10 WTO Members Air Concerns About Trump ‘Buy American’ Order

A Geneva trade official says China and Taiwan have joined many U.S. allies including Israel at the World Trade Organization to express concerns over a Trump administration executive order that seeks to maximize use of American-made goods, products and materials in government procurement. 

The 10 WTO members, also including the European Union, Canada and Japan, urged Washington to continue honoring the trade body’s “Government Procurement Agreement” adopted by Washington and 45 other countries — mostly EU states — that aims to promote fairer, freer access to government contracts. 

The official said the countries took issue Wednesday with the “Buy American and Hire American” executive order signed in April that lays out a policy aimed to “maximize” use of U.S.-made items in government procurement and assistance awards.

Canada: NAFTA’s Proposed Changes ‘Troubling’

Canada’s foreign minister says there are “unconventional” and “troubling” proposals on the table as Canada, the United States and Mexico seek to update the North American Free Trade Agreement.

The fourth round of talks on revising the 23-year-old NAFTA deal wrapped up Tuesday, with more talks set for Mexico next month and additional discussions early next year.

Canada’s Chrystia Freeland said proposals created “challenges,” and “turn back the clock” on NAFTA. Failure could threaten jobs across North America, she said. In addition, ending NAFTA could hurt the North American teamwork that produces cars efficiently and makes them competitive with products from other regions, she added.

Mexico’s Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo said it was clear from the beginning that the talks would be tough and “we still have a lot of work to do.” He also said all nations “have limits.”

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said the United States faces a large trade deficit, and blamed NAFTA for the loss of manufacturing jobs. He expressed frustration that his negotiating partners were not willing to make changes to reduce those deficits. 

NAFTA was harshly criticized by candidate Donald Trump, and press reports say Washington has since proposed renegotiating the deal every five years, requiring more U.S.-made content in automobiles, and scaling back a mechanism to resolve disputes. Trump has blamed what he called poorly negotiated agreements for the loss of millions of manufacturing jobs that hurt the U.S. economy. He promised to drive harder bargains in trade deals. 

The Brookings Institution’s Dany Bahar said trade deficits are not the cause of job losses, and called the U.S. focus misplaced. He said NAFTA’s dispute resolution mechanism and some other provisions could use some updating. However, he told VOA that NAFTA is closer to collapse than in previous rounds of talks. Such a collapse would mean U.S.-made cars would become more expensive and less competitive on world markets, likely making the United States the “biggest loser” if the trade deal fails, he said.

До заміської резиденції Порошенка стягнули силовиків – Войціцька

До заміської резиденції президента України Петра Порошенка у Козині Київської області стягнули силовиків, повідомляє народний депутат від «Самопомочі» Вікторія Войціцька.

«Навіщо стільки людей і техніки нагнали для охорони приватної резиденції президента? Та ще й дорогу перекрили на певний час? Тут кого боятись?», – написала Войціцька у Facebook.

«Спитала у хлопців, з чим пов’язана така величезна кількість силовиків… Відповідь була «прекрасна»: проводяться навчання», – додала вона.

Силовики наразі цієї ситуації не коментували.

17 жовтня внаслідок сутичок на Грушевського в Києві постраждали четверо людей: один поліцейський і троє учасників мітингу.

Між учасниками мітингу і силовиками відбулися сутички. Це сталося на вулиці Грушевського після того, як активісти спробували пронести, минаючи рамки металошукача, намети до площі біля будівлі Верховної Ради. Згодом активісти таки пронесли намети і почали їх встановлювати.

У вівторок вранці кілька тисяч людей вийшли на мітинг біля Верховної Ради в Києві, вимагаючи скасувати депутатську недоторканність, створити Антикорупційний суд і внести зміни до виборчого законодавства. За різними даними, учасників акції від двох до чотирьох тисяч. Акція все ще триває.

Напередодні один з ініціаторів акції Міхеїл Саакашвілі в ефірі Радіо Свобода заявив, що учасники мітингу налаштовані мирно. Урядовий квартал у центрі Києва від ранку перекритий і оточений правоохоронцями.

UK Intelligence Head: Terror Threat Worst in his Career

In a rare public speech Tuesday, the head of Britain’s domestic intelligence agency said the terror threat in the country is worse now that it has ever been during his 34-year career.

“It’s clear that we’re contending with an intense UK terrorist threat from Islamist extremists,” MI5 chief Andrew Parker said. “That threat is multi-dimensional, evolving rapidly and operating at a scale and pace we’ve not seen before. But so too is our response.”

Parker said the MI5, also known as he Security Service, has noted a “dramatic upshift” in the threat this year, with a total of 36 people killed in separate attacks in London and Manchester.

“Twenty attacks in the U.K. have been foiled over the past four years. Many more will have been prevented by the early interventions we and the police make,” Parker said.

Last month, a makeshift bomb on the London subway injured at least 30 people. The blast was the fifth major terrorist attack in Britain this year.

Під Радою сталася штовханина, яку силовики фіксували на відео

Під будівлею Верховної Ради у Києві сталася штовханина, приводом до чого була спроба Нацгвардії прибрати паркан.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, силовики підійшли з боку Маріїнського парку і Кабміну. Сутичка сталася з боку Маріїнського парку, коли силовики створили живий щит, а мітингарі у відповідь почали штовханину.

Як сказав у розмові з кореспондентом Радіо Свобода керівник однієї з груп спецпризначенців, на той момент їхнім завданням було зафіксувати на відео факт «агресивної поведінки мітингарів». 

17 жовтня, унаслідок сутичок на вулиці Грушевського у Києві постраждали четверо людей – один поліцейський і троє учасників мітингу. Як повідомив речник Нацполіції Ярослав Тракало, поліцейського госпіталізували і ще трьом цивільним надали медичну допомогу на місці.

Між учасниками мітингу і силовиками відбулися сутички. Це сталося на вулиці Грушевського після того, як активісти спробували пронести, минаючи рамки металошукача, намети до площі біля будівлі Верховної Ради. Згодом активісти таки пронесли намети і почали їх встановлювати.

У вівторок вранці кілька тисяч людей вийшли на мітинг біля Верховної Ради в Києві, вимагаючи скасувати депутатську недоторканність, створити Антикорупційний суд і внести зміни до виборчого законодавства. За різними даними, учасників акції від двох до чотирьох тисяч. Акція все ще триває.

Напередодні один з ініціаторів акції Міхеїл Саакашвілі в ефірі Радіо Свобода заявив, що учасники мітингу налаштовані мирно. Урядовий квартал у центрі Києва від ранку перекритий і оточений правоохоронцями.

Duke and Duchess of Cambridge Expecting Child in April

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge say their third child will be due in April.

The royal couple had already revealed that they were having a child, but didn’t previously say which month the child is due. The brief statement released Tuesday by their Kensington Palace office offered no further details.

The former Kate Middleton had announced she was pregnant after missing a royal engagement in September. As with her other two pregnancies, she is suffering from hyperemesis gravidarum, or acute morning sickness.

She has since appeared in other events, including one Monday in which she danced with a person dressed as the beloved British children’s book character, Paddington Bear.

William and Kate, both 35, already have two children: Prince George, 4, and Princess Charlotte, 2.

Через поранення поліцейського біля Ради відкрили кримінальне провадження

За фактом поранення поліцейського під час сутичок на Грушевського біля Верховної Ради відкрили кримінальне провадження, повідомив речник МВС Артем Шевченко.

«За фактом сутичок під Верховною Радою внесено у ЄРДР відомості за ознаками злочинів передбачених ч.2 ст.345 «Погроза або насильство щодо працівника правоохоронного органу», – зазначив Шевченко у Facebook.

17 жовтня, унаслідок сутичок на вулиці Грушевського у Києві постраждали четверо людей – один поліцейський і троє учасників мітингу. Як повідомив речник Нацполіції Ярослав Тракало, поліцейського госпіталізували і ще трьом цивільним надали медичну допомогу на місці.

Між учасниками мітингу і силовиками відбулися сутички. Це сталося на вулиці Грушевського після того, як активісти спробували пронести, минаючи рамки металошукача, намети до площі біля будівлі Верховної Ради. Згодом активісти таки пронесли намети і почали їх встановлювати.

У вівторок вранці кілька тисяч людей вийшли на мітинг біля Верховної Ради в Києві, вимагаючи скасувати депутатську недоторканність, створити Антикорупційний суд і внести зміни до виборчого законодавства. За різними даними, учасників акції від двох до чотирьох тисяч. Акція все ще триває.

Напередодні один з ініціаторів акції Міхеїл Саакашвілі в ефірі Радіо Свобода заявив, що учасники мітингу налаштовані мирно. Урядовий квартал у центрі Києва від ранку перекритий і оточений правоохоронцями.

UN Report: Inequality, Denial of Reproductive Rights Threaten Development

A U.N. report warns gender inequality and the denial of reproductive rights and family planning threatens development goals, weakens national economies and will undermine efforts to eliminate poverty by 2030.

In its annual State of World Population report, the U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA) describes the poorest women in most developing countries as the most powerless members of society.   It says the poorest women have the least access to care during pregnancy and childbirth. And it says the inequality has life-long repercussions for women’s health, ability to get an education and employment.

UNFPA Geneva Office Director Monica Ferro said family planning is not only a human right, but necessary for women’s empowerment.  She said a woman or adolescent who cannot enjoy reproductive rights cannot stay healthy.  She and her family will be locked into lifelong poverty and deprivation.

“Limited access to family planning translates into 89 million unintended pregnancies and 48 million abortions in developing countries annually.  This does not only harm women’s health, but also restricts their ability to join or stay in the paid labor force and move towards financial independence,” Ferro said.

Ferro also expressed regret over the decision by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump not to fund the U.N. Population Fund.  In April, the administration announced it was cutting the U.S. contribution which in 2016 stood at $63 million.  Ferro said that will take a heavy toll on the health and well-being of thousands of impoverished women in developing countries.  

“With previous United States contribution for UNFPA, we were really fighting gender-based violence and reducing maternal deaths, especially in fragile and crisis and disaster-hit countries,” Ferro said.

They include Iraq, Nepal, Sudan, Syria, the Philippines, Ukraine and Yemen.  Ferro added the U.S. contribution helped save the lives of thousands of women during pregnancy and childbirth.  In addition, she said the organization was able to prevent thousands of unwanted pregnancies and provide other crucial family planning services.

US Homebuilder Sentiment Rises in October

U.S. homebuilders are feeling more optimistic than they have in months, looking past a recent slowdown in new home sales and the risk of rising labor and materials costs following hurricanes Harvey and Irma.

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder sentiment index released Tuesday rose four points to 68 this month. That’s the highest reading since May.

Readings above 50 indicate more builders see sales conditions as good rather than poor. The index has remained above 60 since September of 2016.

According to the latest survey by FactSet, the index easily exceeded expectations for a reading of 64 among industry analysts.

Readings gauging builders’ view of single-family home sales now and over the next six months rose from September. A measure of traffic by prospective buyers also rose.

The deadly hurricanes that swept into Texas, Louisiana and Florida raised concerns among builders that that their new-home projects could be delayed and face rising construction and materials costs as the focus turned to rebuilding properties that were flooded or damaged by the fierce winds and rainstorms. Homebuilders were grappling with a shortage of skilled construction labor before the hurricanes hit.

Those concerns remain, but builders appear to be drawing encouragement from the thin supply of homes on the market, which has helped lift sales of new homes ahead of last year’s pace.

“It is encouraging to see builder confidence return to the high 60s levels we saw in the spring and summer,” said Robert Dietz, the NAHB’s chief economist. “With a tight inventory of existing homes and promising growth in household formation, we can expect the new home market continue to strengthen at a modest rate in the months ahead.”

A shortage of homes for sale coupled with rising prices has turned affordability into a challenge for many would-be buyers.

Sales of new U.S. homes slid 3.4 percent in August to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 560,000. It was the second straight monthly decline, though sales are running 7.5 percent higher year-to-date than in 2016, thanks to solid sales gains earlier this year. New-home sales figures for September are due out next week.

This month’s builder index was based on 323 respondents.

A measure of current sales conditions for single-family homes rose five points to 75, while an outlook for sales over the next six months climbed five points to 78. Builders’ view of traffic by prospective buyers increased one point to 48.

 

Forbes: Trump’s Net Worth Declined by $600 Million in Past Year

U.S. President Donald Trump’s net worth declined by some $600 million to $3.1 billion in the past year, according to Forbes magazine.

The biggest contributing factor to Trump’s declining fortune was his real estate holdings, much of which is in New York City. Several of his Manhattan properties have declined in value, reducing his fortune in this sector by nearly $400 million.

Some of Trump’s golf properties overseas and in the United States also have declined in value, the apparent result of potential guests being offended by Trump’s politics and bluster, Forbes reported.

The presidential campaign also contributed to a decline in Trump’s net worth. His cash holdings were reduced to about $100 million since last year after he spent $66 million on his campaign.

The reduction in Trump’s cash holdings also was the result of a $25 million payment Trump made to settle a lawsuit over Trump University.

Forbes said it calculated Trump’s net worth “after months of digging through financial disclosures and public property records and conducting dozens of interviews.”

Forbes now ranks Trump as the 248th richest person in the U.S., down from 156 in 2016.

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates topped the list of wealthiest Americans for the 24th consecutive year with a net worth of $89 billion. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos came in number two with a net worth of $81.5 billion.

Влада не чинить перешкод мирним акціям протесту – Шкіряк

Влада не чинить перешкод участі громадян у мирних акціях протесту в центрі Києва. Про це заявляє радник міністра внутрішніх справ України Зорян Шкіряк.

«Кількість встановлених сьогодні рамок з металошукачами під час футбольних матчів дозволяє пропустити 55 тисяч громадян протягом 2,5 години. Отже, 3 тисячі (можливо, більше) учасників мітингу пройдуть абсолютно спокійно і достатньо швидко. Звичайно, якщо не будуть здійснюватися свідомі сплановані провокації і відверті перешкоджання правоохоронцям виконувати свої функції», – написав Шкіряк у Facebook.

«Дії правоохоронних органів спрямовані виключно на забезпечення безпеки мирних українських громадян, що беруть участь в цих заходах», – наголосив радник Авакова, нагадавши про трагічні події 31 серпня 2015 року, коли під стінами Верховної Ради пролунав вибух і загинули четверо нацгвардійців.

У центрі Києва зранку 17 жовтня перекритий рух на кількох вулицях в урядовому кварталі. Міхеїл Саакашвілі та його партія «Рух нових сил» організовує акцію «на підтримку політичної реформи, обмеження депутатської недоторканності і створення антикорупційного суду».

Зі свого боку Служба безпеки України повідомила про наміри «окремих радикально налаштованих структур» здійснити провокації під час цих акцій.

Протести під Радою: вимога реформ чи піар політиків? – ранковий ефір Радіо Свобода

Саакашвілі під Верховною Радою вимагатиме політичних реформ.

Дорогі обранці: депутати хочуть підвищити собі зарплату.

Трипільську культуру візьме під захист ЮНЕСКО.

На ці теми говоритимуть ведучий Ранкової Свободи Олександр Лащенко і гості студії: народні депутати Юрій Дерев’янко, Сергій Мельник; Михайло Папієв, Олександр Кірш, голова Комітету виборців Олексій Кошель; екс-представник України при ЮНЕСКО Юрій Кочубей, президент Українського комітету Міжнародної ради з питань пам’яток і визначних місць Микола Яковина.

 

Spain Jails 2 Top Catalonian Independence Leaders

Spain’s high court ordered two top Catalan separatists jailed for alleged sedition while the question of the region’s independence remains unclear.

Prosecutors accuse Jordi Cuixart of the Omnium Cultural movement and Jordi Sanchez of the Catalan National Assembly of provoking violence against police during a pro-independence march last month.

Protesters trapped officers inside a building and destroyed several police cars.

“Spain jails Catalonia’s civil society leaders for organizing peaceful demonstrations,” Catalan President Carles Puigdemont tweeted Monday. “Sadly, we have political prisoners again,” an apparent reference to Francisco Franco’s military dictatorship that ended more than 40 years ago.

The High Court also placed Catalan police chief Josep Lluis Trapero under investigation. The court declined to order him behind bars, but did revoke his passport to keep him from leaving the country.

Meanwhile, Puigdemont has still not said whether he will declare Catalan independence outright after the court and Spanish government declared a pro-independence referendum illegal.

Puigdemont had a Monday deadline to give a simple “yes” or “no” answer to the question whether he will declare independence. So far, he has only called for talks with Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and the deadline has been pushed to Thursday.

A frustrated Rajoy has said the uncertainty surrounding Catalonia is hurting the Spanish economy. The economic ministry Monday cut its economic growth forecast for 2018 because of the crisis.

Catalonia, Spain’s most prosperous region, is home to 7.5 million people. Its capital, Barcelona, is one of Europe’s major tourist attractions. Catalonia has its own language and distinct culture, and is deeply divided over independence.

The Catalan government said that 90 percent of Catalans voted for independence from Spain in the October 1 referendum. Many opponents of independence boycotted the vote, reducing turnout to around 43 percent.

VOA’s Isabela Cocoli contributed to this report.

Three Dead as Tropical Storm Ophelia Batters Ireland

At least three people have been killed as Tropical Storm Ophelia battered Ireland on Monday.

One of the most powerful storms ever recorded in the northeastern Atlantic hit every corner of Ireland with wind speeds of 190 kilometers per hour recorded at the southernmost tip of the country.

Ophelia knocked down trees and power lines, leaving more than 330,000 homes without power.

About 200 flights from Ireland’s two main airports in Dublin and Shannon were canceled. The airports are expected to reopen Tuesday as cleanup begins.

“There are still dangers out there, but the cleanup has started in some areas and the job of getting the country back to work has begun,” the chairman of Ireland’s National Emergency Coordination Group, Sean Hogan, told a news conference.

Schools across Northern Ireland will remain closed Tuesday to “avoid any potential risk to life for children, young people and staff,” the Education Department said.

Ankara Backs Baghdad Bid to Take Kirkuk, But Tensions Remain

Turkey has offered assistance to the Iraqi government in its effort to take control of the city of Kirkuk from Kurdish peshmerga forces.

The offer was made in a statement by the Turkish foreign ministry: “We once again emphasize the importance we attach to the protection of Iraq’s political unity and territorial integrity.”

Ankara strongly backs Baghdad in its opposition to an independence referendum passed last month by Iraqi Kurds. Turkey fears similar secessionist demands from its own large restive Kurdish minority.

“Ankara’s thinking is that if Kirkuk is taken back from Iraqi Kurds, then their dreams of independence are quashed permanently and there would be one less problem in Turkish foreign policy,” said political consultant Atilla Yesilada of Global Source Partners.

Kirkuk has approximately 5 percent of world’s oil reserves, and Iraqi Kurds have been exporting around 60,000 barrels a day from the region under its control.

Pro-government Turkish media gloated over reports of the imminent fall of Kirkuk.

“[Kurdish president Masoud] Barzani’s childhood dream shattered,” wrote the Turkish newspaper Yeni Safak. Despite Kirkuk’s multi-ethnic population, the identity of many Kurds is linked to their capital. On Monday, Ankara stepped up its pressure on the semiautonomous Iraqi Kurdish region, announcing an air embargo in the latest sanction to protest the referendum vote.

Monday’s foreign office statement also reiterated Kirkuk’s multi-ethnic identity, underlining the importance of the Turkmen population.

“Our relatives, our kinsman, rhetoric re-emerged [for] a while now,” observed former senior Turkish diplomat Aydin Selcen, who established Turkey’s consulate in the Iraqi Kurdish region. “It proves the fact, the oncoming presidential elections which will be held in 2019 effect the foreign policy of Turkey.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is facing a widely predicted close re-election bid and is courting nationalist voters, many of whom care deeply about Kirkuk and the fate of their Iraqi ethnic kin.

“The nationalists consider Kirkuk and Mosul part of Turkey,” said analyst Yesilada. “Kirkuk city and Kirkuk province, there are up to more than a million Turkmens — more than 50 percent are Sunni and they have close ties to Turkey. This is an important issue for Turkey and, in particular, for [Turkey’s Nationalist Action Party leader] Mr. [Devlet] Bahceli, who is an implicit partner for Mr. Erdogan’s endeavors at home and abroad.”

Last month, Bahceli declared that 5,000 of his party members would go to Kirkuk to protect Turkmen against the city’s then-Kurdish rulers. But analysts warn the threat faced by Turkmen is far from removed, with Baghdad forces set to take back control.

“Baghdad’s policy so far has been to disenfranchise the minorities, which are Sunni Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen. And this policy, if the Shia or Iraqi army take over Kirkuk, I am fairly sure they will not treat minorities with grace or favor,” Yesilada said.

Baghdad appears sensitive to such concerns.

“The Iraqi government was clever enough to use a Turkmen brigade among the PMU [Iraqi Shia militia force] that claimed Kirkuk province,” said former senior Turkish diplomat Selcen. “And not only the PMU is being used, but also the main duties are on the shoulders of the Iraqi army and Iraqi special forces Golden Division [Sunni military forces] elements.”

But Selcen says Ankara’s offers of military assistance will likely be rejected politically. A planned visit Sunday by Turkish Prime Minster Binali Yildirim was canceled, as was a high-level Turkish minister delegation Monday because of the Iraqi military operation in Kirkuk.

Analysts point out that while Ankara and Baghdad have found common ground on thwarting Iraqi Kurdish independence aspirations, strategic differences remain that potentially could come to the fore over the fate of Iraq’s ethnic Turks.

У Ростові-на-Дону відкрили пам’ятник «героям Донбасу»

У Ростові-на-Дону відкрили меморіал «героям Донбасу». На церемонії відкриття були присутні помічник президента Росії Владислав Сурков і лідер угруповання «ДНР» Олександр Захарченко. Квіти також поклали представники російської регіональної влади, зокрема, мер Ростова Віталій Кушнарьов.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, Сурков перед відкриттям пам’ятника зустрівся з представниками угруповання «ДНР» на з’їзді так званого «Союзу добровольців Донбасу». На зустрічі обговорювалися «проблеми» підтримуваних Росією бойовиків на Донбасі, а також «політична ситуація», зокрема участь росіян у конфлікті у Сирії.

Ініціатором встановлення меморіалу був «Союз добровольців Донбасу». Місцеві громадські активісти заявляли про незаконність «пам’ятника найманцям». У відповідь на ці скарги в адміністрації і прокуратурі міста заявили, що незадоволені встановленням монумента можуть звернутися до суду. 

Бойові дії на Донбасі розпочалися у квітні 2014 року. З того часу, за даними ООН, там загинули близько 10 тисяч людей.

Україна і Захід звинувачують Росію у підтримці проросійських бойовиків на Донбасі. Москва ці звинувачення відкидає, заявляючи, що на Донбасі немає російських військових, але є «добровольці».

In Harvey-hit County, Some in GOP Newly Confront the Climate

The church was empty, except for the piano too heavy for one man to move. It had been 21 days since the greatest storm Wayne Christopher had ever seen dumped a year’s worth of rain on his town, drowning this church where he was baptized, met his high school sweetheart and later married her.

 

He had piled the ruined pews out on the curb, next to water-logged hymnals and molding Sunday school lesson plans and chunks of drywall that used to be a mural of Noah’s Ark. Now he tilted his head up to take in the mountain of rubble, and Christopher, an evangelical Christian and a conservative Republican, considered what caused this destruction: that the violent act of nature had been made worse by acts of man.

 

“I think the Lord put us over the care of his creation, and when we pollute like we do, destroy the land, there’s consequences to that,” he said. “It might not catch up with us just right now, but it’s gonna catch up. Like a wound that needs to be healed.”

 

Jefferson County, Texas, is among the low-lying coastal areas of America that could lose the most as the ice caps melt and the seas warm and rise. At the same time, it is more economically dependent on the petroleum industry and its emissions-spewing refineries than any other place in the U.S. Residents seemed to choose between the two last November, abandoning a four-decade-old pattern of voting Democratic in presidential elections to support Donald Trump.

 

Then came Hurricane Harvey. Now some conservatives here are newly confronting some of the most polarizing questions in American political discourse: What role do humans play in global warming and the worsening of storms like Harvey? And what should they expect their leaders — including the climate-skeptic president they helped elect — to do about the problem now?

Answers are hard to come by in a place where refineries stand like cityscapes. Nearly 5,000 people work in the petroleum industry. Some have described the chemical stink in the air as “the smell of money” — it means paychecks, paid mortgages and meals.

 

Christopher, like most people in Jefferson County, believed that global warming was real before the storm hit. Post-Harvey, surrounded by debris stretching for block after block, he thinks the president’s outright rejection of the scientific consensus is no longer good enough.

 

But how do you help the climate without hurting those who depend on climate-polluting industries?

 

“It’s a Catch-22 kind of thing,” he said. “Do you want to build your economy, or do you want to save the world?”

 

___

 

“Steroids for storms” is how Andrew Dessler explains the role global warming plays in extreme weather. Climate change didn’t create Hurricane Harvey or Irma or Maria. But Dessler, a professor of atmospheric sciences at Texas A&M University, and most scientists agree that warming and rising seas likely amplify storms that form naturally, feeding more water and more intensity as they plow toward land.

 

“It will be 60 inches of rain this time, maybe 80 inches next time,” Dessler said of Harvey’s record-setting rainfall for any single storm in U.S. history.

As a private citizen and candidate, Trump often referred to climate change as a hoax, and since taking office he and his administration have worked aggressively to undo policies designed to mitigate the damage. He announced his intention to pull out of the Paris climate agreement, a global accord of 195 nations to reduce carbon emissions, and his administration has dismantled environmental regulations and erased climate change data from government websites. This month, his Environmental Protection Agency administrator promised to kill an effort to limit carbon emissions from coal-fired plants.

 

Anthony Leiserowitz, a Yale University researcher, traces the politicization of the climate to 1997, when then-Democratic Vice President Al Gore brokered a commitment on the world stage to reduce greenhouse gases. The political parties have cleaved further apart ever since, and climate change denial reached a fever pitch as the Tea Party remade the GOP during President Barack Obama’s first term.

 

Americans tend to view the issue through their already established red-versus-blue lens, Leiserowitz said. But while there are fractions on each extreme, the majority still fall somewhere along a scale in the middle.

 

A new Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll finds that 63 percent of Americans think climate change is happening and that the government should address it, and that two-thirds of Americans disapprove of the way Trump is handling the issue. Most Americans also think weather disasters are getting more severe, and believe global warming is a factor.

 

As the downpour from Hurricane Harvey stretched into its second day, with no end in sight, Joe Evans watched from the window of his home in the Jefferson County seat of Beaumont, and an unexpected sense of guilt overcame him: “What have we been doing to the planet for all of these years?”

Evans, a Republican, once ran unsuccessfully for local office. He ignored climate change, as he thought Republicans were supposed to do, but Harvey’s deluge left him wondering why. When he was young, discussions of the ozone layer were uncontroversial; now they’re likely to end in pitched political debate.

 

“I think it’s one of those games that politicians play with us,” he said, “to once again make us choose a side.”

 

Evans voted for Trump, but he’s frustrated with what he describes as the “conservative echo chamber” that dismisses climate change instead of trying to find a way to apply conservative principles to simultaneously saving the Earth and the economy. Even today, some Republicans in the county complain about Gore and the hypocrisy they see in elite liberals who jet around the world, carbon emissions trailing behind them, to push climate policies on blue-collar workers trying to keep refinery jobs so they can feed their families.

 

Evans isn’t sure if the disastrous run of weather will cause climate change to become a bigger priority for residents here, or if as memories fade talk of this issue will, too.

 

“I haven’t put so much thought into it that I want to go mobilize a bunch of people and march on Washington,” he said. “But it made me think enough about it that I won’t actively take part in denying it. We can’t do that anymore.”

 

___

 

Most in Texas didn’t believe climate change existed when Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist at Texas Tech University, began evangelizing about the issue years ago. Now studies estimate that 69 percent of Texans believe that the climate is changing, and 52 percent believe that has been caused by human activity. Most resistance she hears now is not with the science itself but over proposed solutions that mean government intrusion and regulation.

Jefferson County’s refineries produce 10 percent of the gasoline in the United States, 20 percent of diesel and half of the fuel used to fly commercial planes, said County Judge Jeff Branick, a Democrat who voted for Trump and then switched his party affiliation to Republican, in part because of his disagreement with the Democratic Party’s climate policies.

 

Branick doesn’t deny that climate change exists, but he calls himself a cheerleader for the petroleum industry and believes environmental policies are “job killers.”

 

John Sterman, a professor at MIT Sloan School of Management, said addressing climate change will invariably lead to gradual job losses in the fossil fuels industry. But communities have lost a dominant industry before, and those able to diversify can prosper. Jefferson County could look to the renewable energy industry, with jobs that require many of the skills refinery workers have, he said. Texas already produces more wind power than any other state.

 

Angela Lopez’s husband works in a refinery, so she understands the worry of the economic cost of addressing global warming. But her county is nicknamed “cancer alley” for its high levels of disease that residents have long attributed to living in the shadow of one of the largest concentrations of refineries in the world.

 

“It’s our livelihood, but it’s killing us,” Lopez said, standing in what used to be her dining room. Now her house in Beaumont is down to the studs. As Harvey’s floodwaters rose, she tried to save what she could. She piled the dresser drawers on the bed and perched the leather couch up on the coffee table. It did no good. The water didn’t stop until it reached the eaves, and the Lopezes lost everything they own.

 

Just about all of her relatives are conservatives, and indeed the political divides in the county run deep: Even as most of the communities along the Gulf Coast turned red years ago, Jefferson County clung to its Democratic roots. The county is ethnically diverse — 41 percent white, 34 percent black and 20 percent Hispanic — with a historically strong union workforce. Trump won Jefferson by just 419 votes.

 

“To come up with real solutions, you have to be honest with yourself about what causes something to happen,” Lopez said. “It’s not just because some storm came, it was bad and unprecedented. It was unprecedented for a reason, so we have to acknowledge that and start working toward being better. And part of that conversation should be climate change.”

On a porch outside another ruined house nearby, two neighbors who both lost everything to Harvey started having that conversation.

 

Gene Jones, a truck driver who didn’t vote, asked Wilton Johnson, a Trump supporter, if he thought climate change intensified the storm.

 

“I don’t think so, no,” Johnson said.

 

“You don’t? You don’t think about the chemical plants and the hot weather? You don’t think that has anything to do with it?”

 

“I can understand people believing that,” Johnson replied. But he blames natural weather cycles for upending their lives so completely.

 

Jones now lives in a camper in his driveway; Johnson’s father has been sleeping in a recliner in his yard to ward off looters.

 

Johnson feels like he’s gone through the stages of grief. At first, as he fled his home, he denied how devastating the storm might be. Then he got angry, when he realized nothing could be saved — not the family photos or the 100-year-old Bible that fell apart in his hands. He grew depressed and now, finally, he thinks he’s come to accept this new reality as something that just happened because nature is not always kind, and never has been.

 

And he remains unshaken in his support for Trump’s environmental agenda.

 

“We need to be responsible human beings to the Earth, but at the same time we shouldn’t sacrifice the financial freedoms,” he said. “What good is a great environment if we’re poor and living like cavemen? And vice versa, I understand the other side of that: What’s great about living in luxury when you can’t go outside?

 

“I just don’t think we should look at two storms and say, ‘We’re ruining the Earth! Shut the plants down!'”

 

___

 

When Wayne Christopher was a boy in Jefferson County, it got so hot he remembers frying eggs on the sidewalk. It has always been hot here, and there have always been hurricanes.

 

But it seems to him that something is different now. There is a palpable intensity in the air, in the haze that hangs over the interstate. The region has warmed about two degrees in his lifetime, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and annual rainfall has increased by about 7 inches on average. Christopher counts the number of times a beach road he’s driven on all his life has had to be rebuilt because the ocean overtook it.

 

“The sea keeps moving in — water rising, land disappearing or eroding or whatever you want to call it — it’s happening,” said Christopher, who is 66 now and retired after toiling more than 40 years for the railroad. “I think Mother Nature can come back, but there’s a point to where, if we just keep on and keep on, I don’t know if she can come back.”

 

He thinks the president he helped put in office should do something: take the threat seriously, research before he talks or tweets, not dismiss established science as a hoax because acknowledging it’s real would mean acknowledging that something must be done.

 

But like many others here, Christopher is not pushing to stick with the Paris climate agreement or other global coalitions because he’s not sure it’s fair that the United States should invest in clean energy when other countries that pollute might not. He worries that could cause more job losses to overseas factories, put a squeeze on the middle class and forfeit a slice of American sovereignty.

 

His wife, who also supported Trump, cocked her head as she thought about that sentiment.

 

“I can see the pros, I can see the cons,” Polly Christopher said. “But if you were to simplify it to your children, and they say, ‘Well, everybody else is doing it, if I do it what difference is it going to make?’ you would just get on them and say, ‘You’ve got to do the right thing. Right is right, and wrong’s wrong.'”

 

For weeks, the couple have been gutting Memorial Baptist Church, a place they consider their home. The congregation dwindled over time to about 45, mostly older people, and it was so hard to make ends meet the church canceled a $19,000-a-year flood insurance policy just two months before Harvey hit. Now it could cost some $1 million to rebuild, meaning the church may never be rebuilt at all.

 

So when Christopher’s granddaughter came by to help, found the piano in the otherwise empty sanctuary, sat down and started to play, he was overcome with a sense of grief.

 

“In my head I was thinking the whole time, this could be the last time that piano is played inside the auditorium,” he said. Then she started to sing: “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound …”

 

“It did something to me,” he said.

 

Both he and his wife believe President Trump has a responsibility to look at the destruction Harvey left them with and act accordingly.

 

“He’s got a business mind. Whatever it takes to make money, that’s what he’s going to do to make America great again,” Christopher said, and that’s why he voted for Trump. “But it does make me wonder if he looks at global warming as a real harm. Because you can make all the money in the world here. But if you don’t have a world, what good is it going to do you?”

Populism Again Casts Shadow Over Booming Eurozone Economy

For months, the outlook for the eurozone economy has brightened thanks to a series of electoral defeats for populist parties in key states like France. Now, following votes in Germany and Austria and the uncertainty over the Spanish region of Catalonia, concerns are growing again about the potential impact of euroskeptic politics.

The euro has edged lower in recent weeks despite data showing that the eurozone economy is enjoying one of its strongest periods of growth since the global financial crisis exploded a decade ago. On Monday, it was down 0.3 percent at $1.1785, having been above $1.20 at the end of August for the first time in two years.

 

One of the reasons relates to the electoral success of populist forces, first in Germany in late-September when the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany received almost 13 percent of the vote and won representation into the country’s parliament for the first time. Though the center-right Christian Democrats came out on top, the authority of Chancellor Angela Merkel was somewhat undermined by AfD’s relative success and she has still to forge a new coalition.

 

The populist tide was further evidenced in Sunday’s Austrian election, which saw the right-wing Freedom Party come second with around 27 percent of the vote — enough to possibly become part of a government led by the People’s Party and its 31-year-old leader, Sebastian Kurz.

 

The impact of a coalition involving a party that has sought to downplay the country’s Nazi past could hinder efforts to further integrate the economies of the 19 countries that use the euro, as advocated for by new French President Emmanuel Macron.

 

“Even though Austria is highly integrated and depends on the eurozone’s structure and openness, a new Austrian government will make the eurozone’s life harder, trying to push through self-interests,” ING economist Inga Fechner said.

 

Also of potential concern to the unity of the eurozone is the uncertainty surrounding Catalonia following its disputed independence referendum earlier this month. On Monday, there was still a lack of clarity as to whether the region’s leader, Carles Puigdemont, has declared independence following the vote that Madrid has deemed illegal.

 

The Spanish government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has repeatedly said it’s not willing to negotiate with Puigdemont if independence is on the table, or accept any form of international mediation. The government has threatened to activate Article 155 of Spain’s Constitution, which could see Madrid take temporary control of some parts of Catalonia’s self-government.

 

All these signs of populism come at a time when the European economy is enjoying one of its most sustained upswings for a decade. A run of economic indicators have shown that the recovery, especially among those countries that use the euro currency, has been gaining momentum through 2017. The recovery, which has also seen unemployment come off highs, has prompted speculation that the European Central Bank will start to ease back on some of its emergency stimulus measures in the coming months.

 

Many economists ascribe the improving economic backdrop to the defeat of populist politicians earlier this year, notably in France where National Front leader Marine Le Pen lost overwhelmingly in the presidential runoff against Macron. Her defeat come a few weeks after Geert Wilders’ anti-Islam Freedom Party fared worse than anticipated in Dutch elections.

 

At the start of this year, the rise of populism was considered by many economists as the gravest cloud hanging over Europe’s economic future, especially as worries over Greece had abated. The Brexit vote in Britain in the summer of 2016 had shown how vulnerable the region could be to populist movements. The great fear for those overseeing the euro currency is that a party may come into government seeking to get out of the single currency and revert to the country’s original currency.

 

What’s occurred in the past few weeks is evidence that those populist forces are not done yet.

 

Simon Derrick, chief currency strategist at BNY Mellon, said “it would make sense for the euro to weaken if concerns about populism in the eurozone re-emerged.”

 

The next potential worry is Italy, where elections have to be held by May 2018. The country has for years grown more slowly than other developed economies and there are concerns that a party seeking to blame the country’s problems on the euro could make headway in the elections, potentially triggering more volatility for a currency that’s spent years dodging crises. In August, former premier Silvio Berlusconi floated the idea of a parallel currency being introduced in Italy.

 

 

Саакашвілі про акцію 17 жовтня біля Ради: люди настроєні мирно

Колишній голова Одеської ОДА, лідер партії «Рух Нових сил» Міхеїл Саакашвілі заявляє, що учасники акції протесту, яка запланована на 17 жовтня біля Верховної Ради, настроєні мирно. Про це він сказав в ефірі Радіо Свобода. 

«Люди які прийдуть завтра до Верховної Ради, вони настроєні мирно, спокійно, рішуче… ми повинні просто показати, що ми – спокійна сила», – заявив він. 

«Коли вони кажуть, що ми хочемо щось захопити. Навіщо? Таким чином влада хоче нас показати маргіналами. А які ми маргінали? Ми виражаємо думку практично всього населення України», – додав він. 

На 17 жовтня запланований так званий «всеукраїнський збір» під Верховною Радою України. Серед організаторів акції прихильники Міхеїла Саакашвілі, «Самопомочі», «Демократичного Альянсу», «Автомайдану» і «Свободи». За словами Саакашвілі, на акції мають прозвучати три основні вимоги: створення антикорупційних судів, скасування депутатської недоторканності й ухвалення нового виборчого закону.

Водночас у СБУ заявляють про попередження збройної провокації, яка готувалася під час мітингу 17 жовтня під Верховною Радою у Києві. За інформацією СБУ, двоє колишніх активістів «Революційних правих сил» намагалися купити два автомати АК-47 і три гранатомети, щоб застосувати їх на мітингу, але силовики заблокували спробу купівлі зброї.

 

Clinton Brands WikiLeaks Boss ‘Tool of Russian Intelligence’

Hillary Clinton has told an Australian state broadcaster that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was a tool of Russia in his release of hacked emails that hurt the U.S. Democratic presidential nominee’s campaign.

 

Clinton told Australian Broadcasting Corp. in an interview broadcast on Monday that the Australian whistleblower had “become a kind of nihilistic opportunist who does the bidding of a dictator,” Russian President Vladimir Putin.

 

“He’s a tool of Russian intelligence, and if he’s such a … martyr of free speech, why doesn’t WikiLeaks ever publish anything coming out of Russia?” she said.

 

Clinton was complaining about WikiLeaks’ publication during the 2016 election campaign of politically damaging emails from the Democratic National Committee.

 

Assange, who is holed up in Ecuador’s embassy in London, hit back at Clinton’s interview, tweeting that she was “not a credible person.”

 

“It is not just her constant lying. It is not just that she throws off menacing glares and seethes thwarted entitlement,” he tweeted. “Watch closely. Something much darker rides along with it. A cold creepiness rarely seen.”

 

‘Concerted operation’

In the interview, Clinton rejected reporter Sarah Ferguson’s proposition that Assange was simply performing a journalist’s role by publishing information.

 

“There was a concerted operation between WikiLeaks and Russia and most likely people in the United States to, as I say, weaponize that information, to make up stories, outlandish, often terrible stories that had no basis in fact, no basis even in the emails themselves, but which were used to denigrate me, my campaign, people who supported me, and to help [Donald] Trump,” Clinton said.

 

“WikiLeaks is unfortunately now practically a fully owned subsidiary of Russian intelligence,” she said.

 

The 45-year-old Australian fled to the embassy in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden over an investigation of sexual offense allegations. Despite a Swedish prosecutor announcing in May that he was no longer the target of an active rape investigation, Assange remains in the embassy for fear of extradition to the United States on charges over WikiLeaks’ aggressive publication of thousands of pages of classified U.S. government documents.

 

CIA Director Mike Pompeo in April denounced WikiLeaks as a “hostile intelligence service” and a threat to U.S. national security. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said Assange’s arrest was a priority as the Justice Department steps up efforts to prosecute people who leak classified information to the media.

 

Their condemnation of WikiLeaks differed sharply from President Donald Trump’s past praise of the organization. Before last year’s election, Trump said he was happy to see WikiLeaks publish private, politically damaging emails from Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager, John Podesta. He was less happy about the release of CIA tactics, which the White House said was different because it involved information about secretive national security tools.

 

The president said in April that he was not involved in the decision-making process regarding charging Assange but that the move would be “OK with me.”

 

French Government Planning New Law Fighting Sexual Violence

The French government is unveiling a draft bill that focuses on sexual harassment on French streets and sexual violence against minors.

 

Speaking on French radio RTL on Monday, Gender Equality Minister Marlene Schiappa said she has been setting up workshops across France with the aim of eventually criminalizing threatening attitudes toward women in French streets. Schiappa also wants to extend the statute of limitations for sexual assaults to 30 years from the current 20 years when minors are involved.

 

The draft bill is expected to be voted on next year.

 

A parliamentary group of five lawmakers is studying the new law.

 

Schiappa said she has the support of President Emmanuel Macron, who has been urging victims of sexual harassment to speak out.

 

 

Catalonia’s President Response on Secession not Acceptable to Madrid

The president of Spain’s region of Catalonia has responded to a Monday deadline, failing to clarify whether he will push ahead with efforts for the region to break away from Madrid and signaling that the secession crisis is far from over.

 

The Spanish government had given Catalonian leader Carles Puigdemont until Monday to provide a simple “yes” or “no” answer.

In a letter, Puigdemont told Spanish President Mariano Rajoy secessionists want to suspend initiating steps towards independence for two months. “For the next two months, our main objective is to bring you to dialogue,” Puigdemont wrote.

Following an independence referendum on October 1, Puigdemont said last week he was prepared for Catalonia to “become an independent state,” despite a court ruling that declared such a move would be unconstitutional.

But Puigdemont immediately said he was suspending the secession drive to allow time for negotiations with Madrid.

The contradictory statements prompted Rajoy to give Puigdemont until 10 a.m. (0800 UTC) Monday to clarify his position with a simple “yes” or “no” answer. Rajoy said Madrid was ready to suspend the region’s autonomy and begin to exercise direct control if Puigdemont decided to continue pressing for secession.

Spanish officials had said they would consider anything other than a simple “no” answer an indication that the independence drive would continue and thus begin steps to strip Catalonia of its autonomy. After receiving Puigdemont’s letter Monday, Spanish leaders indicated they would treat his reply as a “yes.”

“He has not answered the question clearly,” said Spanish Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria at news conference Monday. Saenz de Santamaria said the government would now give Puigdemont until Thursday to re-think his response.

Catalonia, Spain’s most prosperous region, is home to 7.5 million people, has its own language and distinct culture, and is deeply divided over independence.

The Catalan government said that 90 percent of Catalans voted for independence from Spain in October 1 referendum. Many opponents of independence boycotted the vote, reducing turnout to around 43 percent.

 

Порошенко привітав Курца та його партію з перемогою на виборах в Австрії

Президент України Петро Порошенко привітав Себастьяна Курца та очолювану ним Австрійську консервативну народну партію з перемогою на парламентських виборах.

«Перемога Себастьяна Курца та Народної партії в Австрії – це перемога людини, яка неодноразово бувала в Україні, і яка добре знає українську тему. Це також перемога переконаного європейця, який знає важливість консолідованого ЄС для миру на континенті», – заявив Порошенко у Facebook.

«Розуміючи, що попереду у канцлера Курца тривалі коаліційні переговори, тим не менше, переконаний: єдина Європа, європейські цінності будуть важливими для нового уряду», – зазначив президент України.

Дострокові парламентські вибори відбулися в Австрії в неділю за участю 16 партій і політичних рухів. Згідно з попередніми даними, перемогу здобула Австрійська консервативна народна партія на чолі з 31-річним Курцем. За підсумками виборів президент Австрії Александер Ван дер Беллен наділить лідера найбільшої парламентської фракції повноваженнями з формування Кабінету міністрів або ведення коаліційних переговорів.

Austria’s Sebastian Kurz Tipped to Become World’s Youngest Leader

Sebastian Kurz, leader of Austria’s conservative People’s Party (OVP), is set to become the world’s youngest leader after declaring his party’s victory in Sunday’s general election. At 31, Kurz is believed to be younger than North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and France’s Emmanuel Macron who is approaching 40. With most of the votes counted, The People’s Party won more than 31 percent of the vote and is expected to form a coalition with right-wing Freedom Party (FPO).VOA’s Zlatica Hoke has more.

Верховна Рада береться за медичну реформу – ранковий ефір Радіо Свобода

Незалежна чи ні? Каталонія має визначитися зі своїм статусом.

Чи буде ухвалено цього тижня медичну реформу та чи всіх вона задовольнить?

Як почуваються іноземні інвестори в Україні?

На ці теми говоритимуть ведучий Ранкової Свободи Олександр Лащенко і гості студії: український дипломат, надзвичайний і повноважний посол Маркіян Лубківський, журналіст-міжнародник Олексій Коваль; народний депутат, заступник голови комітету Верховної Ради з питань охорони здоров’я Ірина Сисоєнко і член профільного комітету, народний депутат Ігор Шурма; економічний експерт Павло Шеремета, економіст Ігор Гарбарук, заступник голови Офісу ефективного регулювання Денис Малюська.

 

Київ може отримати черговий транш МВФ до кінця року – Данилюк

Міністр фінансів України Олександр Данилюк вважає, що Київ може отримати черговий кредитний транш МВФ до кінця цього року.

«Ми очікуємо транш до кінця року», – сказав Данилюк 15 жовтня під час брифінгу у Вашингтоні за підсумками переговорів з керівництвом МВФ, які відбулися напередодні.

За його словами, це залежатиме від домовленостей щодо ціни на газ для населення. Під час переговорів, каже Данилюк, було досягнуто певного прогресу щодо цього, але конкретних домовленостей ще немає. «Ми просунулися, зафіксували певні принципи, переговори тривають», – зазначив український міністр.

У МВФ наразі не коментували результатів цих переговорів.

На початку жовтня агенція Reuters повідомила, що Україна запропонує МВФ нову формулу розрахунку ціни на газ для населення, яка залишить тарифи без змін до липня 2018 року. За даними агенції, нова пропозиція української влади передбачає зростання ціни газу на 4,8%, а не на 17,6%, як вимагає угода з МВФ.

Представники української влади заявляють про відсутність підстав для підвищення тарифів на житлово-комунальні послуги і газ для населення, чого вимагає МВФ.

Ophelia Threatens Ireland With Worst Storm in 50 Years

Ireland dispatched its armed forces to bolster flood defenses on Sunday and warned people against non-essential travel as the remnants of Hurricane Ophelia threatened the country with its worst storm in 50 years.

Ophelia, the sixth major hurricane of the Atlantic season, is due to make landfall on the south west coast of Ireland at around 0500 GMT on Monday, the Irish weather service said, describing the storm as “unprecedented.”

Hurricane force winds are likely off Ireland’s south coast but they are expected to ease before they reach the coastline, said the weather service, which has declared a Status Red weather alert.

The weather service has warned some gusts may exceed 130 kilometers per hour (80 miles per hour).

The government has also warned of localized coastal flooding and likely disruption to transport and electricity services.

“You should not be out in this storm … this is an extreme weather event,” the chairman of Ireland’s National Emergency Coordination Group Sean Hogan said at a briefing.

Asked if it was likely to be the worst storm in half a century, he said the “comparable weather event” was Hurricane Debbie, which killed 12 in Ireland in 1961. Ophelia has the potential to be a life-threatening event in Ireland, he said.

The storm is likely to pass close to a west of Ireland golf course owned by U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, who has been planning a wall to protect its greens from coastal erosion.

“The storm has the potential to reshape stretches of the Irish coast, John Sweeney, a climatologist at Maynooth University,” said.

“It is going to be perhaps an event comparable to Debbie in 1961 which has effectively marked many of the coastlines of the west coast of Ireland to the present day,” Sweeney told state broadcaster RTE.

Members of the armed forces have been sent to Tralee on the south west coast to build coastal defenses with sandbags.

Britain’s meteorological service said in a statement that the weather system may effect road, rail, air and ferry services.

British media are comparing the storm to the Great Storm of 1987, which subjected parts of the United Kingdom to hurricane strength winds 30 years ago to the day.

Донбас: український військовий поранений через обстріли бойовиків – штаб

Українська сторона повідомляє про поранення одного свого військового через обстріли з боку підтримуваних Росією бойовиків на Донбасі. За інформацією штабу української воєнної операції, це сталося на луганському напрямку, де ситуація була найскладнішою.

«Зі стрілецької зброї проросійські найманці відкривали вогонь біля Новоолександрівки. Унаслідок цього обстрілу близько 11 години отримав поранення один наш військовий. Зараз постраждалий перебуває у військово-медичному лікувальному закладі. Його стан оцінюється, як задовільний», – повідомили у штабі АТО ввечері 15 жовтня.

«Від початку доби незаконні збройні формування 9 разів порушили перемир’я. Збройні сили 4 рази відповідали ворогу використовуючи піхотне озброєння, – додали у штабі.

В угрупованні «ДНР» заявляють, що українська сторона минулої доби випустила по підконтрольній їй території 78 снарядів і мін у результаті чого загинули 2 бойовики. В угрупованні «ЛНР» кажуть, що українські військові упродовж минулої доби випустили по їхніх позиціях понад 90 боєприпасів, про втрати луганські бойовики не повідомляють.

Черговий режим припинення вогню, про який заявила 23 серпня Тристороння контактна група, мав почати діяти з 25 серпня, напередодні початку шкільного року, і стати постійним. Про перші його порушення сторони заявили вже через кілька хвилин після настання часу перемир’я.

Hillary Clinton Warns Britain on Potential Trade Deal with Trump

Former U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton cautioned Britain on Sunday over its push to secure a trade deal with U.S. President Donald Trump after it leaves the European Union.

Clinton, the Democratic Party candidate who lost out to Trump in last November’s election, also said Britain would face serious disruption if it left the EU without a negotiated deal with Brussels.

The British government has talked up the prospect of bilateral trade deals with the United States and others as one of the major benefits of leaving the EU following last year’s surprise referendum vote to leave.

Asked about the prospects of a British-U.S. deal, Clinton told the BBC: “You’re making a trade deal with somebody who says he doesn’t believe in trade, so I’m not quite sure how that’s going to play out over the next few years.”

British Prime Minister Theresa May visited Trump in January to talk trade. The countries share $200 billion of trade each year.

But May has since intervened in a dispute between U.S. aerospace firm Boeing and Canadian planemaker Bombardier, lobbying in the interests of Bombardier to try to protect jobs at its factory in Northern Ireland.

Clinton also said Britain would be at a “very big disadvantage” if divorce negotiations with the EU failed, and went on to compare the factors behind the Brexit vote to her own election loss.

“Looking at the Brexit vote now it was a precursor to some extent to what happened to us in the United States… The amount of fabricated, false information that your voters were given by the ‘Leave’ campaign,” she said.

She said her own presidential campaign was subject to similar treatment, citing the spread of false stories by online news outlets, and warned that Britain and other countries must be alert to the risks of such new media.

“The big lie is a very potent tool,” she said.

Jane Goodall Documentary Shows Development in Understanding of Man and Chimp

After sitting fifty years in the National Geographic archives, 100 hours of footage on Jane Goodall and her groundbreaking observations of Chimpanzees in the African forest of Tanzania have been compiled into a documentary film. At a screening of the film in Los Angeles, Goodall spoke to VOA’s Elizabeth Lee about her work and thoughts on the film.