country’s top law enforcement official, has called the H2B program “detrimental to wages and job opportunities of American workers.” But Donald Trump, before he was president, employed H2B workers during peak resort season at his Florida golf club, Mar-a-Lago.

H2B-reliant businesses worry that the visa is unfairly lumped into Trump’s hard-line stance on immigration. And in Bishop’s mind, some legislators simply don’t understand seasonal economies.

“When people come to Cape Cod and the islands, they come to see and visit us. It’s full employment, we are busy, there’s traffic, so they don’t even realize there is a labor shortage,” Bishop said. “But when you come here in January, you may be the only car on the road for quite a while.”

Hiring strategy

Jim Underdah, general manager at the Coonamessett Inn, considers himself one of the lucky few to secure his share of foreign seasonal workers from Jamaica. Still, a backlog in the system has delayed their arrival and forced him to repurpose the limited workforce he retains year-round.

In anticipation of this, Underdah says many businesses like his choose to employ workers full-time even during the offseason, when he doesn’t need them.

“I have people in the kitchen that we work 40 hours for the winter, so they’re not going to leave me,” Underdah said. “They’re gonna say, ‘Hey, they’re treating us good.’ They’re going to be here this spring. They’re going to get me through till hopefully the workers get in.”

Paul Dean, who runs a seafood retail and catering business, was not as lucky. Lacking the workforce he needs to keep his multiple operations running, he says he may be forced to close one of his locations a couple days a week.

Like Sylvester, Dean predicts this would amount to a loss of 20 percent of annual income.

“That means I’m buying 20 percent less product from local vendors,” Dean said. “We’re obviously collecting 20 percent less in meals tax toward the state. We’re not paying payroll taxes … there’s a huge trickle-down effect.”

Dean and Sylvester are crossing their fingers for a last-ditch effort by lawmakers to reinstate an H2B returning worker exemption before April 28, as part of its fiscal year 2017 federal spending bill. But in case that doesn’t happen, Sylvester offers last-resort advice for summer tourists.

“If you’re going to stay over, bring your sheets and some towels,” he joked, “because there’s going to be no one to clean your room.”

WATCH: One Business Owner Talks about the Challenges

Russia Urged to End Torture, Killing of Gays in Chechnya

International organizations are demanding Russia investigate the abduction, detention and killing of gay and bisexual men in the country’s southern republic of Chechnya.

United Nations human rights experts on Thursday called on Russian authorities to “put an end to the persecution of people perceived to be gay or bisexual in the Chechen Republic who are living in a climate of fear fueled by homophobic speeches by local authorities.”

“It is crucial that reports of abductions, unlawful detentions, torture, beatings and killings of men perceived to be gay or bisexual are investigated thoroughly,” they added.

The appeals follow reports in the respected Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta that police in the predominantly Muslim republic of Chechnya have rounded up more than 100 men suspected of homosexuality and that at least three of them have been killed.

Chechen authorities have denied the reports, while a spokesman for leader Ramzan Kadyrov insisted there were no gay people in Chechnya.

“Nobody can detain or harass anyone who is simply not present in the republic,” Alvi Karimov told the Interfax news agency. “If such people existed in Chechnya, law enforcement would not have to worry about them since their own relatives would have sent them to where they could never return.”

Separately, the director of the human rights office at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Michael Georg Link, said Thursday that Moscow must “urgently investigate the alleged disappearance, torture and other ill-treatment” of gay men in Chechnya.

Novaya Gazeta also reported this month that Chechen authorities are running secret prisons, branded “concentration camps,” in the town of Argun where men suspected of being gay are kept and tortured.

After two separatist wars in the 1990s, predominantly Muslim Chechnya became increasingly conservative under late President Akhmat Kadyrov and then his son Ramzan.

US Wary of Russian Role in Afghanistan as Moscow Holds Talks

As the United States and Russia clash on Syria, another war-torn nation could play out as a renewed theater for the U.S.-Russia rivalry: Afghanistan.

Thursday, U.S. forces dropped what was being called the largest non-nuclear bomb on a reported Islamic State militant complex in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar.

The U.S. strike came a day before Russia is to host multi-nation talks on prospects for Afghan security and national reconciliation, the third such round since December.

Eleven countries are set to take part in Friday’s discussions in Moscow, including Afghanistan, China, Iran, Pakistan and India. Former Soviet Central Asian states have been invited to attend for the first time.

The Afghan Taliban said Thursday that they would not take part.

“We cannot call these negotiations [in Moscow] as a dialogue for the restoration of peace in Afghanistan,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told VOA. “This meeting stems from political agendas of the countries who are organizing it. This has really nothing to do with us, nor do we support it.”

The spokesman reiterated insurgents’ traditional stance that U.S.-led foreign troops would have to leave Afghanistan before any conflict resolution talks could be initiated.

The United States was also invited to the Moscow talks, but Washington declined, saying it had not been informed of the agenda beforehand and was unclear about the meeting’s motives.

Undermining NATO

American military officials suspect Russia’s so-called Afghan peace diplomacy is aimed at undermining NATO and have accused Moscow of arming the Taliban.

“I think it is fair to assume they may be providing some sort of support to [the Taliban], in terms of weapons or other things that may be there,” U.S. Central Command Chief General Joseph Votel told members of the House Armed Services Committee in March. He said he thought Russia was “attempting to be an influential party in this part of the world.”

For its part, Moscow has denied that it is supporting the Afghan Taliban.

“These fabrications are designed, as we have repeatedly underlined, to justify the failure of the U.S. military and politicians in the Afghan campaign.There is no other explanation,” said Zamir Kabulov, the Kremlin’s special envoy to Afghanistan.

In a separate statement Thursday, the Taliban also denied receiving military aid from Russia, though the group defended “political understanding” with Afghanistan’s neighbors and regional countries.

Anna Borshchevskaya of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said reports of Moscow supporting the Taliban were not new.

“The official Russian position on the Taliban is that they see it as a group that could help fight ISIS, but this is something that even some Taliban spokesmen have denied, since ISIS and the Taliban reached an understanding about a year ago,” Borshchevskaya said.

Putin’s motive

She said that if the allegations of Russian support for the Taliban were true, Russian President Vladimir Putin was most likely motivated by his desire to undermine the West.

“Certainly one motivation could be taking advantage of regional chaos, and to assert Russia’s influence at the expense of the U.S., taking advantage of a U.S. retreat from the Middle East and elsewhere and [to] undermine NATO and the U.S.” Borshchevskaya said, “This has been Putin’s pattern.”

U.S. President Donald Trump has made few public statements on Afghanistan, and his administration is still weighing whether to deploy more American troops to try to reverse the course of the war.

Thursday’s strike in Nangarhar marked a major step by the Trump administration in Afghanistan, in which there has been a U.S. military presence since 2001.

During a March 31 NATO foreign ministers meeting in Brussels, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson reaffirmed U.S. support for the alliance’s mission in Afghanistan.

“NATO’s work in Afghanistan remains critical. The United States is committed to the Resolute Support Mission and to our support for Afghan forces,” Tillerson said.

Some 13,000 NATO troops, including 8,400 Americans, are part of the support mission, tasked with training Afghanistan’s 300,000-member national security and defense forces.

Michael Kugelman, South Asia expert at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson Center, said he expected continuity in U.S. policy toward Afghanistan between the Obama and Trump administrations.

“The statement made by Tillerson at a recent NATO meeting could well have been uttered by an Obama official,” Kugelman said. “The focus on training, advising and assisting and the call for reconciliation mirror exactly the Obama administration’s priorities.”

More troops

But the South Asia analyst noted one important policy difference: U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan.

“Obama was an anti-war president who was never comfortable keeping large numbers of troops in Afghanistan. Trump is unlikely to be as constrained,” Kugelman said.

“Look for Trump to send in several thousand more troops,” he said. “This is a request that the generals in Afghanistan have made for years, and Trump is more likely to defer to the U.S. military’s wishes on this than Obama was.”

As for Russian involvement in Afghanistan following the former Soviet Union’s occupation of the South Asian country from 1979 to 1989, Kugelman said that even if Russia were engaging the Taliban to undercut U.S. influence,  the two nations ultimately hope for the same outcome in Afghanistan.

“The ironic thing is that Washington and Moscow both want the same endgame in Afghanistan — an end to the war, preferably through a reconciliation process — but they simply can’t get on the same page about how to proceed,” Kugelman said.

Trump, Yellen May Not Be an Odd Couple After All

At first glance, U.S. President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen may have little in common.

Yellen is an academic economist and veteran of Democratic administrations who is committed to an open global economy, while Trump is a real estate mogul with an electoral base suspicious of the economic order Yellen helped to create.

Yet the two may have interests in common now that Trump is president and both want to get as many Americans working as possible.

Since her appointment as Fed chair in February 2014, Yellen has kept interest rates low and she currently pledges to raise them only slowly even though unemployment, at 4.5 percent, is at its lowest in nearly 10 years.

Meanwhile, Trump’s election campaign promises to cut taxes, spend money on infrastructure and deregulate banking, have helped propel a surge in the U.S. Conference Board’s consumer confidence index to its highest level since the internet stocks crash 16 years ago.

Former Fed staff and colleagues who know Yellen said Trump’s surprising remarks this week in a Wall Street Journal interview, in which he did not rule out Yellen’s reappointment to a new four-year term next year, are not as outlandish as they may appear now that the president has a vested interest in keeping markets and the economy on an even keel.

And the same staff and colleagues say Yellen may well accept reappointment, despite Trump’s criticism of her during last year’s election campaign.

Many in Trump’s Republican party have called for tighter monetary policy and a less activist Fed, but “the president would not really find that useful,” said former Fed vice chair Donald Kohn.

If Trump fills three existing Federal Reserve board vacancies with people Yellen thinks she could work with, “it would be really difficult to turn down” a reappointment when her term as chair expires in February 2018.

“If she continues to do well, he’d be nuts to ditch her for an unknown quantity,” said University of California, Berkeley, economics professor Andrew Rose, a long-time colleague and co-author with Yellen of an oft-cited study of labor markets.

Yellen took over from Ben Bernanke as Fed chair in February 2014 with the U.S. economic recovery from the 2008 financial crisis still on shaky ground, and she has made no secret she puts a priority on growth in jobs and wages and a broad recovery in U.S. household wealth.

In a slow return to more normal monetary policy, Yellen has stopped the purchase of additional financial securities by the Fed and in December 2015 began raising short term interest rates for the first time in 10 years.

So far those policy shifts have been engineered with little apparent impact on job growth, and so mesh with Trump’s core election campaign promises to restore employment and earnings.

The slow rise in interest rates in the past year has also happened while U.S. stock prices have risen to record highs, though Trump has claimed the credit for himself.

Precedent for Fed Chair to Stay On

There is precedent for Trump to stick with a former president’s Fed chair appointment. Paul Volcker, Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke, the three previous Fed chairs, served at least two four-year terms and were nominated by both Democratic and Republican presidents.

However it may be a more difficult step for Trump.

During last year’s election campaign, Trump accused Yellen of accepting orders from then President Obama to keep interest rates low for political reasons, and he said he would replace her as Fed chair because she is not a Republican party member.

In a particularly biting moment last year, in a campaign video advertisement, he labeled her as among the “global special interests” who had ruined life for middle America.

 

The Fed on Thursday said it had no response to Trump’s comments published on Wednesday on Yellen and or on whether Yellen would consider a second term.

Much Could Still Go Wrong

Some of Trump’s advisers and some Republican lawmakers want a more conservative Fed in which the chair has less power and would see a Yellen reappointment as yet another step away from his promise to “drain the swamp” of the Washington establishment.

There are also three current vacancies on the Fed’s seven member Board of Governors, and unorthodox new members could make it difficult for Yellen to manage policy or accept another four-year term.

But if the choice is her consensus style or someone unproven in their ability to manage public and market expectations, “he’d be wise to reappoint her,” said Joseph Gagnon, a former Fed staffer and Berkeley colleague of Yellen’s currently at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

“I don’t see what is in his interests to appoint someone who is going to jack up interest rates.”

Polish Leader Welcomes NATO Troops, Hails ‘Historic Moment’

Polish leaders welcomed a new multinational NATO battalion to Poland on Thursday, with the president calling it “a historic moment for my country.”

 

The near-permanent deployment of a NATO battalion under U.S. command marks the first time NATO troops have been placed so close to Russian territory, a step the Kremlin denounces as a threat to its own security.

 

But Polish President Andrzej Duda said the deployment, to Poles, stands as a symbol of liberation and inclusion in the Western democratic world.

 

“It’s not an exaggeration to say that generations of Poles have waited for this moment since the end of the Second World War,” Duda said in the northeastern town of Orzysz as he addressed the troops and the U.S. and British ambassadors.

 

The battalion of about 1,000 troops is led by the United States, but includes troops from Britain and Romania. Croatian troops are expected to join later.

 

Their base of operations, Orzysz, is 60 kilometers (37 miles) from the border with Kaliningrad, a Russian territory on the Baltic Sea separated from the Russian mainland.

 

While NATO has held exercises in the region in past years, the deployment marks the alliance’s first continuous troop presence in the area that was considered by defense experts as vulnerable.

 

Defense Minister Antoni Macierewicz said the NATO presence guarantees the security of NATO’s eastern flank.

 

The NATO deployment is separate from a U.S. battalion of 3,500 troops that arrived in Poland earlier this year and which is headquartered in southwestern Poland, near the German border.

 

Both missions are responses to calls for greater U.S. and NATO protection by a region fearful after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and its support for a rebel insurgency in eastern Ukraine.

Tesla Set to Unveil Electric Semi-truck in September

Tesla CEO Elon Musk says the company plans to unveil an electric semi-truck in September.

 

Musk tweeted the announcement Thursday. He offered no other details about the semi, such as whether it will be equipped with Tesla’s partially self-driving Autopilot mode.

 

Musk also said the company plans to unveil a pickup truck in 18 to 24 months.

 

Tesla currently sells two electric vehicles, the Model S sedan and Model X SUV. Its lower-cost Model 3 electric car is due out by the end of this year.

 

But Musk revealed last summer that the Palo Alto, California-based company is working on several more vehicles, including the semi and a minibus.

 

Tesla shares rose nearly 3 percent in late trading Thursday in response to Musk’s tweet.

Chile’s President Bachelet Presents Bill to Boost Pensions

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet announced on Wednesday evening that she was sending to Congress a bill that would dramatically increase the size of

public pensions in the face of growing opposition to the nation’s current system.

The bill would include an increase in the amount of savings held collectively, a new 5 percent payroll tax, and a corresponding boost in retirement savings. Current pensioners would see savings rise by around 20 percent, while workers currently paying into the system would see increases of up to 50

percent.

“We must advance toward a truly mixed social security system, where all play their part, where solidarity comes from personal effort, where the state and employers play their corresponding role,” Bachelet said in a speech.

Chile’s privatized pension plan was started in the 1980s during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, and the so-called ‘Chilean model’ has been copied and adopted worldwide.

But opposition to it is rising in Chile, with regular street protests demanding changes. Opponents say the payouts are meager, and they complain the pensions are managed by for-profit funds.

It is unclear if Bachelet’s bill can become law. Her governing coalition is severely divided, and parliamentary elections are set to take place in November, while debate on complex bills can take years in Chile.

Earlier in April, Chile’s finance minister said divisions in the government might make any pension reform impossible, and earlier this week, a major education bill pushed by Bachelet failed in committee.

Under the system proposed by Bachelet, the new 5 percent tax would be divided into two parts and have a six-year implementation period. Three percent would go into the personal savings of each worker, while 2 percent would go into a collective account, managed by the state.

The bill would also give pensioners more say in the investment decisions of the pension investment funds, known as AFPs.

Україна вимагатиме посилення тиску на Росію через репресії в Криму – Беца

Міністерство закордонних справ України буде звертатися до міжнародного співтовариства з проханням посилити тиск на Росію через обшуки в Криму. Про це 13 квітня у коментарі проекту Радіо Свобода Крим.Реалії заявила речниця українського МЗС Мар’яна Беца.

За її словами, «систематичні, масштабні обмеження кримських татар і етнічних українців говорять про те, що Росія продовжує використовувати цих людей у своїй політичній грі і політичних цілях».

«Ми категорично засуджуємо такі дії і будемо звертатися до всіх наших партнерів для того, щоб посилити тиск на Росію. Бо тільки консолідованим тиском і міжнародною ізоляцією можна досягти певних результатів», – заявила Беца.

Вона додала, що та ситуація, яка склалася в Криму, «ще раз говорить про те, що Росія цинічно і зухвало ігнорує всі норми міжнародного права, зокрема останню резолюцію Генеральної асамблеї ООН». «Ця резолюція зобов’язала Росію як державу-окупанта дотримуватися норм міжнародного права і дотримуватися права людини на окупованому півострові. Але Росія в черговий раз ігнорує будь-які свої зобов’язання», – заявила вона.

У Бахчисараї вранці 13 квітня російські силовики провели обшуки в будинках мусульман – Ризи Муждабаєва і Сейдамета Мустафаєва. Очевидці повідомляли про застосування сили з боку силовиків і звуки пострілів. Адвокат Джеміль Темиш повідомив, що на затриманих кримських мусульман склали адмінпротоколи, їх везуть до суду.

Російські силовики назвали обшуки і затримання «плановими заходами».

6 квітня співробітники ОМОН оточили центральний ринок Сімферополя. Тоді російські силовики затримали близько 80 людей «неслов’янської зовнішності». В управлінні російської поліції по Криму назвали затримання на ринку Сімферополя «плановими робочими заходами».

Після анексії в Криму почастішали масові обшуки у незалежних журналістів, кримських активістів, членів Меджлісу кримськотатарського народу, а також кримських мусульман, підозрюваних у зв’язках із забороненою в Росії організацією «Хізб ут-Тахрір». Цю заборону Москва нав’язує і в окупованому українському Криму. Міністерство закордонних справ України висловило стурбованість у зв’язку з переслідуваннями громадян України в анексованому Криму і закликало припинити тиск на них. Також МЗС закликало міжнародне співтовариство застосувати всі можливі види правового і політичного тиску на Росію, щоб вона припинила порушувати права людини і свободу слова, а також звільнила всіх українських політв’язнів і заручників.

НАНУ просить підтримки влади для відзначення ювілею

Національна академія наук України хоче відзначити своє створення на загальнодержавному рівні і просить про підтримку в проведенні ювілейних заходів уряд, парламент і президента. Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, таке звернення ухвалили на загальних зборах НАН України.

«Вчені академії активно працюють над окресленням концептуальних засад і стратегій реалізації цивілізаційного вибору нашої держави, а також над питаннями реінтеграції Донбасу і Криму в політико-правовий і соціокультурний простір України, модернізації вітчизняних державних та суспільних інститутів відповідно до європейських і світових стандартів», – йдеться у зверненні.

Також під час загальних зборів академіки і члени-кореспонденти заслухали доповідь голови зборів, академіка і президента НАН України Бориса Патона. У доповіді він зупинився на успіхах українських вчених як в сфері фундаментальних наук, так і у суспільно-політичних дослідженнях.

«Зокрема, це чиста наука, а саме передбачення нового ефекту в полі чорної діри, що обертається. Або чорної діри Керра. Це суто теоретичний результат розвитку нашими математиками нового підходу до розв’язування рівнянь Максвелла у просторі складної геометрії», – наголосив Патон.

Також він згадав про відкриття і дослідження нової модифікації вуглецю – тривимірної форми графена або «карбонових стільників», довгостроковий моніторинг аерозолів і загального вмісту озону і розробку політики інтеграції українського суспільства в контексті викликів та загроз подій на Донбасі.

Сторіччя Національної академії наук України відзначатимуть в листопаді 2018 року.

Путін і Тіллерсон детально не обговорювали Україну – Пєсков

Речник президента Росії Дмитро Пєсков заявляє, що під час зустрічі Володимира Путіна з держсекретарем США Рексом Тіллерсоном 12 квітня в Москві ситуація в Україні детально не обговорювалася.

«Пунктирно – так. Детального обговорення України не було», – сказав Пєсков 13 квітня, коментуючи зустріч. За словами речника Путіна, детально на зустрічі обговорювали ситуацію в Сирії.

Він також заявив, що говорити про зрушення у відносинах між Росією і США наразі зарано.

Державний секретар США Рекс Тіллерсон 12 квітня після зустрічі з міністром закордонних справ Росії Сергієм Лавровим у Москві і після того, як їх обох прийняв президент Росії Володимир Путін, назвав відсутність поступу в урегулюванні в Україні перешкодою до нормалізації відносин із Росією.

За словами держсекретаря, нині відносини США і Росії перебувають на низькому рівні, а дві ядерні держави не повинні мати таких відносин.

Він нагадав, що Росія має виконати свої зобов’язання, зокрема, щодо виведення військ і озброєнь, і вплинути на сепаратистів, щоб Організація з безпеки і співпраці в Європі могла повноцінно відіграти свою роль у врегулюванні.

Пізніше, відповідаючи на запитання, Тіллерсон сказав, що під час переговорів питання санкцій, запроваджених щодо Росії через її агресію проти України, не обговорювали.

У перебігу переговорів сторони в першу чергу обговорили становище в Сирії, і, як сказав Тіллерсон, вони разом виступають за єдину і стабільну Сирію, а також проти тероризму, що загрожує обом країнам.

Держсекретар США прилетів до Москви у вівторок із італійського міста Лукки, де голови зовнішньополітичних відомств країн «Групи семи» обговорювали, зокрема, шляхи впливу на Росію з тим, щоб змінити її ставлення до президента Сирії. Тіллерсон заявив, що підтримка Дамаска не відповідає стратегічним інтересам Москви.

Перед прибуттям Рекса Тіллерсона до Росії з ним мав телефонну розмову президент України Петро Порошенко, і, як повідомили на Банковій, держсекретар пообіцяв, що Вашингтон не допустить ніяких пакетних домовленостей щодо вирішення ситуації в Україні і Сирії.

Останнім часом відносини між Росією і США далі загострилися через війну в Сирії.

In Win for Boeing and GE, Trump Says He Wants to Revive Export-Import Bank

President Donald Trump plans to revive the hobbled Export-Import Bank of the United States, his office said, a victory for American manufacturers like Boeing and General Electric which have overseas customers that use the agency’s government-backed loans to purchase their products.

Trump first told the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday he would fill two vacancies on the agency’s five-member board that have prevented the bank from having a quorum and being able to act on loans over $10 million. Trump’s picks must gain approval from the Senate, which blocked nominees by former President Barack Obama.

Trump told the Journal that the bank benefits small businesses and creates jobs, a reversal of his earlier criticism of the bank being “featherbedding” for wealthy corporations.

Bank offers loans to foreign entities

The Export-Import Bank, an independent government agency, provides loans to foreign entities that enables them to purchase American-made goods. For example, it has been used by foreign airlines to purchase planes from Boeing and farmers in developing nations to acquire equipment.

The bank’s acting chairman, Charles “CJ” Hall, was not immediately available for comment.

The bank has become a popular target for conservatives, who have worked in Congress to kill the bank, arguing that it perpetuates cronyism and does little to create American jobs.

Trump’s about-face on the export bank comes after meeting on Tuesday with former Boeing Chief Executive Officer Jim McNerney, who left the company last year but oversaw the corporation’s aggressive lobbying effort in support of the bank in 2015.

Trump also met at the White House on Feb. 23 with GE CEO Jeff Immelt and Caterpillar Inc CEO Mark Sutton, both vocal supporters of the bank.

It is not known if they discussed the bank at those meetings.

Bank helps level playing field

Large American corporations that do significant amounts of exports say other countries have similar agencies and the export bank levels the playing field.

“This is an encouraging development on a key competitive issue for U.S manufacturers and their extensive supply chains,” Boeing spokeswoman Kate Bernard said in statement to Reuters.

 

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, which includes companies like Ingersoll-Rand, United States Steel and Pfizer, cheered the move.

“Manufacturers are encouraged by President Trump’s vocal support for the bank,” said NAM Vice President of International Economic Affairs Linda Dempsey in a statement.

A 2015 fight to shutter the bank led by conservatives in Congress allowed the bank’s charter to expire for five months.

After overwhelming bipartisan support emerged to renew the bank’s charter, which is needed for it to operate, conservatives blocked nominees to the board, preventing it from financing large exports like aircraft and power turbines.

Groups work to shut down bank

Freedom Partners and Americans for Prosperity, two groups funded by the Republican donor Koch brothers, worked aggressively for years to kill the bank. Brothers Charles and David Koch have opposed the bank for what they call damaging interference into the free market by government.

Nathan Nascimento, Freedom Partners vice president of policy, called the bank on Wednesday “the epitome of what’s wrong with Washington.”

“Reopening the flood gates to Ex-Im’s corporate welfare is a bad deal for hardworking taxpayers and a bad deal for American businesses,” he said.

The Club for Growth, which spends heavily in electing conservative candidates and was one of the few groups to campaign against Trump during the Republican primary in 2016, also lamented the change in position.

“Ex-Im has a long history of cronyism and corruption that is well-known to many in the Trump Administration, and while we hoped it would be done away with, the administration now has taken on the almost impossible challenge of reforming a federal agency whose mission has been to pick winners and losers with taxpayer dollars,” spokesman Doug Sachtleben said in a statement to Reuters.

 

French Presidential Race Tightens Further, Markets Nervous

Polls showed France’s presidential election campaign tightening further on Wednesday as financial markets fretted about the rising popularity of a far-left candidate who wants to put France’s European Union membership to a vote.

Investors have long been anxious about election frontrunner Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Front, who has promised a referendum on whether to quit the EU and ditch the euro.

She has been joined on the list of investors’ concerns by far-left veteran Jean-Luc Melenchon, who has surged in the polls after strong performances in two candidates’ debates.

The Communist-backed Melenchon also wants a referendum on EU membership after an attempt to renegotiate the EU treaties.

Fillon stable in poll

The latest Ifop-Fiducial poll on Wednesday showed Le Pen winning 23.5 percent in the April 23 first round, one point ahead of centrist Emmanuel Macron.

Both Le Pen and Macron’s support dipped by half a point from Tuesday while conservative Francois Fillon was stable on 19 percent and Melenchon unchanged on 18.5 percent.

The top two candidates go through to a run-off on May 7, where polls say Macron would easily beat Le Pen.

Traders cited the French election, as well as U.S. relations with Syria and North Korea, as reasons why investors switched to safe assets, such as gold or U.S. Treasuries, on Wednesday.

“Risk sentiment is not strong at the moment because of tensions in North Korea and also risk of a … rising Melenchon,” said Nomura currency strategist Yujiro Goto in London.

German foray

Concern about a Le Pen victory, which would put further pressure on the EU after Britain’s decision to leave the bloc, led to an unusual foray into French politics by Germany, France’s traditional partner at the heart of the EU.

“We need a pro-European France,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said in Berlin.

“I hope Le Pen does not become French president,” he added.

Outgoing Socialist President Francois Hollande is also concerned about Melenchon’s rising popularity, according to Le Monde newspaper, and this has fed speculation he could endorse Macron as the best hope to win rather than official Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon, who is doing poorly in the polls.

Hollande won’t offer support yet 

In an interview with Le Point magazine published on Wednesday, Hollande kept silent about his choice, saying he would endorse a candidate before the second round of the election.

But he spoke highly of the decision by Macron, a former economy minister in his government, to launch a new party, saying “I think politics needs renewal” and he spoke out against demagoguery.

“There is a danger in simplifications and falsifications which make people look at the … speaker rather than the content of what he is saying,” he said.

Hollande, an unpopular president who did not seek a second term, said ruling parties should not hold primary elections in future, because it was impossible to be president and candidate at the same time.

‘The French Chavez’

The conservative Le Figaro newspaper called Melenchon “the French Chavez,” alleging in a front-page story that his plans were inspired by the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez.

Melenchon mocked his new notoriety in a blog on his website.

“They announce that my winning the election would bring nuclear winter, a plague of frogs, Red Army tanks and the landing of the Venezuelans,” he said.

Bill Would Permit Use of Livestock as Loan Security in Zimbabwe

Zimbabwean entrepreneurs could soon use movable assets, including livestock and vehicles, to secure loans from banks, according to a bill brought before the country’s Parliament this week.

The southern African country’s economy is dominated by informal business following the formal sector’s contraction by as much as 50 percent between 2000 and 2008, according to government data, after President Robert Mugabe’s seizure of white-owned farms decimated the key agriculture sector.

The Movable Property Security Interest Bill, introduced Tuesday by Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa, seeks to make it easier for Zimbabwe’s burgeoning informal sector to access bank funds.

A copy of the bill seen Wednesday by Reuters defines movable property as “any tangible or intangible property other than immovable property.”

New economic reality

Presenting the bill, which still has to go through several stages before becoming law, Chinamasa said the majority of small businesses did not have the immovable assets that banks require as collateral for loans.

“The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Act will be amended to achieve the objective of this bill, and the assets to be considered include any type, such as machinery, motor vehicles, livestock and accounts receivable,” Chinamasa told lawmakers.

The finance minister said banks had failed to adjust to Zimbabwe’s new economic reality, in which the informal sector, mostly made up of small businesses, plays a dominant role.

Loans to small businesses amounted to $250 million in the year to date, Chinamasa said, out of total bank loans of nearly $4 billion.

“As minister in charge of financial institutions, I feel there is need for a change of attitude by our banks to reflect our economic realities,” Chinamasa said.

The bill provides for a collateral registry to be set up by the central bank, which would maintain a database of all movable assets put up as loan security.

“The purpose of the registry is to facilitate commerce, industry and other socioeconomic activities by enabling individuals and businesses to utilize their movable property as collateral for credit,” reads part of the bill.

Pitching the proposed law to legislators, Chinamasa cited several developing economies — including those of Liberia, Ghana, Malawi, Kenya, Lesotho, Peru and Ukraine — that he said used movable assets as collateral to increase lending to small businesses.

“Their access to banking finance increased by 8 percent [on average], while interest rates declined by 3 percent per annum,” he said.

Foreign currencies

Zimbabwe’s economy enjoyed a temporary reprieve after it adopted the use of multiple foreign currencies — mainly the U.S dollar and South Africa’s rand — in 2009 to replace its inflation-ravaged local unit.

The currency move initially paid dividends, with the economy expanding by an average 11.3 percent between 2010 and 2012, according to World Bank data, while inflation came down to single digits.

However, declining exports from the mineral-dependent country following weaker mineral commodity prices coincided with a sharp rise in imports, triggering an acute foreign currency shortage and slowing down the economy as credit to businesses dried up.

China Won’t Be Labeled a Currency Manipulator, Trump Says

President Donald Trump said Wednesday that his administration would not label China a currency manipulator, backing away from a  campaign promise, even as he said the U.S. dollar was “getting too strong” and would eventually hurt the economy.

In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Trump also said he would like to see U.S. interest rates stay low, another comment at odds with what he had often said during the election campaign.

A U.S. Treasury spokesman confirmed that the Treasury Department’s semiannual report on currency practices of major trading partners, due out this week, would not name China a currency manipulator.

The U.S. dollar fell broadly on Trump’s comments on both the strong dollar and interest rates, while U.S. Treasury yields fell on the interest rate comments, and Wall Street stocks slipped.

Trump’s comments broke with a long-standing practice of both U.S. Democratic and Republican administrations of refraining from commenting on policy set by the independent Federal Reserve. It is also highly unusual for a president to address the dollar’s value, which is a subject usually left to the Treasury secretary.

 

A day-one promise

“They’re not currency manipulators,” Trump told the Journal about China. The statement was an about-face from Trump’s election campaign promises to slap that label on Beijing on the first day of his administration as part of his plan to reduce Chinese imports into the United States.

The Journal paraphrased Trump as saying that he’d changed his mind on the currency issue because China has not been manipulating its yuan for months and because taking the step now could jeopardize his talks with Beijing on confronting the threat from North Korea.

Separately Wednesday, at a joint news conference with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, Trump said the United States was prepared to tackle the crisis surrounding North Korea without China if necessary.

The United States last branded China a currency manipulator in 1994. Under U.S. law, labeling a country as a currency manipulator can trigger an investigation and negotiations on tariffs and trade.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement that Trump’s decision to break his campaign promise on China was “symptomatic of a lack of real, tough action on trade” against Beijing.

“The best way to get China to cooperate with North Korea is to be tough on them with trade, which is the number one thing China’s government cares about,” Schumer said.

Yellen’s future

Trump also told the Journal that he respected Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen and said she was “not toast” when her current term ends in 2018.

That was also a turnaround from his frequent criticism of Yellen during his campaign, when he said she was keeping interest rates too low.

At other times, however, Trump had said that low rates were good because higher rates would strengthen the dollar and hurt American exports and manufacturers.

“I think our dollar is getting too strong, and partially that’s my fault because people have confidence in me. But that’s hurting — that will hurt ultimately,” Trump said Wednesday.

“It’s very, very hard to compete when you have a strong dollar and other countries are devaluing their currency,” Trump told the Journal.

The dollar fell broadly Trump’s comments on the strong dollar and on his preference for low interest rates. It fell more than 1.0 percent against the yen, sinking below 110 yen for the first time since mid-November.

“It’s hard to talk down your currency unless you’re going to talk down your interest rates, and so obviously he’s trying to get Janet Yellen to play ball with him,” said Robert Smith, president and chief investment officer at Sage Advisory Services in Texas.

Trump’s comments on the Fed were his most explicit about the U.S. central bank since he took office in January, and they suggested a lower likelihood that he plans to try to push monetary policy in some unorthodox new direction.

Fed overhaul

Some key Republicans have advocated an overhaul of how the Fed works, using a rules-based policy that would most likely mean higher interest rates, not the lower ones Trump said he prefers.

The Fed in mid-March hiked interest rates for the second time in three months, increasing its target overnight rate by a quarter of a percentage point.

“Maybe he’s learning on the job,” said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist at Northern Trust in Chicago, noting that with Trump’s transition from candidate to president he was now being counseled by more orthodox voices sensitive to what is needed to keep global bond markets on an even keel.

The president is also “very close” to naming a vice chair for banking regulation and filling another open seat that governs community banking on the Federal Reserve Board, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said during the interview.

Turkey’s Referendum: Millions of Voters With Myriad Views

There are only two options on the ballot – “yes” or “no” – but tens of millions of Turks will cast their votes in a referendum on Sunday with a myriad of motives.

The referendum could bring about the biggest change to Turkey’s system of governance since the founding of the modern republic almost a century ago, replacing its parliamentary system with an executive presidency.

The question on the ballot paper may be about the constitution, but looming large is the figure of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who could win sweeping powers and stay in office until 2029 if the changes are approved.

Polls show a close race, with a slight lead for “yes.” But the vote may yield surprises.

‘I want a democracy’

“I’m a patriot,” said Cengiz Topcu, 57, a fisherman in Rize on the Black Sea coast, Erdogan’s ancestral home town where his supporters are among the most fervent.

But Topcu is voting “no.”

“In the past, Erdogan was a good man but then he changed for the worse. I want a democracy: not the rule of one man,” he told Reuters in his boat.

The proposed changes, Erdogan and his supporters say, will make Turkey stronger at a time when the country faces security threats from both Islamist and Kurdish militants.

Violence has flared in the largely Kurdish southeast since the collapse of a cease-fire between the state and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in 2015, and parts of the region have long been strongholds of opposition to Erdogan.

But Hikmet Gunduz, 52, a street vendor in the main regional city of Diyarbakir, hopes his “yes” vote will help bring peace.

“I like President Erdogan’s character. He is a bit angry and a bit authoritarian but his heart is full of love.”

Freedoms

Erdogan, arguably modern Turkey’s most popular but divisive politician, has long cast himself as the champion of ordinary, pious Turks exploited by a secular elite.

Although a majority Muslim country, Turkey is officially secular and the headscarf was long banned in the civil service and in universities until Erdogan’s Islamist-rooted AK Party overturned that restriction.

Aynur Sullu, a 49-year-old hotel owner in the Aegean coastal city of Izmir, a bastion of the secularist opposition, said she planned to vote “yes,” dismissing suggestions that Erdogan’s Islamist ideals were encroaching on people’s private lives.

“Anyone can drink raki or swim with a bikini freely,” she said, referring to the alcoholic drink favored by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the modern secular republic. “Also, now women with headscarves have freedom.”

Businesswoman Dilsat Gulsevim Arinc, however, said Erdogan was acting like a sultan and hoped her “no” vote would help teach him a “useful lesson”.

“He is too authoritarian,” said the 68-year-old cafe owner in Cesme, an Aegean resort town. “If things go on like this, I think Turkey will be finished in the next 10 years.”

Hungary Appears to Backtrack in Row Over US University; Protests Persist

Hungary denied Wednesday that a new education law was aimed at shutting down a university founded by U.S. financier George Soros, and suggested a possible compromise in a dispute that has drawn protests at home and criticism from Washington.

Central European University (CEU) found itself in the eye of a political storm after Hungary’s parliament passed the law last week setting tougher conditions for the awarding of licenses to foreign-based universities.

Critics said the new terms would hurt academic freedoms and were especially aimed at CEU, founded by the Hungarian-born Soros after the collapse of Communism and considered a bastion of independent scholarship in the region.

In an apparent change of tack, Education Secretary Laszlo Palkovics said CEU could continue to operate if it delivered its teaching and issued its degrees through its existing Hungarian sister school.

“We never wanted to close down CEU,” Palkovics told news website HVG.hu. “The question is whether CEU insists on having a license in Hungary or having courses in Hungary honored with a CEU degree … [CEU’s own] license has little significance.”

Despite this, thousands of Hungarians protested in central Budapest against what they said was a crackdown on free thought and education.

They filled the capital’s Heroes’ Square and formed a heart shape and the word “CIVIL.” It was the fourth major street demonstration in the last two weeks as the government faces growing resistance a year before elections are due.

“They have pressed ahead since 2010 with new moves every day that hurt democracy in some way,” Robert Ferenczi, a 55 year-old protester from Budapest, told Reuters.

Government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs said the government would not suspend the disputed law, but added: “We are going to have talks with everyone; if the Soros university is driven by good intentions, it will be able to solve the problem.”

CEU itself was taken by surprise at Palkovics’ comments, according to an emailed statement.

“The solution evoked by State Secretary Palkovics in the press does not appear to be legally and operationally coherent and certain,” it said. “CEU has not been approached directly by Secretary Palkovics with this information.”

“Exchanges in the press are no substitute for sustained direct contact on a confidential basis. We look to the Hungarian government to initiate negotiations with CEU so that we can resolve this and go back to work, with our academic freedom secured, without limits or duration.”

The dispute over the university has come to symbolize rival visions of Hungary’s future. Soros, whose ideal of an “open society” is squarely at odds with Orban’s “illiberal democracy, ” has often been vilified by the prime minister.

Domestic protest, foreign concern

The law stipulated that the CEU must open a branch in its home state of New York alongside its campus in Budapest and secure a bilateral agreement of support from the U.S. government.

Both of those conditions would have been prohibitive by a deadline of January 2018, and CEU rejected them from the start.

The United States asked Hungary to suspend the implementation of the law, and the European Union on Wednesday threatened Orban with legal action for moves that it saw as undemocratic.

“Taken cumulatively, the overall situation in Hungary is a cause of concern,” European Commission First Vice President Frans Timmermans said.

Analyst Zoltan Novak at the Centre for Fair Political Analysis said the government now appeared to have performed a U-turn.

“Calling it ‘Soros University’ for weeks was a clear way for the government to designate an enemy and attack,” Novak said. “Now they made the education secretary bring up a policy argument to back out, containing the political fallout.”

Novak said Orban, who faces elections in April 2018, may have miscalculated the resistance the CEU law could provoke, especially from Washington.

НБУ заявляє про отримання документів щодо продажу української «дочки» «Сбербанку»

Національний банк України отримав документи на погодження продажу української «дочки» «Сбербанку», повідомилиРадіо Свобода у прес-службі НБУ.

За повідомленням, згідно з документами, що надійшли 10 квітня, інвестором виступає громадянин Великої Британії й Росії Саїд Гуцерієв, що має намір придбати 77,5% акцій фінустанови.

«Водночас, як вбачається з поданого у складі пакета документів схематичного зображення структури власності, яку матиме ПАТ «Сбербанк» у разі набуття інвестором істотної участі, найближчим часом також очікується подання пакета документів від ще одного інвестора – АТ «Норвік Банка» [JSC «Norvik Banka»], яке має намір придбати 22,5% акцій ПАТ «Сбербанк», – додали в НБУ.

Отримані від Гуцерієва документи зареєстровані і перебувають на опрацюванні, додали в Нацбанку і повідомили, що, за законом, їх розглянуть протягом трьох місяців з часу надходження повного пакета документів. За цей час НБУ має перевірити відповідність ділової репутації інвестора вимогам, встановленим у нормативно-правових актах Національного банку України, його фінансовий стан і джерела походження коштів.

Національний банк України за рішенням Ради національної безпеки і оборони застосував від 23 березня санкції стосовно дочірніх компаній російських державних банків, які працюють в Україні, зокрема і щодо «Сбербанку».

Після цього рішення стало відомо, що найбільший у Росії комерційний банк «Сбербанк», підконтрольний державі, розглядає варіанти якнайшвидшого виходу з українського ринку. 27 березня російський «Сбербанк» повідомив про продаж своїх філій в Україні.

Представники «Національного корпусу» блокують роботу відділень «Сбербанку» в кількох містах України, вимагаючи припинення діяльності російських підприємств в Україні. 

У Дніпрі активісти знову пікетують відділення «Сбербанку», вимагаючи його закриття

У Дніпрі 12 квітня активісти знову пікетують відділення російського «Сбербанку», вимагаючи припинення роботи російського бізнесу в Україні.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, вони обгорнули будівлю банку великим синьо-жовтим полотнищем і прикріпили на фасаді плакат із написом «Російські банки – геть!».

Окрім того, біля входу до будівлі учасники акції створили інсталяцію із осколків боєприпасів, зібраних в зоні бойових дій на сході України. «Це те, чим російські військові стріляють у наших солдатів, тому вимагаємо припинити роботу російського бізнесу на нашій території», – пояснили Радіо Свобода учасники акції.

За їхніми словами, акція буде безстроковою, до виконання їхніх вимог, серед яких – згортання роботи російських банків на території України. Як зазначають активісти, біля банку в Дніпрі вони організують цілодобове чергування.

Поліція стежить за діями активістів, але не втручається. На місці події – два поліцейські авто.

Водночас у відділенні «Сбербанку» в Дніпрі від коментарів щодо акції відмовились. Охорона будівлі посилена, проте співробітники заявили, що відділення працює у звичному режимі, так само, як й інші відділення в регіоні.

15 березня у Дніпрі біля будівлі російського «Сбербанку» активісти оголосили акцію протесту проти «бізнесу країни-агресора». Тоді фасад будівлі тоді облили червоною фарбою і обклеїли плакатами з написами «Увага! Це банк-окупант, він буде закритий». Вхід до будівлі був заблокований бетонними блоками. За кілька днів робота банку була розблокована.

Днями активісти партії «Національний корпус» заблокували вхід до відділення «Сбербанку» у центрі Харкова і в Києві.

Після того, як минулого тижня політична партія «Національний корпус» заявила, що з 10 квітня «фізично припинить» діяльність російських банків в Україні, у «Сбербанку» заявили, що будь-які подальші агресивні дії щодо фінансової установи розцінюють як умисне заподіяння шкоди інтересам українських клієнтів і Україні.

У Національному банку України закликали правоохоронців гарантувати безперебійну роботу відділень банків і не допустити «фізичної дестабілізації» функціонування банківської системи.

Національний банк за рішенням Ради національної безпеки і оборони застосував від 23 березня санкції стосовно дочірніх компаній російських державних банків, які працюють в Україні, зокрема і щодо «Сбербанку».

Після цього рішення стало відомо, що найбільший у Росії комерційний банк «Сбербанк», підконтрольний державі, розглядає варіанти якнайшвидшого виходу з українського ринку. 27 березня російський «Сбербанк» повідомив про продаж своїх філій в Україні.

Перед запровадженням цих санкцій в Україні активісти, зокрема представники «Національного корпусу», вимагали припинення діяльності російських банків в Україні і блокували роботу відділень банку.

UK Parliament Says Brexit Voter Site May Have Been Attacked

A British parliamentary report has raised the possibility that the voter registration site used in the run-up to the June referendum on whether Britain should leave the European Union may have been attacked by foreign powers.

 

Parliament’s Public Administration Committee said Wednesday it “does not rule out the possibility” that a foreign cyberattack may have caused the website to crash on June 7.

 

The report mentions Russia and China as possibly being involved but says it has no proof of foreign intervention targeting the site.

 

Officials initially blamed the crash on a surge in voter demand following a debate.

 

The committee concludes the referendum was in general well run but calls for greater emphasis on cyber security in the future.

 

Britain voted on June 23 to leave the EU bloc.

 

Lavrov: Russia Has Questions About Ambiguous US Policies

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday that his government has had a lot of questions about what he said were ambiguous and contradictory ideas coming from the new administration of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Lavrov spoke at the start of a meeting in Moscow with U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, adding that it is important for Russia to understand U.S. intentions.

Lavrov also referenced last week’s U.S. strike on a Syrian airbase, which came in response to a chemical weapons attack, calling the U.S. response “troubling.”

Tillerson was more brief in his opening statement, but like Lavrov, he said that Wednesday’s talks were happening at an important time and would include a frank discussion of their differences and mutual interests.

The top U.S. diplomat said the lines of communication between the two countries “shall always remain open.” He said he wants to understand why certain areas of sharp differences exist and the prospects for narrowing those divides.

Tillerson arrived in Russia with less ammunition than Washington and London had hoped he would have in his bid to convince Russia to abandon its support for Syrian President Bashar al Assad.

 

But he does have a tough ultimatum in hand, following reports quoting unidentified senior U.S. officials as saying that Russia had prior knowledge of the attack that killed scores of people including women and children.

G7 ministers meeting Tuesday in the Italian city of Lucca failed to agree on targeted sanctions against the Russian and Syrian military, arguing that an investigation would first have to confirm who in Syria used chemical weapons against civilians in the country last week.

 

“We cannot let this happen again,” Tillerson told reporters before flying to Moscow. “We want to relieve the suffering of the Syrian people. Russia can be a part of that future and play an important role,” he said. “Or Russia can maintain its alliance with this group, which we believe is not going to serve Russia’s interests longer term.”

The chemical attack prompted a world outcry and a U.S. missile attack that marked a turning point in the Trump administration’s approach to the seven-year-old conflict.

 

U.S. President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Theresa May had agreed to press Russia to distance itself from Assad following the chemical attack by imposing targeted sanctions, but Germany and Italy, both leading G-7 nations, disagreed.

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin “must not be pushed into a corner,” said Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano said Tuesday.

For his part, Putin called Tuesday for a U.N. probe of last week’s attack. Without elaborating, he also said Russia has received intelligence about planned “provocations” using chemical weapons that would put the blame on the Syrian government.

 

The G7 ministers’ decision in Italy means the prospect of sanctions is dim. The process of launching an investigation would be long and complex, requiring a U.N. resolution and an agreement by the Assad government for weapons inspectors to access sites in territory under Assad’s control before establishing who was responsible and whether there was Russian complicity.

 

As the ground rapidly shifted regarding the U.S. approach to Syria, Tillerson made it clear that Washington hopes Assad will not be part of Syria’s future. He told the foreign ministers in Lucca U.S. missile strikes were necessary as a matter of U.S. national security, and indicated the Trump administration may not be done with Assad.

 

“We do not want the regime’s uncontrolled stockpile of chemical weapons to fall into the hands of ISIS or other terrorist groups who could, and want, to attack the United States or our allies. Nor can we accept the normalization of the use of chemical weapons by other actors or countries in Syria or elsewhere,” Tillerson said.

У НАБУ повідомили про передачу ГПУ документів для екстрадиції матері Онищенка

У Національному антикорупційному бюро України повідомили про скерування до Генпрокуратури пакету документів для екстрадиції Інеси Кадирової, матері фігуранта так званої «газової справи» Олександра Онищенка. Про це йдеться в повідомленні НАБУ на сторінці у Facebook.

«НАБУ направило до ГПУ для подальшого скерування компетентним органам Іспанії повний пакет документів, необхідний для початку процедури екстрадиції Інеси Кадирової, громадянки України, за версією слідства – співорганізатора так званої «газової схеми», внаслідок якої інтересам держави завдано збитків на суму близько 3 мільярдів гривень», – йдеться в повідомленні.

У НАБУ зазначили, що після отримання оригіналів документів суд Іспанії ухвалюватиме рішення про застосування так званого екстрадиційного арешту або іншого запобіжного заходу до розгляду питання про екстрадицію вказаної особи в Україну.

Інесу Кадирову було оголошено в міжнародний розшук влітку 2016 року. 30 березня цього року стало відомо про її затримання в Іспанії. Жінка підозрюється, зокрема, у створенні злочинної організації, розтраті майна в особливо великих розмірах та фіктивному підприємництві.

15 червня 2016 року НАБУ та Спеціальна антикорупційна прокуратура заявили про викриття організованого злочинного угруповання, що завдало збитків державі у розмірі понад 3 мільярди гривень унаслідок спільної діяльності на підставі угод, укладених із ПАТ «Укргазвидобування». Відповідно до доказів, отриманих під час досудового розслідування кримінального провадження, організатором корупційної схеми є депутат Верховної Ради Олександр Онищенко.

Сам він спростовує свою причетність до цього і називає порушену справу тиском на нього з метою відібрати його бізнес.

У липні минулого року Верховна Рада позбавила Онищенка депутатської недоторканності. Наприкінці липня депутат повідомив, що перебуває у Лондоні, але зазначив, що не має наміру просити там про політичний притулок. На допит НАБУ до Києва він не прибув.

 

За минулу добу на Донбасі поранені 5 військових – штаб

У прес-центрі штабу АТО вранці 12 квітня повідомили, що через обстріли підтримуваних Росією бойовиків минулої доби на Донбасі п’ятеро українських військовослужбовців були поранені.

«Ситуація в районі проведення АТО продовжує залишатись напруженою. За минулу добу російсько-окупаційні війська 45 разів обстріляли позиції Збройних cил України», – йдеться в повідомленні прес-центру на сторінці у Facebook.

За даними штабу, обстріли з боку сепаратистів тривали на всіх напрямках з використанням кулеметів і мінометів різних калібрів, протитанкових гранатометів, зенітних установок.

В угрупованні «ДНР» звинуватили українську сторону в обстрілах у вівторок вдень околиць Донецька. Бойовики стверджують, що під час обстрілів ЗСУ використовували міномети. Луганські сепаратисти на своїх сайтах поки не повідомляють про те, як минули останні години на підконтрольних угрупованню «ЛНР» територіях».

Від 1 квітня у зоні збройного конфлікту на сході України мало початися чергове перемир’я – напередодні Великодніх свят. Про це раніше домовилися учасники переговорів Тристоронньої контактної групи. Проте обстріли не припинилися, сторони конфлікту звинуватили в цьому одна одну.

With Media Muzzled, Turkish ‘No’ Voters Seek Alternative Channels

Strolling down the quayside in Izmir, a liberal bastion on Turkey’s Aegean Coast, Kubilay Mutlu and his Street Orchestra sing of “the naked emperor” and the collapse of sultanates in a bid to rally “no” voters ahead of Sunday’s historic referendum.

With mainstream media saturated by pro-government campaigning ahead of the vote on broadening President Tayyip Erdogan’s powers, those opposed to the changes are seeking alternative channels to get their message across.

“No” supporters have complained of threats and bans from the authorities, and a report by one non-governmental group said television coverage of the “yes” campaign had been ten times more extensive than that of the opposition.

“What we want to stress, despite the pessimistic picture, is that ‘no’ is a very important option. Let’s use our right to object,” said Mutlu, whose band, made up of teachers and students from a local university, put their song “One ‘no’ is enough” on video-sharing site YouTube.

Referendum to be decided Sunday

Sunday’s referendum will decide on the biggest change in Turkey’s system of governance since the foundation of the modern republic almost a century ago, potentially replacing its parliamentary system with an executive presidency.

Erdogan and his supporters say the change is needed to give Turkey stronger leadership at a time of turbulence. Opponents fear increasingly authoritarian rule from a president they cast as a would-be sultan who brooks little dissent.

The vote is being held under a state of emergency imposed after a failed military coup nine months ago, meaning there are “substantive” limitations on freedom of expression and assembly, according to the Venice Commission, a panel of legal experts at the Council of Europe.

Turkey has purged more than 113,000 people from the police, judiciary, military and elsewhere since the coup attempt, and has closed more than 130 media outlets, raising concerns among Western allies about deteriorating rights and freedoms.

Many opposition leaders jailed

The leaders of the pro-Kurdish opposition HDP, parliament’s third-largest party, have been jailed over alleged links to Kurdish militants along with a dozen of its MPs and thousands of its other members. The HDP opposes the constitutional changes.

“The extremely unfavorable environment for journalism and the increasingly impoverished and one-sided public debate that prevail in Turkey at this point question the very possibility of holding a meaningful, inclusive democratic referendum campaign,” the Venice Commission said last month.

Turkish officials have said international observers are free to monitor all aspects of the referendum and have repeatedly rejected the notion that the media is muzzled, saying that outlets shut down in the purges were closed on terrorism-related charges, not for their journalism.

Erdogan was quoted in February as saying there was more press freedom in Turkey than in many Western countries.

Dominating the airwaves

A stream of music videos exhorting people to vote “no” have emerged on social media, as opposition politicians complain that the playing field ahead of the vote is far from level.

In one such video, which has had close to 400,000 views on YouTube, a women’s group appeals to listeners to use “power of laughter” in a song entitled “ha ha ha, hayir,” a play on the Turkish word for “no.”

“They have the media, meeting halls, municipalities and resources in their hands. But stubbornly we try to touch people on the streets, through social media,” Dilara Yucetepe, who was part of the project, told Reuters.

Another “no” video draws on imagery from anti-government demonstrations in 2013, when hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets in what grew from a protest against the redevelopment of an Istanbul park into a broad show of defiance.

Opposition leader interviewed

State broadcaster TRT interviewed Kemal Kilicdaroglu, leader of the main opposition CHP, on Friday evening and was set to interview a spokesman for the HDP on Tuesday, a development the party described on its Twitter feed as “seemingly unbelievable.”

Such appearances are relatively rare, all but drowned out by the multiple speeches each day by Erdogan, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim and others broadcast live on all the major networks.

According to a report by the Unity for Democracy (DIB), an opposition-affiliated organization, live television broadcasts from March 1-20 period dedicated 169 hours to Erdogan, 301.5 hours to the ruling AK Party and 15.5 hours to the nationalist MHP, which supports the “yes” campaign.

The CHP had 45.5 hours of coverage while the HDP had none, the report said. A Turkish court last week banned the HDP’s “no” campaign song on the grounds that it contravened the constitution and fomented hatred.

In a report published on the party’s website, CHP lawmaker Necati Yilmaz said “no” campaigners had faced 143 incidents of pressure, threats and bans by the end of March.

“While the state’s resources and financial power are being used to boost the ‘yes’ vote, its legal, administrative and security forces are used to clamp down on ‘no,’” he said.

Wall Street Reforms May Be Replaced, Trump Tells CEOs

President Donald Trump told a group of chief executives Tuesday that his administration was revamping the Wall Street reform law known as Dodd-Frank and might eliminate the rules and replace them with “something else.”

At the beginning of his administration, Trump ordered reviews of the major banking rules that were put in place after the 2008 financial crisis, and last week he said officials were planning a “major haircut” for them.

“For the bankers in the room, they’ll be very happy because we’re really doing a major streamlining and, perhaps, elimination, and replacing it with something else,” Trump said Tuesday.

“That will be the minimum. But we’re doing a major elimination of the horrendous Dodd-Frank regulations, keeping some obviously, but getting rid of many,” he said.

The many provisions of the Dodd-Frank measure were aimed at decreasing risks in the U.S. financial system. The White House is not unilaterally able to upend Dodd-Frank’s rules, almost all of which are implemented by independent regulatory agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Reserve.

A sweeping change to the law would require congressional action, though in some cases regulators may also have wiggle room to make changes through a formal rule-making process.

Report on regulations

In February, Trump issued an executive order requiring Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin to consult with U.S. regulators and submit a report outlining a proposal for possible regulatory and legislative changes that will help fuel economic growth and promote American business interests.

That report, due to be released in June, will most likely serve as a blueprint for possible changes down the road. However, congressional action on a Wall Street bill is not expected in the near term, as Congress focuses primarily on health care and tax reform.

Participants in the Tuesday meeting included Rich Lesser, chief executive of Boston Consulting Group; Doug McMillon, chief executive of Wal-Mart Stores; Indra Nooyi, chief executive of PepsiCo; Jim McNerney, former chief executive of Boeing; Ginni Rometty, chief executive of IBM; and Jack Welch, former chairman of General Electric.

The business leaders are part of Trump’s “Strategy and Policy Forum” that last met with him in February.

Trump also reiterated his criticism of the North American Free Trade Agreement between the United States, Canada and Mexico.

“NAFTA is a disaster. It’s been a disaster from the day it was devised. And we’re going to have some very pleasant surprises for you on NAFTA, that I can tell you,” he said.

Social Media Storm Over Airline Treatment of Passenger

United Airlines saw its stock price decline by 4 percent or more after a viral video showing a passenger being dragged off a flight and injured sparked outrage in the U.S. and several nations. One airline analyst says he has never seen such a “parade of incompetence.”

Держсекретар США висловив сумнів щодо України як риторичний прийом – Держдепартамент

У Державному департаменті США назвали «риторичним прийомом» слова державного секретаря Рекса Тіллерсона, який раніше у вівторок поставив під сумнів, чому американців має турбувати конфлікт в Україні.

Саме цими двома словами відповів на запитання про слова держсекретаря речник Держдепартаменту Роберт Гаммонд, повідомило агентство «Блумберґ».

Агентство нагадало, що Тіллерсон дійсно останнім часом відверто давав знати, що США і Європа не повинні знімати санкцій, накладених щодо Росії через її вторгнення до України і анексію Криму. Він наголошував, що причини, через які запровадили ці санкції, – втручання Росії на сході України і окупація Криму, – далі існують.

Раніше у вівторок міністр закордонних справ Франції Жан-Марк Еро повідомив, що під час зустрічі голів зовнішньополітичних відомств країн «Групи семи» того дня Рекс Тіллерсон в якийсь момент сказав: «Який інтерес для американських платників податків цікавитися Україною, крім великих принципів? Чи не Європа мала б узяти на себе цю відповідальність?».

«Я відповів цілком ясно, що Європа вже взяла цю відповідальність. Вона погодилася на санкції, і ці санкції й далі чинні, бо Європа не приймає можливості змінювати кордони, встановлені після Другої світової війни, не приймає того, щоб одна держава могла дозволяти собі анексувати шматок іншої держави, бо буде скринька Пандори, якщо ми дозволимо це і заплющимо на це очі», – сказав Еро журналістам після завершення зустрічі про свою відповідь Тіллерсонові.

Як додав французький міністр, він також заявив американському держсекретареві, що саме в інтересах платників податків у США, щоб Європа була безпечною і політично й економічно сильною, а не слабкою, розколеною і безвольною.

Голови зовнішньополітичних відомств країн «Групи семи» за результатами зустрічі в місті Луцці в Італії ухвалили раніше у вівторок підсумкову заяву, в якій, зокрема, повторили визнання незалежності, територіальної цілісності й суверенітету України, засудили незаконну анексію Криму Росією і підтвердили політику її невизнання і санкцій проти причетних, а також відданість виконанню мінських домовленостей про врегулювання конфлікту на сході України. Вони заявили, що особливо очікують від Росії виконання її зобов’язань і вчинення впливу на сепаратистів, щоб домогтися й від них виконання зобов’язань.

Учасники зустрічі наголосили, що поведінка Росії несумісна з міжнародним порядком, заснованим на правилах, і тому країни «Групи семи» залишаються єдині у застосуванні широкого кола зовнішньополітичних інструментів, включно з санкціями, з метою переконати Росію повернутися на шлях спільної поваги до цих цінностей. «Ми повторюємо заклик до всіх сторін виконати їхні зобов’язання за мінськими домовленостями, включно з виведенням іноземних збройних формувань і озброєнь із території України, поверненням Україні контролю за її боком міжнародного кордону і безпечним доступом і наданням гуманітарної допомоги нужденним. Ми нагадуємо, що тривалість санкцій ясно пов’язана з повним виконанням Росією її зобов’язань за мінськими домовленостями і її повагою до суверенітету України», – мовилося в підсумковому комюніке зустрічі.

Державний секретар США Рекс Тіллерсон відразу після закінчення зустрічі вирушив із Італії до Росії з першим на цій посаді візитом, прибув до Москви і в середу має зустрітися з міністром закордонних справ Росії Сергієм Лавровим, у першу чергу з метою особисто донести до нього позицію Заходу і значної частини арабського світу щодо підтримки Москвою влади Башара аль-Асада в Сирії. Напередодні візиту у Вашингтоні повідомляли, що сторони, крім Сирії, обговорять і деякі інші теми, серед яких буде і становище в Україні.

Перед прибуттям Рекса Тіллерсона до Росії з ним мав телефонну розмову президент України Петро Порошенко, і, як повідомили на Банковій, держсекретар пообіцяв, що Вашингтон не допустить ніяких пакетних домовленостей щодо вирішення ситуації в Україні і Сирії.

Report: Millions of Migrant Gulf Laborers Forced to Pay for Right to Work

South Asian migrants powering the construction boom in oil-rich Gulf countries are often illegally made to pay for their own recruitment, adding to hardships of poor working conditions and wages, according to an investigation released Tuesday.

Millions of migrants seeking a way out of poverty by working in Gulf nations from Qatar to the United Arab Emirates must routinely pay fees that can equal a year’s salary, U.S. researchers said in a report.

“Recruitment is not free,” said report co-author David Segall of New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. “Somebody does have to bear these costs, but that of course should be the employing company.”

The findings came as conditions for construction workers from India, Nepal and Bangladesh in the 2022 FIFA World Cup host, Qatar, have drawn scrutiny from rights groups who say migrants live in squalor and work without proper access to water and shelter.

In five fact-finding missions to the Gulf and South Asia, the researchers found workers are typically made to pay for their airfare from South Asia and their work visa, often at inflated prices.

Selling visas for profit is illegal in the six Gulf countries the researchers investigated — Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. But violations rarely lead to prosecution and punishment, the report said.

Fees highest for Bangladeshis

Bangladeshi workers paid as much as $5,200 in recruitment fees, according to the study, the highest price among other South Asian construction workers, who number some 10 million people in the Gulf.

In rare cases, construction companies took on expenditures to recruit their workers, the study found. The fees had the effect of pushing already destitute migrants further into poverty by tying them to high-interest loans.

“These are people who are already desperate enough that they feel that they need to undertake this journey, leave their families in order to just achieve the possibility of economic success,” Segall told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “For them to be in debt before they even start this journey is really an injustice.”

Reports of abuse of migrant domestic workers have prompted countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda and Indonesia to ban their citizens in recent years from seeking jobs in the Middle East.

The New York University report expanded on the findings of an investigation conducted in Qatar and released last week, which concluded hundreds of Asian workers had paid recruitment fees.

Прокуратура Криму звернулася до МЗС перед «міжнародним» заходом російської влади в Ялті

Прокуратура Автономної Республіки Крим у системі Генеральної прокуратури України звернулася до Міністерства закордонних справ України з проханням вжити заходів для попередження порушення законів України іноземцями під час планованого встановленою на окупованому півострові російською владою «міжнародного економічного форуму».

«Зокрема, прокуратура звертає увагу на можливості інформування представництв іноземних країн про дотримання вимог чинного законодавства України щодо порядку в’їзду на тимчасово окуповану територію України і виїзду з неї іноземців та про юридичну відповідальність, яка може настати у випадку недотримання порядку перетину адміністративного кордону», – мовиться в повідомленні прокуратури.

Крім того, у прокуратурі Криму нагадали про резолюцію Генеральної асамблеї ООН від 27 березня 2014 року, яка, серед іншого, закликала утримуватися від усіх дій і кроків, які можна було б тлумачити як визнання будь-якої зміни статусу півострова. «Зважаючи, що організаторами форуму виступають незаконно утворений орган – «уряд Республіки Крим» – та Фонд «Ялтинського Міжнародного економічного форуму» за підтримки адміністрації президента Росії, участь у такому заході офіційних іноземних представників може розглядатися як визнання останніми зміни статусу Автономної Республіки Крим та міста Севастополя та легітимності окупаційного режиму», – додали у прокуратурі.

Також прокуратура Автономної Республіки Крим попередила про невідворотність покарання за порушення законодавства України.

Таким покаранням за порушення норми, що вимагає від іноземців і осіб без громадянства в’їздити на територію окупованого Криму тільки з попереднього дозволу української влади і через встановлені пункти пропуску на адміністративній межі між Кримом і вільною частиною України, є заборона на в’їзд до України.

Після минулорічного «міжнародного економічного форуму» в окупованій Ялті МЗС України зверталося з нотами протесту до держав, із яких на захід російської влади приїздили політичні діячі.