Лисенко: у ГПУ «із задоволенням поспілкуються» з Поклонською, якщо вона приїде в Київ

У Генеральній прокуратурі України заявляють, що «із задоволенням» поспілкуються з екс-прокурором анексованого Росією Криму Наталією Поклонською, якщо вона прибуде до Києва. Так речник ГПУ Андрій Лисенко прокоментував заяву Поклонської на ім’я генпрокурора України Юрія Луценка з вимогою розпочати розслідування стосовно президента Петра Порошенка і деяких українських державних діячів.

«Поза всіма сумнівами і застереженнями представники Генпрокуратури України з великим задоволенням поспілкуються з екс-прокурором анексованого Криму Наталією Поклонською на теми державної зради і заборони діяльності Меджлісу кримськотатарського народу, а також сформулюють ексклюзивні відповіді на її щирі запитання у разі прибуття останньої за адресою: 03057 Київ, вулиця Дегтярівська, 31-а. Усі законні підстави для цього є», – написав Лисенко у Facebook.

Раніше Поклонська у Facebook повідомила, що направила заяву на ім’я генпрокурора України Юрія Луценка з вимогою розпочати розслідування стосовно президента Петра Порошенка, секретаря РНБО Олександра Турчинова і міністра внутрішніх справ Арсена Авакова. Поклонська заявляє, що вони «причетні до створення злочинного угруповання».

До анексії Росією Криму Наталія Поклонська працювала в органах прокуратури України. Навесні 2014 року, після окупації українського Криму, встановлена там Москвою російська влада призначила її «прокурором» півострова. Вона ініціювала заборону діяльності Меджлісу в Росії, а також фактично і в окупованому українському Криму, у 2016 році.

Наразі Поклонську в Росії вважають депутатом Державної думи. Вона була незаконно «обрана» до російського парламенту в українському Криму на псевдовиборах, які влаштувала Москва на окупованому півострові. Україна і Захід не визнали цього «обрання». 

В Україні щодо Наталії Поклонської порушили дві кримінальні справи: про державну зраду і про заборону діяльності Меджлісу кримськотатарського народу. Вона також перебуває у санкційних списках ЄС і ще низки окремих країн, зокрема Австралії, Швейцарії, Ліхтенштейну чи Норвегії.

МЗС протестує проти вироку українцеві Балуху в анексованому Криму

Міністерство закордонних справ України протестує у зв’язку із вироком суду в анексованому Росією Криму, який засудив українського активіста Володимира Балуха до 3,7 року ув’язнення.

«Сфабриковане рішення незаконних судів. Висловлюємо протест. Будемо посилювати міжнародний тиск на Росію зі звільнення Балуха», – написала у Twitter речниця МЗС Мар’яна Беца.

Підконтрольний Кремлю Роздольненський районний суд в анексованому Криму 16 січня засудив українського активіста Володимира Балуха, обвинуваченого в зберіганні боєприпасів, до трьох років і семи місяців колонії-поселення і штрафу в розмірі 10 неоподатковуваних мінімумів доходів громадян (близько 4,6 тисячі гривень – ред.).

Раніше прокурор попросив для обвинувачуваного 5 років і 1 місяць позбавлення волі з відбуванням у колонії-поселенні і оплату штрафу в розмірі 20 неоподатковуваних мінімумів доходів громадян (9,2 тисячі гривень – ред.).

Балух під час свого заключного слова на засіданні 15 січня заявив, що справа проти нього «сфабрикована у зв’язку з його політичною позицією» і це не змусить його любити «нову батьківщину».

ФСБ Росії затримала Володимира Балуха 8 грудня 2016 року. Співробітники ФСБ стверджували, що знайшли на горищі будинку, де живе Володимир Балух, 90 патронів і кілька тротилових шашок.

У серпні 2017 року суд виніс вирок українському активісту – три роки і сім місяців колонії загального режиму, а також штраф у розмірі десяти неоподатковуваних мінімумів доходів громадян. Під час розгляду апеляційної скарги вирок Балух скасували. Справу відправили на повторний розгляд.

Роздольненський районний суд 1 грудня змінив запобіжний захід українському активісту на домашній арешт протягом двох місяців.

Захист Балуха і правозахисники вважають, що він став жертвою репресій за свою проукраїнську позицію.

ГПУ: обшуки в «Укргазвидобуванні» стосувалися закупок запасних частин до насосів за завищеною ціною

Обшуки Генеральної прокуратури України та Служби безпеки України в компанії «Укргазвидобування» стосувалися закупок запасних частин до насосів за завищеною ціною, повідомив речник ГПУ Андрій Лисенко у Facebook.

За даними слідства, у жовтні 2016 року «Укргазвидобування» закупило запасні частини у компанії «Україна-2000» на загальну суму в понад 51 мільйон гривень, що перевищує їхню ринкову вартість.

«У ході досудового розслідування вже встановлено, що службові особи ПАТ «Укргазвидобування» з метою заволодіння коштами, вступили у змову з представниками підприємств-постачальників запчастин, організували та впровадили механізм проведення закупівель товарно-матеріальних цінностей за завищеними цінами», – написав Лисенко.

Він додав, що розслідування в цій справі триває від 5 травня 2017 року за статтею про «привласнення, розтрату майна або заволодіння ним шляхом зловживання службовим становищем».

Обшуки в «Укргазвидобуванні» відбувалися зранку 16 січня.

ПАТ «Укргазвидобування» спеціалізується на виробництві природного газу і газового конденсату. Воно на 100% є дочірнім підприємством «Нафтогазу України».

Pope Begs Forgiveness for ‘Irreparable Harm’ From Sex Abuse

Pope Francis begged for forgiveness Tuesday for the “irreparable damage” done to children who were raped and molested by priests, opening his visit to Chile by diving head-first into a scandal that has greatly hurt the Catholic Church’s credibility here and cast a cloud over his visit.

 

Speaking to Chile’s president, lawmakers, judges and other authorities, Francis said he felt “bound to express my pain and shame” that some of Chile’s pastors had sexually abused children in their care. He was interrupted by applause from the dignitaries at La Moneda palace when he pronounced the words.

 

“I am one with my brother bishops, for it is right to ask forgiveness and make every effort to support the victims, even as we commit ourselves to ensuring that such things do not happen again,” he said.

 

History’s first Latin American pope didn’t refer by name to Chile’s most notorious pedophile priest, the Rev. Fernando Karadima, who was sanctioned in 2011 by the Vatican to a lifetime of “penance and prayer” for sexually molesting minors. Nor did he refer to the fact that the emeritus archbishop of Santiago, a top papal adviser, has acknowledged he knew of complaints against Karadima but didn’t remove him from ministry.

 

Karadima had been a politically connected, charismatic and powerful priest who ministered to a wealthy Santiago community and produced dozens of priestly vocations and five bishops. Victims went public with their accusations in 2010, after complaining for years to church authorities that Karadima would kiss and fondle them when they were teenagers.

 

While the scandal rocked the church, many Chileans are still furious over Francis’ subsequent decision, in 2015, to appoint a Karadima protege as bishop of the southern city of Osorno. Bishop Juan Barros has denied knowing about Karadima’s abuse but many Chileans don’t believe him, and his appointment has badly split the diocese.

 

“Sex abuse is Pope Francis’ weakest spot in terms of his credibility,” said Massimo Faggioli, a Vatican expert and theology professor at Villanova University in Philadelphia. “It is surprising that the pope and his entourage don’t understand that they need to be more forthcoming on this issue.”

 

The Karadima scandal and a long cover-up has caused a crisis for the church in Chile, with a recent Latinbarometro survey saying the case was responsible for a significant drop in the number of Chileans who call themselves Catholic, as well as a fall in confidence in the church as an institution.

 

That distrust extends to Francis, who is making his first visit as pope to this country of 17 million people. The Argentine pope is nearly a native son, having studied in Chile during his Jesuit novitiate and he knows the country well, but Chileans give him the lowest approval rating among the 18 Latin American nations in the survey.

 

“People are leaving the church because they don’t find a protective space there,” said Juan Carlos Claret, spokesman for a group of church members in Osorno that has opposed Barros’ appointment as bishop. “The pastors are eating the flock.”

 

People angry over Barros planned a protest for Tuesday, when Francis is scheduled to celebrate Mass in Santiago’s O’Higgins Park.

 

Other groups also called demonstrations against the pontiff.

 

Victor Hugo Robles, an activist in Chile’s lesbian and gay community, said the Vatican tries to paint an image of the pope as being close to the people, particularly those with the most needs.

 

“We are the ones who need help,” said Robles. “Gay people, people living with AIDS. When it comes to those things, the church has an attitude of intolerance, of disgust.”

 

Felipe Morales, from a group called the Workers’ Socialist Front, said many were unhappy with the pope and the church’s historical influence in Chile. They planned to protest outside while Francis celebrated Mass.

 

“The role of the church has been nefarious,” said Morales. “Sex abuse cases have been covered up and people are unhappy with many other issues.”

 

To be sure, many are excited to see the pope. Thousands lined the streets of Santiago to get a glimpse of Francis after he arrived Monday night, though the crowds were notably thin compared to previous visits to other Latin American capitals. O’Higgins Park, though, was teeming with faithful waiting for the pope’s Mass, with some pilgrims camping out overnight.

 

“It was amazing to see him,” said Luis Salazar, a young boy who came out with his family to see Francis pass by in his popemobile Monday.

 

The pope will try to inject new energy into the church during his visit, which includes sessions with migrants, members of Chile’s Mapuche indigenous group and victims of the 1973-1990 military dictatorship. It remains to be seen if he will meet with sex abuse survivors. A meeting wasn’t on the agenda, but such encounters never are.

 

 

 

 

Порошенко підписав закон про відмову від терміну «інвалід» – АП

Президент України Петро Порошенко підписав закон, який передбачає виключення із законодавства та вжитку терміну «інвалід», передає прес-служба українського президента.

«Цим документом вносяться зміни до 37 законів України, у положеннях яких слова «інвалід», «дитина-інвалід» та «інвалід війни» замінено відповідно словами «особа з інвалідністю», «дитина з інвалідністю» та «особа з інвалідністю внаслідок війни», – зазначили в Адміністрації президента.

Згідно з повідомленням, закон приводить норми чинного законодавства у відповідність до положень Конвенції ООН про права осіб з інвалідністю.

19 грудня 2017 року Верховна Рада підтримала проект закону про внесення змін до деяких законодавчих актів України (щодо соціального захисту осіб з інвалідністю) в другому читанні.

Russian Pollster Stops Publishing Results on Elections

Russia’s main independent polling agency has stopped publishing results of opinion polls on the upcoming presidential election, fearing legal repercussions.

 

Levada Center was listed as a foreign agent in 2016 under a new law aimed at curbing alleged foreign influence on public life in Russia. Authorities insist that the law does not aim to target critics of the Kremlin.

 

Levada is not a foreign company, but Russian authorities are able to list it as a foreign agent because it has received foreign funding.

 

Levada’s director, Lev Gudkov, told the Russian daily Vedomosti on Tuesday that the agency is carrying out election polling but will not publish results during the campaign because it fears that this could be viewed as election meddling and could lead to a motion to close down the pollster.

 

Russians go to polls on March 18 to vote for their president. Incumbent Vladimir Putin is expected to win by a landslide.

 

Results of Levada’s polls have not differed dramatically from those by the two main state-owned polling agencies in terms of support for Putin and the ruling party. But recent polls did show a difference regarding the turnout for the upcoming vote.

 

With his key rival, Alexei Navalny, barred from running, Putin is facing candidates who only nominally oppose him. That raised fears of a lower turnout at the election, which would be a major embarrassment for the Kremlin.

 

Commenting on the pollster’s announcement, Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday it was “unfortunate” that Levada will not be able to publish its polls but said it was a matter of following the law.

 

 

 

Social Democrats Push Back Against German ‘Grand’ Coalition

The head of Germany’s center-left Social Democrats lobbied party members Tuesday to vote in favor of opening coalition talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives, amid strong opposition from grassroots members.

Martin Schulz made the rounds in the populous state of North-Rhine Westphalia, talking with party members to push for their approval at a party convention Sunday to open formal negotiations with Merkel’s Union bloc.

A rejection of talks would be a setback for both Schulz and Merkel, who has already failed to forge a coalition with two smaller parties.

The Social Democrats and the Union bloc, who have governed Germany in a “grand coalition” since 2013, suffered heavy losses in September’s national election.

In non-binding votes, Social Democrats in the smaller states of Berlin and Saxony-Anhalt have indicated they’ll vote against opening coalition talks, while party members in Brandenburg voted in favor.

In North Rhine-Westphalia Schulz met with party members in Dortmund before heading to the state capital Duesseldorf for similar meetings in the evening.

The Social Democrats in North Rhine-Westphalia aren’t planning any poll ahead of time on whether to approve the talks, the dpa news agency reported, but with about a quarter of the delegates to the Sunday convention their support is key.

Global Carmakers to Invest at Least $90B in Electric Vehicles

Ford’s plan to double its electrified vehicle spending is part of an investment tsunami in batteries and electric cars by global automakers that now totals $90 billion and is still growing, a Reuters analysis shows.

That money is pouring in to a tiny sector that amounts to less than 1 percent of the 90 million vehicles sold each year and where Elon Musk’s Tesla, with sales of only three models totaling just over 100,000 vehicles in 2017, was a dominant player.

With the world’s top automakers poised to introduce dozens of new battery electric and hybrid gasoline-electric models over the next five years — many of them in China — executives continue to ask: Who will buy all those vehicles?

“We’re all in,” Ford Motor Executive Chairman Bill Ford Jr. said of the company’s $11 billion investment, announced on Sunday at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit. “The only question is, will the customers be there with us?”

“Tesla faces real competition,” said Mike Jackson, chief executive of AutoNation Inc, the largest U.S. auto retailing chain. By 2030, Jackson said he expects electric vehicles could account for 15-20 percent of New vehicle sales in the United States.

Investments in electrified vehicles announced to date include at least $19 billion by automakers in the United States, $21 billion in China and $52 billion in Germany.

But U.S. and German auto executives said in interviews on the sidelines of the Detroit auto show that the bulk of those investments are earmarked for China, where the government has enacted escalating electric-vehicle quotas starting in 2019. 

Mainstream automakers also are reacting in part to pressure from regulators in Europe and California to slash carbon emissions from fossil fuels. They are under pressure as well from Tesla’s success in creating electric sedans and SUVs that inspire would-be owners to flood the company with orders.

While Tesla is the most prominent electric car maker, “soon it will be everybody and his brother,” Daimler AG Chief Executive Dieter Zetsche told reporters on Monday at the Detroit show.

Daimler has said it will spend at least $11.7 billion to introduce 10 pure electric and 40 hybrid models, and that it intends to electrify its full range of vehicles, from minicompact commuters to heavy-duty trucks.

“We will see whether demand will drive our (electric vehicle) sales or whether we will all be trying to catch the last customer out there,” Zetsche said. “Ultimately, the customer will decide.”

For now, Nissan’s 7-year-old Leaf remains the world’s top-selling electric vehicle and the company’s sole battery-only car — an offering soon to be swamped by new rivals bringing tougher competition that could add pressure to pricing.

“Everybody will find out that if you push you will have a lot of bad news on residual values,” Nissan Chief Performance Officer Jose Munoz told Reuters.

Jim Lentz, chief executive of Toyota’s North American operations, said it took Toyota 18 years for sales of hybrid vehicles to reach 3 percent share of the total market. And hybrids are less costly, do not require new charging infrastructure and are not burdened by the range limits of battery electric vehicles, he said.

“What’s it going to take to get to 4 to 5 percent” share for electric cars, Lentz said. “It’s going to be longer.”

The largest single investment is coming from Volkswagen AG , which plans to spend $40 billion by 2030 to build electrified versions of its 300-plus global models.

In the United States, General Motors has outlined plans to introduce 20 new battery and fuel cell electric vehicles by 2023, most of them built on a new dedicated, modular platform that will be introduced in 2021.

GM Chief Executive Mary Barra has not said how much the automaker will spend on electric vehicles. Much of the investment will be made in China, where GM’s Cadillac brand will help spearhead the company’s more aggressive move into electric vehicles, according to Cadillac President Johan de Nysschen.

In an interview on Monday at the Detroit show, de Nysschen said Cadillac would “play a central role” in GM’s electric vehicle strategy in China, and will introduce an unspecified number of models based on GM’s future electric-vehicle platform.

Some of those Cadillacs could be assembled in China, de Nysschen said.

Chinese automakers, including local partners of Ford, VW and GM, all have publicized aggressive investment plans.

Not every multinational automaker is moving so aggressively into electric vehicles.

In Detroit on Monday, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne said it did not make sense to announce a specific number of new electric vehicles — and he said the company was not under pressure, but working to meet emissions requirements. 

“We do not have a gun to our head,” Marchionne said. He said EVs will likely become mandatory in Europe because of emissions rules.

Rural Women in India, Elderly in Japan Open Homes to Airbnb Guests

Mobile apps that help women in the Indian countryside and tiny villages in Japan to open their homes to visitors from across the world are generating incomes, revitalizing remote communities and helping to curb migration to cities.

A women’s organization in the western Indian state of Gujarat has tied up with Airbnb, the short-term home rental service, to train rural women to be hosts and list their homes on its site.

A year in, the number of women earning from home sharing has doubled, according to the Self Employed Women’s Association (SEWA), which has about 2 million members, mostly in villages.

“At first, we weren’t sure how the women would fare and if people would respond to homestays in these areas,” said Reema Nanavaty, a director at SEWA.

“But once they began getting guests, the women invested in upgrading their homes and started using Google Translate to communicate with guests. It has become a significant source of income for them,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Guests to the colorful homes are treated to home-cooked Gujarati food, and can participate in kite flying and garba dancing with sticks in traditional costume, she said.

The partnership will extend to 14 more states, aiming to boost incomes of women in rural areas and help boost tourism in otherwise neglected areas, she said.

Cheap smartphones are also aiding those looking for work, with job matching sites helping even illiterate job seekers from rural Cambodia to India find employers without middlemen who may dupe them.

Airbnb also has partnerships in South Korea, Japan and Taiwan for rural tourism.

In Japan, the Yoshino Cedar House, a collaboration with Tokyo-based architect Go Hasegawa and the local community, came about as a response to shrinking rural populations in the rapidly ageing country.

It was inspired by a host whose listing helped rejuvenate her village, said Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia.

Hundreds of villages and towns “will disappear in the next decade if we do not find ways to create regenerative and adaptive systems”, he said via e-mail.

The Cedar House is run by a cooperative of about two dozen community members who take turns at being the host.

Most of the proceeds remain in the community, with a percentage of profits reinvested in local projects, Gebbia said.

“If we can get community-driven empowerment right in Japan, we can find ways of adapting this to other countries,” he said.

In India, the 50 rural homes listed on Airbnb are drawing guests from the United States and Europe, Nanavaty said.

“Some of the villages were not even on Google Maps. For the women, it is a new way to make money, be independent,” she said.

Intel Underfoot: Floor Sensors Rise as Retail Data Source

The next phase in data collection is right under your feet.

Online clicks give retailers valuable insight into consumer behavior, but what can they learn from footsteps? It’s a question Milwaukee-based startup Scanalytics is helping businesses explore with floor sensors that track people’s movements.

The sensors can also be used in office buildings to reduce energy costs and in nursing homes to determine when someone falls. But retailers make up the majority of Scanalytics’ customers, highlighting one of several efforts brick-and-mortar stores are undertaking to better understand consumer habits and catch up with e-commerce giant Amazon.

Physical stores have been at a disadvantage because they “don’t have that granular level of understanding as to where users are entering, what they’re doing, what shelves are not doing well, which aisles are not being visited,” said Brian Sathianathan, co-founder of Iterate.ai, a small Denver-based company that helps businesses find and test technologies from startups worldwide.

But it’s become easier for stores to track customers in recent years. With Wi-Fi — among the earliest available options — businesses can follow people when they connect to a store’s internet. One drawback is that not everyone logs on so the sample size is smaller. Another is that it’s not possible to tell whether someone is inches or feet away from a product.

Sunglass Hut and fragrance maker Jo Malone use laser and motion sensors to tell when a product is picked up but not bought, and make recommendations for similar items on an interactive display. Companies such as Toronto-based Vendlytics and San Francisco-based Prism use artificial intelligence with video cameras to analyze body motions. That can allow stores to deliver customized coupons to shoppers in real time on a digital shelf or on their cellphones, said Jon Nordmark, CEO of Iterate.ai.

With Scanalytics, Nordmark said, “to have [the sensors] be super useful for someone like a retailer, they may need to power other types of things,” like sending coupons to customers.

Using the data

Scanalytics co-founder and CEO Joe Scanlin said that’s what his floor sensors are designed to do. For instance, the sensors read a customer’s unique foot compressions to track that person’s path to a digital display and how long the person stands in front of it before walking away, he said. Based on data collected over time, the floor sensors can tell a retailer the best time to offer a coupon or change the display before the customer loses interest.   

“Something that in the moment will increase their propensity to purchase a product,” said Scanlin, 29, who started developing the paper-thin sensors that are 2-square feet (0.19-sq. meters) as a student at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater in 2012. He employs about 20 people.

Wisconsin-based bicycle retailer Wheel and Sprocket uses Scanalytics’ sensors — which can be tucked under utility mats — to count the number of customers entering each of its eight stores to help schedule staff.

“That’s our biggest variable expense,” said co-owner Noel Kegel. “That sort of makes or breaks our profitability.”

Privacy and surveillance

Kegel wants to eventually have sensors in more areas throughout his stores to measure where customers spend most of their time and what products are popular, but he said it’s too expensive right now.

The cost of having the sensors ranges from $20 to $1,000 per month, depending on square footage and add-on applications to analyze data or interact with digital signs, Scanlin said. He said he’s working with 150 customers in the U.S. and other countries and estimates that about 60 percent are retailers.  

The emergence of tracking technologies is bound to raise concerns about privacy and surveillance. But Scanlin noted his sensors don’t collect personally identifying information.

Jeffrey Lenon, 47, who was recently shopping at the Shops of Grand Avenue mall in Milwaukee, said he wasn’t bothered by the idea of stores tracking foot traffic and buying habits.

“If that’s helping the retailer as far as tracking what sells and what no, I think it’s a good idea,” Lenon said.

These technologies have not become ubiquitous in the U.S. yet, but it’s only a matter of time, said Ghose Anindya, a business professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business.

“In a couple of years this kind of conversation will be like part and parcel of everyday life. But I don’t think we’re there yet,” he said.

Головою Державної служби ветеранів обрали Валентина Манька

Головою Державної служби у справах ветеранів війни та учасників антитерористичної операції на конкурсі обрали Валентина Манька, повідомляє Національне агентство України з питань державної служби.

Як йдеться на сайті агентства, Манько є головою громадської організації «Єдиний союз патріотів України» та радником директора державного підприємства «Конярство України».

Згідно з постановою Кабінету міністрів від 10 вересня 2014 року, Державна служба у справах ветеранів війни та учасників антитерористичної операції «є центральним органом виконавчої влади України, який реалізує державну політику у сфері соціального захисту ветеранів війни та учасників антитерористичної операції, соціальної та професійної адаптації військовослужбовців, які звільняються, осіб, звільнених з військової служби, та учасників антитерористичної операції, в межах своїх повноважень державну політику у сфері волонтерської діяльності, а також соціального захисту деяких категорій осіб».

Migration Policy Threatens to Collapse Germany’s Coalition Talks

Resistance is growing in the ranks of Germany’s Social Democrats against forming another “grand coalition” with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats, and migration policy is a major sticking point.

Migration remains the most divisive issue in the country following the slaying late last month of a teenage German girl by her former boyfriend, an Afghan migrant.

The killing has refocused public anxiety about a rising level of violent crime associated with migrants, as well as the government’s handling of thousands of unaccompanied male asylum-seekers who claim to be under 18 years of age, but who may be adults.

The December 27 killing of the 15-year-old girl prompted a tabloid press furor. It followed a series of brutal crimes by young male migrants, including the slaying in September of a 19-year-old medical student by a 22-year-old Afghan migrant, who told a court he posed as a minor to improve his immigration chances.

In his case, public anger deepened when it emerged he had been jailed for attempted murder in Greece, but released under an amnesty before making his way to Germany.

In July of last year, another adult male migrant claiming to be a teenager went on an axe rampage on a train, injuring several people before being shot dead by police.

The reports of migrant-related crime are adding to Merkel’s difficulties in pulling off a coalition deal with the Social Democrats (SPD) that would allow her to remain Germany’s leader.

 

Immigrant cap

Social Democrat rebels object to a cap on the number of migrants allowed to resettle in the country that was included Friday in a preliminary agreement among the parties. Chancellor Merkel’s junior partner, Bavaria’s Christian Social Union (CSU), is demanding a 220,000-person a year cap on the resettlement of asylum-seekers.

Migration differences contributed to the collapse of weeks-long coalition talks last year among her Christian Democratic Union (CDU), its Bavarian sister party, the pro-business Free Democratic Party (FDP), and the Green party, following federal elections at the end of September.

Those elections left Merkel’s ruling CDU the largest party, but with a reduced share of the vote and fewer seats thanks partly to a surge by Germany’s far-right populists. The SPD recorded its worst electoral performance since 1933.

In last week’s negotiations with the SPD, the Bavarian CSU conservatives insisted on the resettlement cap and have been demanding medical tests for unaccompanied male migrants suspected of lying about their age. SPD activists accuse the CSU of exploiting the migration issue, arguing that young German males also commit crimes.

Since the migration influx started in 2015, when Merkel offered an open-door policy to asylum-seekers from war-torn countries, crime rates have risen. Violent crime rose 10 percent between 2014 and 2017 in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

The migration cap has enraged some SPD rebels, who say it is unconstitutional. They also want a new social security plan and stronger protections for employees.

Changes to coalition deal

Speaking to Berlin’s Der Tagesspiegel newspaper, the city’s mayor, Michael Muller, said the preliminary coalition talks “fell short of party expectations.” He refused to rule out the possibility of SPD delegates withholding their approval, the coalition talks collapsing, and the need for new elections.

SPD leaders fear party members will reject the outline coalition agreement when they vote on January 21 and are scrambling to seek changes in the deal. Rank-and-file skeptics remain bruised by the SPD’s poor performance in last year’s elections and doubtful it should agree to a renewed version of their 2013-2017 “grand coalition” with Merkel’s conservatives.

Talk of seeking changes in the provisional deal struck Friday is angering conservatives. Julia Kloeckner, a deputy CDU leader, questioned the trustworthiness of the SPD. “You negotiated, raised your hand for the complete exploratory package,” she said 

“Being able to trust means being able to rely on the word of the other,” she tweeted. “Everything was negotiated in the package, no cherry picking please!.”

CDU lawmaker Thomas Strob told RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland, “What we have agreed upon with each other is valid.”

On Saturday, delegates at a regional SPD conference in the eastern German state of Saxony-Anhalt voted 52-51 against agreeing to a “grand coalition” with Merkel, despite a plea by former party leader Sigmar Gabriel to back the deal for the sake of German stability.

The teenage girl’s slaying will “inevitably have repercussions for ongoing coalition talks in Berlin,” said Marcel Fürstenau, a commentator for Deutsche Welle, Germany’s public international broadcaster. “One thing seems impossible: that people, despite being understandably horrified and outraged, might deal with it calmly.”

Апеляційний суд залишив на посаді заступника голови Запорізької облради

Колегія суддів Апеляційного суду Харківської області залишила на посаді заступника голови Запорізької обласної ради Владислава Марченка.

Апеляційний суд залишив у силі рішення суду першої інстанції, який не знайшов підстав для усунення посадовця від виконання обов’язків.

Відсторонити Марченка просила прокуратура прокуратура Харківської області.

21 грудня співробітники Харківської обласної прокуратури та Служби безпеки України провели в Запоріжжі 30 обшуків у справі заступника голови Запорізької обласної ради Владислава Марченка.

Тоді генпрокурор Юрій Луценко повідомив, що «справа стосується депутата облради (Марченка – ред.) та його брата, які через вплив на посадових осіб організовували фіктивні тендери на благоустрій парку (2,7 мільйона гривень) та шкільні спортмайданчики (84 мільйони гривень) з наперед визначеним переможцем». За його даними, Марченко, який є «підозрюваним організатором схеми», разом з братом «лобіювали свої фірми» через зв’язки із заступником мера Запоріжжя Анатолієм Пустоваровим.

Владислава Марченка затримали 21 грудня та відправили до Харкова для вручення підозри. 23 грудня Червонозаводський районний суд Харкова обрав йому запобіжний у вигляді домашнього арешту з носінням електронного пристрою на термін до 21 лютого 2018 року, який 11 січня Апеляційний суд Харківської області змінив на частковий домашній арешт.

28 грудня суд відхилив клопотання прокуратури Харківської області про відсторонення Марченка від посади.

Paper: IMF Concerned by Ukraine’s Anti-Corruption Draft Law

The International Monetary Fund has told the Ukrainian authorities that it does not support a draft law to create an anti-corruption court because the bill does not guarantee its independence, the newspaper Ukrainska Pravda reported on Monday.

Slow progress in establishing a court to handle corruption cases while demonstrating independence and transparency has been one of the main obstacles to the disbursement of a long-delayed loan tranche under the aid-for-reforms program.

In response to international pressure to speed up the process, President Petro Poroshenko submitted a new draft law to parliament in December.

But the IMF mission chief for Ukraine, Ron van Rooden, has since written to the presidential administration to express the Fund’s concerns about parts of the bill, Ukrainska Pravda said, publishing what it said was the text of the letter in full.

“We have serious concerns about the draft law,” van Rooden said in the letter dated Jan. 11. “Several provisions are not consistent with the authorities’ commitments under Ukraine’s IMF-supported program.”

He said parts of the legislation could undermine the independence of the court and the transparent appointment of competent and trustworthy judges.

The law could also lead to further delays as an additional bill would need to be submitted by the president for the court to established, he said.

“In its current form… we would not be able to support the draft law,” he said.

Responding to a request for comment, Poroshenko’s office denied an allegation in the letter that the law is not in line with recommendations of a leading European rights watchdog.

“President Petro Poroshenko has repeatedly emphasized that the country’s leadership has the political will to create an independent anti-corruption court,” it said in an emailed statement.

The IMF did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

The IMF and Ukraine’s other foreign backers have repeatedly called for Ukraine to improve efforts to root out graft. They see an anti-corruption court as an essential tool for eliminating the power of vested interests.

Reform progress stalled last year, raising concerns the authorities are backtracking on commitments and unpopular policy changes in anticipation of presidential and parliamentary elections in 2019.

Establishing the court, sticking to gas price adjustments and implementing sustainable pension reform are the key conditions Ukraine must meet to qualify for the next loan tranche of around $2 billion from the IMF.

Справи щодо 4 екс-беркутівців, підозрюваних у побитті «Автомайдану», передали до суду – ГПУ

Департамент спеціальних розслідувань направив до суду обвинувальний акт щодо чотирьох колишніх співробітників столичного спецпідрозділу міліції «Беркут», яких підозрюють у перевищенні влади та побитті 18 активістів громадського руху «Автомайдан» і сторонніх громадян в ніч з 22 на 23 січня 2014 року на вулицях Щорса та Грушевського у Києві, повідомила прес-служба Генеральної прокуратури України.

У ГПУ зазначили, що особам також інкримінують службові підроблення офіційних документів (рапортів) та надання завідомо неправдивих показань, поєднаних з обвинуваченням активістів у тяжких злочинах, на підставі яких їх було затримано, притягнуто до кримінальної відповідальності за нібито хуліганські дії та арештовано.

Генпрокуратура повідомила, що в червні 2016 року направила до суду обвинувальний акт стосовно командира роти спецпідрозділу «Беркут» та п’ятьох колишніх працівників спецпідрозділу «Беркут» у цій справі.

Під час подій Революції гідності Міністерство внутрішніх справ мотивувало затримання «Беркутом» активістів «Автомайдану» їхніми хуліганськими діями, зокрема і щодо правоохоронців. Затриманих тоді навіть судили, але зі зміною влади після Революції гідності судові процеси проти автомайданівців припинилися.

Russia, Turkey Condemn US Plans for Syria Border Force

Turkey’s president on Monday denounced U.S. plans to form a 30,000-strong Kurdish-led border security force in Syria, vowing to “drown this terror force before it is born,” as Russia and Syria also rejected the idea.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan also warned U.S. troops against coming between Turkish troops and Kurdish forces, which Ankara views as an extension of Turkey’s own Kurdish insurgency.

Turkey has been threatening to launch a new military operation against the main Syrian Kurdish militia, known as the People’s Defense Units, or YPG, in the Kurdish-held Afrin enclave in northern Syria. The YPG is the backbone of a Syrian force that drove the Islamic State group from much of northern and eastern Syria with the help of U.S.-led airstrikes.

Russia has also warned that the nascent U.S. force threatens to fuel tensions around Afrin.

“The United States has admitted that it has created a terrorist force along our country’s border. Our duty is to drown this terror force before it is born,” Erdogan said in a speech in Ankara.

The U.S.-led coalition says the new force, expected to reach 30,000 in the next several years, is a key element of its strategy in Syria to prevent the resurgence of the IS group in Syria.

“A strong border security force will prohibit (IS) freedom of movement and deny the transportation of illicit materials,” the coalition said in a statement to The Associated Press. “This will enable the Syrian people to establish effective local, representative governance and reclaim their land.” The SDF currently controls nearly 25 percent of Syrian territory in the north and east.

The core of the force is to be made up of fighters from the existing Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, the coalition’s ally in the fight against IS. Some 230 cadets have already been recruited to the new border force, according to the coalition. The force is expected to be deployed along the borders of the SDF-held areas and Iraq and Turkey.

Turkey sent troops into Syria in 2016 to prevent Syrian Kurdish fighters from forming a contiguous entity along its border. It has also supported rival Syrian rebels and independently fought to drive IS from parts of Syria.

Tensions with Washington have repeatedly erupted over its support of the SDF, prompting U.S. troops to deploy in northeast Syria to prevent clashes between the Kurdish forces and Turkey-backed fighters.

In recent days, Turkey said it would soon launch a new operation in Afrin and sent reinforcements to the border. Russia deployed military observers to Afrin last year in an effort to prevent Turkish-Kurdish clashes.

On Monday, Erdogan said preparations for the military assault on Afrin “are complete,” adding that an operation could start any moment. He said Turkish troops are already firing artillery at Afrin from the border.

“Don’t stand between us and these herd of murderers. Otherwise, we won’t be responsible for the unwanted incidents that may arise,” he said. “Tear off the insignia you have placed on the uniforms of the terrorists so that we don’t have to bury them (U.S. soldiers) together with the terrorists.

Russia said Monday that the new force is a sign Washington “doesn’t want to preserve the territorial integrity of Syria.” Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said the nascent border force is “not helping calm the situation.”

Moscow is a main backer of Syrian President Bashar Assad, while Turkey supports the Syrian opposition. But they came together last year along with Iran, another Assad ally, to set up “de-escalation” zones that have reduced much of the fighting. Since then, Turkey’s ties with Russia have warmed as relations with the U.S. have deteriorated.

Assad’s government also condemned the U.S. plans for the border force, calling it “a blatant encroachment upon the sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity of Syria,” and a violation of international law.

French Dairy Recalls Infant Milk from 83 Countries

More than 12 million boxes of French baby milk products are being recalled from 83 countries for suspected salmonella contamination.

The recall includes Lactalis’ Picot, Milumel and Taranis brands.

The head of the French dairy Lactalis on Sunday confirmed that its products are being recalled from countries across Europe, Africa, Latin America and Asia after salmonella was discovered at one of its plants last month. The United States, Britain and Australia were not affected.

Emmanuel Besnier told weekly newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche that his family company, one of the world’s biggest dairies, would pay damages to “every family which has suffered a prejudice.”

The paper said 35 babies were diagnosed with salmonella in France, one in Spain and a possible case in Greece.

Salmonella can cause severe diarrhea, stomach cramps, vomiting and severe dehydration. It can be life-threatening, especially in young children.

Lactalis officials have said they believe the contamination was caused by renovation work at their Celia factory in Craon, in northwest France.

France’s agriculture minister said products from the factory will be banned indefinitely during the investigation.

 

У офшорних фірм є шанс відсудити конфісковані півтора мільярди Януковича – Горбатюк

Керівник департаменту спецрозслідувань Генеральної прокуратури Сергій Горбатюк припускає, що офшорні фірми можуть відсудити назад конфісковані гроші колишнього президента України Віктора Януковича. Про це він заявив в ефірі програми «Завтра» – спільного проекту Радіо Свобода та каналу «112 Україна»

«Звичайно, якщо є фірми, які оскаржують і які отримають відмову в цьому, і які можуть бути добросовісними так званими набувачами, дійсно вони можуть звертатися до європейських судів і розраховувати, що європейський суд буде до них дослухатися», – сказав прокурор.

Водночас, як зазначив Горбатюк, про відкриття якихось проваджень щодо оприлюднення медіакомпанією «Аль-джазіра» засекреченого вироку Краматорського суду про спецконфіскацію коштів екс-президента йому нічого невідомо. Як пояснив керівник департаменту спецрозслідувань ГПУ, прокуратура втратила можливість починати провадження зі створенням Державного бюро розслідувань, тож цією справою може займатись Нацполіція або Служба безпеки України.

Більше того, наголосив Горбатюк, офіційного підтвердження того, що оприлюднений документ є дійсно вироком Краматорського суду, наразі немає.

Розслідувачі медіакомпанії «Аль-Джазіра» оприлюднили документ, який містить 95 сторінок і, зокрема, містить рішення Краматорського районного суду, за яким було конфісковано 1,5 мільярда доларів США, що належали колишньому президентові України Віктору Януковичу та його оточенню.

Водночас антикорупційна організація Transparency International Україна закликає в законному порядку опублікувати цей вирок, бо автентичність тексту вироку поки достеменно не підтверджено.

У квітні 2017 року генеральний прокурор Юрій Луценко заявив, що суд у Краматорську на Донеччині схвалив рішення про конфіскацію коштів колишнього президента України Віктора Януковича і його оточення. Це рішення досі не оприлюднили.

Державне підприємство «Інформаційні судові системи», яке зобов’язане оприлюднити судове рішення у реєстрі, посилається на заборону органів прокуратури. Генеральна прокуратура, у свою чергу, стверджує, що визнала це рішення державною таємницею, і не може ні підтвердити, ані спростувати автентичність оприлюднених журналістами документів. 

US-Led Coalition Helps Build New Syrian Force, Angering Turkey

The U.S.-led coalition is working with its Syrian militia allies to set up a new border force of 30,000 personnel, the coalition said on Sunday, a move that has added to Turkish anger over U.S. support for Kurdish-dominated forces in Syria.

A senior Turkish official told Reuters the U.S. training of the new “Border Security Force” is the reason that the U.S. charge d’affaires was summoned in Ankara on Wednesday. The official did not elaborate.

The force, whose inaugural class is currently being trained, will be deployed at the borders of the area controlled by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) — an alliance of militias in northern and eastern Syria dominated by the Kurdish YPG.

In an email to Reuters, the coalition’s Public Affairs Office confirmed details of the new force reported by The Defense Post. About half the force will be SDF veterans, and recruiting for the other half is underway, the coalition’s Public Affairs Office said.

The force will deploy along the border with Turkey to the north, the Iraqi border to the southeast, and along the Euphrates River Valley, which broadly acts as the dividing line separating the U.S.-backed SDF and Syrian government forces backed by Iran and Russia.

U.S. support for the SDF has put enormous strain on ties with NATO ally Turkey, which views the YPG as an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) — a group that has waged a three-decade insurgency in Turkey.

Syria’s main Kurdish groups have emerged as one of the few winners of the Syrian war, and are working to entrench their autonomy over swathes of northern Syria.

Washington opposes those autonomy plans, even as it has backed the SDF, the main partner for the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State in Syria.

The coalition said the BSF would operate under SDF command and around 230 individuals were currently undergoing training in its inaugural class.

“Efforts are taken to ensure individuals serve in areas close to their homes. Therefore, the ethnic composition of the force will be relative to the areas in which they serve.

“More Kurds will serve in the areas in northern Syria. More Arabs will serve in areas along the Euphrates River Valley and along the border with Iraq to the south,” the coalition’s Public Affairs Office said.

‘A new mission’

“The base of the new force is essentially a realignment of approximately 15,000 members of the SDF to a new mission in the Border Security Force as their actions against ISIS draw to a close,” it said.

“They will be providing border security through professionally securing checkpoints and conducting counter-IED operations,” it said, adding that coalition and SDF forces were still engaging Islamic State pockets in Deir al-Zor province. IED stands for improvised explosive device.

The United States has about 2,000 troops in Syria fighting Islamic State, and has said it is prepared to stay in the country until it is certain Islamic State is defeated, that stabilization efforts can be sustained, and there is meaningful progress in U.N.-led peace talks on ending the conflict.

The Syrian government in Damascus has declared the United States an illegal occupation force, and its SDF allies as “traitors”. A top Syrian Kurdish politician told Reuters last week the United States appeared in no hurry to leave Syria.

Leader of Britain’s UKIP Faces Calls to Quit Over Girlfriend’s Remarks

The leader of Britain’s eurosceptic UK Independence Party faced calls on Sunday to stand down after a newspaper published racist messages sent by his girlfriend about Prince Harry’s fiancee Meghan Markle.

Last year, Henry Bolton was the fourth leader in a year to be appointed to the helm of UKIP, a party which helped bring about a Brexit vote. He hit the tabloid newspapers over Christmas when they reported that he had left his wife for 25-year-old model and UKIP member Jo Marney.

The Mail on Sunday published a series of messages sent by Jo Marney to a friend in which she made offensive comments about Markle and black people. The newspaper also published an apology from Marney, who said her comments had been “taken out of Context.”

UKIP’s Bill Etheridge, a member of the European Parliament, said: “The time has come for Henry Bolton to resign as leader of UKIP. He must go, he must go quickly, he must go as quietly as possible.”

“It appears to me that the lack of experience in politics from Henry has got the better of him,” he said in a video statement, describing the last few months as “hell” for the party.

Peter Whittle, UKIP’s member of the London Assembly, also criticized the remarks, saying they were “disgraceful.”

“This person should not just be suspended from @UKIP but expelled altogether,” he said on Twitter.

Led by Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage, UKIP won nearly 4 million votes in 2015, 12.6 percent of those cast, on its anti-European Union platform, putting it at the forefront of British politics even though it managed to win one seat in parliament.

But its fortunes have sunk since, hurt by internal fights over its future direction. At last year’s election in June, UKIP won 1.8 of the vote.

Слідчий комітет Росії порушив кримінальні справи щодо 72 українських військових – ЗМІ

Слідчий комітет Росії відкрив 146 кримінальних проваджень щодо 72 українських військових, зокрема – 20 чинів із числа найвищого військового керівництва, заявив в інтерв’ю виданню «Російська газета» очільник відомства Олександр Бастрикін.

Загалом же, за його словами, розслідується 209 кримінальних справ, пов’язаних із подіями в Україні, починаючи із 2014 року, передає видання.

Заяви про початок таких проваджень стосовно українських військових за статтею «застосування заборонених засобів і методів війни» через обстріли на Донбасі Бастрикін робив неодноразово також протягом минулого року. Бастрикін серед інших російських чиновників входить до санкційного списку, зокрема, за «актом Магнітського», через що йому заборонено в’їзд до певних країн ЄС, США і Канади.

У лютому минулого року генпрокурор України Юрій Луценко повідомив, що в Україні за воєнні злочини покарана 41 людина, серед яких 28 – громадяни Росії. Крім того, серед підозрюваних у воєнних злочинах є 12 генералів та 2 офіцери з числа найвищого командного складу Збройних сил Росії. У цих справах фігурує і радник президента Росії Сергій Глазьєв.

Збройний конфлікт на сході України почався навесні 2014 року після російської анексії Криму. За даними ООН, за час конфлікту загинули близько 10 тисяч людей. Україна і Захід звинувачують Росію у підтримці сепаратистів на Донбасі, Москва ці звинувачення відкидає і заявляє, що на непідконтрольних Києві територіях можуть бути хіба що російські «добровольці».

Росія: Затулін пропонує денонсувати договір з Україною в частині визнання кордонів

Депутат Державної думи Росії Костянтин Затулін, який є членом владної фракції «Єдина Росія», запропонував денонсувати Договір про дружбу, співробітництво і партнерство між Росією і Україною в тій частині, де країни визнають територіальні кордони одна одної. Про це 14 січня повідомляє російська державна інформагенція «РИА Новости».

Депутат вважає, що договір «односторонньо вигідний» Україні. «Бо, не обумовлюючи механізмів партнерства, співпраці і дружби, в другій статті договору ми визнаємо територіальні межі України, а вони, відповідно, наші – на момент підписання та ратифікації цього документа. Тобто йдеться про те, що, підписавши цей договір, Росія в 1997-му, а потім під час ратифікації в 1999 році підтвердила, що вона вважає, скажімо, Крим і Севастополь частиною території України», – зазначив Затулін.

Укладений у 1997 році Договір про дружбу, співробітництво і партнерство між Росією і Україною є основоположним документом російсько-українських відносин. Він передбачає стратегічне партнерство двох країн «на основі принципів взаємної поваги, суверенної рівності, територіальної цілісності, непорушності кордонів, мирного врегулювання суперечок, незастосування сили або загрози силою, включаючи економічні та інші способи тиску».

У лютому 2014 року невідомі озброєні люди, яких називали «зеленими чоловічками», захопили головні державні установи Автономної Республіки Крим і підняли над будівлями російський прапор. Крім того, вони блокували українські військові частини. Згодом у Росії визнали, що «зелені чоловічки» – російські військові.

16 березня 2014 року на території Криму і міста Севастополя відбувся так званий референдум про статус півострова, за результатами якого Росія заявила про включення Криму до свого складу.

Україна офіційно оголосила початком тимчасової окупації Криму Росією 20 лютого 2014 року. Міжнародні організації визнали окупацію і анексію Криму незаконними і засудили дії Росії. Москва заперечує окупацію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості». 

Energy Agency Sees Oil Price Decline, But Analyst Predicts a Boom

Crude oil prices reached a 30-month high this week. But the government agency that analyzes and disseminates energy information says the rally may have run its course. The Energy Information Administration predicts U.S. crude prices will stabilize to about 55 dollars a barrel for West Texas Crude and 60 dollars a barrel for Brent Crude, with slightly higher prices for both in 2019. One energy expert disagrees and says oil prices are on their way up. Mil Arcega explains.

Wahlberg Donates $1.5 Million After Pay Gap Outcry

Following an outcry over a significant disparity in pay between co-stars, Mark Wahlberg agreed Saturday to donate the $1.5 million he earned for reshoots for All the Money in the World to the sexual misconduct defense initiative Time’s Up.

Wahlberg said he’ll donate the money in the name of his co-star, Michelle Williams, who reportedly made less than $1,000 on the reshoots.

“I 100% support the fight for fair pay,” Wahlberg said in a statement.

Williams issued a statement Saturday, saying: “Today isn’t about me. My fellow actresses stood by me and stood up for me, my activist friends taught me to use my voice, and the most powerful men in charge, they listened and they acted.”

She noted that “it takes equal effort and sacrifice” to make a film.

“Today is one of the most indelible days of my life because of Mark Wahlberg, WME (William Morris Endeavor) and a community of women and men who share in this accomplishment.”

The announcement Saturday came after directors and stars, including Jessica Chastain and Judd Apatow, shared their shock at reports of the huge pay disparity for the Ridley Scott film. The 10 days of reshoots were necessary after Kevin Spacey was replaced by Christopher Plummer when accusations of sexual misconduct surfaced against Spacey. USA Today reported Williams was paid less than $1,000 for the 10 days.

Both Williams and Plummer were nominated for Golden Globes for their performances.

Talent agency William Morris Endeavor, which represents both Williams and Wahlberg, said it will donate an additional $500,000 to Time’s Up. The agency said in a statement that wage disparity conversations should continue and “we are committed to being part of the solution.”

It’s Back to the Future in Run-up to Russian Elections

Ukraine proudly announced this year that the country was free of all monuments to Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin in towns controlled by the Kyiv-based government. But while Ukraine has been busy completing the tearing down of statues to Lenin and monuments to other Communist figures, Soviet heroes have never been more in vogue in neighboring Russia.

Monuments to Lenin have been springing up across the country. Other Communist luminaries have received tributes, too, including Communist spymaster Felix Dzerzhinsky, the founder of the KGB, who was dubbed Lenin’s “willing executioner.”

Dzerzhinsky once wrote: “We stand for organized terror — this should be frankly admitted. Terror is an absolute necessity during times of revolution. Our aim is to fight against the enemies of the Soviet government and of the new order of life.”

Soviet nostalgia used to be the preserve of quirky fringe groups composed mainly of resentful old Communist retainers, destitute state pensioners and right-wing nationalists lamenting Russia’s military weakness. But it has become more widespread, with even youngsters embracing a glorified past — and Russian leader Vladimir Putin doesn’t appear to mind.

Remaining nostalgic

Since 2014, regret about the collapse of the Soviet Union has been high, with about half of the population remaining nostalgic about the past and lamenting the end of the USSR, according to pollsters at the Leveda Center.

A 2017 survey by the polling agency found that 47 percent of Russians approved of Josef Stalin, both for his personality as well as his “managerial skills,” despite his bloodthirsty legacy. Historians estimate that Stalin was responsible for more deaths than Adolf Hitler.

And nostalgia has fueled the rehabilitation of a host of characters in the Soviet story that few thought would ever again be eulogized — including biologist Trofim Lysenko, who has been dubbed “the Soviet era’s deadliest scientist” for his role overseeing Stain’s agricultural polices that led to famines fatal to millions.

Lysenko believed that modern genetics was a Western imperialist plot designed to undermine Russia.

There have been an increasing number of books and articles praising Lysenko, “part of a disturbing pro-Lysenko movement, which is accompanied by a growing sympathy for Stalin,” a group of Russian and German scientists noted in a recent article for the journal Current Biology. Despite the triumphs of modern genetics and the discrediting of Lysenkoism, “recent years have seen a rethinking of [his] doctrine in Russia,” they said.

Last November, the Kremlin played down the centennial of the Bolshevik Revolution, although it didn’t move to deter Communist devotees from holding celebration rallies. Uneasiness about memories of revolution and uprisings is one thing; celebrating Soviet heroes and strong national leadership is another, say analysts.

In the run-up to March presidential elections, Soviet nostalgia and celebrations of Russian nationalism serve a useful purpose for the Kremlin.

Upcoming election

Putin is assured of winning in March, but there are Kremlin worries about voter apathy and low turnout. Patriotic appeals and eulogies to forceful leadership and national discipline could help in getting more voters to the polling stations.

Putin has not been shy to co-opt the Soviet regime’s greatest victories and Russian nationalism to burnish himself and his own credentials.

Flying into Crimea after annexing the Ukrainian province in 2014, Putin’s itinerary was tightly choreographed to invoke the past. He laid a wreath at a World War II memorial, visited an ancient Russian Orthodox cathedral, and recalled czarist and Soviet-era glory with an inspection of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet at Sevastopol.

Not only have Kremlin officials increasingly been encouraging Soviet nostalgia and the memory of Stalin, they also have been promoting autocratic figures from Russia’s pre-Communist past — including Ivan the Terrible.

Last October, the government endorsed the country’s first-ever monument to Ivan the Terrible, with the unveiling in the city of Orel of a statue to the 16th-century czar who expanded Russia but at great human cost. Ivan the Terrible is reputed to have killed one of his sons during a rage.

The official lionization of historical despots feeds into an embrace of anti-democratic values, according to academic Dina Khapaeva, professor of Russian at the Georgia Institute of Technology. She noted in an article for Project Syndicate, a nonprofit that distributes commentary, that Russian officials have even spoken approvingly of Russian serfdom, which “complements the desire for a return to autocracy.”

“No wonder, then, that monuments to Stalin, too, are multiplying in Russian cities,” she said.

Protests in Tunisia Spur Government to Pledge Aid to Poor

Tunisia plans to increase aid for poor families by $70.3 million, after nearly a week of protests over austerity measures, an official said Saturday.

“This will concern about 250,000 families,” Mohamed Trabelsi, minister of social affairs, said. “It will help the poor and middle class.”

President Beji Caid Essebsi was also scheduled to visit the poor district of Ettadhamen in the capital, Tunis, which was hit by protests.

Essebsi was set to give a speech and open a cultural center, Reuters reported. It was to be the president’s first visit to the district.

Several hundred protesters took to the streets Saturday in Sidi Bouzid, where a 2011 uprising began, touching off the Arab Spring protests. And on Friday, protesters in cities and towns across the country waved yellow cards — a warning sign to the government — and brandished loaves of bread, a symbol of the day-to-day struggle to afford basic goods.

Anger has been growing since the government introduced price hikes earlier this month, which came atop already soaring inflation.

WATCH: Protests Erupt Again in Tunisia, Cradle of 2011 Arab Spring

Since Monday, security forces have been deployed in Tunis and across the country. Several hundred people have been arrested, including opposition politicians, while dozens have been injured in clashes with police. A 55-year-old man died earlier this week, though the circumstances of his death remained unclear.

The scenes of protest are reminiscent of January 2011, when demonstrations swept across the country, eventually toppling dictator Zine al-Abedine Ben Ali before spreading across the region.

“Why did we do the revolution? For jobs, for freedom and for dignity. We obtained freedom, sure — but we’re going hungry,” unemployed protester Walid Bejaoui said Friday.

One of the main protest organizations is using the Arabic social media hashtag “Fesh Nestannew?” or “What Are We Waiting For?” The group is urging a return to the spirit of the 2011 revolt.

“We believe a dialogue is still possible and reforms are still possible. The yellow card is to say, ‘Attention: Today we have the same demands that we have been having for years. It’s time to tackle the real problems, the economic crisis, the high cost of living,’ ” said Henda Chennaoui, a Fesh Nestannew protester.

The government enacted a new law this month raising taxes to try to cut the deficit, a move largely driven by Tunisia’s obligations to its international creditors, said analyst Max Gallien of the London School of Economics.

“I think that this government feels that its ability to make its own economic policy or its ability to roll back these austerity reforms is very much limited by the demands of international financial institutions,” he said, “primarily the IMF,” or International Monetary Fund.

The government has condemned the violence but pledged to listen to the protesters.

“No matter what the government undertakes, its top priority — even during tough decisions — is improving the economic and social conditions of the people,” Prime Minister Youssef Chahed told reporters Thursday.

So could the region witness a repeat of 2011, with the protests gaining momentum?

“We’re looking at a different region now. But at the same time, there are similarities: the issue of austerity, of socioeconomic nationalization, of corruption and predation by elites,” analyst Gallien said.

The Tunisian government’s task is to address those deep-rooted problems before the protests spin out of control.

Zeman, Drahos Set for Runoff Vote in Czech Presidential Poll

Czech President Milos Zeman has won the first round in the nation’s presidential election, and now must face Jiri Drahos, the former head of the country’s Academy of Sciences, in a runoff vote in two weeks.

Eight candidates were hoping to unseat the current controversy-courting 73-year-old leader, who is seeking another five-year term.

With 95 percent of ballots counted by the Czech Statistics Office, and a 61-percent turnout, Zeman was leading with 39.3 percent of the vote, followed by Drahos with 26.3 percent. A former diplomat, Pavel Fischer, placed third with 10.1 percent.

None of the other candidates seeking the largely ceremonial post received a majority of first-round votes, which makes it possible for Drahos to advance to the second round.

Zeman was elected to the largely ceremonial post in 2013 during the country’s first direct presidential vote, a victory that returned the former left-leaning prime minister to power.

In office, he has become known for strong anti-migrant rhetoric that won him support from the populist far-right. He has divided the nation with his pro-Russian stance and his support for closer ties with China.

Zeman was one of the few European leaders to endorse Donald Trump’s bid for the White House. He flew the European Union flag at Prague Castle, but later used every opportunity to attack the 28-nation bloc.

“This looks hopeful,” he told reporters.

The run-off election will be held January 26 and January 27.

Thousands Protest Austria’s New Right-wing Government

Thousands of Austrians are protesting their country’s new right-wing government with a march in Vienna.

 

Police in the capital said about 20,000 people were attending the march on Saturday.

 

Some protesters carried placards reading “Never Again.” Others chanted slogans such as “Refugees should stay, drive out the Nazis.”

 

The new governing coalition made up of the conservative Austrian People’s Party and the nationalist Freedom Party has taken a hard line against migration.

 

Report: Traffic Fatalities Hold Back Developing Economies

Deadly traffic accidents are more than just individual tragedies. They’re a drag on economic growth in developing countries, according to a new World Bank report.

The study is among the first to show that investing in road safety in low- and middle-income countries would raise national incomes.

Ninety percent of the world’s annual 1.25 million traffic deaths happen in the developing world. The World Health Organization says traffic accidents are the leading cause of death worldwide for people between 15 to 29 years old. That includes crashes that kill pedestrians, bicyclists and motorcyclists.

But the issue does not get much official attention, according to World Bank transportation expert Dipan Bose.

“There is not a lot of political will in many low and middle income countries to take definitive actions to reduce road deaths and injuries,” he said.

Bose co-authored a study focused on five countries: China, India, Thailand, the Philippines and Tanzania. The authors used economic models to estimate what each country’s overall economy would gain over a 24-year period by cutting traffic deaths in half.

“The results were quite startling,” he said.

Thailand would see a 22 percent boost to national income. The country’s high rates of both economic growth and traffic accidents meant it had the most to gain.  

Tanzania would gain seven percent. The other countries fell in between.

These kinds of economic gains are “something which no national government can ignore,” Bose said. The report “gives the economic story of why it is important to take strong actions on road safety.”

Enforcing speed limits, helmet and seat belt laws and cutting down on drunk driving are “low-hanging fruit” to reduce traffic injuries, the report says.

Not only drivers at fault

But drivers are only partly responsible for traffic deaths, according to a separate report co-authored by the World Bank and the World Resources Institute. City planners and government officials are responsible for building safety into the transportation system.

“If the system’s not safe – if people don’t have the opportunity to cross the road safely, or drive in a safe vehicle – then a small error can result in a fatality,” said report co-author Anna Bray Sharpin at the World Resources Institute. “And that should not be the case.”

For example, she said, “many cities have applied highway design guidelines even to their city streets.” Wide, multi-lane boulevards are designed for “maximum traffic flow and speed,” but not for cyclists or pedestrians.

“People tend to take risks to try and cross the road,” she said. “And that comes back to this issue of whether this is a personal responsibility, or a co-responsibility between governments and planners and people using the road.”

The report offers guidance for incorporating safety into road design. Public transit, walking and biking lower the number of cars on the road and the number of accidents. Installing sidewalks, raised crosswalks and protected cycle lanes helps keep these road users out of harm’s way. On rural roads, median barriers can reduce head-on collisions.

Bray Sharpin notes that many developing countries are currently planning major road infrastructure projects.

“There’s a window of opportunity now to integrate safety into their planning,” she said. It’s much cheaper than trying to retrofit it later. Plus, once these roads are built, they’ll be around for decades.

If they don’t build in safety now, she added, they will be “locked into their dangerous infrastructure for the very long term.”