У Сімферополі продають килим з Путіним

В одному з магазинів у Сімферополі продається килим із зображенням президента Росії Володимира Путіна, повідомляє кореспондент проекту Радіо Свобода Крим.Реалії.

Вартість виробу становить 5 тисяч рублів (понад 2 тисячі гривень – ред.). Килим із зображенням глави російської держави розмістили на найвиднішому місці в магазині.

Три роки тому в Криму користувалися популярністю футболки з портретами Путіна. Зараз інтерес до них спав, відзначають торговці, але футболки як і раніше продають у сувенірних крамницях, переважно в прибережних містах. Вартість такої футболки, за інформацією кореспондента Крим.Реалії, становить 400-500 рублів (170-210 гривень – ред.).

Верховна Рада України офіційно оголосила 20 лютого 2014 року початком тимчасової окупації Криму і Севастополя Росією. 7 жовтня 2015 року президент України Петро Порошенко підписав відповідний закон. Міжнародні організації визнали окупацію і анексію Криму незаконними і засудили дії Росії. Країни Заходу запровадили низку економічних санкцій. Росія заперечує окупацію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості».

US Lawmaker Calls for Hearing on Amazon’s Whole Foods Deal

The top Democrat on the U.S. House of Representatives’ antitrust subcommittee has voiced concerns about Amazon.com Inc.’s $13.7 billion plan to buy Whole Foods Market Inc and is pushing for a hearing to look into the deal’s potential impact on consumers.

The deal announced in June marks the biggest acquisition for the world’s largest online retailer. Amazon has not said what it will do with Whole Foods’ stores and other assets, but analysts and investors worry the move could upend the landscape for grocers, food delivery services and meal-kit companies.

U.S. Representative David Cicilline requested the hearing on Thursday in a letter to the chair of the House Judiciary Committee and the subcommittee chairman. Shares of Amazon were up 0.3 percent in mid-morning trading on Friday.

“Amazon’s proposed purchase of Whole Foods could impact neighborhood grocery stores and hardworking consumers across America,” Cicilline said in a statement. “Congress has a responsibility to fully scrutinize this merger before it goes ahead.”

The deal must be approved by U.S. antitrust enforcers, in this case most likely the Federal Trade Commission. Congress plays no formal role in that process but hearings are often used to highlight the possible impact of deals on consumers. The hearing is unlikely to happen without Republican support.

Amazon and Whole Foods declined to comment.

Also this week, hedge fund manager Douglas Kass from Seabreeze Partners Management Inc. said he was shorting shares of the retailer because of concern about Amazon in Washington.

Kass said he had heard rumblings on Capitol Hill regarding concern about Amazon’s size and clout but did not specify what the concerns were.

“I am shorting Amazon today because I have learned that there are currently early discussions and due diligence being considered in the legislative chambers in Washington, D.C.,” he wrote in a note to investors late on Wednesday. “If I am correct, word of this could lower Amazon’s shares by 10 percent overnight.”

Kass said in emailed comments to Reuters on Friday that he has what he called a “core” short position in Amazon, meaning a sizeable bet based on a long-term outlook.

“This has the potential of being the biggest business news story of [the] year,” he said. Kass declined to comment when asked for more details about pressure from Capitol Hill.

Kass is followed for his bets on declines in companies’ share prices. He shorted Marvel Entertainment in 1992 when its shares were in the high $60s, and the company went bankrupt 1-1/2 years later.

He also bet against big U.S. banks leading into the 2007-2009 financial crisis, shorting Bank of America, MGIC, Citigroup and several other financials that ultimately averaged a 98 percent price decline by the time they bottomed in 2009.

While antitrust experts have said they expect Amazon’s bid to win regulatory approval, some critics argue the deal should be blocked because it gives the retailer a big head start towards domination of online grocery delivery.

They argue the Whole Foods acquisition will give Amazon an unfair advantage over traditional grocers and new players that might emerge in the market, potentially grounds for the deal to be blocked for antitrust reasons.

Russia’s Ban on US Adoptions Gets Snarled in New Melodrama

More than four years after it was imposed, Russia’s ban on adoptions by Americans is back in the news, rekindling frustration and sadness among some of those affected by it.

Chuck Johnson, CEO of the National Council for Adoption, worries that any efforts by President Donald Trump’s administration to get the ban lifted might now be more complicated because of revelations regarding Donald Trump Jr.

The younger Trump, explaining a meeting last year with a Russian lawyer, initially issued a statement saying the subject was the adoption ban, but later released emails showing his motive was to obtain negative information about Hillary Clinton.

“Because Russia is so much in the news, it’s now made lifting the ban even more awkward and difficult,” Johnson said. “You’d have Democrats and the hawkish Republicans who would see it as further collusion.”

The ban has had “disastrous results” for orphans in Russia, said Johnson, a leading advocate of international adoption.

Signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in December 2012, the ban served as retaliation for a U.S. law targeting alleged Russian human-rights violators. It also reflected resentment over the 60,000 Russian children adopted by Americans in the previous two decades, about 20 of whom died of abuse, neglect or other causes while in the care of their adoptive parents.

Heartache for families

More than 200 U.S. families were in the process of trying to adopt children from Russia when the ban took effect. Many of those children have now been placed in Russian homes; the fate of other children remains unknown to their would-be adoptive families.

That’s the case for a Minneapolis-area couple who adopted a boy from Russia in 2008 and were trying to adopt his biological brother, Nikolai, when the ban was imposed.

The wife, Renee Carlson — who is now divorced and remarried — campaigned relentlessly for an exception to be made for her family. She even traveled to Moscow in early 2014 and made an emotional appeal on Russian television, but the second adoption never went through.

In an email this week, Carlson said she was told by some of her Russian contacts that Nikolai may have been adopted in Russia, but that she has been unable to confirm that.

“The Russian people I met with were just like us as Americans, good people, just perhaps had their hands tied by their administration’s direction,” she wrote. “I respect and understand, as we face similar politics in the U.S.”

High-level talks

Resumption of adoptions from Russia has been a goal of the Trump administration, as it had been for the Obama administration. But there was no movement until Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov agreed in April to include the matter in high-level talks aimed at resolving festering conflicts that have hindered cooperation on broader strategic and security issues.

Those talks, between the third-ranking U.S. diplomat, Tom Shannon, and Deputy Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, were suspended by Moscow last month after the Treasury Department hit Russia with new sanctions for its actions in Ukraine. But the State Department now says a new round of talks between Shannon and Ryabkov will take place in Washington on Monday.

Estimates of the number of orphans in Russia vary widely, but the country has been trying to place more of the orphans with Russian families through an expansion of domestic adoption.

A U.S.-based organization, Kidsave, has been assisting in those efforts, arranging for hundreds of orphans to visit Russian families during weekends and holidays with the aim of encouraging the families to consider adoption. According to Kidsave, more than 1,000 children in the Smolensk region found homes outside the orphanages or established long-term connections with mentors.

Tatiana Stafford, who oversees Kidsave’s Russia program, said the adoption ban was unfortunate but didn’t affect the program.

“A lot of families who were in the process of adoption — they suffered, the children suffered,” she said. “But at the same time, it gave momentum to domestic adoption.”

This will be the last full year of Kidsave’s Russia operation. It plans to transfer the program to a Russian nonprofit next year.

Radical Steps Needed to Fix Polish Judiciary, Party Leader Says

Poland’s most powerful politician insisted Friday that “radical changes” are necessary to heal the nation’s judiciary and vowed to push ahead despite vehement protests from Poland’s opposition and European bodies.

Jaroslaw Kaczynski, head of the ruling populist Law and Justice party, was referring at a news conference to new regulations that give lawmakers power over the body that chooses judges and to a draft law that would empower the justice minister to appoint or dismiss Supreme Court justices.

Earlier, the party had put its loyalists on another top court, the Constitutional Tribunal, and took control of state-owned media.

The opposition and some European politicians say these moves snuffed out judicial independence and violated democracy and the rule of law.

Under the euroskeptic party, Poland already is subject to a European Union procedure reviewing the government’s dedication to European values.

Kaczynski, a lawyer, contended that the judiciary sector has not been reformed since communist times, lacks moral principles, is inefficient and needs younger personnel.

“You cannot change that without far-reaching moves, without radical changes,” Kaczynski said. “What we need to do, we will do.”

He insisted the changes were in the public interest and fulfilled the party’s election campaign promises. Law and Justice won the 2015 elections and controls the parliament. It enjoys steady support of above 30 percent of voters. Critics say that is chiefly due to the party’s generous program of social benefits to the poorest.

The head of the Supreme Court, Malgorzata Gersdorf, who was member of the anti-communist Solidarity movement in the 1980s, has protested the proposed changes as going in the wrong direction and has defended the “highest level of professionalism” of the judges.

Report: Poor Coordination Undercuts Sanctions Against Rogue States

A lack of coordination between the European Union and the United States can undermine sanctions against rogue nations, said a new report from the Royal United Services Institute, a British research group.

 

The report’s authors also called for improved guidance for the private sector in implementing the penalties.

 

The assessment came as the United States pushes for stricter controls following North Korea’s test earlier this month of an intercontinental ballistic missile. Washington wants new sanctions against both Pyongyang and the foreign firms, most of them Chinese, that it says provide North Korea with an economic lifeline.

 

“We intend to present these firms with a clear choice. You can do business with us or you can do business with North Korea, but you cannot do business with both,” Democrat Senator Chris Van Hollen told reporters Wednesday after presenting a bipartisan bill in Washington.

 

The fragmented nature of international sanctions, which are enforced separately by the United Nations, U.S. and EU, renders them less effective against Pyongyang, argued report author Emil Dall.

“North Korea relies on a complex network of overseas front companies, shell companies, agents that are acting on behalf of the North Korean regime —  people that are simply not captured on sanctions lists,” he said.

 

Dall noted recent examples of effective coordination. It has been two years since the so-called P5+1 countries — the United States, China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, plus Germany — agreed on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action with Iran. That agreement saw the EU and U.S. lift some sanctions on Iran in return for limits on Tehran’s nuclear program.

The United States and Europe have also implemented coordinated sanctions against Russian individuals and companies following its forceful takeover of Crimea and invasion of eastern Ukraine in 2014.

​The nature of the EU means targets are often able to evade its sanctions over time.

“You’ve got all member states who have to agree unanimously to imposing new sanctions. In the European Union, there is also the prospect of legal challenges in the European courts,” said Dall.

He added that U.S. sanctions are more adaptable as rogue states try to evade the measures.

 

“The U.S. is able to more rapidly put in place new measures and new designations that counteract that,” he said. “The solution is closer communication both between the U.S. and the EU on sanctions regimes, but it’s also closer communication with the private sector.”

 

Britain’s pending EU exit, known as Brexit, complicates the picture further. The report said London will be able to move more quickly in imposing and adapting sanctions outside the bloc — but any measures will have less clout without European enforcement.

Germany Checking Daimler Cars Amid Diesel Emissions Probe

The German Transport Ministry says the country’s motor transport authority will examine cars made by Daimler amid an investigation into suspected manipulation of diesel emissions controls.

Daimler said in May that prosecutors would search several offices in Germany and it was cooperating with the probe.

Company representatives met with a Transport Ministry commission Thursday following a report by the Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper, citing a search warrant, that over a million vehicles may have had engines whose software manipulated emissions levels. Neither the company nor prosecutors commented on that detail.

Ministry spokesman Ingo Strater said Friday the company “set out its position that Daimler is behaving in accordance with the law.”

Strater said the Federal Motor Transport Authority is examining Daimler cars, as it has in the past other manufacturers’ vehicles.

Депутат Константіновський вирішив скласти мандат

В’ячеслав Константіновський, позафракційний депутат Верховної Ради, написав заяву про складення повноважень народного депутата України – про це він повідомив на своїй особистій сторінці в соціальній мережі Facebook.

«Сьогодні ухвалив рішення, що скинуло величезний тягар із моїх плечей. Написав заяву про відмову від депутатського мандата. Я бажаю цьому парламентові терпіння й успіхів із реформами, але вже без мене. Сподіваюся, зможу принести користь, працюючи у сфері бізнесу», – написав Константіновський пізно ввечері в четвер, оприлюднивши й саму заяву.

За його словами, три роки політичної кар’єри були найпохмурішими в його житті. Він також додав, що продовжить боротьбу за землі радгоспу «Пуща-Водиця» на околиці Києва.

Перед цим на іншій своїй сторінці у фейсбуці, яку він веде як депутат, Константіновський оприлюднив черговий результат цієї боротьби – відповідь із прокуратури про накладення арешту на пансіонат «Джерело» в Пущі-Водиці.

Підприємець-мультимільйонер, що займається, зокрема, ресторанним бізнесом, В’ячеслав Константіновський був обраний народним депутатом від політичної партії «Народний фронт» у Києві на парламентських виборах 2014 року. Пізніше за власним бажанням він вийшов із партії.

У лютому 2017 року генеральний прокурор України Юрій Луценко звинуватив В’ячеслава Константіновського в ухиленні від сплати податків на суму в 50 мільйонів гривень. Депутат назвав це «помстою за його вихід із коаліції». Згодом претензії були зняті.

СБУ не виявила оприлюднених «Схемами» фактів незаконного збагачення співробітників економічної контррозвідки

Служба безпеки України закінчила перевірку працівників свого Головного управління контррозвідувального захисту інтересів держави у сфері економічної безпеки за фактами, оприлюдненими в журналістському розслідуванні програми «Схеми», та не встановила фактів незаконного збагачення. Про це йдеться у відповіді начальника Управління внутрішньої безпеки СБУ Олександра Саппи на запит видання «Слово і Діло».

«Повідомляємо, що під час перевірки співробітників Служби безпеки України в теперішній час фактів, які б свідчили про їх причетність до незаконного збагачення, не виявлено», – повідомляється в листі СБУ.

Перевірка була призначена 8 червня після виходу в ефір програми «Схеми» (спільний проект Радіо Свобода та каналу «UA:Перший») розслідування про люксові автомобілі співробітників Головного управління контррозвідувального захисту інтересів держави у сфері економічної безпеки СБУ, вартість яких неспівмірна із заробітною платою державних службовців, що набуло резонансу. 

Журналісти заздалегідь направляли до СБУ запит, однак за годину до виходу сюжету в ефір, коли сюжет уже був на каналі і автори вже не мали технічної можливості вносити будь-які зміни у зміст сюжету, редакція отримала лист від СБУ.

У ньому представники Служби безпеки застерегли журналістів від видачі матеріалу в ефір, навівши кілька статей законів, які, на їхню думку, будуть порушені в разі оприлюднення цього сюжету. Після виходу сюжету в СБУ заявили, що їхні юристи проаналізують порушення, які могли допустити журналісти програми «Схеми».

Radio Flyer Marks 100 Years of Wagon Production

Radio Flyer is rolling its largest “little” red wagon into its hometown of Chicago in celebration of the company’s 100-year anniversary.

Radio Flyer’s gargantuan wagon was the centerpiece for the company’s anniversary event Thursday in the city’s downtown area, the Chicago Tribune  reported. The wagon was created 20 years ago for the brand’s 80th anniversary.

 

Attendees of the event had the opportunity to take a photo with the large wagon and participate in free giveaways. Radio Flyer also will donate 2,000 wagons to children’s hospitals across the country in partnership with Starlight Children’s Foundation.

According to Guinness World Records, the wagon, which is 27 feet (8.23 meters) long and weighs over 15,000 pounds (6803.96 kilograms), is the world’s largest toy wagon. It was inspired by a 1930s statue featured in the World’s Fair in Chicago.

Radio Flyer has locations around the world, but Robert Pasin, chief wagon officer of Radio Flyer, said Chicago is still the company’s home.

“Chicago has so much to do with our heritage and story,” Pasin said. “It’s truly a part of the brand’s DNA.”

The company has evolved since its establishment in 1917 and now offers customizable wagons made of various materials and other products, including tricycles, bicycles and scooters.

Democrats Overplaying Russia Card, Trump Contends

President Donald Trump told reporters on Air Force One that the “media witch hunt” linking his 2016 presidential campaign to Russia was “bad for the country,” because “there’s no collusion, there’s no obstruction, there’s no nothing.”   

Trump accused Democrats of playing “their card too hard on the Russia thing, because people aren’t believing it,” especially in making accusations of treason.

“When they say ‘treason’ — you know what treason is? That’s Julius and Ethel Rosenberg for giving the atomic bomb [to the Russians], OK?” the president said.

Trump, during a one-hour conversation on his plane as it flew to France, defended face-to-face talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom he met last week in Germany, because of mutual interests concerning Syria and other geopolitical issues.  

“If you don’t have dialogue, you have to be fools,” Trump said. “Let’s be the smart people, not the stupid people.”

Question for Putin

Trump said he wanted to ask Putin, at their next meeting, whom the Russian leader really wanted to win last year’s U.S. presidential election, “because I can’t believe that he would have been for me.” Trump contended that his stances on defense and energy policy were more detrimental to Moscow’s interests than those of his opponent, Democrat Hillary Clinton.

The president, when asked about sanctions in place against Russia and whether he might relax them — despite opposition in Congress to doing that — replied that the United States has “very heavy sanctions on Russia right now. I would not and have never even thought about taking them off.”  

Trump denied that Putin had raised the issue during their discussions at the Group of 20 meeting in Hamburg.

He said he was willing to invite Putin to the White House, but “I don’t think this is the right time. But the answer is, yes, I would.”

Trump’s conversation on the plane was initially deemed to be off the record, but on Thursday in Paris he queried one of the reporters from the flight about why his comments had not been published.

In the exchange with New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman, in the office of French President Emmanuel Macron, Trump “asked if I had heard him say it could be on-record,” she recounted in a pool report.

“Your pooler replied truthfully, ‘no’ (co-poolers also were not under the impression it was on-record, since Sarah Huckabee Sanders had declared it off-record),” Haberman wrote.

Excerpts released

After that exchange, Sanders, the primary deputy White House press secretary, told reporters traveling with the president that excerpts of the Air Force One conversation would be released. A transcript, in excess of 3,500 words, was sent to reporters Thursday afternoon, detailing the wide-ranging conversation.

Some of what the president said about Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting in June 2016 with a Russian lawyer reflected what the president had said in two interviews Wednesday and at his news conference with Macron on Thursday.

“Honestly, in a world of politics, most people are going to take that meeting,” Trump said, according to the White House transcript.

Both the senior and junior Trumps have been criticized by people on both sides of the political aisle for asserting it is not a problem to accept an offer of derogatory information from a foreign government on a political opponent.

Trump told the reporters on the flight that twice he asked Putin whether the Russian government interfered in last year’s presidential election.

“He said absolutely not, twice,” according to Trump. “What do you do? End up in a fistfight with somebody?”

Trump also had blunt words about U.S. trade deficits with China and South Korea.

“We are being absolutely devastated by bad trade deals,” he said. “We have the worst of all trade deals with China. We have a bad deal with South Korea. We’re just starting negotiations [to modify the free trade agreement] with South Korea.”  

Trade negotiations

Trump also linked trade negotiations to his push to have Beijing increase pressure on Pyongyang because of the fast-developing North Korean ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programs.

“In terms of North Korea, our strength is trade [with China],” he said. “You make reciprocal deals, you’re talking about hundreds of billions of dollars. But before I did that I wanted to give it a good shot.”  

Trump, when queried by a reporter about retaliatory action against Beijing for dumping of Chinese steel onto the U.S. market, replied that “there are two ways — quotas and tariffs. Maybe I’ll do both.”

He also told the journalists that his previous remark about placing solar panels on his proposed border wall with Mexico was no joke.

“We have major companies looking at that,” Trump said. “Look, there’s no better place for solar than the Mexico border — the Southern border. And there is a very good chance we can do a solar wall, which would actually look good.” 

Because of the presence of natural barriers, Trump said, the solar wall would need to span only 700 to 900 miles (1,127 to 1,448 kilometers) to be effective in halting illegal migration.

Gaza’s Electricity Shortage at Crisis Level

The electricity supply to Gaza’s 2 million residents has dropped to unprecedented lows, with blackouts lasting for more than 24 hours, the territory’s power distribution company said Thursday, prompting fears of a humanitarian and environmental crisis.

The Palestinian enclave needs at least 400 megawatts of power a day, but only 70 megawatts were available as of late Wednesday, when Gaza’s power plant shut down after fuel shipments from Egypt were interrupted following a militant attack last week.

The Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights said the power cuts have caused a rapid deterioration in basic services, “especially health and environmental services, including water and sewage draining.”

The coastal strip had been experiencing the worst electricity shortage in years, limiting Gazans to about four hours of electricity per day.

​Abbas asks Israel to cut shipments

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas recently asked Israel, the main provider of power to Gaza, to cut shipments as a way of pressuring the Islamic militant group Hamas, which seized power in Gaza a decade ago.

Several neighborhoods were without electricity for more than 24 hours Thursday.

Late Thursday, Hamas said 27 Egyptian trucks with 1.5 million liters of diesel entered Gaza for the power plant. It was unclear when operations would resume.

Diesel fuel from neighboring Egypt had kept the station running at half capacity since June 21, but deliveries were interrupted after a deadly attack on Egyptian soldiers last week near the border. Gaza’s power station has low storage capacity, and requires new fuel shipments on an almost daily basis.

Abbas pressures Hamas

Abbas has tried to squeeze Hamas financially in recent months, hoping to force it to cede power. He slashed salaries of his employees there, stopped payments for ex-prisoners and reinstated heavy taxes on the power plant’s fuel.

Palestinians have been split since 2007, with Hamas ruling Gaza and Abbas governing parts of the West Bank. Repeated reconciliation attempts have failed.

The Egyptian diesel shipments were facilitated by Mohammed Dahlan, a former leading figure in Abbas’ Fatah movement who fell out with the Palestinian president in 2010, went into exile and has since forged strong ties with the United Arab Emirates and Egypt.

Venezuela Oil Exports to Cuba Drop, Energy Shortages Worsen

Venezuela’s crude and fuel deliveries to Cuba have slid almost 13 percent in the first half this year, according to documents from state-run oil company PDVSA viewed by Reuters, threatening to worsen gasoline and power shortages in the communist-run island.

Cuba’s government since 2016 has reduced fuel allocations 28 percent to most state-run companies, and has cut electricity consumption. Public lighting was cut 50 percent, while residential electric use was spared.

Beginning in March, Cubans also have reported minor gasoline and diesel shortages at service stations.

Cuba’s economy depends heavily on Venezuelan crude shipments under a series of bilateral agreements started in 2000 by the South American country’s late President Hugo Chavez. In return, the island nation has provided Venezuela with Cuban doctors and other services.

Venezuela’s shipments of crude for Cuba’s refineries dropped 21 percent to 42,310 barrels per day (bpd), the documents showed. Last year, Venezuela made up for a shortfall in crude shipments by sending Cuba more fuels, but this year’s data showed refined products sent to Cuba remained almost unchanged at around 30,040 bpd.

In total, PDVSA sent Cuba an average of 72,350 bpd of crude and refined products in the first half of 2017, down almost 13 percent from the same period of last year, according to the data from internal PDVSA trade reports.

“Cuba needs at least 70,000 bpd from Venezuela to cover its energy deficit and avoid deeper rationing. A larger or total loss of the Venezuelan supply would have a high political and financial cost for Cuba,” which has been gearing up to welcome more tourists, said Jorge Pinon, a Cuban energy expert at the University of Texas in Austin.

Cuba suffered severe energy rationing in the 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union, an ally that had provided cheap fuel. In 2016, Cuba’s economy went into recession for the first time since those days, declining almost 1 percent as shrinking export earnings left it short of funds to import oil on the open market and replace declining Venezuelan supplies.

With Venezuela’s crude production sliding in 2017 for the sixth year in a row, the OPEC nation has had less oil to send Cuba and other customers in regions from Asia to North America and the Caribbean.

Cuba, which produces extremely heavy crude used by industry and power plants, received 103,226 bpd of oil from Venezuela in the first half of 2015, according to the same data.

PDVSA, whose full name is Petroleos de Venezuela SA, did not reply to a request for comment.

Venezuela’s oil shipments to Cuba have been falling since 2008, when they peaked at 115,000 bpd mainly due to a decline in crude exports. The poor shape of Venezuelan refineries cut into fuel exports this year, and Venezuela has also had to boost fuel imports to meet domestic demand.

Cuba, in addition to rationing fuel, is seeking oil cargoes from other producers including Russia, something it had not done for more than a decade.

In one of several recent shipments, the Ocean Quest tanker loaded with fuel oil at Russia’s Tuapse terminal, arrived in Havana on July 9 and is waiting to discharge, according to Reuters vessel tracking data. The Tuapse terminal is operated by state-run Rosneft.

Cuba’s three aged refineries have been operating at reduced rates since last year due to a shortage of light crude, which also affects Venezuela’s 1.3-million-bpd refining network.

Corruption Undermining Ukraine’s Progress, EU’s Juncker Says

Corruption is undermining all efforts to rebuild Ukraine in line with European Union norms, European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said on Thursday, as President Petro Poroshenko vowed to pursue ever-closer integration with the bloc.

Juncker and European Council President Donald Tusk were in Kyiv for a 24-hour summit with Poroshenko following the final ratification of a new trade pact that has angered Russia.

“What we are asking … is to increase the fight against corruption, because corruption is undermining all the efforts this great nation is undertaking,” Juncker said at a joint briefing. “We remain very concerned.”

The criticism suggests the EU delegation may have taken a tougher-than-expected line in talks forecast to be largely upbeat after the confirmation on Tuesday of an association agreement for closer political and trade ties.

Seven conditions still in works

Separately, European Commission Vice president Valdis Dombrovskis said Kyiv had a shrinking window to meet 21 conditions to unlock 600 million euros ($684 million) of further financial assistance from the EU, of which seven are outstanding.

These conditions include making sure that a landmark reform forcing officials to declare their assets online is properly implemented, and Kyiv lifting a ban on wood exports.

“What we are emphasizing currently is that we have quite limited time,” Dombrovskis told reporters. “So all the conditions need to be implemented already in October … because the macrofinancial assistance program ends on Jan. 4 next year.”

Reforms lead to investments

The pro-Western government in Kyiv has sought to boost EU relations since the ousting of a Moscow-backed president in 2014, implementing reforms in exchange for billions of dollars in aid and a new visa-free travel deal with the European Union.

But Ukraine’s allies have repeatedly expressed concern that vested interests and corrupt practices remain entrenched, partly due to weak rule of law.

The European Union and the International Monetary Fund, Ukraine’s main financial backer, have called for the creation of a specialized anti-corruption court, but Juncker said a new solution had been agreed at the summit.

“Today we agreed that if Ukraine establishes … a special chamber devoted to this issue, that will be enough,” he said.

EU membership remains far off

Mykhailo Zhernakov, a judicial expert at the non-governmental coalition Reanimation Package of Reforms, said the agreement would be a disappointment to those campaigning for greater accountability.

“There’s no way that a chamber in any court will be as independent as a separate court,” he told Reuters. “It’s not going to help.”

While full EU membership for Ukraine remains far off, Poroshenko stressed that Kyiv hopes to integrate further by joining the customs union and becoming a member of the bloc’s Schengen open-border zone.

“As early as today, it’s important to start developing a roadmap to the realization of our dreams,” he said.

 

UN Experts Tell Peru to Halt Oil Talks Until Pollution Remedied

United Nations human rights experts on Thursday called on Peru to suspend negotiations on a new contract for a large oilfield in the Amazon until past pollution was cleaned up and the rights of indigenous groups respected.

Canada’s Frontera Energy Corporation now operates Block 192 in the Peruvian Amazon and is in talks with Peru about renewing its contract once the current one expires in September.

U.N. Special Rapporteurs Baskut Tuncak and Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, independent experts tasked with investigating human rights issues, said Peru had failed to clean up pollution from oil spills in the region and was not doing enough to ensure indigenous groups had a voice in talks.

“The Peruvian Government must suspend the direct negotiations with companies until the right to free, prior and informed consent is guaranteed, and all environmental damage has been remedied,” Tuncak and Tauli-Corpuz said in a statement from the U.N. Human Rights Council.

The remarks will likely be welcomed by indigenous rights activists in Peru who say a law requiring the government to include native groups in talks on projects affecting them has not been fully enforced.

Peru’s environment ministry and energy and mines ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In previous years, the government has declared several environmental emergencies in the region due to oil pollution.

Frontera did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Peru’s government has been trying to jump start investments in the country’s oil industry that have dropped sharply since global oil prices fell and a series of ruptures largely shuttered the main pipeline serving the sector.

The aging pipeline, operated by state-owned oil company Petroperu, suffered a new rupture this week, Petroperu said Wednesday. The company has blamed most of the dozen spills from the pipeline last year on attacks from unknown parties.

In June, Frontera reached a deal with indigenous people who had occupied Block 192 in a land-use dispute. The company agreed to pay them for use of land and finance community projects.

Block 192 has produced an average of 2,565 barrels of oil per day this year, a sharp drop from previous years when it churned out some 10,000 bpd, according to data from state regulator Perupetro.

U.S. oil company Occidental Petroleum produced oil from Block 192 for decades before Argentine energy company Pluspetrol took over operations in 2001. Frontera was awarded a two-year contract in 2015.

Federal Reserve Chief Calls Risks of Inflation ‘Two-sided’

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen on Thursday said she believed the risks concerning inflation are “two-sided,” stressing that price gains could both accelerate or slow down.

 

Testifying for the second day before Congress, Yellen sought to expand on remarks she had made Wednesday before the House Financial Services Committee in an apparent effort to adjust views in financial markets.

 

In her House comments, Yellen discussed the possibility that a recent slowdown in inflation could persist longer than the Fed expects. The comments helped trigger a big market rally, with the Dow Jones industrial average hitting a record high. Investors saw the remarks as a signal that the Fed, which has raised interest rates three times since December, might slow the pace of future interest rate increases.

 

But on Thursday, Yellen said that she believed it would be “premature” to conclude that a recent slowdown in price gains meant that the Fed would not be able to achieve its goal of 2 percent annual inflation.

 

After keeping its key policy rate at a record low near zero for seven years, the central bank began raising rates gradually with one quarter-point hike in December 2015, another one last December and two more in March and June of this year. It is now in a range of 1 percent to 1.25 percent. Many economists believe the Fed will raise rates one more time this year, in either September or December.

 

Some senators asked Yellen whether she believed the Trump administration’s goal of lifting economic growth to 3 percent is realistic. President Donald Trump has pledged to boost growth through a combination of tax cuts, regulatory relief and tougher enforcement of trade laws.

 

Yellen said hitting 3 percent growth in the next five years “would be wonderful. … I would love to see it. But I think it would be challenging.”

 

On a regulatory matter, Yellen said that the Fed had the power to remove directors of banks, but she did not give a specific commitment to do so when pressed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

 

Warren, D-Massachusetts, wants to see those directors of San Francisco-based Wells Fargo replaced if they were responsible for the bank’s creation of fake accounts.

 

“Time after time, big banks cheat their customers, and no actual human beings are held into account,” Warren told Yellen.

 

Yellen described the actions at Wells Fargo as “unacceptable.” She said the Fed needs to conduct a full investigation to understand the root causes of the problems at the bank. Yellen said the central bank is prepared to take appropriate enforcement actions but did not say whether that action would include removal of any bank directors.

Poverty in Italy at Worst for Over a Decade in Blow for Ruling Party

The number of people living in poverty in Italy climbed to its highest level for more than a decade in 2016 despite a modest economic recovery, data showed on Thursday, in a report that could hurt the ruling Democratic Party (PD).

Those living in “absolute poverty” rose to 4.74 million last year, or 7.9 percent of the population, up from 7.6 percent in 2015 and the highest since current records began in 2005, national statistics bureau ISTAT reported.

ISTAT defines absolute poverty as the condition of those who are unable to buy goods and services “essential to avoid grave forms of social exclusion.”

Italy emerged from a long recession in 2014, but the report shows that the slow growth posted since then has done little to help the poorest sectors of society.

Gross domestic product is forecast to rise by around 1.1 percent this year, up from 0.9 percent in 2016, but leaving Italy in its customary position among the eurozone’s most sluggish economies.

The country faces elections next spring, and opposition parties were quick to blame the PD and its leader, Matteo Renzi, for the record poverty levels.

“When a government is unable to provide for people’s basic needs, we can undoubtedly say it has failed,” said Giovanni Barozzino, a senator for the Italian Left party, which split from the PD in 2015, complaining Renzi had dragged it to the right.

In the underdeveloped south of Italy, 9.8 percent of people were living in absolute poverty, compared with 7.3 in central regions including the capital Rome, and 6.7 percent in the wealthier north, including the business capital Milan.

ISTAT said Italians living in “relative poverty,” or those whose disposable income is less than around half the national average, also edged up in 2016 to 8.5 million people, or 14.0 percent of the population.

That compared with 13.7 percent in 2015 and was the highest since current records began in 1997.

Російська прокуратура Криму просить суд роз’яснень щодо заборони Меджлісу – активіст

Російська прокуратура анексованого Криму просить підконтрольний Кремлю Верховний суд півострова пояснити, як відомству діяти щодо до Меджлісу кримськотатарського народу, що заборонений на території Росії і анексованого нею Криму. З таким питанням наглядове відомство звернулося у зв’язку із рішенням Міжнародного суду ООН про зняття заборони на діяльність представницького органу кримських татар.

Документи розмістив на своїй сторінці у Facebook кримський активіст Наріман Джелял, якому також прийшла копія запиту, оскільки він був представником відповідача під час суду щодо заборони Меджлісу.

«Минуло три місяці, як оголошено рішення Міжнародного суду ООН, і тільки після трьох місяців кримська прокуратура намагається для себе зрозуміти, як їм чинити з рішенням суду і чи можна створювати громадське об’єднання під назвою Меджліс кримськотатарського народу», – прокоментував Крим.Реалії Наріман Джелял. 

На сайті російської прокуратури Криму немає інформації щодо запиту до Верховного суду півострова.

26 квітня 2016 року підконтрольний Росії Верховний суд анексованого Криму заборонив діяльність Меджлісу кримськотатарського народу на території анексованого півострова. Захист Меджлісу направив апеляцію до Верховного суду Росії. Проте 29 вересня 2016 року Верховний суд Росії відхилив цю апеляцію, підтвердивши заборону на діяльність Меджлісу.

19 квітня Міжнародний суд ООН виніс проміжну ухвалу за позовом Україна проти Росії. Суд у Гаазі не підтримав вимоги Києва щодо тимчасових заходів проти Росії в рамках Конвенції стосовно заборони фінансування тероризму. Проте Москву зобов’язали припинити обмеження прав кримських татар і етнічних українців, відновити Меджліс та навчання українською мовою в анексованому Криму.

Луценко пообіцяв уже у п’ятницю просити суд арештувати Добкіна

Генеральний прокурор України Юрій Луценко повідомив, що Генеральна прокуратура України має намір уже у п’ятницю просити суд обрати для народного депутата Михайла Добкіна (фракція «Опозиційний блок»), позбавленого недоторканності, запобіжний захід у вигляді тримання під вартою.

Він висловив сподівання, що суд задовольнить це прохання ще того ж дня.

Як сказав Луценко журналістам у Верховній Раді, при цьому суд мав би призначити для Добкіна заставу, щоб він міг уникнути перебування за ґратами.

Луценко також повідомляв, що викликає Добкіна до ГПУ на п’ятницю о 14-й годині.

Сам Добкін заявив журналістам, що прийде до ГПУ зі своїми адвокатами. За його словами, він не збирається лягати в лікарню і піде «туди, куди його хочуть відправити».

Раніше в четвер Верховна Рада України задовольнила всі три подання Генеральної прокуратури України щодо позбавлення недоторканності народного депутата Михайла Добкіна, давши згоду на його притягнення до кримінальної відповідальності, затримання і арешт. Перше подання підтримали 288 депутатів, друге 250 і третє 242.

Генпрокурор Юрій Луценко, обґрунтовуючи в парламенті ці подання, заявив, що Михайло Добкін, який свого часу очолював Харківську міськраду, «умисно діяв за попередньою змовою з групою осіб, зловживаючи своїм службовим становищем голови Харківської міської ради в інтересах третіх осіб», і «скоїв кримінальний злочин». За словами Луценка, попереднє розслідування щодо Добкіна «з питань земельної афери» триває.

У середу комітет Верховної Ради України з питань регламенту визнав достатньо обґрунтованим подання Генпрокуратури на надання на притягнення до кримінальної відповідальності Добкіна. Водночас комітет заявив тоді, що вважає недостатньо обґрунтованими, але законними подання щодо затримання і арешту Добкіна. Сам депутат тоді заявив про політичне, як він вважає, підґрунтя звинувачень стосовно нього. При цьому він додав, що у Верховній Раді голосуватиме за зняття депутатської недоторканності з себе.

ГПУ звинувачує Добкіна в тому, що він діяв «в інтересах голови ОК «Житлобуд-1», сприяв в реалізації злочинного умислу щодо заволодіння земельними ділянками на території Харкова шляхом обману». За версією силовиків, зі власності територіальної громади Харкова «незаконно вибули земельні ділянки загальною площею 61,2 гектара, заподіяні збитки у розмірі 178 624 598 гривень».

Михайло Добкін від 2006 до 2010 року обіймав посаду міського голови Харкова, а від 2010 по 2014 рік очолював Харківську облдержадміністрацію.

Верховна Рада схвалила в першому читанні пенсійну реформу

Верховна Рада України взяла за основу урядовий законопроект про пенсійну реформу, схваливши його в першому читанні.

За це проголосували 282 народні депутати.

Раніше профільний комітет парламенту – з питань соціальної політики, зайнятості та пенсійного забезпечення – рекомендував Верховній Раді схвалити цей законопроект у першому читанні і врахувати пропозиції під час підготовки до другого читання.

Кабінет міністрів України вніс цей законопроект до парламенту 22 червня, схваливши його перед тим у травні. Під час презентації законопроекту прем’єр-міністр Володимир Гройсман повідомив, що документ не передбачає підвищення пенсійного віку за наявності 25 років трудового стажу, а люди без страхового стажу зможуть виходити на соціальну пенсію в 63 роки, а люди з менш ніж 15 роками трудового стажу – в 65 років. Крім того, люди, які бажають вийти на пенсію раніше від 65 років, але мають менше ніж 25 років трудового стажу, зможуть доплатити в Пенсійний фонд і вийти на пенсію раніше.

На реалізацію проекту осучаснення пенсій у 2018 році, за словами Гройсмана, знадобиться понад 30 мільярдів гривень, додаткова потреба Пенсійного фонду в коштах на 2017 рік становить 11,2 мільярда гривень на осучаснення пенсій.

Пенсійна реформа є одним із головних пунктів меморандуму про співпрацю між Україною і Міжнародним валютним фондом.

Порошенко привітав політв’язня Сенцова з днем народження

Президент України Петро Порошенко привітав з днем народження українського режисера Олега Сенцова, який уже три роки перебуває в незаконному ув’язненні у Росії. Про це президент написав на своїй сторінці у Facebook.

«Сьогодні день народження Олега Сенцова. Через наших дипломатів передав Олегові «Спогади» Андрія Сахарова. Дорогий Олеже, Україна разом з усім світом продовжить боротися за Вашу свободу», – наголосив Порошенко.

Міністерство закордонних справ України 12 липня закликало всіх приєднатися до кампанії в Києві на підтримку ув’язненого в Росії українського кінорежисера Олега Сенцова в четвер, 13 липня, на день його народження.

Кінорежисера Олега Сенцова затримали представники російських спецслужб в окупованому Криму у травні 2014 року за звинуваченням в організації терактів на півострові. У серпні 2015-го Північно-Кавказький окружний військовий суд у російському Ростові-на-Дону засудив Олега Сенцова до 20 років колонії суворого режиму за звинуваченням у терористичній діяльності на території Криму.

У цій же справі тоді затримали й інших українців. Зокрема, активіст Олександр Кольченко отримав 10 років колонії.

Обидва своєї провини не визнали. Правозахисний центр «Меморіал» у Росії вніс Сенцова і Кольченка у список політв’язнів.

У цій же справі були засуджені Олексій Чирній, а також Геннадій Афанасьєв, якого звільнили в червні 2016 року, обмінявши на двох затриманих у бою на сході України військовослужбовців Збройних сил Росії, яких Москва оголосила вже звільненими з лав війська на час потрапляння в полон.

У Києві відбудеться пленарне засідання саміту Україна – Євросоюз

У Києві 13 липня відбудеться пленарне засідання 19-го саміту Україна – Європейський союз.

12 липня ввечері відбулася робоча вечеря лідерів ЄС з президентом України Петром Порошенком. У складі делегації Євросоюзу в Україну приїхали президент Ради ЄС Дональд Туск, президент Єврокомісії Жан-Клод Юнкер, верховний представник ЄС з зовнішньої політики та політики безпеки Федеріка Моґеріні та інші високопосадовці.

Президент України Петро Порошенко перед початком саміту заявив, що йтиметься про перехід на новий етап партнерства між Україною та Європейським союзом. Очікується, що саміт привітає остаточну ратифікацію Угоди про асоціацію України з ЄС, яка набере чинності з 1 вересня.

Майбутнє угоди було в невизначеності після того, як у 2016 році в Нідерландах більшість учасників рекомендаційного референдуму (при цьому в референдумі взяли участь лише понад 32% виборців) висловилася проти угоди з Україною. Цього року парламент Нідерландів повторно підтримав ратифікацію Угоди про асоціацію України і ЄС.

McDonald’s Sees Its Future: Be More Convenient

McDonald’s is hoping to make a difference in its future seven seconds at a time.

 

The company that helped define fast food is making supersized efforts to reverse its fading popularity and catch up to a landscape that has evolved around it. That includes expanding delivery, digital ordering kiosks in restaurants, and rolling out an app that saves precious seconds.

 

Much of the work is on display in an unmarked warehouse near the company’s headquarters in suburban Chicago, where a blowup of a mobile phone screen shows the app launching nationally later this year. McDonald’s estimates it would take 10 seconds for a customer to tell an employee their order number from the app, down from the 17-second average of ordering at the drive-thru, a difference that could help ease pileups. Elsewhere at the Innovation Center, the digital ordering kiosk shows how customers can skip lines at the register.

 

“Five, 10 years ago, we were the dominant player in convenience, as convenience was defined in those days,” CEO Steve Easterbrook said last month. “But convenience continually gets redefined, and we haven’t modernized.” 

 

The push come as McDonald’s Corp.’s stock has hit all-time highs as investors cheer a turnaround plan that has included slashed costs and expansion overseas. Yet the asterisk on the headlines is the chain’s declining stature in its flagship U.S. market, where it is fighting intensifying competition, fickle tastes and a persistent junk food image.

 

In an increasingly crowded field of places to eat, the number of McDonald’s locations in the U.S. is set to shrink for the third year in a row. At established locations, the frequency of customer visits has declined for four straight years, even after the launch of a popular “All-Day Breakfast” menu. 

 

The chain that popularized innovations like drive-thrus in the 1970s acknowledges it has been slow to adapt, and is scrambling to better fit into American lifestyles. 

 

Running to keep up

 

Lots of once-dominant restaurant chains are feeling the pressure of people having more eating options.

 

An estimated 613,000 places were selling either food or drink in the U.S. last year, up 17 percent from a decade earlier, according to government figures. Supermarkets and convenience stores are offering more prepared foods, and meal-kit delivery companies have been expanding. 

 

“Better burger” places like Shake Shack and Habit Burger Grill don’t come close to McDonald’s roughly 14,000 U.S. locations, but they’re growing. And even if Starbucks and Dunkin Donuts don’t serve burgers and fries, they are among those promoting food more aggressively.

 

“They’re still taking customers from the same market pool,” said Nick Karavites, a McDonald’s franchisee with 22 locations in the Chicago area and chairman of a regional leadership committee.

 

Richard Adams, a former McDonald’s franchisee who is now a consultant to those businesses, has questioned whether the chain can return to the height of its popularity in such a fragmented marketplace. He also noted that many of the new offerings the company is pursuing, such as delivery, are already available at other places.

 

Still, McDonald’s needs to make changes to keep customer visits from falling further. 

 

‘Turning a very large ship’

 

One main focus is the drive-thru, where McDonald’s gets roughly 70 percent of its business. 

 

Customers who place orders on the mobile app, for instance, could also pull into a designated parking spot where an employee would bring out their order. That would theoretically ease backups at the drive-thru, which in turn might prevent potential customers from driving past without stopping during peak hours.

 

Then there’s the partnership with UberEats to offer delivery. McDonald’s gives an undisclosed percentage of the sale to UberEats, in addition to a fee of about $5 that customers pay. So a risk is that delivery could draw from in-store sales, eating into profitability.

 

So far, however, McDonald’s says delivery is bringing in new business during slower times at the roughly 3,500 locations where it has rolled out since the start of the year. 

 

Either way, such changes aren’t likely to transform operations overnight, since most of McDonald’s customers might prefer to order the way they always have. 

 

“That’s like turning a very large ship,” said Karavites, noting the range of company efforts intended to build sales over time. At his remodeled restaurant in Chicago where delivery was recently launched, he said sales are climbing. 

 

To bring more people in over the short-term, the company is promoting $1 sodas and $2 McCafe drinks. Glass cases displaying baked goods are also popping up in stores. And at about 700 locations, the company is testing “dessert stations” behind the counter where employees can make sundaes topped with cake or brownie chunks. 

 

Those stations could eventually handle an expanded menu of sweets.

 

Junk food image

 

At the same time, McDonald’s is trying to shake its image for serving junk food, especially since its appeal to families with children has long helped keep it ahead of rivals like Burger King and Wendy’s.

 

It’s made changes to its Happy Meal, and made a high-profile pledge to offer healthier options. It plans to start using fresh beef instead of frozen patties in Quarter Pounders. But as other chains emphasizing quality or health keep emerging, it may get harder for McDonald’s to hold onto families or change perceptions. 

 

Larry Light, a former chief marketing officer at McDonald’s, says the company strayed in recent years by chasing customers who may have been going to places like Chipotle, but that it is refocusing on burgers and fries. He thinks that will help get people visiting more often.

 

“You cannot build an enduring, profitable business on a shrinking customer base,” Light said.

 

And Bernstein analyst Sara Senatore cited the changes the company is pursuing in raising her rating on McDonald’s to “buy” in April.

 

“I wouldn’t underestimate the power of scale,” Senatore said.

Russian Jets Buzz NATO Airspace as ‘Close Encounters’ Rise Sharply

NATO forces in Europe scrambled fighter jets to intercept approaching Russian aircraft close to 800 times last year – almost double the figure from 2014. That’s according to a new report, which calls for a new agreement and improved communication between NATO and Russia to avert potentially dangerous incidents. Henry Ridgwell has more from London.

Агентство Reuters повідомило про можливу доставку ще двох турбін Siemens із Росії до Криму

Інформаційне агентство «Ройтерз» повідомило, що до окупованого Росією українського Криму могли доставити всупереч санкціям Європейського союзу з сусідньої Росії ще дві турбіни виробництва німецької компанії «Сіменс» до двох доставлених раніше.

Як повідомило агентство в ніч на четвер за київським часом, двоє його репортерів бачили це обладнання в порту в Феодосії на окупованому півострові. Незалежних підтверджень того, що ці два циліндричні об’єкти під синіми покривалами, схожі на два доставлені раніше до окупованого Севастополя, є теж турбінами німецької компанії, на час публікації агентство не мало. Але їхні розміри і форма відповідають публічно оприлюдненим зображенням газових турбін компанії «Сіменс», мовиться в повідомленні.

У середу речник німецької компанії в її штаб-квартирі в Баварії Яшар Азад сказав агентству, що «Сіменс» усе ще намагається встановити всі факти, зокрема, місце перебування решти двох із загалом чотирьох турбін, про які говорять останнім часом.

На самому окупованому російському півострові представник фактичної російської влади заявив цьому ж агентству, що говорити про ці турбіни не можна, «бо ж, ви розумієте, санкції, Siemens».

У середу уряд Німеччини закликав компанію Siemens AG якнайшвидше і якнайповніше подати пояснення з приводу того, яким чином її газові турбіни, всупереч чинним санкціям Європейського союзу, дісталися до окупованого Росією українського Криму з сусідньої Росії. Як заявив журналістам у Берліні речник канцлера Анґели Меркель Штеффен Зайберт, німецький уряд стежить за справою «з великою увагою».

За його словами, дотримання санкцій – це в першу чергу відповідальність компанії «Сіменс». Саме компанія, сказав він, має перевіряти, щоб усі її ділові стосунки відповідали санкційному режимові. «Доставка турбін до Криму всупереч умовам контракту і попри запевнення на найвищому рівні … варта особливої уваги і цілковито неприпустима», – наголосив речник.

У вівторок компанія Siemens подала позови до Арбітражного суду Москви через її газові турбіни, всупереч санкціям незаконно доставлені з Росії до Криму. Серед відповідачів є і спільне підприємство німецької компанії в Росії, в якому «Сіменс» має 65% і на заводі якого в Росії й були збудовані згадані турбіни. У компанії також заявили, що будуть змушені обміркувати свої подальші відносини з Росією після справи з турбінами, після якої «повернення до звичного порядку справ неможливе».

У понеділок компанія «Сіменс» заявила, що висуне кримінальні звинувачення проти неназваних осіб, відповідальних за це порушення, а також подасть судові позови з метою зупинити доставку до Криму іншого обладнання й домогтися повернення турбін із Криму назад до Росії. Інакше, заявили в компанії, вона буде домагатися скасувати весь контракт. Крім того, Siemens зважує й інші додаткові кроки, мовилося в повідомленні.

Компанія тоді підтвердила інформацію про доставку до окупованого Росією Криму принаймні двох із чотирьох її турбін усупереч санкціям щодо півострова. Вона також пообіцяла, що не братиме участі в монтажі, налагодженні і гарантійному обслуговуванні турбін, якщо їх усе-таки встановлять там.

«Сіменс» наголошує, що турбіни були поставлені на замовлення для електростанції на Таманському півострові в Росії і потім перевезені з Росії до Криму «проти волі» компанії. Siemens також заперечує свою причетність до перенаправлення турбін із Росії до Криму. Це, наголосила компанія, становить очевидне порушення контракту, який прямо забороняє російському контрагентові здійснювати поставки до Криму. Як мовилося в повідомленні, впродовж минулих кількох місяців контрагент неодноразово письмово запевняв Siemens, що перевезення турбін до Криму не буде.

При цьому, заявили в компанії, «Сіменс» почав внутрішнє розслідування щодо всіх своїх спільних підприємств і партнерів у Росії, щоб гарантувати відсутність будь-яких поставок чи надання послуг, що могли б порушити експортні обмеження.

Минулого тижня стало відомо, що до окупованого Криму з сусідньої Росії були доставлені газові турбіни для електростанції, яку будує в Севастополі фактична російська влада. Агентство «Ройтерз» оприлюднило розслідування, що підтвердило: йдеться про турбіни компанії Siemens, що потрапили з Росії до Криму з порушенням санкцій Європейського союзу. За цими даними, турбіни були офіційно призначені для електростанції, на папері планованої на Таманському півострові в Росії, але звідти були морем перевезені на окупований український Кримський півострів.

Про можливість перенаправити «таманські» турбіни до Криму для двох нових електростанцій, у Севастополі і Сімферополі, в Росії говорять уже кілька років, від часу окупації півострова 2014 року. Але «Сіменс» щоразу наголошував, що його турбіни призначені тільки для Тамані, але не для окупованого українського півострова, куди постачання такого обладнання заборонене санкціями ЄС.

Європейський союз, а також США й інші країни «Групи семи» і ще низка держав запровадили щодо Росії кілька пакетів санкцій через її агресію проти України – спершу через окупацію Криму, потім через втручання на сході України. Частина цих санкцій забороняє економічні контакти з окупованим півостровом і з захопленими Росією компаніями на ньому.

Art Exhibit in Poland Shows Auschwitz Through Inmates’ Eyes

A new exhibition in southern Poland shows the brutality of the Nazi German death camp of Auschwitz through the artistic work of its inmates. Some of the artworks are being shown publicly for the first time.

The “Face to Face: Art in Auschwitz” exhibition opened last week at the Kamienica Szolayskich (Szolayski Tenement House) of the National Museum in Krakow to mark 70 years of the Auschwitz Museum. The museum’s task is to preserve the site in the southern town of Oswiecim and to educate visitors about it. More than 2 million people visited the museum last year.

The curator of the Krakow exhibit, Agnieszka Sieradzka, said Wednesday it includes clandestine as well as commissioned drawings and paintings by Jews, Poles and other citizens held at Auschwitz during World War II.

“These works help us see Auschwitz as the inmates saw it and experienced it,” Sieradzka told The Associated Press. “We stand face to face with the inmates.”       

The Nazis sometimes ordered talented inmates to make paintings for various purposes. One such painting is a portrait of a Roma woman that pseudo-scientist Josef Mengele experimented on. Mengele ordered portraits like this from inmate painter Dina Gottliebova, a Jewish woman from Czechoslovakia.

The task helped Gottliebova survive. After the war, she traveled to the U.S. and started a family. She died in 2009 in California under the name Dina Babbitt.

Among the clandestine art is the so-called Auschwitz Sketchbook by an unknown author. It has 22 drawings of scenes of beatings, starvation and death. It was found in 1947, hidden in a bottle in the foundation of a barrack at Birkenau, a part of the Auschwitz-Birkenau complex. It is the first time it is being shown to the general public. It is housed at the museum and only shown on request. 

Also being displayed is the original “Arbeit Macht Frei” (Work Sets You Free) gate top that was stolen and retrieved in 2009 and is now kept under guard at the museum. 

From 1940 to 1945, some 1.1 million people, mostly European Jews but also Poles, Roma and Russians, were killed in the gas chambers or died from starvation, excessive forced labor and disease at Auschwitz, which Nazi Germany operated in occupied Poland.

Coal Mine Crackdown Dims Prospects for Mongolia’s Fortune Seekers

Working 50 meters (164 feet) under ground with minimal air supply, Uuganbaatar is one of thousands of Mongolians trying to make a living digging for coal.

Although the mining season does not begin until autumn, when the ground freezes and work is safer, the 31-year-old and his colleagues are seeking to gain a head start by digging a shaft in Nalaikh, one of the nine districts of Mongolia’s capital Ulaanbaatar, in late June.

But their mine could soon be shut by the government, which has launched an unprecedented crackdown on sites that don’t meet safety standards.

That would mean even fewer opportunities for Mongolia’s individual prospectors, who have already been hit hard by the privatization of mines previously open to all.

Miners such as Uuganbaatar dig for coal under loose arrangements with local unions and private companies.

“Things seem really tough for private miners now,” said Uuganbaatar, who, like many Mongolians, goes by one name. “All the licenses have been bought up by influential big shots. Whenever you start to dig somewhere, someone shows up and chases us away. It’s impossible to find a place or mine to dig in.”

A weak economy and particularly harsh winters drove herdsman from across Mongolia to Nalaikh’s private mines in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

The district, with a population of nearly 30,000, was home to Mongolia’s first state mining company, which collapsed in the 1990s in the midst of a post-communist economic crisis. The firm’s dilapidated buildings dot the landscape.

With the economy slowing again after a commodities boom earlier in the decade, authorities fear more people could be tempted down the mines.

“More mines will probably be shut down,” said Byambadorj, a woman who ran two private mine shafts with her husband for 13 years until the government closed them in June.

“In Nalaikh, life revolves around mining, and mining is the main means to support our lives,” she says, insisting that her mines were operating according to the safety standards.

The government had tried to get companies to improve safety by issuing licenses. An official said nine companies had been granted licenses, but not all had met the standards.

“People were working in shafts with no air supply,” said S. Battulga, an official whose department is responsible for reviewing mining licenses across the country.

“Therefore, it was requested that the private mining licenses in Nalaikh be cancelled” on health and safety grounds, he added.

Nalaikh authorities would like people to switch from mining to work in brick factories, but no one seems keen to switch despite the danger.

In the past 25 years, the government has recorded 234 fatalities in Nalaikh’s coal mines, although residents say the real number is hundreds higher.

Trump Arrives in Paris for Bastille Day Celebrations 

U.S. President Donald Trump, who in the past has disparaged Paris as an unsafe city because of terrorism, has arrived in the French capital. He will mark the French national holiday, Bastille Day, on Friday after holding counterterrorism talks with President Emmanuel Macron and marking the 100th anniversary of U.S. troops entering World War I.

Air Force One, the presidential jet, lifted off on schedule (at 7:49 p.m. EDT) Wednesday evening from Joint Base Andrews, outside the nation’s capital. First lady Melania Trump is accompanying the president on the trip to France. They arrives just before 9 a.m. local time.

Before departing the U.S., the president gave several interviews at the White House, including an extended conversation with Pat Robertson of the Christian Broadcasting Network, a prominent figure in conservative political and religious circles.

In contrast to reports from U.S. intelligence agencies that Russian President Vladimir Putin intervened in last year’s U.S. elections to increase Republican Trump’s chances of victory, the president said he believes Putin had hoped Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton would win the race.

According to excerpts of the interview released Wednesday evening by CBN, the president said the Kremlin would have preferred to see Clinton win the White House, because Russian officials thought she would “decimate” the U.S. military once in power.

Watch: Trump Heads for Difficult Encounter in France

Paris ‘out of control’

A year ago Trump described Paris as “so, so, so out of control, so dangerous,” because of terrorists operating there. More recently he suggested that Islamic State attacks in Paris had diminished its standing as a world-class destination.

As he pulled the U.S. out of the 2015 international Paris accord to control greenhouse gas emissions, Trump said he was elected to represent “Pittsburgh, not Paris.” Nevertheless, he subsequently accepted President Macron’s invitation to attend the country’s annual mid-July celebrations.

During his two-day visit, Trump will meet with Macron, whose political fortunes have soared this year. The U.S. president also will lunch with military officials, tour the tomb of Napoleon Bonaparte and join in Bastille Day celebrations Friday.

The two leaders are scheduled to meet Thursday before speaking to reporters.

“We will talk about all the issues which are of interest to us both, including those about which we have disagreements when we have them, but also a lot of the issues on which we are working together — the terrorism threat, the crises in Syria and Libya, and a lot of issues which are of interest to us both,” Macron said.

Syria, G-20 follow-up

A senior U.S. official told reporters the White House expects the civil war in Syria and U.S.-French cooperation both there and on other counterterror issues to take up most of the discussion, while there could also be some follow-up to last week’s G-20 summit in Germany.

France is part of the U.S.-led coalition that has been carrying out airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Syria and Iraq since late 2014. A large majority of those strikes this year have taken place in Syria, where the militants have their de facto capital in the city of Raqqa.

Trump and Macron are both in their first year in office and have shown policy differences when it comes to international efforts to combat climate change. But they also share certain goals, such as reducing the number of workers in their respective governments.

The senior Trump administration official described the relationship between the presidents as “very positive.”

Bastille Day

On Friday, Trump and his wife, Melania, will attend the annual Bastille Day parade, which will include both French and U.S. military personnel.

“The fact that we participated in such a major way in World War I, side by side with the French, is a clear parallel to what we’re doing today,” the senior administration official said. “We still live in a dangerous world. We still live in a world that has many, many threats.”

A French government spokesman, Christophe Castaner, said, “Sometimes Trump makes decisions we don’t like, such as on climate, but we can deal with it in two ways: we can say, ‘We are not going to talk to you,’ or we can offer you our hand to bring you back into the circle. Macron is symbolically offering Trump his hand.”

Britain Hails Spanish Investment as Sign of Confidence in Economy

Spanish companies will commit millions of pounds of investment to Britain on Thursday, the British government said, as it seeks to limit the economic impact of leaving the European Union.

The investment plans, which include building trains and trams in Britain, coincide with a three-day state visit to Britain by Spain’s King Felipe and Queen Letizia.

King Felipe and British trade minister Liam Fox are due to address a U.K.-Spain business forum in London on Thursday, before the Spanish monarch holds bilateral talks with Prime Minister Theresa May at her Downing Street residence.

Britain said the investments would include Spanish manufacturer CAF committing 30 million pounds ($39 million) to build trains and trams at a new factory in Wales, creating 300 jobs, and Spanish infrastructure company Sacyr unveiling plans for a new office in London.

Bilateral trade strong

Bilateral trade between the two countries was worth 40 billion pounds in 2015, and more than 400 Spanish companies are registered in Britain, the government said.

“The sheer scale of Spanish investment in Britain demonstrates Spain’s continued confidence in the strength of the UK economy, and shows that we can and will maintain the closest possible relationship,” May said in a statement.

The government also highlighted more than 100 million pounds which is being invested in the expansion of Luton Airport, majority owned Spanish airport operator AENA, and the construction of a 26 million pound factory in the West Midlands by Spanish steel producer Gonvarri Steel Services.

Gibraltar remains issue

Away from the financial deals, the Spanish royal visit comes amid tensions over the post-Brexit future of the British territory of Gibraltar, which Spain wants back.

The future of Gibraltar, a rock on the southern tip of Spain captured by Britain in 1704, and its 30,000 inhabitants, is set to be a major point of contention in the Brexit talks.

During an address to members of both houses of parliament in London on Wednesday, Felipe said he was confident that Spain and Britain could work towards an acceptable arrangement over Gibraltar.

May to meet with King Felipe

The EU and Britain have also yet to agree on guarantees for EU citizens living in the UK and British expats living in other EU countries. More than 300,000 Britons live in Spain, while more than 130,000 Spaniards live in Britain.

On Wednesday, Felipe said these citizens had “a legitimate expectation of decent and stable living conditions” and urged the British and Spanish governments to work to ensure the Brexit agreement provided sufficient assurance and certainty.

May’s office said that during her talks with Felipe she would welcome the contribution that Spanish citizens make to Britain’s economy and society.

 

Мати росіянина Агеєва просить Порошенка помилувати її сина

Мати затриманого у червні на сході України громадянина Росії Віктора Агеєва звернулася до президента України Петра Порошенка з проханням помилувати її сина. Відеозвернення Світлани Агеєвої опублікувала російська «Нова газета».

Агеєва заявила, що готова особисто поїхати в Україну і взяти участь у переговорах з обміну її сина на «якогось українського громадянина і солдата».

Міністр оборони України Степан Полторак раніше заявляв, що питання про обмін захопленого українськими військовими на Донбасі російського військового Віктора Агеєва вирішуватиметься після завершення слідчого процесу. За словами Полторака, те, що Агеєв служить у російській армії, «підтверджено документами, знайденими при ньому».

Міноборони Росії заперечує інформацію, що Віктор Агеєв є російським військовослужбовцем-контрактником, заявляючи, що офіційно він звільнився у запас у травні 2016 року, пройшовши строкову службу.