HTML

Egyik 19

Magyarországról, utódállami területekről, Európáról, Európai Unióról, további földrészekről, globalizációról, űrről

Friss topikok

Címkék

1956 (85) abkhazia (2) accademiaungheresedellescienze (1) ádeniöböl (1) adriaitenger (12) adriaticsea (4) aegeansea (6) aegyptus (1) afganisztán (64) afghanistan (68) africa (87) afrika (85) agriculture (2) ajurabirodalom (1) akabaiöböl (1) alánia (1) alaptörvény (43) albania (13) albánia (18) algeria (10) algéria (13) algérie (2) alkotmány (32) alkotmánybíróság (22) államadósság (2) állambiztonságiszolgálatoktörténetilevéltára (5) államiszámvevőszék (5) állandóválasztottbíróság (1) állat (2) állatorvostudományiegyetem (1) allemagne (1) alpok (5) alps (2) altai (1) altáj (2) amazon (4) amazonas (1) americae (1) americanhungarianfederation (1) americansamoa (1) americas (8) amerika (12) amerikahangja (1) amerikaimagyarkoalíció (1) amerikaimagyarmúzeum (1) amerikaimagyarszépművesczéh (1) amerikaimagyarszövetség (2) amnestyinternational (9) amur (1) anc (1) ancientegypt (1) ancientrome (2) andes (1) andorra (1) andrássygyulabudapestinémetnyelvűegyetem (1) angara (1) anglia (10) angola (4) antarctic (11) antarctica (4) antiguaésbarbuda (1) antiókhiaifejedelemség (1) appenines (1) aquincumimúzeum (1) arabfélsziget (1) arabianpeninsula (3) arabiansea (1) arabköztársaságokszövetsége (1) áradás (1) araltó (1) arctic (30) arcticocean (6) ardeal (3) argentina (26) argentine (3) ária (1) armenia (9) árpádvonal (1) asia (90) asianinfrastructureinvestmentbank (1) assyria (1) asteroid (26) athén (1) atlanticocean (24) atlantióceán (12) atom (1) audio (1) australia (65) austria (73) austrohungarianmonarchy (5) ausztrália (43) ausztria (158) autonómia (39) autonomy (5) azerbaijan (15) azerbajdzsán (15) azovitenger (5) azovsea (1) ázsia (64) babesbolyaitudományegyetem (4) babilon (1) babilónia (1) badeniőrgrófság (1) bahamas (3) bahamaszigetek (1) bahrain (4) bahrein (1) baikal (2) bajkáltó (1) bajorország (6) balassiintézet (7) balaton (25) balcans (26) balkán (63) baltics (22) balticsea (12) baltikum (25) baltitenger (17) balti államok (1) banat (3) banatus (1) banglades (9) bangladesh (9) bánság (21) baptistaszeretetszolgálat (1) barentssea (5) barentstenger (2) barlang (1) batthyáneum (4) bayern (1) bayofbengal (3) bécsimagyartörténetiintézet (1) békásszoros (2) belarus (28) belgakongó (2) belgium (92) belgrádimagyarkulturálisintézet (1) belize (1) benesdekrétumok (4) beregszászimagyargörögkatolikusesperesikerület (1) beringszoros (1) besszarábia (6) bethlengáboralap (3) bevándorlásihivatal (7) bhután (1) bhutan (1) Biblia (7) bismarcktenger (1) bissauguinea (1) bizánc (3) bizáncibirodalom (4) blacksea (43) bluestream (1) boek (1) bog (1) bohaisea (2) bok (1) bolivia (7) bolyaiegyetem (2) bolyaitudományegyetem (2) book (67) borneo (1) bősnagymaros (1) bosniaandherzegovina (12) bosphorus (3) bosporus (2) bosznia (5) boszniahercegovina (22) boszporusz (2) brandenburg (1) brasil (2) brazil (37) brazília (19) britbirodalom (4) britindia (1) britishpetroleum (2) britszomália (1) britújguinea (1) brunei (4) buch (13) budapest (1) budapestfővároslevéltára (2) budapesthistorymuseum (2) budapesticorvinusegyetem (2) budapestiközlekedésiközpont (1) budapestiműszakiésgazdaságtudományiegyetem (4) budapestitörténetimúzeum (2) budapestneutroncentre (1) budapestostroma (2) bukovina (1) bulgária (75) bulgaria (32) bulgarianacademyofsciences (1) burkinafaso (2) burma (4) burundi (4) burzenland (1) byzantineempire (1) byzantium (1) caboverde (2) calvinjteológiaiakadémia (1) cambodia (3) cameroon (4) canada (72) canto (1) capeofgoodhope (1) caribbean (4) caribbeansea (7) caritashungarica (1) carpathianbasin (5) carpathians (1) carte (7) cartoon (1) caspiansea (8) catalonia (6) caucasus (11) celticmusic (1) centralafricanrepublic (1) centralamerica (7) centralbankofhungary (1) chad (1) chevron (2) chile (24) china (246) chinoingyógyszergyár (1) chorwerke (1) címer (1) Címkék (2) ciprus (15) civilaviationorganization (1) collègebaronjózsefeötvös (1) colombia (11) comet (6) communism (6) communist (28) comunista (1) constitution (3) costarica (9) councilofeurope (1) crimea (31) crisana (1) croatia (28) csád (2) csángórádió (2) csecsenföld (2) csehország (87) csehszlovákia (45) csendesóceán (11) csíkiszékelymúzeum (1) csónak (5) cuba (13) cyprus (20) czechia (30) czechoslovakia (3) dal (8) dalszöveg (1) dance (14) dánia (25) danube (69) danubianresearchcenter (1) danubio (1) dardanelles (4) debreceniegyetem (8) debrecenireformátuskollégium (1) defenseadvancedresearchprojectsagency (1) délafrika (16) délamerika (23) déliáramlat (23) déljemen (1) délkínaitenger (5) délkorea (14) délszudán (2) délvidék (55) democraticrepublicofcongo (18) demográfia (1) denmark (25) depleteduranium (1) deutschland (6) dévaiszentferencalapítvány (3) djibouti (5) dnieper (1) dobrudzsa (2) dominica (3) don (2) donau (1) donbass (10) donetsk (1) dráva (1) drávaszög (2) dubai (7) dubaj (1) dubliniegyezmény (2) duna (134) dunaipolynemzetipark (2) dunamédiaszolgáltatónonprofitzrt (1) dunamellékireformátusegyházkerület (1) dunamúzeum (1) dunatelevízió (7) dzsibuti (1) earth (132) earthquake (48) eastchinasea (3) eastgermany (3) easttimor (5) ebolajárvány (2) ecocalipse (2) ecuador (17) ég (93) égeitenger (4) egészségügy (2) egészségügyivilágszervezet (7) egriérsekség (1) egyenlítőiguinea (1) egyesültállamok (322) egyesültarabemírségek (11) egyesültarabköztársaság (2) egyesültkirályság (8) egyesültnemzetekszervezete (47) egyházikönyvtárakegyesülése (1) egyházzene (1) egyiptom (62) egyiptom(hellenisztikus) (1) egypt (49) éjszaka (1) ekokalipszis (1) elba (1) elsővilágháború (87) emberijogokeurópaibírósága (11) ének (20) england (14) englishchannel (4) ensz (63) eötvösjózsefcollegium (5) eötvöslorándtudományegyetem (15) eötvösloránduniversity (1) építészet (99) equatorialguinea (1) erdély (326) erdélyimagyarközművelődésiegyesület (2) erdélyimagyarműszakitudományostársaság (1) erdélyimagyarnemzetitanács (19) erdélyimagyarnyelvmívelőtársaság (1) erdélyiművészetiközpont (2) erdélyimúzeumegyesület (21) erdélyinemzetimúzeum (1) erdélyinemzetimúzeumkézirattára (1) erdélyinemzetimúzeumlevéltára (1) erdélyireformátusegyházkerület (20) erdélyirómaikatolikusegyházmegye (2) erdélyirómaikatolikuspüspökség (1) erdélyirómaikatolikusstátus (1) erdélyiszépmívescéh (1) eritrea (18) erkelszínház (1) eső (4) este (9) estonia (25) eswatini (1) északamerika (9) északiáramlat (11) északiáramlat2 (1) északírország (2) északisark (6) északitenger (3) északjemen (1) északkorea (10) északmacedónia (1) északvietnam (1) esztergomiérsekség (1) esztergomifőegyházmegyeikönyvtár (1) eszterházakulturáliskutatóésfesztiválközpont (1) eszterházykárolyegyetem (1) észtország (19) ethiopia (17) etiópia (9) etna (1) eubam (1) eufrátesz (3) euphrates (11) eurasia (14) eurázsa (2) eurázsia (22) europa (6) európa (410) európaibékeintézet (1) európaibetegségmegelőzésiésjárványügyiközpont (1) európaibíróság (16) európaibizottság (124) európaibiztonságiésegyüttműködésiértekezlet (4) európaibiztonságiésegyüttműködésiszervezet (25) európaifejlesztésiésújjáépítésibank (1) európaiközpontibank (3) európainemzetiségekföderatívuniója (2) európainukleáriskutatásiszervezet (1) európaiombudsman (1) európaiparlament (112) európaitanács (58) európaiújjáépítésiésfejlesztésibank (3) európaiunió (313) europe (237) europeanantifraudoffice (1) europeanbankforreconstructionanddevelopment (1) europeancentralbank (5) europeancommission (52) europeancouncil (23) europeancourtofauditors (1) europeancourtofhumanrights (2) europeancourtofjustice (5) europeangeosciencesunion (1) europeaninvestmentbank (3) europeanombudsman (1) europeanparliament (39) europeanpublicprosecutorsoffice (1) europeansciencefoundation (1) europeanspaceagency (15) europeanunion (174) europol (5) eurostat (4) evangélikusországoskönyvtár (1) exxon (1) eυρώπη (1) fák (90) federationofhungarians (1) fehéroroszország (20) fehértenger (1) feketetenger (58) felhők (68) felvidék (84) fénykép (28) fényképek (276) ferenchoppmuseumofasiaticarts (1) ferencjózseftudományegyetem (1) ferencrákóczyIItranscarpathianhungarianinstitute (1) ferenczjózseftudományegyetem (1) fertőtó (1) festmény (1) fidzsiszigetek (1) fiji (7) film (131) finland (30) finnország (33) fire (1) firstworldwar (3) fiumeitengerészetiakadémia (1) flanders (1) főgáz (3) föld (19) földközitenger (47) földrajziintézet (1) földrengés (2) forsterközpont (3) fórumkisebbségkutatóintézet (4) france (163) franciaország (205) franciapolinézia (1) franciavichykormány (2) frenchpolynesia (1) frontex (14) függetlenállamokközössége (3) fülöpszigetek (8) fundamentallaw (1) galaxy (1) galícia (2) galilea (1) gambia (3) ganges (1) gangesz (1) gáza (3) gaza (13) gazprom (52) generalelectric (1) genfikonvenció (2) georgia (20) germanreich (4) germany (202) ghana (5) ghána (2) gibraltar (1) globalizáció (49) globalization (132) globalizmus (8) góbisivatag (1) golfáram (1) google (1) görögbirodalom (1) görögkatolikusmetropólia (1) görögország (95) greatbritain (185) greece (58) greenland (6) grenada (1) grófklebelsbergkunómagyartörténetiintézet (1) grönland (1) grúzia (15) guam (2) guatemala (22) guinea (3) guineabissau (1) gulfofaden (2) gulfofmexico (8) gulfofoman (3) guyana (1) győriegyházmegyeilevéltár (1) gyulafehérvárirómaikatolikusérsekség (9) gyulafehérvárirómaikatolikusteológia (1) haázrezsőmúzeum (1) habsburgbirodalom (12) Habsburgermonarchie (1) habsburgmonarchia (3) hadtörténelmilevéltár (1) hadtörténetiintézetésmúzeum (16) hágainemzetközibíróság (1) hagyományokháza (2) haiti (6) hajdúdorogigörögkatolikusegyházmegye (1) hajó (35) hamvasbélakultúrakutatóintézet (1) hangzóanyag (14) hargitanemzetiszékelynépiegyüttes (1) havasalföld (8) háziállatok (1) heatwave (1) hegyek (7) hegység (1) híd (33) himalája (3) himalaya (9) himnusz (6) hitelminősítők (7) (7) hőhullám (4) hold (4) holiday (1) hollandia (57) holyland (1) honduras (17) hongrie (9) hoppferencázsiaiművészetimúzeum (1) horvátország (86) houseofmusic (1) hunbirodalom (3) hungaria (8) HungariaArchiregnum (1) hungarianacademyofarts (1) hungarianacademyofsciences (4) hungarianamericancoalition (1) hungarianhumanrightsfoundation (1) hungariannationalbank (1) hungariannationalmuseum (2) hungarianradio (1) hungarianstateopera (1) hungaricanaközgyűjteményikönyvtár (1) hungary (328) hungría (1) hunkultúramúzeuma (1) hunnia (1) husarenlieder (1) hussarsongs (1) huszárnóta (2) iaea (1) iberia (1) ibériaifélsziget (1) iceland (11) ifla (3) IIbécsidöntés (1) IIrákócziferenckárpátaljaimagyarfőiskola (7) IIworldwar (1) ilhánbirodalom (1) imf (50) imperoromano (1) india (142) indiaióceán (6) indianocean (26) indonesia (25) indonézia (6) induló (1) indus (1) influenzavirus (1) információshivatal (1) inkabirodalom (1) insect (1) instituthongroisdeparis (1) interjú (1) internationalairtransportassociation (1) internationalatomicenergyagency (9) internationalbankofreconstructionanddevelopment (1) internationalcourtofjustice (2) internationalcriminalcourt (2) internationalenergyagency (3) internationallabororganization (1) internationalmonetaryfund (6) internationalspacestation (18) interpol (5) iparművészetimúzeum (5) irak (92) iran (152) irán (74) iraq (137) ireland (22) írország (20) írtenger (1) israel (120) istitutobalassi (1) italia (7) itália (5) italy (126) ithakaprogram (1) ivorycoast (3) Iworldwar (2) izland (6) izráel (3) izrael (93) jagellóegyetem (1) jamaica (1) japán (53) japan (106) járművek (38) jászvásárirómaikatolikuspüspökség (1) jegestenger (1) jemen (11) jeruzsálemikirályság (3) jordan (25) jordán (1) jordánia (33) józsefnádorműszakiésgazdaságtudományiegyetem (1) jugoszlávia (41) julianusprogram (1) jupiter (3) kaliningrad (3) kalocsabácsifőegyházmegye (2) kalocsaifőegyházmegyeilevéltár (1) kambodzsa (4) kamerun (3) kanada (55) karasea (1) karibtenger (3) károligáspáregyetem (3) kárpátalja (120) karpatenbecken (1) kárpátmedence (100) kárpátmedenceintézet (1) kárpátok (35) kashmir (1) kaszpitenger (6) katalónia (1) katar (14) katolikuskaritász (2) katonaiműszakifőiskola (1) katonanóta (2) kaukázus (11) kazahsztán (16) kazakhstan (21) kelet (1) keletikárpátok (1) keletkínaitenger (6) kenya (19) képeslap (1) kerchstrait (1) kereskedelmivilágszervezet (1) kgst (3) kijevinagyfejedelemség (1) kína (147) kínaikultúramúzeuma (1) királyhágó (5) királyhágómellékireformátusegyház (5) kirgizisztán (6) kisebbségijogvédőintézet (4) kisebbségkutatóintézet (2) kitap (2) kitelepítés (1) knjiga (1) köd (2) kodályinstitute (1) kodályzoltánemlékmúzeumésarchívum (1) kolozsváriegyetemikönyvtár (1) kolozsvárifőkonzulátus (2) kolozsvárimagyarkirályiferenczjózseftudományegyetem (2) kolumbia (1) kommunista (79) kommunizmus (46) kongóidemokratikusköztársaság (5) kongóiköztársaság (1) konstantinápolyipatriarchátus (2) könyv (161) koralltenger (1) korea (11) kőrösicsomasándorprogram (1) kórus (3) kórusmű (2) kosovo (17) kossuthdíj (1) koszovó (33) kosztolányidezsőszínház (1) középafrikaiköztrásaság (3) középamerika (3) középeurópaiegyetem (1) központistatisztikaihivatal (11) krím (14) krizajánosnéprajzitársaság (4) książka (2) kuba (7) külügyiéskülgazdaságiintézet (3) kurdistan (4) kurdisztán (8) kúria (7) kuriliszigetek (1) kuvait (4) kuwait (11) kyrgyzstan (5) lamanchecsatorna (2) laos (3) laptewsea (1) latinamerica (4) latvia (17) leagueofnations (1) lebanon (42) lechnerlajostudásközpont (1) leggefondamentale (1) lengyelország (155) lettország (21) levant (1) libano (1) libanon (34) libéria (3) liberia (4) líbia (56) libri (10) libro (7) lisztferencacademyofmusic (2) lisztferenczeneművészetiegyetem (1) lithuania (29) litvánia (23) livre (7) ludovikaakadémia (3) ludwigmúzeumkortársművészetimúzeum (2) luhansk (1) lukoil (2) luxembourg (9) luxemburg (23) lybia (42) macedonia (8) macedónia (36) macedonia(provincia) (1) madagascar (7) madagaszkár (1) madár (15) madžarska (1) magyarállaminépiegyüttes (1) magyarállamvasút (2) magyarenergetikaiésközműszabályozásihivatal (2) magyarfejedelemség (1) magyarföldrajzitársaság (1) magyarföldtaniésgeofizikaiintézet (3) magyarhonvédség (1) magyarírókszövetsége (1) magyarkanizsaiudvarikamaraszínház (1) magyarkirályierzsébettudományegyetem (1) magyarkirályság (57) magyarkülügyiintézet (1) magyarmáltaiszeretetszolgálat (2) magyarmérnökikamara (2) magyarművészetiakadémia (13) magyarnemzetibank (30) magyarnemzetigaléria (8) magyarnemzetilevéltár (7) magyarnemzetimúzeum (18) magyarnemzetioperaház (1) magyarnemzetitanács (2) magyarnemzetiüdülésialapítvány (1) magyarnóta (2) magyarnyelviintézet (1) magyarnyelvstratégiaiintézet (1) magyarokvilágszövetsége (16) magyarország (896) magyarországireformátusegyház (4) magyarországiruszintudományosintézet (1) magyarországkrakkóifőkonzulátusa (1) magyarpolitikaifoglyokszövetsége (1) magyarrendőrség (2) magyarságkutatóintézet (2) magyartáviratiiroda (3) magyartelevízió (1) magyartermészettudományimúzeum (1) magyartudománygyűjtemény (1) magyartudományosakadémia (64) magyartudományosakadémiakönyvtárésinformációsközpont (3) magyarunitáriusegyház (3) magyarvillamosművekzrt (2) magyarvöröskereszt (4) mahart (2) malajzia (10) malawi (4) malaysia (15) malév (1) mali (12) málta (13) malta (9) mamelukbirodalom (1) mansziget (1) map (39) máramaros (6) maramures (1) march (1) marcia (1) máriarádió (1) marokkó (16) maros (4) marosmegyeimúzeum (1) marosvásárhelyiművészetiegyetem (1) marosvásárhelyiorvosiésgyógyszerészetiegyetem (14) mars (14) marsch (1) marshallislands (3) másodikvilágháború (84) mauritánia (2) mauritania (2) mauritius (1) máv (1) médiatudományiintézet (5) mediterraneansea (52) mekong (2) memorandum (1) menekültügyihivatal (1) mercury (1) meteor (5) mexico (72) mexikó (15) mexikóiöböl (2) mezőgazdaság (7) michelincsillag (2) micronesia (1) microspace (1) middleamerica (1) migrációkutatóintézet (1) mikeskelemenprogram (1) mikóimrejogvédelmiszolgálat (1) miskolciegyetem (1) miskolcigörögkatolikusegyházmegye (1) mississippi (2) mol (23) moldova (59) moldva (22) molnáristvánmúzeum (1) monaco (1) monarchiaaustroungarica (1) mongolbirodalom (3) mongólia (3) mongolia (7) montenegró (9) montenegro (7) moon (36) móraferencmúzeum (1) morocco (9) morvaország (5) mountain (2) mounteverest (1) mozambik (4) mozambique (1) mozambiquechannel (1) műcsarnok (2) műegyetem (1) munkácsigörögkatolikusegyházmegye (3) munkácsirómaikatolikusegyházmegye (1) munkácsymihálymúzeum (1) muravidék (4) museumofappliedarts (1) museumofhungarianagriculture (1) music (5) művészetekpalotája (1) myanmar (3) nabucco (4) naftogaz (1) nagorno-karabakh (6) nagybritannia (186) nagyváradirómaikatolikusegyházmegye (1) namíbia (3) nap (26) naplemente (8) nasa (69) nationalheritageinstitute (1) nationalhistorymuseumofromania (1) nationalszéchényilibrary (2) nationaluniversityofpublicservice (1) nato (254) nauru (1) németausztria (1) németbirodalom (46) németdemokratikusköztársaság (10) németkeletafrika (1) németország (283) németrómaibirodalom (7) németszövetségiköztársaság (11) németújguinea (1) nemzetekszövetsége (1) nemzetgyűlés (4) nemzetiadóésvámhivatal (1) nemzetiaudiovizuálisarchivum (1) nemzeticsaládésszociálpolitikaiintézet (1) nemzetiélelmiszerláncbiztonságihivatal (3) nemzetifenntarthatófejlődésstratégia (1) nemzetikisebbségkutatóintézet (7) nemzetiközszolgálatiegyetem (10) nemzetikulturálisalap (8) nemzetikutatásifejlesztésiésinnovációshivatal (1) nemzetinépegészségügyiésgyógyszerészetiközpont (7) nemzetinépegészségügyiközpont (8) nemzetiörökségintézete (2) nemzetiszínház (4) nemzetköziatomenergiaügynökség (7) nemzetközibíróság (1) nemzetközibüntetőbíróság (2) nemzetközihungarológiaiközpont (1) nemzetközimigrációsszervezet (3) nemzetköziűrállomás (1) nemzetközivalutaalap (27) nemzetközivöröskereszt (1) nemzetpolitikaikutatóintézet (1) nemzetstratégiaikutatóintézet (8) nepal (3) népdal (2) néprajzimúzeum (5) népszövetség (6) néptánc (2) népzene (2) newcaledonia (2) newzealand (23) nicaragua (17) niger (12) nigeria (26) nigéria (15) nile (1) nílus (1) nobeldíj (14) nobelprize (3) nordstream2 (3) northamerica (36) northamericanfreetradeagreement (6) northcorea (1) northernsea (2) northkorea (57) northmacedonia (3) northsea (4) northvietnam (1) norvégia (28) norvegiansea (1) norway (43) norwegiansea (1) norwey (2) nyár (135) nyárisportok (3) nyugat (1) nyugatnémetország (1) nyugatrómaibirodalom (2) nyugatszahara (3) óceánia (2) oceania (2) oecd (3) ókoriegyiptom (4) ókorigörögország (3) ókoriizrael (1) ókorikréta (1) ókoriróma (1) ökumenikussegélyszervezet (1) olaszkeletafrika (1) olaszország (164) olimpia (8) olympics (3) oman (4) omán (1) onu (1) opalvezeték (1) opec (11) opera (1) operaház (5) organizationforsecurityandcooperationineurope (6) örményország (9) oroszbirodalom (7) oroszország (270) országgyűlés (82) országgyűlésikönyvtár (4) országház (15) országoskatasztrófavédelmifőigazgatóság (2) országoskórházifőigazgatóság (1) országoslevéltár (4) országosmagyargyűjteményegyetem (1) országosmentőszolgálat (2) országosmeteorológiaiszolgálat (3) országosszéchényikönyvtár (30) országosszínháztörténetimúzeumésintézet (2) őrvidék (6) österreich (2) ősz (47) ősziszínek (5) oszmánbirodalom (32) osztrákmagyarmonarchia (37) ottomanempire (14) oυγγαρία (1) pacificocean (58) pakistan (34) pakisztán (34) paks (1) palestine (28) palesztina (13) pallaszathénéközgondolkodásiprogram (1) panama (10) panamacanal (2) panamacsatorna (1) pannonhalmifőapátság (1) pannónia (3) pannonia (3) pannontenger (1) pápaiállam (1) papuanewguinea (11) pápuaújguinea (2) paraguay (4) parlament (14) parliament (8) partium (57) partiumiésbánságiműemlékvédőésemlékhelytársaság (1) partiumikeresztényegyetem (4) patagonia (1) pázmánypétercatholicuniversity (1) pázmánypéterkatolikusegyetem (11) pechorasea (1) pécsitudományegyetem (3) penclub (3) persia (1) persiangulf (29) peru (15) perzsabirodalom (1) perzsaöböl (13) perzsia (2) petőfiirodalmimúzeum (14) philippines (38) philippinesea (6) photo (69) photos (280) pianomusic (1) picture (2) piemont (1) pireneusok (1) pluto (1) poland (96) polishamericancongress (1) polonia (1) ponte (1) poroszország (2) portugal (18) portugálguinea (1) portugália (26) portugálmozambik (1) portugálnyugatafrika (1) puertorico (3) pyrenees (1) qatar (28) quebec (1) rajna (2) redsea (10) reformátussegélyszervezet (1) regát (2) régészet (1) regionálisnyelvekeurópaichartája (5) RegnumHungariae (3) rendszerváltástörténetétkutatóintézet (1) restitution (1) retyezát (1) robot (3) rodézia (1) rómaibirodalom (15) rómaicsászárság (1) romanempire (2) romania (69) románia (306) romániaievangélikuslutheránusegyház (1) romántudományosakadémia (1) rosatom (7) roscosmos (3) rosneft (8) roszatom (3) rosznyeft (4) rovar (17) ruanda (2) russia (282) russianfederalspaceagency (1) ruténia (1) rwanda (4) SacraCorona (2) sahara (11) sahel (1) salamonszigetek (1) salamontenger (1) salvador (16) samoa (3) sanbernardinostrait (1) sapientiaerdélyimagyartudományegyetem (10) sarkvidék (1) saturn (3) saudiarabia (93) saxony (1) scandinavia (3) schengenagreement (10) schengeniövezet (41) schengenzone (2) scotland (11) seaofazov (3) seaofjapan (5) seaofmarmara (1) seaofokhotsk (1) secondaguerramondiale (1) secondworldwar (4) semmelweisegyetem (2) senegal (4) serbia (44) seychelleszigetek (1) shell (1) siberia (7) siebenbürgen (7) sierraleone (7) sinaibirodalom (1) singapore (18) siria (1) skandinávia (2) skócia (17) slovakia (35) slovenia (14) slovenija (1) snow (1) solarandheliosphericobservatory (1) solarsystem (1) solemne (1) solomonislands (4) somalia (21) southafrica (37) southamerica (31) southchinasea (37) southernocean (1) southkorea (40) southossetia (2) southstream (1) southsudan (1) southvietnam (1) sovietunion (65) space (149) spain (61) spanyolország (68) sport (1) srilanka (4) Stephanskrone (1) straitofbosphorus (1) straitofhormuz (10) straitsofmalacca (1) stratégiakutatóintézet (1) stratfor (1) sudan (9) suezcanal (8) sumer (1) summer (1) sun (69) sundastrait (1) supernova (1) svájc (55) svédország (54) swaziland (1) sweden (63) swelling (1) switzerland (25) syria (185) szabadeuróparádió (4) szabadkainépszínházmagyartársulata (1) szabótattilanyelviintézet (1) szahara (12) szászföld (1) szatmárirómaikatolikusegyházmegye (1) szatmárirómaikatolikuspüspökség (1) szaudarábia (5) szaúdarábia (42) száva (1) szegeditudományegyetem (8) székelyföld (98) székelyhadosztály (2) székelymikókollégium (2) székelynemzetimúzeum (5) szellemitulajdonnemzetihivatala (1) szemerebertalanmagyarrendvédelemtörténetitudományostársaság (1) szenegál (2) szentföld (1) szentistvánegyetem (1) SzentKorona (29) szépművészetimúzeum (8) szerbhorvátszlovénkirályság (1) szerbia (131) szibéria (4) szicíliaikirályság (1) szigligetiszínház (1) szingapúr (9) szíria (137) szivárvány (2) szlavónia (1) szlovákia (121) szlovénia (38) szolyvaiemlékpark (1) szomália (13) szövetségesellenőrzőbizottság (1) szovjetunió (148) szudán (16) szuezicsatorna (6) szváziföld (1) tádzsikisztán (4) taiwan (34) taiwanstrait (8) taiwanstraits (1) tajikistan (4) tajvan (8) tajvaniszoros (1) tánc (16) tanganyika (1) tanzania (5) tanzánia (2) tátra (1) tavasz (68) ted (1) tejút (1) tél (30) telekilászlóalapítvány (2) telekilászlóintézet (1) télisportok (1) térkép (27) terrorházamúzeum (2) thaiföld (2) thailand (13) thecentralbankofhungary (1) thefederalreserve (1) thenetherlands (48) tibet (8) tigáz (1) tiger (1) tigris (2) tisza (17) tiszántúlireformátusegyházkerület (2) togo (2) tonga (5) törökáramlat (4) törökország (143) transatlantictradeandinvestmentpartnership (8) transcarpathia (3) transilvania (6) transnistria (4) transpacificpartnership (4) transsilvania (1) transsylvania (2) transvaal (1) transylvania (15) transylvanianreformedchurchdistrict (1) transylvanie (1) transzatlantiszabadkereskedelmimegállapodás (1) transzjordánemirátus (1) transznisztria (1) transznyeft (2) trianon (2) trinidadandtobago (3) tripoliszigrófság (1) tunézia (12) tunisia (14) turkey (132) türkiye (1) turkmenistan (2) Türkmenisztán (1) türkmenisztán (3) tűzijáték (1) ucraina (1) uganda (10) újzéland (7) ukraine (135) ukrajna (202) ukrtranszgaz (1) unesco (15) ungaria (1) ungarischesinstitut (1) ungarn (2) ungheria (4) unitedarabemirates (24) unitedkingdom (52) unitednations (108) unitedstates (345) universityofarizona (1) ünnep (36) űr (24) ural (3) urál (5) uruguay (5) usa (55) üstökös (1) Üzbegisztán (1) üzbegisztán (5) uzbekistan (3) vanuatu (3) váradhegyfokipremontreiprépostság (1) városkép (65) varsóimagyarkulturálisintézet (1) varsóiszerződés (7) vaskapu (4) vatican (34) vatikán (34) velenceiköztársaság (3) velenceitó (1) venezuela (27) venus (4) veritastörténetkutatóintézet (2) vers (22) video (277) vidéo (5) vietnam (27) vietnám (1) vihar (1) világbank (13) vinagora (1) virág (145) vírus (22) virus (64) visegradcountries (5) visegrádialap (1) visegrádiországok (54) visztula (1) víz (88) vízuminformációsrendszer (1) volcanoes (38) volga (3) vöröskereszt (5) vöröstenger (3) vulkán (4) wales (2) walles (1) warsawpact (1) węgrzech (1) westafrica (2) westbank (3) westernsahara (1) who (29) worldbank (12) worldhealthorganizaton (18) worldmeteorologicalorganization (1) worldmusic (1) worldtradeorganization (4) worldwarI (9) worldwarII (19) worshipsong (1) wto (1) xxiszázadintézet (1) yamal-europe (1) yellowsea (3) yemen (44) yugoslavia (9) yukos (1) zaire (1) zambia (6) zanzibár (2) zene (11) zeneakadémia (7) zenemű (4) zeneszám (4) zimbabwe (5) zöldfokiszigetek (1) zongorajáték (2) βιβλίο (1) книга (1) книгата (1) унгария (1) Címkefelhő

2023. XI. 1. II. Egypt, Gaza, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Palestine, Qatar, Turkey, Yemen

2023.11.03. 13:33 Eleve

.

Africa

Egypt
11/01/2023  The Rafah crossing to Egypt was opened up for the first time since the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel. Under a deal between Egypt, Israel and Hamas that was mediated by Qatar in coordination with the United States, hundreds of evacuees - some critically injured and people with foreign passports - have left Gaza for Egypt at the Rafah border crossing. Earlier in the day, a first group of injured Palestinians were transported into Egypt and taken to a nearby hospital for treatment with Egypt's Health Ministry putting the number at 16. Other Egyptian officials told that 76 injured people had left Gaza through the border crossing. The Egyptian border authority in Rafah said 81 seriously injured people were due to enter Egypt today. There were up to 65 ambulances equipped with full resuscitation and life support capabilities. The el-Arish hospital, in the nearby Egyptian city of el-Arish, is set to receive many of those injured. By early evening today, over 300 foreign nationals and people with dual citizenship crossed into Egypt. US President Biden said in a post on X that US citizens would be among those leaving Gaza today. Among the group were also four Italian nationals, five French nationals. German aid workers were among those who left, Foreign Ministry says. At least 500 foreign passport holders are expected to cross into Egypt today, Egyptian authorities said. (Source: dw) 

Asia

Gaza
1 Nov (2023)  Just 13 hospitals left in the Palestinian enclave remain operational, out of 35 that existed before the conflict erupted on 7 October. The rest have either been damaged by strikes or forced to close due to a lack of supplies. Hospitals are operating with less than one-third of their normal staffing levels, according to the Hamas-run Ministry of Health in Gaza. 16 healthcare workers are estimated to have been killed while on duty and another 30 injured. Yesterday, one out of Gaza's three water supply lines from Israel was restored for the first time since being cut off last month - though the amount being received has yet to be assessed. Gaza remains under a full electricity blackout, using backup generators to get by, after Israel halted both electricity and fuel on 11 October in a bid to cut off Hamas's supplies. Humanitarian aid entering Gaza since 21 October, via the Rafah crossing with Egypt has not been allowed to include fuel for this reason. In total, 217 trucks have entered the enclave so far. Some 59 trucks carrying water, food and medicines entered Gaza yesterday - making it the largest convoy of aid to be delivered so far. Just one bakery run by the World Food Programme (WFP) and eight local Gazan ones remain operational, supplying bread to Palestinians. Hours-long queues are reported in front of them as a result, where the UN says people are exposed to airstrikes. (Source: bbc)

1 Nov (2023)  BBC World Service is launching an emergency radio service for Gaza broadcast on MW 639kHz. The emergency service called Gaza Daily will broadcast daily news to the people of Gaza, and also provide listeners with safety advice on where to access shelter, food and water supplies. Produced in Cairo and London, the service will initially run one programme a day at 1500 GMT (1700 Gaza time) from Friday 3 November. A second daily update will be broadcast at 0500 GMT (0700 Gaza time) from Friday 10 November. (Source: bbc)

1 Nov 2023  Telecom provider Paltel reported a “complete disruption” of communications and internet services in Gaza today morning. It becomes increasingly difficult to understand the situation in Gaza City and the northern part as Israeli tanks move to separate the north from the south. Israel has cut Gaza’s telecommunication and internet services for a second time despite humanitarian aid agencies warning that such blackouts severely disrupt their work in an already dire situation in the war-torn Palestinian enclave. In a statement, the Palestinian Ministry of Communications appealed to neighbouring Egypt to operate communication stations near the Gaza border and activate roaming service on Egyptian networks. Gaza’s G2 mobile network 'crushed further' by fuel shortages and damage to infrastructure. On Saturday, September 28, Musk said he would offer his Starlink satellite internet service to “internationally recognised aid organisations” in Gaza, prompting protests by Israel. 'Hamas will use it for terrorist activities,” Israel’s Communications Minister Karhi said on X, referring to the group that rules Gaza. On Monday, September 30, US Ambassador to the United Nations Thomas-Greenfield told the Security Council that the United States made clear to Israel that it was concerned about a shutdown of communications in the Gaza Strip, which "imperils the lives of civilians, UN personnel and humanitarian workers and risks exacerbating the humanitarian crisis in Gaza”. (Source: aljazeera)

01/11/2023  'Pallywood': a mix of the words ‘Palestine’ and ‘Hollywood’ and is used as a derogatory term by people who believe Palestinians are using crisis actors and victimising themselves. Pro-Israeli accounts are accusing Palestinians of using crisis actors to fake their suffering in order to elicit online sympathy. One viral video was shared on X by Naftali, a former member of Israeli PM’s communications and social media team. On the left, the clip presented as filmed "today" showing a man walking through rubble, and on the other side is another video claimed to have been filmed "yesterday", where a man with a similar appearance is in the hospital with an amputated leg. The clips don't show the same person. The Cube found the original video of the man walking through rubble was published on the 26th of October 2023. The man in the viral clip is Aljafarawim who posts numerous videos of the conflict in the Gaza Strip. Looking through his Instagram account, no images of him in a hospital. Videos of the man in a hospital bed show he is in an Israeli hospital, identifiable by the country's flags in the background, according to Alt News, an Indian fact-checking website. The 16-year-old teenager called Zendiq, holder of an Israeli identity card lost his leg on 24 July 2023, “during the invasion of the Nour Shams refugee camp, near Tulkarem, by Israeli occupation forces”, “rushed to an Israeli hospital where his right leg was amputated just above the knee,” the English-speaking pro-Palestinian site Palsolidarity published. He was treated in the hospital for a month and was released on 21 August 2023. (Source: euronews)

November 01, 2023  An IDF statement claimed Israeli airstrikes on the densely-populated Jabaliya refugee camp on the outskirts of Gaza City killed Biari, Commander of Hamas' Central Jabaliya Battalion and a large number of terrorists yesterday. "He was very important, I would say even pivotal in the planning and the execution of the October 7 attack against Israel from the northeastern parts of the Gaza Strip," IDF spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Conricus said. He added that dozens of Hamas combatants were in the same underground tunnel complex as Biari and were also killed when it collapsed in the attack. Hamas also released a statement denying reports of Biari's killing, stating the claim was just an Israeli pretext for killing civilians. The operation also involved ground forces taking control of a compound that the IDF said was used by Hamas’s Central Jabaliya Battalion. The IDF refuted the claims of Hamas that the killed were civilians, stating it called the residents of the area "to move south for their safety" before the raids. "The strike damaged Hamas’s command and control in the area, as well as its ability to direct military activity against IDF soldiers operating throughout the Gaza Strip," the army said in a statement. Footage showed huge craters where buildings once stood. Rescue workers and bystanders were also seen digging through the wreckage, searching for survivors. The IDF later claimed two soldiers were also dead in the operations. (Source: theweek *)
* India

Iran
11/01/2023  Supreme leader Khamenei made a call for Muslim states to halt oil and food exports to Israel, amid the bombardment of Gaza. Iran has backed Islamist groups opposing Israel for years but has denied direct involvement in the Hamas terror attacks launched on southern Israel on October 7. (Source: dw) 

Israel
1 Nov (2023)  The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman Hagari said joint action of their ground, sea and air forces had seen troops "break through the forward Hamas perimeter the northern Gaza Strip". He also said that, guided by "precise intelligence from the Intelligence Branch and the ISA", the IDF had used fighter jets to "eliminate" Atzar, a Hamas anti-tank commander. In a separate briefing, Israel's Brig Gen Cohen said the IDF's forces were now "deep" into the Gaza Strip - "at the gates of Gaza City", he added. (Source: bbc)

11/01/2023  The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it dispatched navy missile boats to the Red Sea today after Iran-backed Houthi militia in Yemen claimed they launched attacks on Israel. A video on the social media platform Telegram appearing to show missile boats patrolling near the southern Israeli port city of Eilat. The IDF said it had intercepted an "aerial threat" over the Red Sea yesterday night. Attacks launched at Israel over the Red Sea area have not hit Israeli territory or entered its airspace, either being shot down or falling short. (Source: dw)

Nov. 1, 2023  Eleven Israeli soldiers killed since expanded ground operations in Gaza: IDF. The IDF first announced that two soldiers were killed in northern Gaza Tuesday, October 31. The ages of the 11 fallen soldiers ranged between 19 and 24, Israeli officials said. Since the Hamas attack in Israel that sparked the war, more than 300 Israeli soldiers have been killed. The Hamas-backed Gaza Health Ministry claims more than 8,000 Palestinians have been killed since the conflict erupted last month. (Source: nypost)

Jordan
11/01/2023 
Jordan announced it has recalled its ambassador to Israel with immediate effect in protest over the war and the "humanitarian catastrophe" in Gaza. Foreign Minister al-Safadi said in a statement that he also told Israel's ambassador to Jordan not to return to the kingdom. The Israeli ambassador had previously left Jordan two weeks ago amid protests. Jordan signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994. It was the second Arab country after Egypt to establish diplomatic ties with Israel. Yesterday, US President Biden and Jordan's King Abdullah II spoke on the phone about the war between Israel and the Islamist Hamas militant group, which rules Gaza. According to a statement from the White House, the two leaders had discussed "urgent mechanisms to stem violence, calm rhetoric and reduce regional tensions." (Source: dw)

Palestine
Nov. 1, 2023  The Palestinian Authority, which was founded as a proto-state administration as a result of the 1993 Oslo peace accords, manifests itself mainly as a sprawling bureaucracy across the West Bank, where it has limited powers. In Gaza it has none, after the violent ouster there of its ruling party, Fatah, in 2007 by Hamas, its top rival. As yet, there does not seem to be any movement to drive out Fatah and the Palestinian Authority from the West Bank as well, which would create a dangerous power vacuum. But disenchantment with the authority - its weakness, inefficiency and corruption scandals - has been brewing for years. And the idea that Fatah and the authority could reestablish control in Gaza if Israel succeeds in its goal of extirpating Hamas seems ludicrous to many Palestinians, who consider Abbas, the authority’s octogenarian president, as moribund as the administration he heads. Although Palestinian Authority presidents serve a four-year term, Abbas was voted into office in 2005 and has not held an election since. Israel remains in de facto control of the West Bank and coordinates with the Palestinian Authority’s security apparatus to stop Palestinian militant attacks, either through the authority’s security personnel or through its own operations - a deeply unpopular policy that critics say reduces the authority to little more than Israel’s guard dog. A common view is that the local security forces are too cozy with their Israeli counterparts. Since Oct. 7, the Israeli government has stepped up what it calls counterterrorism operations across the occupied West Bank alongside its relentless offensive in Gaza. Israel’s military was giving settlers free rein and mounting a security dragnet that has killed scores of Palestinians in the West Bank. On Oct. 22, a pair of missiles lanced through the roof of Al Ansar Mosque, blowing up the main hall, shredding two Jenin Brigade fighters and nearly killing a third, witnesses said. The Jenin Brigade group was formed in 2021 with funding from Iranian-backed Islamic Jihad and brings together different armed factions in joint pursuit of the refugee camp’s defense. Members of the Jenin Brigade expect no mercy from the Israelis, nor any help from the official Palestinian leadership. Although the Jenin refugee camp has long been in Israel’s crosshairs, the military’s recent raids display a different level of ferocity, residents say. In the last week, restive Jenin, long a militant hotbed, has become the site of near-daily raids involving scores of Israeli soldiers, dozens of armored vehicles and even airstrikes that have killed at least a dozen people, according to Palestinian health officials. Israel says the incursions target terrorists who have attacked Israelis in the past or are planning to do so. The Jenin refugee camp, a decrepit neighborhood is running up a steep hill, whose 14,000 residents are refugees and their descendants from the 1948 “Nakba” - “catastrophe” in Arabic - referring to the mass displacement of Arabs that accompanied Israel’s independence. The camp is one of the poorest neighborhoods in the West Bank. It is steeped in the culture of resistance against Israel’s occupation. At night, residents place metal hedgehogs at the camp’s entrances to stymie armored vehicles, while keeping a close eye on anyone coming in, for fear of Israeli undercover agents. The authority’s security coordination with Israel they viewed nowadays as nothing less than treason. Almost no building is free of a martyr poster, and the cemeteries overflow with those killed in clashes with Israeli troops. Since July, a fourth graveyard has had to be opened. As Israel pursues its punishing ground offensive in Gaza and the casualties mount, the Palestinian Authority’s impotence only comes into sharper relief. On Monday, October 30, Israel deployed drones, snipers and dozens of armored vehicles, including two bulldozers that tore up streets and infrastructure near the camp, leveled the iconic arched gate over its entrance and destroyed a sculpture commemorating the 2002 Israeli incursion. Four men were killed and nine other people were wounded, Palestinian health authorities said. Late on October 31, Israeli special forces teams surged into Jenin, broke into the house of a top Fatah leader in the city and beat him and his son before taking them into custody, residents said. That was followed by yet another incursion involving bulldozers, drones, snipers, dozens of troops and airstrikes. They withdrew several hours later, leaving three Palestinians dead and a trail of bullet-scarred walls, ripped-up asphalt and destroyed cars. The weeks since Hamas's unprecedented assault on Oct. 7 have seen Israel intensify its crackdown on the occupied West Bank, with dozens of Palestinians killed and hundreds - Palestinian rights groups say more than a thousand - arrested. The United Nations says that more than 120 Palestinians, including 33 children, have been killed by Israeli security forces or settlers in the West Bank. Whereas homes in the West Bank city of Jenin have been demolished by Israeli troops, roads have been churned up by Israeli bulldozers and storefronts have been disfigured by Israeli gunfire, the offices of the Sultah, or Palestinian Authority, were attacked by Palestinians themselves during a noisy protest over Israel’s bombardment of Gaza. Disgusted with the authority’s inability to protect its own people or stand up to Israel, militants in the crowd aimed their bullets at the government compound after its security forces tried to break up the demonstration. Although much of their fury is directed at Israel, many in Jenin accuse the Palestinian Authority of abandoning them, saying its leaders are more concerned with their own survival and its security forces with pursuing Palestinian armed groups at Israel’s behest than they are with protecting Palestinian lives. (Source: latimes)

Qatar
1 November 2023  Iranian Foreign Minister Amir-Abdollahian met with Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Al Thani, where he conveyed a verbal message from Iranian President Raisi on several regional and international issues, especially the developments in the Palestinian territories. He also met with Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Al Thani. The Qatari FM said he discussed with Amir-Abdollahian the escalations in Gaza and the West Bank and advancing ceasefire efforts. He wrote in a post on the "X" platform: "We stressed intensifying efforts to prevent expanding conflict that will result in serious consequences for everyone." Before leaving Doha for Ankara, Amir-Abdollahian met with the head of the Hamas politburo, Haniyeh, for the second time this month. "It was necessary to use the latest political opportunities to stop the war, and if the situation goes out of control, no party will be safe from its consequences," the top official said, according to Iranian media. He said the US was part of the war in Gaza, adding that Washington is in no position to ask others for restraint. (Source: aawsat *)
*Asharq Al Awsat, London

Turkey
November 1, 2023  Turkey was the first majority Muslim country to recognize Israel in 1949. It is also among the first to recognize the declaration of the State of Palestine. Unlike Turkey’s Western allies, Ankara does not consider Hamas a terrorist organization. In 2018, President Erdoğan described it as part of the Palestinian resistance defending “the Palestinian homeland against an occupying power.” Safeguarding the rights of Palestine and Palestinians is for the Justice and Development Party (AKP) part of its quest to defend the interests of Muslims worldwide. The party elites and its core constituency believe that the liberation of Muslims (from Western cultural and political domination) started in Turkey (thanks to Erdoğan) and can spread elsewhere. Erdoğan has promoted this rhetoric. In 2020, after converting the Hagia Sophia into a mosque, he described it as the 'harbinger of the al-Aqsa Mosque’s liberation.' It has been one of the central pillars of the AKP’s foreign policy to push for Turkey to be a peacemaker in the periphery of the international system. The Arab uprisings in 2011 were a turning point for the AKP’s leadership ambitions. Muslim Brotherhood–affiliated parties were winning elections throughout the region. Erdoğan has sought to position himself - and the Turkish government - as the leader of the Muslim world by supporting Sunni Islamists throughout the Middle East. Turkey has granted safe haven to many Islamist exiles and has generously supported their organizations operating in the country. During the failed coup attempt in 2016 or the controversial constitutional referendum in 2017, the AKP in turn welcomed support from Sunni Islamists for Erdoğan. Turkey was often seen as an equalizing force to the Arab autocrats of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, which see political Islam as a threat to their survival. Ankara’s increasingly confrontational foreign policy and expanding military footprint since 2016 have contributed to this view. Trapped in the mismatch between its stated ambitions and actual capabilities, Ankara became increasingly isolated. Since 2020, Turkey has been on a charm offensive to break nearly a decade of regional isolation. Ankara was more cautious and distanced itself from Arab Islamists to help repair its relations with regional actors, including Israel. After a decade of frosty relations, diplomatic ties with Israel were restored in 2022. Stuck between hegemonic aspirations and rapprochement efforts to break its isolation and repair its economy, Ankara lacks influence on either Israel or Hamas. In the hours after the attack, Ankara condemned the loss of civilian lives, and called on both sides for restraint. Since then, it has increasingly taken a critical stance toward Israel’s policy on Gaza. 'Ankara’s relationship with Hamas also appears to be of little value' - Qatar appears to be the decisive actor in hostage negotiations. To reinsert Ankara into a fragile regional order, Turkish Foreign Minister Fidan proposed on Oct. 17, in an interview at the pro-government daily Sabah, a “guarantor formula.” In line with the framework of a two-state solution within the 1967 borders and with a capital in Jerusalem, this formula would foresee a country from within the region, including Turkey acting as a guarantor for the future Palestinian state. Fidan also noted that “other countries could play the same role for Israel” and mentioned the importance of a “potential unified position between China and Russia, as U.N. Security Council members” in resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Russia and China recently voiced support for a two-state solution, which the international community has until recently considered unrealistic. Turkey’s ruling elites believe that the West lacks strategic thinking and has increasingly become estranged from the rest of the world in the face of various issues including relations with China, migration and terror, and the shift in economic gravity from the West to the East. For Ankara, the unequivocal and unconditional support that the Biden administration gives Israel confirms this belief. Pro-government journalists expect that the conflict would lead to an increasing isolation of Israel. Since the disputed attack at the al-Ahli hospital in Gaza City, there have been calls on the government to ally with countries in the Global South to stop the U.S.-Israeli alliance. Bahçeli, the leader of the AKP’s junior partner, the Nationalist Movement Party, said Turkey should intervene militarily if there is no ceasefire. Those critical of Ankara’s civilizationist aspirations yet share its aspirations for a foreign policy independent from the West call for booting U.S. military members at Incirlik Air Force Base and the Kürecik Radar Station in Malatya. Both Israeli and Palestinian societies are caught by the trauma of their interconnected histories and the violence of war. The myth of an invincible Israeli military and intelligence is broken. U.S. government efforts to recalibrate the regional order by facilitating Arab-Israeli normalization are disrupted, if not totally off the table in the near term. Arab states are worried about widening regional conflict and increasing public rage against Israel’s policy toward the occupied territories. Many in the so-called Global South are disillusioned by the unequivocal support the United States and the European Union give Israel. Given the prevalence of anti-immigration, xenophobic, and Islamophobic sentiments within the Western public, the violent conflict in Gaza might risk becoming a domestic issue in the United States and Europe. According to Erdoğan, the Biden administration’s decision to send aircraft carriers to the eastern Mediterranean hindered Turkey’s efforts to deescalate the situation. The government’s belief is that the conflict will bring the United States back to the region. The fear is that a stronger American presence will further disrupt Ankara’s efforts to prevent Kurdish autonomy under the leadership of the Democratic Union Party and the People’s Protection Units in northern Syria. 'After two decades of policy to expand Turkey’s role in the Middle East, Ankara is effectively a marginal actor.' "Its influence is limited to rhetorical outcries'. (Source: warontherocks)

Yemen
November 1, 2023  The Middle East nation lies at the southernmost point of the Arabian Peninsula. Its coastline is on the southern end of the Red Sea and represents a strategic choke point for world shipping and, crucially, Saudi oil. Yemen’s internationally recognised government is backed by the Saudi and US governments and has been in a civil war with the Houthis since 2014. Yemen’s Houthi movement, not Yemen itself, has effectively declared war against Israel. Yemen-based militants which control Yemen’s west, join the Israel-Hamas war, firing missiles on Israel, extending the conflict to the far side of the Middle East. While not the officially recognised government of Yemen, the Houthi movement controls a significant portion of the country. The Houthis are backed by Iran and are part of its 'Axis of Resistance', an informal military coalition centred on anti-Western and anti-Israel intent. Other participants include Lebanon-based militant group Hezbollah; Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups; the Syrian government; militant groups in Iraq. The Houthi group is rooted in Zaydism, a sect of Shiite Islam that accounts for about 25 per cent of Yemen’s population; the rest of the country is predominately Sunni. The Houthi movement, also known as Ansar Allah (Supporters of God), developed in the 1990s out of dissatisfaction with Yemeni government alignment with Saudi Arabia and the US. It has positioned itself as an anti-imperialist group against foreign intervention and as a force for economic development for Yemeni people. The Houthi movement says it launched ballistic and cruise missiles on southern Israel today. The Israel Defence Forces said it intercepted at least one missile originating from near the Red Sea, along with other “aerial threats”. Houthi military spokesperson Saree said it was behind two earlier incidents, a drone attack on October 18 and three cruise missiles intercepted by the US Navy on October 19. The few Houthi attacks were, for now, more about messaging than a real military threat. (Source: brisbanetimes)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video russia jordan china iran egypt france germany europe italy asia israel iraq africa turkey gaza qatar yemen syria palestine lebanon europeanunion kurdistan unitednations unitedstates mediterraneansea redsea saudiarabia unitedarabemirates arabianpeninsula westbank

2023. XI. 1. I. European Union, Russia, Ukraine

2023.11.02. 20:38 Eleve

.

European Union
November 1, 2023  The EU has limited influence in managing a geopolitical crisis on its periphery, including due to its exhaustion from Russian aggression against Ukraine. It must choose to be omnipresent or intelligently select the priorities where it imposes its presence, based on a prudent cost-benefit analysis of the available resources and the objectives set. The EU can combine the management of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza with the ceasefire; consolidate support for Ukraine in the face of Russian aggression; accelerate the enlargement process with the aim of stabilising and securing its immediate neighbourhood in the Western Balkans and the Eastern Partnership - Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia.   The Hamas terrorist operation took by surprise Israel's Western partners. The EU concluded that the situation in the region is rather part of the geopolitical mandate of American diplomacy. The United States wrongly assessed the capabilities of Israel's defence and security apparatus. One of the reasons for the lack of attention to this conflict, shown by the United States and the EU, is the mobilisation of resources (political attention and available material resources) to counter Russian aggression against Ukraine. Another reason can be considered Western concern to deter China's military measures against Taiwan, following the Russian scenario in relation to Ukraine, carried out in February 2022. In addition to the casualties reported by Israel and the Palestinian side, there are citizens of at least 37 countries who are held captive in Gaza or having died at the hands of Hamas. This aspect outlines the international nature of the crisis, as well as the multiple pro-Palestinian protests held in Western capitals, including Brussels. The EU's declared efforts to de-escalate the conflict will fail, as the dynamics of the crisis depend on the status quo of civilians in Gaza. To restore the humanitarian situation, the EU, together with the US, will have to condition its political-diplomatic support for Israel on a ceasefire. Otherwise, the EU risks losing its moral authority in the eyes of the Global South. The EU has moved closer to a division at the level of the member states on how the EU should handle in the case of the Middle East crisis. In some cases, public opinion tends to support the Palestinian cause, in others European societies contain large Muslim minorities (2023: France – 6.7mn, Germany – 5.5mn, etc.), who are sensitive to events in Gaza. The (in)actions of the governments of the EU states and Brussels can have consequences on public order in Europe today and, respectively, political-electoral effects in the near future. Some 800 European diplomats and officials criticised the lack of a balanced speech by the president of the Commission, who, by positioning herself in favour of Israel, damaged the credibility of European diplomacy. The visit of European Commission von de Leyen and the statements from Israel caused confusion in the offices of EU Council President Michel and High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Borell, who deal with EU foreign policy. In an episode of mandate overreach, Várhelyi, head of Enlargement and Neighborhood Policy, stated that humanitarian aid to Gaza would be immediately interrupted following the Hamas attacks on October 7. At the same time, the commissioner responsible for crisis management, Lenarčič, flatly contradicted Várhelyi and reiterated that humanitarian aid continues: €27.9mn were budgeted for 2023. The EU subsequently announced that it was tripling humanitarian aid to €75mn. There are more hidden dividing lines between member states. In the UN General Assembly vote, eight EU states (including France, Spain and the Netherlands) voted in favour of the ceasefire in Gaza, four opposed this resolution and 15 abstained. Despite the UN vote, Michel insisted that the European Council meeting on the same day would have demonstrated unity within the EU, when he advocated not for a ceasefire but for humanitarian “pauses'.  Realisation of the European perspectives for the Eastern Partnership states - Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia - deepening of European integration in these countries requires aiming the construction of functional states, which prevent political crises, socioeconomic declines, mass migrations and depopulation.   The fact that the attention of the United States is absorbed by the situation in the Middle East and that aid to Israel seems to have become a priority, generates some discomfort in Kyiv. The EU has previously reiterated that the effectiveness of its support will depend on the sustainability of US assistance. As of February 2022, the EU had allocated more than €82bn to support Ukraine, not counting the costs of supporting the more than 5mn Ukrainian refugees in EU states. There is already a lack of financial resources within the EU, which has requested to supplement the budget with some €66bn, but the proposal was met with objections from member states. Due to the decrease in financial resources, the EU is increasingly leaning towards the idea of transferring to Ukraine the benefits derived from Russian money (more than €200bn) frozen in the states of the EU through the post-2022 sanctions, for reconstruction needs. Ukrainian leaders demand the opening of accession negotiations with the EU. The European Commission's report on Ukraine, will be presented in early November. There are decisions that President Zelensky must make, and prior to that the Rada dominated by his party, Servant of the People, has had to restore anti-corruption tools. The opening of the negotiating chapters could be delayed throughout 2024, even if the European Council adopts a favourable decision at the end of December.   The shortcomings of the reforms that the Moldovan authorities must implement as part of the EU requirements are justified by the Moldovan side with hybrid threats of Russian origin or with anti-reform resistance within state institutions. In reality, discrepancies between the government's pro-European political ambitions and the quality of reforms are increasing. Moldova could lose the opportunity to start accession negotiations, only if the EU takes into account deficiencies in the field of justice or electoral legislation. Contrary to the recommendations of the Venice Commission and even the Constitutional Court of Moldova, the government restricted the right to be elected of several candidates in local elections. The bans were motivated by the ruling Action and Solidarity Party (PAS) representatives as a remedy to counter the attempts of the 'criminal group' led by Şor (sanctioned by the EU, US, etc.) to influence the results of the local elections on November 5. PAS maintains close political contacts with political factors in Brussels.   In Georgia there are valid doubts about meeting the EU requirements to obtain candidate country status. The failed attempt to remove President Zurabishvili for promoting the European perspective, with some procedural deviations from constitutional prerogatives, denotes a crisis in the political process of European integration. However, the decision on Georgia's candidate country status does not depend on its degree of readiness, but on the EU's geopolitical calculations on the performance of the Russian factor in the region. (Source: intellinews)

Russia
11/01/2023  Late on Sunday, October 29, hundreds of protesters stormed the Makhachkala airport in Russia's Muslim-majority Dagestan, seeking to attack Jewish passengers arriving from Israel. Several police officers were injured during the chaotic scenes, and more than 80 were initially detained. Russian media reported today that 15 anti-Israeli rioters who stormed the airport have been sentenced - some to eight days of administrative arrest while others received sentences of 60 hours of community service. (Source: dw)

1 Nov 2023  In September 2022, Putin signed a decree that gives Russian nationality to anyone who has served on the front line for six months. Muslims are Russia’s fastest-growing population stratum. Dire demographic problems and oil wealth turned Russia into a magnet for millions of labour migrants from ex-Soviet Central Asia. Some Crimean Tatars, a Muslim community of about 200,000 in the annexed peninsula, became part of this influx as they share ties with Turkic-speaking nations of Central Asia, a region their forefathers had been deported to en masse in 1944. Public opinion is dominated by rampant nationalism, xenophobia and often portrays Muslim newcomers as hostile and alien. Muslim labour migrants have faced hate attacks, arbitrary detentions and arrests, police brutality, extortion and threats for decades. The immigrants are accustomed to authoritarian rule and police brutality in their countries of origin, often know little about their civil rights in Russia, do not have access to lawyers, and may not speak much Russian. Very few make their cases public, fearing persecution of their families. Russia’s mostly Muslim, impoverished and corruption-choked North Caucasus is one of the few regions with high birth rates, and hundreds of thousands also move to Moscow and other big cities. Moscow only has five official mosques, and tens of thousands of believers throng areas around them during Muslim holidays. Most labour migrants choose to attend informal “prayer houses”, which some locals and police see as hotbeds of “extremism”. During their raids on prayer houses Russian police finds “problems” – both imaginary and real, such as a lack of registration, a blurred stamp, or an expired work permit. The labour migrants are locked up and forced to enlist in military service, facing several kinds of threats to ensure their cooperation. Russian far-right nationalists help organise raids on “prayer houses”. Zov (Call), a group whose closed Telegram channel has 141,000 subscribers, routinely informs police about Muslim gatherings. As part of a nationwide series of raids dubbed “Illegal 2023”, police have been combing construction sites, markets, farms, restaurants, apartment buildings, hostels and “prayer houses” – or simply rounding up anyone who does not look Slavic. The Illegal 2023 investigations are “tied to organisation of illegal migration, trade in drugs and psychotropic substances, arms trade and border crossings”, Ministry of Internal Affairs spokeswoman Vovk said. 'Since at least May 2023, Russia has approached Central Asian migrants to fight in Ukraine with promises of fast-track citizenship and salaries of up to $4,160,' the British Defence Ministry said in September. A red Russian passport eliminates many of the problems with police and bureaucratic hurdles that migrants face. An Uzbek man whose wife and child are Russian nationals, was told that without a military contract and participation in the special military operation, they won’t even accept his citizenship application. Even if a labour migrant already has a Russian passport, recently adopted laws allow authorities to take it away with ease. “If you are a Russian national but are not ready to fulfil your military duty, a decision should be made to strip such a man of his citizenship,” Russia’s top investigator Bastrykin told a military conference in mid-October. Bastrykin said earlier that migrants have a “constitutional duty to defend the nation that accepted them” and that enlisting them should be a “priority”. Police in St Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city said they handed conscription papers to 56 labour migrants with Russian passports after just one raid on a market on September 6. A month earlier, about 100 labour migrants were served with conscription papers, it said. There have even been calls to abolish age limits for migrants so that they can be forced to serve in the military. The conscription age in Russia is between 18 and 30. “You became a Russian national at age 50 – go serve at 50,” lawmaker Zhuravlyev said on October 24. The Russian military faces a shortage of manpower on the front lines, exacerbated by Russia’s low birthrates and a population loss of hundreds of thousands of people a year in the rapidly aging nation of 143 million. The September 2022 “partial” mobilisation triggered an exodus of hundreds of thousands of Russian men, making labour migrants more attractive targets. The Kremlin is afraid to declare a second round of mobilisation in advance of the March 2024 presidential election. The emphasis is on recruiting migrants, as their loss on the front line will not affect Russia politically or economically. So far, there has only been a single public incident associated with the forced conscription of migrants. Last October, two Tajik nationals were forcibly sent to a training camp before departure to Ukraine. Aminzoda and Rakhmonov, heard their commanding officers 'insult their religion', they got hold of a machine gun and killed 11 people and injured 15 others. The two were shot dead and pronounced “terrorists” by authorities. (Source: aljazeera)

November 1, 2023  As one of many sanctions measures put in place against Russia since it invaded Ukraine in February last year, the G7 group of richer nations brought in a price cap on crude oil last December followed by a similar measure for products in February this year. The cap was designed to try and deny buyers of Russian crude the use of Western-supplied services, including shipping and insurance, unless cargoes are sold at or below the capped price. Russia’s swift build-up of a so-called shadow fleet of tankers – estimated to number more than 600 ships – has circumvented these sanctions measures, has made the West’s oil price cap “unenforceable”, according to the World Bank’s latest Commodity Markets Outlook report. While Russia’s exports to the European Union, the US, Britain and other Western countries fell by 53% between 2021 and 2023, these have been largely replaced with increased exports to China, India and Turkey – up 40% over the same period, according to data carried in the report. “The price cap on Russian crude oil introduced in late 2022 appears increasingly unenforceable given the recent spike in Urals prices,” the World Bank said, referring to the benchmark Russian crude, currently quoted in the mid-$70s per barrel range, well above the G7-led $60 price cap for Russian crude. “It seems that by putting together a shadow fleet, Russia has been able to trade outside of the cap; the official Urals benchmark recently breached the cap for more than three months, averaging $80 per barrel in August,” the report noted. The rise of shadow or dark fleet has seen many vintage ships given an extra stay of execution. Tankers still working above 20 years of age made up just 1% of the global tanker fleet pre-covid and were still a rarity at 3% before the invasion of Ukraine in late February last year. They’re now on track to make up 11% of all tanker demand by mid-2025, according to data from brokers Braemar. (Source: splash247)

Ukraine
November 1, 2023  'Modern positional warfare and how to win it.' Having launched the large-scale armed aggression against Ukraine on February 24, 2022, the russian federation provoked the beginning of an unprecedented global security crisis. Russian great-power chauvinism multiplied by sick imperial ambitions gradually turns the military conflict it began in the centre of Europe into an armed confrontation between democratic and authoritarian political regimes with the prospect of its spread to other regions of the planet with similar geopolitical models (Israel and the Gaza Strip, South and North Koreas, Taiwan and China, etc.). The insufficient effectiveness of the existing global political regulatory mechanisms, primarily the UN and the OSCE, leaves ukraine no choice but to restore its territorial integrity after the large-scale armed aggression within the internationally recognized borders of 1991, exclusively by military force, in which its Armed Forces (AF) play a decisive role. Having entered the war with a stronger enemy, which has a lot of weapons and a much greater mobilization capabilities, ukraine was not only able to stop it, but also to conduct a successful counteroffensive in 2022 and stave the enemy off along many axes. The prolongation of a war, as a rule, in most cases, is beneficial to one of the parties to the conflict. "In our particular case, it is the russian federation, as it gives it the opportunity to reconstitute and build up its military power," Zaluzhnyi, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, tells. An analysis of the current situation in which the Armed Forces of ukraine and other components of the state Defence Forces are placed shows that in order to find a way out of the positional form of warfare, it is necessary to: gain air superiority; breach mine barriers in depth; increase the effectiveness of counter-battery; create and train the necessary reserves; build up electronic warfare (EW) capabilities. Modern art of war involves gaining air superiority to successfully conduct large-scale ground operations. The Armed Forces of ukraine entered the war with 120 tactical aircraft, out of which only 40 were considered to be technically suitable for utilization, and 33 medium and short-range anti-aircraft missile battalions, of which only 18 had fully serviceable equipment, Zaluzhnyi informs. The next prerequisite that transforms the nature of current hostilities into a positional form is the widespread use of mine barriers by both the enemy and ukraine's troops. 'In the russian-ukrainian war, as in the wars of the past, the role of missile forces and artillery in fires remains quite significant, and depending on the conditions, axes and areas of operations varies from 60 to 80% of the total volume of tasks executed, he tells. Compared to ukraine, the russian federation has almost three times more mobilization human resources. The prolonged nature of the war, limited opportunities for the rotation of soldiers on the line of contact, gaps in legislation that seem to legally evade mobilization, significantly reduce the motivation of citizens to serve with the military, Zaluznhny notes. This leads to the lack of ukraine's ability to achieve superiority over the enemy in reserves by increasing their number. Even before the events of 2014, the military and political leadership of the russian federation paid considerable attention to the development of electronic warfare. An illustrative example of this is the creation in 2009 of a separate branch of the armed forces of the russian federation – the electronic warfare troops. In addition, as part of the russian armed forces, a powerful air component of electronic warfare has been created, which ensures the effective employment of troops (forces) and high-precision weapons. "Relying on the strategic superiority in military, economic, human, natural resource and scientific potential and relatively appropriate conditions for its implementation" - he writes - the occupying armed forces are still not able to fully implement the plans of the russian general staff. Countermeasure to the achievement of military-political objectives by the aggressor state comes at a high cost for ukraine and its Armed Forces. The Armed Forces of ukraine and other components of the Security and Defence Forces involved in repelling armed aggression, practically along the entire line of contact between the parties and in the border areas with the russian federation, faced the need to overcome the military parity problem. Its existence is stipulated by the reasons related to parity in the air, minefields, counter-battery and electronic warfare, and the creation of reserves. 'The need to avoid the transition to a positional form of hostilities, such as the "trench war" of 1914-1918, necessitates the search for new and non-trivial approaches to breaking the military parity with the enemy' Zaluzhnyi writes. Key takeaways: "The transition of the war to a positional form leads to its prolongation and carries significant risks for both the Armed Forces of ukraine and the state as a whole. "In addition, it is beneficial to the enemy, who is trying in every possible way to reconstitute and increase its military power. "To get out of the positional form at the current stage of warfare, first of all, it is necessary to: gain air superiority; breach mine barriers in depth; increase the effectiveness of counter-battery and electronic warfare; create and prepare the necessary reserves. "The widespread use of information technology in military affairs and the rational organization of logistics support play a significant role in finding a way out of the positional form of warfare. 'The need to avoid transitioning from a positional form to a manoeuvrable one necessitates searching for new and non-trivial approaches to break military parity with the enemy', Zaluzhnyi, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, wrote. (Source: economist): https://tinyurl.com/4t8umym8

1 November 2023  Last week, the authorities ordered the forced evacuation of children from 31 towns and villages close to the frontline. The orders came after Russia renewed offensives in parts of the Donetsk region and fighting intensified in Kherson region. In addition to free transport to safety, Ukraine initially gives all forced evacuees money - around £45 per adult, £70 per child or vulnerable adult - and a place to live. The adults will be expected - eventually - to work. While millions of Ukrainians have fled the war abroad, the Ukrainian government estimates there are nearly five million internally displaced people in the country. Forced evacuees are taken in by communities all over Ukraine. (Source: bbc)

Ukraine
November 1, 2023 / October 30, 2023  At the end of last year, during his previous visit to Washington, Zelensky received a hero’s welcome. The White House sent a U.S. Air Force jet to pick him up in eastern Poland a few days before Christmas and, with an escort from a NATO spy plane and an F-15 Eagle fighter, deliver him to Joint Base Andrews outside the U.S. capital. That evening, Zelensky appeared before a joint session of Congress to declare that Ukraine had defeated Russia 'in the battle for minds of the world.' A few right-wing Republicans refused to stand or applaud for Zelensky, but the votes to support him were bipartisan and overwhelming throughout last year. This time around, the atmosphere had changed. In recent months, the issue of corruption has strained Zelensky’s relationship with many of his allies. Ahead of his new visit to Washington, the White House prepared a list of anti-corruption reforms for the Ukrainians to undertake. These proposals targeted the very top of the state hierarchy, one of the aides who traveled with Zelensky to the U.S. told. “These were not suggestions,” says another presidential adviser. “These were conditions.” In early September, Zelensky fired his Minister of Defense, Reznikov, a member of his inner circle who had come under scrutiny over corruption in his ministry. He had not been personally involved in graft, one presidential adviser says, pointing to the inflated prices the ministry paid for supplies, such as winter coats for soldiers and eggs to keep them fed. “But he failed to keep order within his ministry.” One of Zelensky’s foreign policy advisers urged him to call off the trip in late September, warning that the atmosphere was too fraught. Assistance to Ukraine had become a sticking point in the debate over the federal budget. Congressional leaders declined to let Zelensky deliver a public address on Capitol Hill. His aides tried to arrange an in-person appearance for him on Fox News and an interview with Winfrey. Neither one came through. Instead, on the morning of Sept. 21, Zelensky met in private with then House Speaker McCarthy before making his way to the Old Senate Chamber, where lawmakers grilled him behind closed doors. Most of Zelensky’s usual critics stayed silent in the session; Senator Cruz strolled in more than 20 minutes late. The Democrats, for their part, wanted to understand where the war was headed, and how badly Ukraine needed U.S. support. “They asked me straight up: If we don’t give you the aid, what happens?” Zelensky recalls. “What happens is we will lose.” At the National Archives in Washington it did not go as planned. Zelensky was running late. That afternoon, his meetings at the White House and the Pentagon delayed him by more than an hour. When he finally arrived to begin his speech at 6:41 p.m., he looked distant and agitated. His delivery felt stilted, as though he wanted to get it over with. After the speech, while handing out medals, he urged the organizer to hurry things along. He later said, the reason was the exhaustion he felt that night, not only from the demands of leadership during the war but also the persistent need to convince his allies that, with their help, Ukraine can win. “Nobody believes in our victory like I do. Nobody,” Zelensky told after his trip. Back to Kyiv. On first day a longtime member of his team tells that, most of all, Zelensky feels betrayed by his Western allies. They have left him without the means to win the war, only the means to survive it. 'But his convictions haven’t changed'. Despite the recent setbacks on the battlefield, he does not intend to give up fighting or to sue for any kind of peace. On the contrary, his belief in Ukraine’s ultimate victory over Russia has hardened into a form that worries some of his advisers. It is immovable, verging on the messianic. 'He deludes himself,' one of his closest aides tells in frustration. “We’re out of options. We’re not winning. But try telling him that.” Zelensky’s stubbornness, some of his aides say, has hurt their team’s efforts to come up with a new strategy, a new message. As they have debated the future of the war, one issue has remained taboo: the possibility of negotiating a peace deal with the Russians. Zelensky remains dead set against even a temporary truce. But how they would react to the signals they had received, especially the insistent calls for Zelensky to fight corruption inside his own government? Some of the accusations have been hard to deny. Even the firing of the Defense Minister did not make officials 'feel any fear,' because the purge took too long to materialize. The President was warned in February that corruption had grown rife inside the ministry, but he dithered for more than six months, giving his allies multiple chances to deal with the problems quietly or explain them away. In August, a Ukrainian news outlet known for investigating graft, Bihus.info, published a damning report about Zelensky’s top adviser on economic and energy policy, Shurma, a former executive in the energy industry, who has a brother who co-owns two solar-energy companies with power plants in southern Ukraine. Even after the Russians occupied that part of the country, cutting it off from the Ukrainian power grid, the companies continued to receive state payments for producing electricity. The anticorruption police, an independent agency known in Ukraine as NABU, responded to the publication by opening an embezzlement probe into Shurma and his brother. But Zelensky did not suspend his adviser. Instead, in late September, Shurma joined the President’s delegation to Washington, where he was glad-handing senior lawmakers and officials from the Biden Administration. Ten days later, Congress passed a bill to temporarily avert a government shutdown. It included no assistance for Ukraine. 'People are stealing like there’s no tomorrow,” a top presidential adviser in early October said. Zelensky, asked about the problem, acknowledged its gravity and the threat it poses to Ukraine’s morale and its relationships with foreign partners. 'Fighting corruption is among his top priorities, he assured'. The President gave strict orders for his staff to avoid the slightest perception of self-enrichment. The typical salary in the President’s office comes to about $1,000 per month, or around $1,500 for more senior officials, far less than they could make in the private sector. “We sleep in rooms that are 2 by 3 meters,” about the size of a prison cell, says Yermak, the presidential chief of staff, referring to the bunker that Zelensky and a few of his confidants have called home since the start of the invasion. “We’re not out here living the high life,” he tells in his office. Zelensky also suggested that 'some foreign allies have an incentive to exaggerate the problem, because it gives them an excuse to cut off financial support'. 'It’s not right,' he says, 'for them to cover up their failure to help Ukraine by tossing out these accusations.' And the fading enthusiasm for a war with no end in sight? Public support for aid to Ukraine has been in decline for months in the U.S., and Zelensky’s visit did nothing to revive it. Some 41% of Americans want Congress to provide more weapons to Kyiv, down from 65% in June, when Ukraine began a major counteroffensive, according to a survey taken shortly after Zelensky’s departure. That offensive has proceeded at an excruciating pace and with enormous losses. Since the start of the invasion, Ukraine has refused to release official counts of dead and wounded. But according to U.S. and European estimates, the toll has long surpassed 100,000 on each side of the war. It has eroded the ranks of Ukraine’s armed forces so badly that draft offices have been forced to call up ever older personnel, raising the average age of a soldier in Ukraine to around 43 years. “They’re grown men now, and they aren’t that healthy to begin with,” says the close aide to Zelensky. 'This is Ukraine. Not Scandinavia.” In some branches of the military, the shortage of personnel has become even more dire than the deficit in arms and ammunition. One of Zelensky’s close aides tells that even if the U.S. and its allies come through with all the weapons they have pledged, “we don’t have the men to use them.” On Aug. 11 Zelensky fired the heads of the draft offices in every region of the country. The reputation of the draft offices had been tainted. The move backfired as recruitment nearly ground to a halt without leadership. As conscription efforts have intensified around the country, stories are spreading on social media of draft officers pulling men off trains and buses and sending them to the front. Those with means sometimes bribe their way out of service, often by paying for a medical exemption. Twenty months into the war, about a fifth of Ukraine’s territory remains under Russian occupation. The cold of early fall had taken hold. Russian attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure have damaged power stations and parts of the electricity grid, leaving it potentially unable to meet spikes in demand when the temperature drops. Blackouts would likely be more severe this winter, and the public reaction in Ukraine would not be as forgiving, senior officials in charge of dealing with this problem told. 'Last year people blamed the Russians,” one of them says. “This time they’ll blame us for not doing enough to prepare.” “Freezing the war, to me, means losing it,” Zelensky says. 'Before the winter sets in, his aides warned to expect major changes in their military strategy and a major shake-up in the President’s team'. At least one minister would need to be fired, along with a senior general in charge of the counteroffensive, they said, to ensure accountability for Ukraine’s slow progress at the front. Some front-line commanders have begun refusing orders to advance, even when they came directly from the office of the President, says one of Zelensky’s close aides. “They just want to sit in the trenches and hold the line,” he says. 'But we can’t win a war that way." Some commanders have little choice in second-guessing orders from the top, a senior military officer said. At one point in early October, he said, the political leadership in Kyiv demanded an operation to 'retake' the city of Horlivka, a strategic outpost in eastern Ukraine that the Russians have held and fiercely defended for nearly a decade. The answer came back in the form of a question: With what? “They don’t have the men or the weapons,” says the officer. “Where are the weapons? Where is the artillery? Where are the new recruits?” Zelensky can feel during his travels that global interest in the war has slackened. So has the level of international support. 'The scariest thing is that part of the world got used to the war in Ukraine,' he says. “Exhaustion with the war rolls along like a wave. You see it in the United States, in Europe. And we see that as soon as they start to get a little tired, it becomes like a show to them: ‘I can’t watch this rerun for the 10th time.’' With the outbreak of war in Israel, even keeping the world’s attention on Ukraine has become a major challenge. Palestinian terrorists had massacred many hundreds of civilians in southern Israel, prompting the Israeli government to impose a blockade of the Gaza Strip and declare war against Hamas. The focus of Ukraine’s allies in the U.S. and Europe, and of the global media, quickly shifted to the Gaza Strip. 'Zelensky wanted to help'. He asked the Israeli government for permission to visit their country in a show of solidarity. The answer appeared the following week in Israeli media reports: “The time is not right.” A few days later, President Biden instead of asking Congress to vote on another stand-alone package of Ukraine aid, bundled it with other priorities, including support for Israel and U.S.-Mexico border security. The package would cost $105 billion, with $61 billion of it for Ukraine. But it was also an acknowledgment that, on its own, Ukraine aid no longer stands much of a chance in Washington. (Source: time)

November 1, 2023  A Russian drone attack set ablaze the Kremenchuk oil refinery in central Ukraine Poltava region and knocked out power supply in three villages, while falling debris from downed drones damaged railway power lines in the nearby central Kirovohrad region. The fire at the refinery, which Moscow has targeted many times during the war and Kyiv says is not operational, was quickly put out, said Pronin, head of Poltava region's military administration. The extent of the damage was not clear. Ukraine's Air Force said air defences shot down 18 of 20 drones and a missile fired by Russia overnight before they reached their targets in an attack that sought to strike military and critical infrastructure. The Ukrainian military said Russia carried out another missile attack on Poltava region and southern Odesa region later today morning, with two missiles downed in the latter. (Source: reuters)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: russia india taiwan china nato mexico france moldova germany europe asia israel georgia turkey poland spain ukraine gaza caucasus uzbekistan tajikistan unitedkingdom palestine europeanunion unitednations unitedstates northkorea southkorea europeancommission sovietunion thenetherlands organizationforsecurityandcooperationineurope worldbank worldwarI crimea europeancouncil balcans

2023. X. 31. European Union, Kosovo, Russia, Ukraine, China, Gaza, Israel, Lebanon, Taiwan, United States, United Nations, globalization

2023.10.31. 17:44 Eleve

.

Europe

European Union
(31 October 2023) / 18/08/2023  Common security and defence policy: Missions and operations. Annual Report 2022.    Contents:     Foreword.     Part 1 - 2022 in focus: Europe’s security under threat ...  EU Security and Defence engagement around the world.     PART 2 - Achievements of CSDP Missions and Operations  ...  The Eastern neighbourhood  ...  The Western Balkans  ...  The Mediterranean  ...  The Middle East  ...  The Sahel  ...  The Horn of Africa  ...  Central and Southern Africa.  (Source: eeas *): https://tinyurl.com/29kw22yu
* European External Action Service 

Kosovo
Tue, Oct 31 2023  The Western Balkans, a group of six countries that European Union officials have repeatedly said belong to the European family, comprises Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia. Not yet members of the 27-nation bloc, the region of roughly 18 million in Southern and Eastern Europe is known as an arena of geostrategic rivalry, with Brussels, Moscow and Washington among those jockeying for influence. NATO has had a peacekeeping mission in Kosovo since 1999 following a bloody conflict between ethnic Albanians opposed to ethnic Serbs and the government of Yugoslavia in 1998. As conflict rages between Israel and Hamas and Russia and Ukraine, the focus of Western powers has been diverted from a different geopolitical issue: Serbia-Kosovo tensions - a powder keg, a security issue for both the Balkans and Europe. A deadly shootout in late September between a heavily armed group of ethnic Serbs and Kosovo special police forces in the northern Kosovan village of Banjska appeared to mark another pivotal juncture. U.S. and European officials expressed deep concern over the violence and 'unprecedented' buildup of military forces there, as the White House described it. The military alliance reacted to the September incident by deploying additional peacekeeping troops to the region, while Serbia bolstered its military presence along its border with Kosovo. Serbian President Vučić has previously said that Serbian forces had no intention of going to war with Kosovo, noting that this would be counterproductive to the country’s ambitions of joining the EU. The Serbia-Kosovo discord finds itself languishing in the shadow of more immediate and globally resonant challenges. "When a new conflict erupts on the global stage, it inherently strains a nation’s capacity to effectively manage preexisting conflicts,” Hartwell, a non-resident senior fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis, told. In the Balkan region even minor incidents can swiftly spiral into broader conflicts - what happens in the Balkans, doesn’t stay in the Balkans, he said. Essentially, the diplomatic and military bandwidth only goes so far, and states are compelled to make calculated choices about where to direct their efforts. “The U.S., EU and U.K. do not have the diplomatic and military bandwidth to respond to several conflicts of strategic interest. Choices will have to be made in terms of where we can commit our resources, and that will ultimately have negative consequences for some regions,” he added. “However, when we neglect this responsibility, or mismanage it as is currently the case, we inadvertently create an opening for other players to fill the vacuum,” CEPA’s Hartwell said. (Source: cnbc)

Russia
10/31/23  Few Russian or Western analysts believe a mysterious Russian Telegram channel called General SVR and Solovey (who some say are one and the same person). Hundreds of thousands of Russians have read General SVR’s and Solovey’s claims. Many more are discussing them. They do provide remarkably detailed accounts of Putin’s supposed death that enhance their verisimilitude, but imaginative crackpots and secret police provocateurs would be expected to do the same. Seeds of doubt have been planted. Solovey has a biting sense of humor, speaks well, argues logically and generally comes across as the kind of professor every student would want. Other than his claims regarding Putin’s death and the supposed exile of Prigozhin, the deceased head of the mercenary Wagner Group, to an island off the coast of Venezuela, his analyses of Russia’s internal politics are invariably smart and incisive. As a would-be opposition leader, Solovey may be determined to sow confusion in the ranks of Russian elites and among ordinary Russians, leading them to wonder whether the great leader is still alive and to question whether the man claiming to be Putin really is Putin - thereby undermining his legitimacy. With Russia’s presidential elections scheduled for March 2024, popular doubt about Putin’s health and existence can only complicate the Kremlin’s plans. The other possibility is that Solovey and General SVR are not bona fide independent democratic oppositionists, as they claim to be. They may in fact be agents of the security services or spokesmen for powerful elites able to provide Solovey - who lives in Moscow and, despite his savage criticism of Putin, has managed to avoid arrest - with protection. Solovey himself describes his politics as liberal conservative, which may also be the appropriate modifiers to describe his protectors. Chances are that Solovey’s possible protectors are conservative reformers who would want to dismantle the worst aspects of Putinism and try to end the war. Elite efforts to delegitimize the current regime bespeak a crack within what appears to outside observers as a monolithic regime. Putin’s spokesman, Peskov, felt compelled to deny rumors of Putin’s death and the existence of Putin doubles as fake news. 'But, since Peskov is always assumed never to tell the truth, was the denial a confirmation, or was it really a denial?' The intended effect of the death claim would be the same - doubt, confusion and delegitimation. (Source: thehill)

Ukraine
Oct 31, 2023  Russia does not often publicize its own losses, and offers up only infrequent updates on what it claims to be the casualty count. 'Russia has lost more than 300,000 soldiers in its grueling 20-month-long war in Ukraine, the General Staff of Ukraine's military said today. This updated count includes 870 Russian casualties in the past 24 hours'. In September 2022, the Kremlin put the death toll for its forces at 5,937; on the same day, Kyiv's count of 'liquidated' Russian soldiers was 55,110. Both Moscow and Kyiv could benefit from inflating the other's reported losses. It is not possible to independently verify battlefield reports or casualty counts from either side. Kyiv's figure of around 300,000 Russian losses corresponds with Western intelligence estimates and open-source information, according to Mertens, an analyst with the Hague Centre for Strategic Studies. The head of Ukraine's armed forces, General Zaluzhnyi, said in late August 2022 that almost 9,000 Ukrainian fighters had been killed at that point. In November 2022, the U.S.' top soldier, General Milley, said both Russia and Ukraine had likely each lost 100,000 soldiers in the fighting. Almost 500,000 Ukrainian and Russian troops had been killed or injured in 18 months of war, The New York Times reported in mid-August, citing U.S. officials. "Each side tries to paint a picture of it winning," Miron, a post-doctoral researcher at the Department of War Studies at King's College London, U.K. told. There are also questions about how the numbers are collated and by whom they were recorded, she said. Russia now has around 40,000 troops deployed in the vicinity of Avdiivka, Colonel Shtupun, a spokesperson for Ukraine's Tavria group of forces covering Avdiivka, said on Sunday, October 29. (Source: newsweek)

Asia

China
Oct 31, 2023 
China has not officially condemned Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel and has criticized Israel’s actions in Gaza as “collective punishment” and going “beyond self-defense.” Chinese and other social media users expressed shock this week after finding that Israel was not explicitly demarcated as a country on Baidu and Alibaba’s online digital maps. Amap and Baidu Maps are the two most popular platforms for GPS navigation in China. Amap is considered the market leader. Both are known for having spotty service outside of China; Baidu Maps only began expanding to other regions through a partnership in 2017. It’s possible that people may be noticing long-standing features of the two platforms. Both mapping services did not automatically display labels for either Israel or Palestine. Baidu spokesperson Peng told that the company may not always display the names of smaller countries due to space constraints. Baidu Maps did navigate to the country, though it still wasn’t labeled. Users can find corresponding countries or areas on Baidu Maps by simply using the map’s search function, Peng said. Amap doesn’t label other countries either, and only names cities on its map. In the Middle East, Amap displayed several capital cities near Israel and Palestine, such as Damascus, Beirut, and Amman. But it did not demarcate Israel’s Tel Aviv or the disputed city of Jerusalem, which were both displayed on Baidu Maps. China’s foreign ministry dismissed speculation that it had changed its stance on Israel’s borders during a press conference today, saying that Beijing recognizes the country on official maps. “I believe you are aware that China and Israel have a normal diplomatic relationship,” Wenbin, a ministry spokesperson, said. The relevant country is clearly marked on the standard maps issued by the Chinese competent authorities, he said. China tightly regulates how maps are depicted in the country, and it has become more aggressive in staking claims to areas it considers its own territory. Last month, Beijing released a new official map that showed land claimed by Malaysia, Vietnam, India, and the Philippines as belonging to China. Baidu Maps similarly shows the independent island of Taiwan as part of China. Other GPS services, particularly Google Maps, have been scrutinized for changing territorial borders depending on what country users are located in. In India, for example, Google displays the disputed region of Kashmir as under Indian control, while users elsewhere see a dotted line acknowledging that Pakistan also has a claim to the territory. (Source: semafor)

Gaza
October 31, 2023  The Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem blamed Israel today for the overnight bombing of its cultural centre in Gaza City and condemned the "direct and unjustified attack". "This attack represents a stark embodiment of Israel's unwarranted determination to destroy the civil infrastructure and social service centres, as well as shelters for civilians trapped in the besieged enclave," the church said. The Patriarchate said 19 places of worship, including churches and mosques, have been hit by Israeli strikes since October 7. Several people were killed on October 20 while they were sheltering in the compound of Saint Porphyrius Church, the oldest church still in use in Gaza, when it was hit by Israeli bombardment. (Source: barrons)

Oct. 31, 2023 The Israeli military reported "fierce battles" with Hamas deep inside the Gaza Strip as its ground operation pushed deeper into the north of the enclave and rescued a soldier who had been taken captive. The IDF said a massive strike on the Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip killed a senior Hamas commander who was one of the architects of the Oct. 7 terror attack. Dozens of others were killed and hundreds wounded, according to Gaza's Indonesian Hospital. Israel's national security adviser said 'the end of the war is not close' because Hamas must first cease to exist. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected growing international calls for a cease-fire after a bombing campaign that plunged Gaza into darkness and cut it off from most of the world over the weekend. (Source: nbcnews)

31/10/2023  More than half the territory's 2.3 million Palestinians have fled their homes, with hundreds of thousands sheltering in packed UN-run schools-turned-shelters or in hospitals alongside thousands of wounded patients. Several hundred thousand Palestinians remain in the northern part of Gaza, where Israeli troops and tanks reportedly have advanced on several sides of Gaza City, the sprawling urban center. Ground operations in Gaza were focused on the north, including Gaza City, described as "Hamas's centre of gravity" by Conricus, an Israeli military spokesman. Ground troops battled Hamas militants and attacked underground compounds. 'But we continue to strike in other parts of Gaza. "We are going after their commanders, we are attacking their infrastructure, and whenever there is an important target associated with Hamas, we hit it," he said. The military said it had hit some 300 militant targets over the past day. A flurry of Israeli airstrikes today in the Jabaliya refugee camp on Gaza City's outskirts levelled apartment buildings, leaving craters where they once stood. At least six airstrikes destroyed a number of apartment blocks in a residential area. The Hamas-run Interior Ministry reported a large number of casualties but did not immediately provide details. Dozens of rescue workers and bystanders dug through the wreckage, searching for survivors. As the families of hostages in Gaza campaign for the freedom of their loved ones, Hamas has claimed it will release a number of them in the coming days. 'We have informed intermediaries that we will release a certain number of foreigners in the next few days, in line with our position which we had previously announced that we don't want or need to keep them or continue to detain them in Gaza", Obeida, a Hamas spokesman said today. To date, Hamas has released five hostages but more than 200 people are still being held captive. Hamas has said it would let the others go in return for thousands of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, which has dismissed the offer. The United Nations agency in Gaza warned that “an immediate humanitarian cease-fire has become a matter of life and death for millions.' “Let's be clear: the handful of convoys authorised via Rafah are nothing compared to the needs of more than 2 million people trapped in Gaza,” said Commissioner-General Lazzarini. "The current siege imposed on Gaza is collective punishment,' he added. “An entire population is dehumanised.' Around 30 trucks carrying water, food and medicine entered Gaza through the Rafah crossing on the Egyptian border on Sunday, October 29, the largest amount of aid since 21 October. Before October 7th, around 500 trucks entered the Gaza Strip every day, which even then was considered insufficient by many observers. More than 1 million people have been displaced in Gaza. Lazzarini called Hamas' attack on southern Israel earlier this month “horrible” and “shocking”. Doctors in Gaza are being forced to operate on the ground and perform cesarean sections on women and amputations on children without anaesthesia due to a lack of medicine, Doctors of the World (MDM) said yesterday. While denouncing Hamas' "unspeakable atrocities", vice-president of MDM Corty said, "We must also condemn the fact that Israel is bombing thirsty and starving people who have no prospect of leaving'. Since October 9, Israel has subjected Gaza to a 'complete siege', depriving its 2.4 million inhabitants of water, food and electricity while limiting international aid to a trickle. The NGO also warned there would be an 'exponential' increase in infant deaths amid Israel's unrelenting strikes. “We are going from an open-air prison to an open-air mass grave', he said. Gaza's Ministry of Health says 8,306 people have been killed, including 3,457 children, since the start of the war. A White House spokesperson said yesterday that a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas was "not the right answer at this time', claiming the Palestinian Islamist group 'would be the only one to benefit from it.' The US however is in favour of "temporary and localised humanitarian pauses to allow aid to reach certain specific populations and perhaps even to help with the evacuation of people who want to leave' Gaza, said Kirby, spokesperson for the National Security Council. (Source: euronews)

31 October 2023  In a televised address, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman Hagari confirmed that forces carried out an attack on the Jabalia refugee camp and killed Hamas commander Biari. He said several other militants were killed in the strike, adding the targeting of the commander caused underground tunnels to collapse and 'led to the destruction of other buildings'. More than 100 people are believed to have been killed in the attack, and hundreds more injured. (Source: mirror)

31 October 2023  Air strikes yesterday night outside the Indonesian Hospital caused a power cut and doctors said they feared for the lives of 250 injured Palestinians being treated there as fuel runs low. The director of Gaza's Indonesian Hospital told that more than 50 Palestinians were killed and 150 wounded in Israeli air strikes on a densely populated area of the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza. Elder, a spokesperson for the UN children's agency in Geneva, warned of the risk of infant deaths due to dehydration. Children in Gaza were getting sick from drinking salty water, he said. Fighting in an urban setting, Israel said its forces fought Hamas gunmen inside the militants' vast tunnel network beneath Gaza as it expands a four-day-old ground offensive. "Over the last day, combined IDF (Israel Defense Forces) struck approximately 300 targets, including anti-tank missile and rocket launch posts below shafts, as well as military compounds inside underground tunnels belonging to the Hamas terrorist organization," an Israeli military statement said. Militants responded with anti-tank missiles and machine gun fire, a number of militants were killed, it said. Hamas said in a statement its fighters were engaging in fierce battles with Israeli ground forces, who were taking losses. Israeli forces also bombed the enclave overnight in air, sea and ground attacks, hitting northwestern areas. Yesterday, Israeli forces targeted Gaza's main north-south road and attacked Gaza City, its northern hub, from two directions. Ground fighting spreads to south Gaza. The al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas's armed wing, said militants also clashed early today with Israeli forces invading Gaza's south, hitting four Israeli vehicles with missiles and in Beit Hanoun, in the northeast, they 'liquidated' an Israeli unit which was ambushed as it entered a building. (Source: aawsat *)
* Asharq Al-Awsat (London)

Israel
October 31, 2023 An Israeli government ministry has drafted a wartime proposal to transfer the Gaza Strip’s 2.3 million people to Egypt’s Sinai peninsula, drawing condemnation from the Palestinians and worsening tensions with Cairo. In its report, the Intelligence Ministry - a junior ministry that conducts research but does not set policy - offered three alternatives 'to effect a significant change in the civilian reality in the Gaza Strip in light of the Hamas crimes that led to the Sword of Iron war.” The document proposes moving Gaza’s civilian population to tent cities in northern Sinai, then building permanent cities and an undefined humanitarian corridor. A security zone would be established inside Israel to block the displaced Palestinians from entering. The report did not say what would become of Gaza once its population is cleared out. The document dismisses the two other options: reinstating the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority as the sovereign in Gaza, or supporting a local regime. Among other reasons, it rejects them as unable to deter attacks on Israel. The reinstatement of the Palestinian Authority, which was ejected from Gaza after a weeklong 2007 war that put Hamas in power, would be 'an unprecedented victory of the Palestinian national movement, a victory that will claim the lives of thousands of Israeli civilians and soldiers, and does not safeguard Israel’s security,” the document says. Egypt would not necessarily be the Palestinian refugees’ last stop - the document speaks about Egypt, Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates supporting the plan either financially, or by taking in uprooted residents of Gaza as refugees and in the long term as citizens. Canada’s “lenient” immigration practices also make it a potential resettlement target, the document adds. “In our assessment, fighting after the population is evacuated would lead to fewer civilian casualties compared to what could be expected if the population were to remain.” The document is dated Oct. 13. It was first published by Sicha Mekomit, a local news site. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office played down the report compiled by the Intelligence Ministry as a hypothetical exercise - a 'concept paper.' But its conclusions deepened long-standing Egyptian fears that Israel wants to make Gaza into Egypt’s problem, that Israel wants to force a permanent expulsion of Palestinians into its territory, as happened during the war surrounding Israel’s independence and revived for Palestinians memories of their greatest trauma - the uprooting of hundreds of thousands of people who fled or were forced from their homes during the fighting surrounding Israel’s creation in 1948. The vast majority of Gaza’s population are the descendants of Palestinian refugees uprooted from what is now Israel. Egypt ruled Gaza between 1948 and 1967, when Israel captured the territory, along with the West Bank and east Jerusalem. 'Egypt has made clear throughout this latest war that it does not want to take in a wave of Palestinian refugees'. Egypt’s president, El-Sissi, has said a mass influx of refugees from Gaza would eliminate the Palestinian nationalist cause. It would also risk bringing militants into Sinai, where they might launch attacks on Israel, he said. That would endanger the countries’ 1979 peace treaty. 'He proposed that Israel instead house Palestinians in its Negev Desert, which neighbors the Gaza Strip, until it ends its military operations'. “We are against transfer to any place, in any form, and we consider it a red line that we will not allow to be crossed,” Rudeineh, spokesman for Palestinian President Abbas, said of the report. “What happened in 1948 will not be allowed to happen again.' A mass displacement, Rudeineh said, would be 'tantamount to declaring a new war.' Guzansky, a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, said the paper threatened to damage relations with a key partner. “I see it either as ignorance or someone who wants to negatively affect Israel-Egypt relations, which are very important at this stage.” Egypt is a valuable partner that cooperates behind the scenes with Israel, he said. If it is seen as overtly assisting an Israeli plan like this, especially involving the Palestinians, it could be “devastating to its stability.” “The issue of the ‘day after’ has not been discussed in any official forum in Israel, which is focused at this time on destroying the governing and military capabilities of Hamas,” the prime minister’s office said. (Source: apnews)

October 2023 AD  Air raid sirens sounded in the area of Israel's far southern resort city of Eilat on the Red Sea today and the Israeli military said it downed an approaching 'aerial target'. Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi militias said they had launched a 'large number' of ballistic missiles and drones towards Israel, their third operation targeting Israel, with more to come. (Source: aawsat *)
* Asharq Al-Awsat (London)

Lebanon
31/10/2023  'Combat aircraft recently attacked infrastructure of the terrorist organisation Hezbollah on the territory of Lebanon,' the Israeli army wrote on X today. 'Among the infrastructure attacked, weapons, positions and sites used by the organisation were destroyed,' it added. Tensions are soaring on the Israel-Lebanon border, fuelling fears the current fighting could spill over into the region. Hezbollah, backed by Iran, has engaged fire with Israeli forces repetitively since Hamas stormed into Israel and murdered hundreds of civilians on October 7th. The Shiite group announced yesterday that one of its fighters had been killed, bringing the total to 47. Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati told yesterday his country was doing everything possible to avoid being drawn into the conflict. (Source: euronews)

Taiwan
October 31, 2023  Concerns are mounting in Asia that the wars in Ukraine and Israel are depleting U.S. stockpiles of weapons and ammunition, leaving it in a weaker position to defend Taiwan against a potential Chinese offensive. Experts point out that while there is some overlap, the weapons needed to fight a land war in Ukraine, or fend off short-range rockets from Gaza, are different from what would be needed in a maritime conflict in the Taiwan Strait. However, the Iran-backed, Lebanon-based militia Hezbollah could be a game changer. Hezbollah entry into war would mean Taiwan trade-off, U.S. analysts say. Israeli demand for long-range missiles and Patriots would eat into Indo-Pacific needs. A missile assault from north of Israel would create a direct trade-off with the weapons needed in the event of a Taiwan contingency, analysts told. Kavanagh, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said that the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza is limited in scale and 'probably doesn't create too much of a problem for the United States to resource.' For comparison, while 6,000 to 8,000 rounds of ammunition could be used each day in Ukraine, the Israeli Defense Forces would use around 5,000 a week. "It would present the U.S. a challenge, but it will be doable, given that the U.S. is ramping up production already,' she said. If the war expands to include Hezbollah, however, "it becomes a lot tougher and the trade-offs become much starker," she said. 'Hezbollah likely has over 150,000 missiles and they could probably fire these at a rate that Israel estimates as 6,000 to 8,000 per day.' Hezbollah is believed to have advanced precision-guided missiles and short-range ballistic missiles, provided by Iran. Those higher-end missiles would present a more daunting threat to Israel's Iron Dome air defense system than that of Hamas' more rudimentary rockets. That would likely push Israel to request the U.S. to provide air defense systems like the Patriot, which is already in short supply and would directly take away from U.S. preparations for the Indo-Pacific region, Kavanagh said. Another area is long-range missiles, she said. 'If Israel's conflict with Hezbollah intensifies, or if Iran became more directly involved, Israel might see the need to conduct some longer-range strikes. Not just short-range strikes into southern Lebanon, but potentially strikes to hit Hezbollah targets in Syria or against Iranian assets.' In January, the Washington-based think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies published the results of its latest war games, simulating a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. In the 24 times the CSIS ran the war game, long-range missiles proved to be crucial in U.S. operations to defend Taiwan. 'Long-range missiles were critical because Chinese air defenses were initially so formidable that no aircraft could get close enough to drop short-range munitions. Even stealth aircraft were at risk,' the report said. But sophisticated, long-distance cruise missiles were only available in the early stages of the war. 'As these inventories are depleted, aircraft must use shorter-range munitions and accept more risk,' the report said. Grieco, senior fellow at the Stimson Center, said, "We have a primacy hangover and we still think this is the 90s, when the United States was at the peak of its relative power, and we can do all of this. But ultimately, if we're serious about the Indo-Pacific, that means that we have to prioritize." The U.S. will have to be honest about the trade-offs, Grieco said. "There's always trade-offs in strategy. If the United States is serious about the Indo-Pacific and about deterring China, then it's going to have to reconcile its goals with its available means and that sometimes requires hard choices," she said. Kavanagh said it would not present an opportunity for China to act on Taiwan, but it may give Beijing 'additional flexibility' to be more aggressive in the region. 'That could be a little bit of what you're seeing with confrontations with the Philippines over Second Thomas Shoal,' she said. 'They feel that they have a little bit more leeway, or at least they might be interested in sort of testing the boundaries of how far they can push'. (Source: nikkei)

North America

United States
Oct 31, 2023  'Today, the Department of Defense (DoD) announced that the United States will pursue a modern variant of the B61 nuclear gravity bomb, designated the B61-13, pending Congressional authorization and appropriation. The Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) would produce the B61-13,' the Department of Defence release said. 'This initiative follows several months of review and consideration. The fielding of the B61-13 is not in response to any specific current event; it reflects an ongoing assessment of a changing security environment," the US Department of Defence added. The B61-13 will yield similarly to the B61-7, which has a maximum output of 360 kilotons, according to Fox News. The bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, during World War II, was around a 15 kiloton bomb. The B61-13 would be almost 14 times bigger than the 25-kiloton bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki. 'While it provides us with additional flexibility, production of the B61-13 will not increase the overall number of weapons in our nuclear stockpile,' said Assistant Secretary of Defence for Space Policy Plumb. The announcement coincides with escalating international tensions following the US' high-explosive experiment earlier this month at a nuclear test site in Nevada. (Source: economictimes /India/)

31 Oct (2023)  Speaking to a congressional committee in Washington DC, FBI director Wray has warned that Hamas's 7 October attack on Israel could motivate extremist groups across the world to step up violent campaigns. Wray told lawmakers that "the actions of Hamas and its allies will serve as an inspiration the likes of which we haven’t seen since isis launched its so-called caliphate years ago". He also warned that antisemitic attacks on Jewish Americans had increased since the conflict erupted. "This is a threat that is in some way reaching historic levels," Wray said. "The Jewish community is targeted by terrorists across the spectrum. Our statistics would indicate for a group that only represents 2.4% of the public, the Jewish community accounts for 60% of religious based hate crimes." (Source: bbc)

31 October 2023  Protesters caused chaos in Congress today. Demonstrators called the Secretary of State a "murderer' who has "blood on his hands' during mayhem at the start of the hearing on Middle East and Ukraine aid in front of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Protesters drenched in fake blood caused chaos by interrupting Blinken's testimony on Israel, to demand a ceasefire in Gaza and call for the U.S. to stop 'supporting genocide'. Blinken's comments were cut off multiple times by members of the audience waving signs calling for an end to the 'siege' of Gaza. He and Defense Secretary Austin were forced to sit in silence as protesters chanted 'ceasefire now' and held up their hands covered in red paint. The disarray led to the suspension of the hearing, before officers could restore order. A dozen protesters were arrested for disrupting the hearing. The latest stunt comes less than 24 hours after Republicans announced a plan to send $14.3billion to Israel. Blinken restarted his testimony when order restored inside the hearing room. He was able to resume his testimony and insisted the U.S. is focused on 'protecting civilian lives.' (Source: dailymail)
A photo: 'Blinken was all smiles yesterday night when his children received candy from President Biden during the White House Halloween party'. 

United Nations

Oct 31, 2023  Israel's ambassador to the UN, Erdan, and his team, wore a yellow star pinned on their coats while addressing the UN Security Council. He accused Hamas, the Palestinian terror group ruling Gaza, of atrocities and compared them with the Nazis of Germany during a speech at the UN Security Council. 'Today, after innocent Jewish babies were burned alive, this council is still silent. Some member states have learned nothing in the past 80 years. Some of you have forgotten why this body was established'. "We will wear this star until you condemn the atrocities of Hamas and demand the immediate release of our hostages," Erdan was heard saying in a video. (Source: indiatoday)

31 October 2023  Briefings to the Security Council by Lazzarini, the head of the UN children’s agency UNICEF and a senior UN humanitarian official painted a dire picture of the humanitarian situation in Gaza 23 days after Hamas’ surprise Oct. 7 attacks in Israel, and its ongoing retaliatory military action aimed at “obliterating” the militant group, which controls Gaza. The head of the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees told a UN emergency meeting yesterday “an immediate humanitarian cease-fire has become a matter of life and death for millions,” accusing Israel of “collective punishment” of Palestinians and the forced displacement of civilians. The commissioner-general of the UN agency known as UNRWA said there is no safe place anywhere in Gaza, warning that basic services are crumbling, medicine, food, water and fuel are running out, and the streets “have started overflowing with sewage, which will cause a massive health hazard very soon.” Lazzarini said “the handful of convoys” allowed into Gaza through the Rafah crossing from Egypt in recent days “is nothing compared to the needs of over 2 million people trapped in Gaza.” Lazzarini warned that a further breakdown of civil order following the looting of the agency’s warehouses by Palestinians searching for food and other aid “will make it extremely difficult, if not impossible, for the largest UN agency in Gaza to continue operating.” According to the latest figures from Gaza’s Ministry of Health, more than 8,300 people have been killed - 66% of them women and children - and tens of thousands injured, the UN humanitarian office said.    UNICEF Executive Director Russell: that toll includes over 3,400 children killed and more than 6,300 injured. UNICEF oversees water and sanitation issues for the UN, and Russell warned that “the lack of clean water and safe sanitation is on the verge of becoming a catastrophe.”    Many speakers at the council meeting denounced Hamas’ Oct. 7 surprise attacks on Israel that killed over 1,400 people, and urged the release of some 230 hostages taken to Gaza by the militants. But virtually every speaker also stressed that Israel is obligated under international humanitarian law to protect civilians and their essentials for life including hospitals, schools and other infrastructure - and Israel was criticized for cutting off food, water, fuel and medicine to Gaza and cutting communications for several days.    US Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield urged the divided Security Council - which has rejected four resolutions that would have responded to the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks and the ongoing war - to come together, saying “the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is growing more dire by the day.” Stressing that all innocent civilians must be protected, she said the council must call “for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages, address the immense humanitarian needs of Palestinian civilians in Gaza, affirm Israel’s right to defend itself from terrorism, and remind all actors that international humanitarian law must be respected.” She reiterated President Biden’s calls for humanitarian pauses to get hostages out and allow aid in, and for safe passage for civilians. “That means Hamas must not use Palestinians as human shields - an act of unthinkable cruelty and a violation of the law of war,” the US ambassador said, “and that means Israel must take all possible precautions to avoid harm to civilians.” In a sign of increasing US concern at the escalating Palestinian death toll, Thomas-Greenfield told the council Biden reiterated to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday “that while Israel has the right and responsibility to defend its citizens from terrorism, it must do so in a manner consistent with international humanitarian law.” “The fact that Hamas operates within and under the cover of civilians areas creates an added burden for Israel, but it does not lessen its responsibility to distinguish between terrorists and innocent civilians,” she stressed. Following the rejection of the four resolutions in the 15-member Security Council - one vetoed by the US, one vetoed by Russia and China, and two for failing to get the minimum nine “yes” votes - Arab nations went to the UN General Assembly last Friday, October 27, where there are no vetoes. The 193-member world body adopted a resolution calling for humanitarian truces leading to a cessation of hostilities by a vote of 120-14 with 45 abstentions. Now, the 10 elected members in the 15-member Security Council are trying again to negotiate a resolution that won’t be rejected. While council resolutions are legally binding, assembly resolutions are not though they are an important barometer of world opinion. Israel’s UN Ambassador Erdan was sharply critical of the council’s failure to condemn Hamas’ attacks and asked members: 'Why are the humanitarian needs of Gazans, the sole issue, the sole issue you are focused on?” Recalling his grandfather who survived Nazi death camps but whose his wife and seven children perished in the Auschwitz gas chamber, Erdan told the council he will wear a yellow star - just as Hitler made his grandfather and other Jews wear during World War II — “until you condemn the atrocities of Hamas and demand the immediate release of our hostages.” Mansour, the Palestinian UN ambassador, also urged the Security Council to follow the General Assembly, end its paralysis, and demand “an end to this bloodshed, which constitutes an affront to humanity, war crimes, and crimes against humanity, and a clear and imminent danger for regional and international peace and security.” “Save those who still can be saved and bury in a dignified manner those who have perished,” Mansour said. (Source: aawsat *)
* Asharq Al-Awsat (London)

October 31, 2023  The United Nations special envoy for Syria, Pedersen, told the Security Council yesterday, that the Israel-Hamas war is spilling into Syria, fueled by growing instability, violence and a lack of progress toward a political solution to its 12-year conflict. On top of violence from the Syrian conflict, the Syrian people now face 'a terrifying prospect of a potential wider escalation' following Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks on Israel and the ongoing retaliatory military action. 'Spillover into Syria is not just a risk; it has already begun,' the U.N. envoy for Syria said. Pedersen pointed to airstrikes attributed to Israel hitting Syria's airports in Aleppo and Damascus several times, and retaliation by the United States against what it said were multiple attacks on its forces 'by groups that it claims are backed by Iran, including on Syrian territory.' Syria was seeing a surge in violence even before Oct. 7. Pedersen said the number of Syrians killed, injured and displaced is at its highest since 2020, citing a significant intensification of attacks in government-controlled areas, including an unclaimed attack on a graduation ceremony at a military academy in Homs, which the government attributes to terrorist organizations. He also reported government rocket attacks throughout October on Hayat Tahrir al Sham . the insurgent group that rules much of rebel-held northwest Syria - as well as a major escalation of Turkish strikes in the northeast following an attack on Turkish government facilities in Ankara. The Turkish strikes have killed dozens, damaged health facilities, schools and camps, and displaced more than 120,000 civilians, he said.   U.S. Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield accused 'terrorist groups,' some backed by Syria and Iran, of threating to expand the Gaza conflict 'by using Syrian territory to plot and launch attacks against Israel.' She also accused Syria of allowing Iran and terrorist groups to use its international airports for military purposes. 'We call on the regime to curb the activities of Iran-backed militias in Syria, stop the flow of foreign arms and fighters through its territory, and cease escalatory actions in the Golan Heights,' she said. 'The United States has warned all actors not to take advantage of the situation in Gaza to widen or deepen the conflict,' she said. 'And we’ve made clear that we will respond to attacks on our own personnel and facilities in Syria or against U.S. interests, and where appropriate exercise our right to self-defense forcefully, proportionately and in a manner that minimizes civilian harm.'   Ambassador Nebenzia of Russia, Syria’s closest ally, accused Israeli forces of striking sites in Syria, including civilian airports, and called U.S. attacks in the country "illegitimate actions" and “a gross violation of Syria’s sovereignty.” He also claimed U.S. economic interests and involvement “in contraband with Syrian grain and oil” have prevailed over political interests. Nebenzia said there is a sharp increase in tensions around the Israel-Hamas conflict and attacks like the ones by the U.S. might provoke spillover to the entire region.  “This must not be deemed acceptable," he said.   Iran’s U.N. Ambassador Iravani refuted all U.S. claims, saying his country is in Syria at Damascus' request to fight terrorism. He accused Washington of attempting 'to shift the blame from the culprit to the victim.' Iravani told the council the United States’ 'unwavering support' for Israel 'has rendered it part of the problem.” He said the U.S. and some Western countries were attempting to give Israel an unjust right to self-defense while ignoring the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination, and equating the Palestinian resistance with terrorism. 'Iran’s primary objective is to avoid any escalation in the region,” the ambassador stressed, which is why it has endorsed international calls for an immediate cease-fire and humanitarian aid for people in Gaza. However, Iravani said Iran will respond to any threat, attack or aggression endangering its security. (Source: abcnews)

Globalization

Oct 31, 2023  “Hundreds of thousands are signing up for Telegram from Israel and the Palestinian Territories,” Durov, Telegram’s Russian founder, posted on his public channel on October 8, adding that the company was bringing support for Hebrew and Arabic to the app. In the absence of official information, Hamas attacks brought a surge of users - sustained government pressure on the country’s press had driven people in search of alternative news sources. Previous escalations of violence tended to coincide with an uptick of activity on Telegram. Hamas accounts have been banned from most social media platforms for years. But, when it launched its attack on Israel on October 7, Hamas had a huge presence on Telegram. “Everyone affected should have reliable access to news and private communication in these dire times,” Durov said. 'Telegram was already familiar to many Israelis, who, among other things, often procure cannabis through the app'. Hamas posted gruesome images and videos that were designed to go viral. Telegram’s lax moderation ensured they were seen around the world. Hamas take control of the narrative in those first few hours - during the course of the day, Telegram, which has 800 million users worldwide, became the main source of videos and information spreading to other social media platforms, including X, Instagram, and TikTok, where content was being reposted with little to no verification. The platform’s potential to rapidly disseminate easily downloadable and sharable content made it a crucial weapon - in real-time. One of the most-viewed videos featured professionally filmed and edited footage of armed paragliders landing on sandy terrain and storming buildings. It isn’t clear from when or where the video was filmed. Other footage, seemingly recorded on body cameras and phones, shows fighters crossing the Gaza-Israel Barrier and exchanging fire. And cameras pan over slain Israeli soldiers in the aftermath of an attack. This video, and others like it, have received more than 700,000 views apiece on Telegram. Hamas’ own channels still played the commanding role. Whereas before it was somewhat dated, now it was specifically designed: Livestreams were accompanied by a deluge of short, branded clips that could easily be shared. They definitely had highly produced content ready to go, and then their ability to post and upload in real time as the attack was unfolding also shows there was a degree of sophisticated media strategy. SITE Intelligence Group, a consultancy monitors the Qassam Brigades channel claims that Hamas’ Telegram strategy totally changed on October 7. Katz, SITE’s executive director and founder believes the group’s strategy was partly inspired by the islamic state’s playbook. Telegram used to be the app of choice for islamic state. (In an interview in 2015, Durov replied that is would simply find another app if kicked off his. 'I still think we’re doing the right thing - protecting our users’ privacy,' he said. Shortly afterward, the islamic state carried out a series of attacks in Paris, killing 130 people, earning Telegram widespread criticism. Telegram subsequently banned 78 is channels, created a bot to track and eliminate new is channels, and cooperated with Europol). Islamic state has shown how to reach a wider audience and how to process content in such a way that it evokes both fear and admiration. But Hamas is an enemy of the islamic state. Hamas, unlike islamic state, maintains international contacts, and many governments don’t regard it as a terrorist group, particularly in Asia and Latin America. In one open source intelligence war-watching group on Telegram, videos of IDF forces being humbled - basic quad drones dropping grenades on Israel’s state-of-the-art Mark IV Merkava tanks, followed by footage of soldiers fleeing their vehicles and being captured by Hamas fighters were seen. Five hours after the attacks started, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that his country was at war. One of the biggest fronts Israel failed on, and one of the biggest things that helped create panic in Israeli society, was mis- and disinformation during the first 72 hours. With little to no official information, many desperate Israelis were not just watching violent videos released by Hamas; they were also getting caught up in a mess of conspiracy theories. While videos and images of victims were soon going viral on major social networks, the most extreme content can all be traced back to Telegram: Hamas’ real-time broadcasting of its attack on Israel as psychological warfare - militants jumping the border fence, old women being taken away, people being murdered in their beds. The weaponization of Telegram played a key role in this psychological attack. In some groups, the attacks were already being blamed on the IDF for having betrayed Netanyahu. Other conspiracy theory groups on Telegram and X claimed it was all a false-flag operation by the Israeli prime minister. By the evening of October 7, the IDF, which had been concentrating on X, began posting more regularly on Telegram. By then it was already observing a very clear pipeline of images and videos of facts distorted and events exaggerated or misinterpreted from Telegram to X. The Telegram’s lack of robust content moderation, alongside its sprawling honeycomb of public channels and groups, enabled content to rapidly reach millions of people. Hamas’ Telegram channels grew rapidly in the first five days of the conflict. Qassam Brigades, the channel dedicated to the organization’s military wing, tripled in size from 205,000 to nearly 620,000 subscribers, alongside a tenfold increase in the number of views per post, according to analysis by the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab). In the year prior to the attacks, the channel had only grown by 20,000 followers. Apple and Google which host Telegram in their app stores have now begun asking the company to ban Hamas’ main channels. Before the takedown requests from Google and Apple, the Qassam Brigades channel was nearing 800,000 subscribers. It is currently down to roughly 670,000. Telegram has declined to block channels disseminating extreme content. In a post on his public channel on October 13, Durov alluded to the difficulty of policing speech in a conflict, and cited a Hamas warning before a strike on the Israeli city of Ashkelon as a reason not to act: 'Would shutting down their channel help save lives - or would it endanger more lives?' Other channels became popular, too. Gaza Now, which the DFRLab describes as 'Hamas aligned,' doubled its 350,000 subscribers in the first 24 hours of the crisis, while the average number of views in the first five days increased tenfold. The channel currently has more than 1.9 million subscribers and consistently reposts Hamas content. On Android, people now see a message telling them that two of the main Hamas-run channels, including Qassam Brigades, cannot be displayed on 'Telegram apps downloaded from the Google Play Store.” Telegram instructs Android users who want “fewer restrictions" to download the app directly from its website. Telegram, which is headquartered in Dubai, has once again found itself at the center of a complex geopolitical and humanitarian crisis. Katz alleges that Hamas’ social media activity has been effective in cultivating rare support across disparate radical Islamist groups around the world, whether Sunni or Shia. Without Telegram, this would have been impossible, argues Katz. "It allows for quick uploads and sharing, to utilize automated bots, to stay anonymous. No other platform comes close.' On October 13, on Durov’s public channel he claimed that Telegram’s moderators and unspecified 'AI tools' were removing “millions of obviously harmful content.” Campo, who directed Telegram’s growth, business, and partnerships from 2015 to 2021, argues that Durov has chosen to “maximize' amplification of content on his platform. Public channels, for example, can have an unlimited number of subscribers while private groups can reach 200,000 people, far more than WhatsApp’s 1,024-member limit. Being able to upload any type of file of up to 2 GB enables Telegram to become a bridge for content between social networks and other platforms. It reveals the outsize power of one of the world's most tight-lipped technology companies - the power of the platform to quickly spread unfiltered content ahead of traditional media, as well as the true extent of Hamas’ weaponization of the app. Many believe Instagram has been censoring and shadow-banning pro-Palestinian accounts, some of which had resorted to burying the #IStandWithIsrael hashtag in posts to get seen. Meta, which owns Instagram, said it had fixed a number of bugs that may have been causing such issues. Neff, who helped cofound Telegram and worked at VK, the Russian social network Durov used to run, believes that Durov sees Telegram as an almost neutral, public utility: He accepts there will always be both good users and bad users - but that Durov believes good people will prevail against bad people. 'They use Telegram to communicate safely, and reliably. And in situations like the [current conflict in the] Middle East, they ideally warn each other of danger which might hopefully save some lives,” Neff says. As of February 2023, there were only 60 employees. 'The almost nonexistent trust and safety team in no way can keep up with the daily global chaos they are now faced with at the scale they’ve become,' Neff adds. Unlike other platforms, Telegram does not appear to have a codified process for dealing with crises like this, instead tending to make changes under intense legal or media pressure. In the European Union, regulators have warned social media platforms against content that contravenes its Digital Services Act. A spokesman for the European Commission told that they are in contact with Telegram, without offering details. After a recent meeting of the European Union Internet Forum and pressure from Germany, Hamas’ Telegram channels are now blocked in a number of EU member states. The Hamas group is trialing a rudimentary app for keeping people updated on the latest news and announcements from the Qassam Brigades - another example of its expanded technical capabilities. Hamas seems to be preparing for their communications to be disrupted in the event that Telegram does remove the group. Whatever happens, as Telegram continues to develop into the de facto platform for witnessing war in real-time, unfiltered and unmoderated, it is changing the way the world experiences violent conflict. Hamas’ ability to widely share images and videos of its attacks have the potential to inspire further violence, Katz argues. This is going to escalate and be a much bigger problem. "Because this will lead to more violence around the world.' And for that, Katz claims, Telegram will be in no small part responsible. “The feeling now is that [Telegram is] not closing anything,' Nashif, a Palestinian digital rights activist tells from his home in the northern Israeli city of Haifa. Nashif has seen Israeli channels mocking murdered Palestinians.'“People abusing the [dead] bodies, making jokes …' Nashif and 7amleh, the civil rights organization he leads, have been documenting cases of Palestinians being threatened by Israeli channels and groups on Telegram since the conflict began. “That means that Telegram is also not going to shut Israeli channels inciting [violence],' he said. “I think that the owner and leadership of the company are very aware that this is bringing to them millions of people and subscribers,' Nashif alleges. 'I think it's part of the business model.' Based on prior examples, Durov appears to have an aversion to interfering or taking sides in political and international crises, based more on pragmatism than principle. 'First of all, he’s worried about the size of the audience", Rozenberg, who worked with Durov from the early days of VK in 2007, before becoming director of special areas, which involved anti-spam work at Telegram from 2016 to 2017, claims. "And if he started blocking channels or content with pro-Palestine and/or pro-Israel positions, he would be blamed by huge parts of Telegram's audience in a lot of countries, that he supported another side of the conflict.” 'So, it’s just business.' Source: wired)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video dubai russia india taiwan japan china map iran photo nato egypt germany europe israel turkey europol kosovo ukraine gaza serbia albania qatar yemen philippines syria unitedkingdom palestine lebanon europeanunion unitednations unitedstates europeancommission mediterraneansea redsea globalization pacificocean bosniaandherzegovina northmacedonia taiwanstrait

2023. X. 19. Magyarország. Aréna című műsorban Sulyok, az Alkotmánybíróság elnöke (video)

2023.10.20. 23:55 Eleve

.

Sulyok, az Alkotmánybíróság elnöke

az Inforádió Aréna című műsorában

- video -

(Forrás: YouTube / Inforádió):

https://tinyurl.com/yt5uhxhc

 

Felülírhatja-e az európai jog a nemzeti alkotmányokat? Mi a különbség a nemzeti jogrendszerek és az Európai Unió jogrendszere között? Melyik táplálkozik szuverenitásból, és melyik származtatott, átruházott hatáskörökből? Milyen az európai jogi tér? Mindegyik jogrendszer önálló? Melyik csúcsán milyen csúcsszerv áll a jogértelmezést illetően? Van-e köztük hierarchia? Mi történik, ha a nemzeti Alkotmánybíróság egy jogi kérdés megítélésében más döntésre jut, mint az európai jogot értelmező Európai Unió Bírósága? Milyen megoldás van az efféle kollíziós helyzetekre?     Elsőbbsége van-e minden helyzetben az európai jognak, akár még a nemzeti alkotmányokkal szemben is? Milyen megoldásokat dolgozott ki a német Alkotmánybíróság EU-s jog és a nemzeti alkotmány ütközéseinek felülvizsgálatára? Mit jelent az, hogyha egy nemzeti Alkotmánybíróság úgy dönt az Európai Unió Bírósága egyik ítéletéről, hogy túlterjeszkedik a saját jogterületén (ultra vires) és önkényes, ezért nem érvényes? Beavatkozhat-e akár az Európai Bizottság, akár egy nemzeti kormány (adott esetben a német) egy nemzeti Alkotmánybíróság ítélethozatalába?     Széteshet-e az Európai Unió joga ezeknek a vitáknak a hatására? Visszavehet-e átruházott hatáskört egy nemzeti kormány az Európai Uniótól, ha az nem gyakorolja ezt hatékonyan? Milyen határozata van ebben a tárgykörben a magyar Alkotmánybíróságnak? Hogyan vezethető le a nemzeti identitás a nemzeti Alaptörvényből?     Hol az Alkotmánybíróság helye a magyar jogrendszerben? Mi a magyar Alkotmánybíróság történetének két fő fázisa? Mennyiben hasonlítanak a magyar Alkotmánybíróság 2012 óta létező jogai és hatáskörei a német Alkotmánybíróságéhoz? Melyek az alkotmányjogi panaszok típusai? Hogyan gyakorolhat alapjogi normakontrollt az Alkotmánybíróság az egyes bírósági döntések, és így a teljes bírósági rendszer fölött?     Van-e olyan jogi kérdés, amely nem függ össze az Alaptörvénnyel? Milyen az alkotmánybíráskodás és az Alkotmánybíróság kapcsolata ma? Hogyan kérhet a magyar Országgyűlés előzetes normakontrollt az Alkotmánybíróságtól? Hogyan kérhet normakontrollt a köztársasági elnök? Hány konkrét példa volt ezekre a jelenlegi ciklusban? Miért érzékeli egyfajta elefántcsont-toronynak az Alkotmánybíróságot?

Kulcsszavak:

Alaptörvény     Alkotmány      Alkotmánybíróság     Bajorország     Európa     Európai Bizottság     Európai Parlament    Európai Unió     Európai Bíróság     Hollandia      Magyarország     Németország     Országgyűlés      Románia     video

2023. X. 23 - 2024. II. 22. között 9782 megtekintés.

 

. 4 2 22

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video magyarország románia németország európa hollandia alkotmánybíróság alkotmány bajorország országgyűlés alaptörvény európaiunió európaiparlament európaibizottság európaibíróság

2023. X. 1. Poland, Slovakia, European Commission, Nagorno Karabakh, Russia, Ukraine, United Kingdom, China, United States

2023.10.01. 23:32 Eleve

.

Poland
Sun October 1, 2023  Polish opposition hold Warsaw rally ahead of October 15 vote. The upcoming election pits two parties with very different policy prescriptions for Poland’s future: the more nationalist, inward-looking, anti-immigration vision of the PiS versus the liberal, pro-Europe PO political movement. Organizers said that 1 million people attended the “March of a Million Hearts.' The event began at 12 p.m. with speeches from several leaders. Attendees began a 4-kilometer march an hour later. Polish press agency PAP quoted local police saying about 100,000 people participated. The conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party has ruled Poland since 2015. Tusk, the former European Council president now is leading the PO. Poland’s conservative government has found itself repeatedly at odds with the EU in recent years. The country’s anti-abortion laws are the strictest in Europe. The PiS was hoping to woo conservative voters by promoting a Catholic image. Two years ago Poland’s high court was defying the primacy of EU law - it deemed EU rules were subordinate to Polish law. Now Warsaw Mayor Trzaskowski said that he hoped that today’s event was the beginning of a march 'toward a completely different Poland.' (Source: cnn)

Slovakia
October 1, 2023 
Slovakia, an eastern European nation of about 5.5 million people, was going to the polls to choose its fifth prime minister in four years after seeing a series of shaky coalition governments. The final opinion polls published last week showed SMER and PS neck and neck. SMER party headed by a pro-Kremlin figure came out top after securing more votes than expected, what could pose a challenge to NATO and EU unity on Ukraine. Fico doubled down on his rhetoric, said he “will do everything” in his power to kickstart Russia-Ukraine peace talks. “More killing is not going to help anyone,” Fico said. Negotiations are unlikely to be welcomed in Ukraine, as for now they would likely involve proposals in which territory is ceded to Russia, which is a non-starter for Kyiv. PS's Šimečka said his party will do 'everything it could' to prevent Fico from governing. 'We think it will be really bad news for the country, for our democracy, for our rule of law, and for our international standing and for our finances and for our economy if Mr Fico forms the government' Šimečka said. The moderate-left Hlas party, led by a former SMER member and formed as an offshoot of SMER following internal disputes, came third with 14.7% of the vote, and could play kingmaker. With seven political parties reaching the 5% threshold needed to enter the parliament, coalition negotiations will almost certainly include multiple players and could be long and messy. Fico needs at least two other parties to gain a majority in the parliament. A coalition with Hlas and the far-right nationalist SNS appears most likely.  Fico has pledged an immediate end to Slovak military support for Ukraine and promised to block Ukraine’s NATO ambitions in what would upend Slovakia’s staunch backing for Ukraine. Pellegrini, the leader of Hlas, said his party was “very pleased with the result,” adding that the party will “make the right decision” to become part of a government that will lead Slovakia out of the “decay and crisis that (the country’s previous leaders) got us into.” In the election campaign Pellegrini has suggested Slovakia “had nothing left to donate” to Kyiv, but also said that the country should continue to manufacture ammunition that is shipped to Ukraine. A SMER-led government could have serious consequences for the region. Slovakia was among the handful of European countries pushing for tough EU sanctions against Russia and has donated a large amount of military equipment to Ukraine. Fico has blamed “Ukrainian Nazis and fascists” for provoking Russia’s President Putin into launching the invasion, repeating the narrative Putin has used to justify his invasion. While in opposition, Fico became a close ally of Hungary’s Prime Minister Victor Orbán, especially when it came to criticism of the EU. There is speculation that, if he returns to power, Fico and Orbán could gang up together and create obstacles for Brussels. If Poland’s governing Law and Justice party manages to win a third term in Polish parliamentary elections next month, 'this bloc of EU troublemakers could become even stronger'. Polls suggest Fico’s pro-Russia sentiments are shared by many Slovaks. According to a survey by GlobSec, a Bratislava-based security think tank, 40% of Slovaks believed Russia was responsible for the war in Ukraine, the lowest proportion among the eight central and eastern European and Baltic states GlobSec focused on. In the Czech Republic, which used to form one country with Slovakia, 71% of people blame Russia for the war. The same research found that 50% of Slovaks perceive the United States – the country’s long-term ally – as a security threat. (Source: cnn)

01-Oct-2023  Slovakia held parliamentary elections yesterrday – and the winner raises questions over whether the central European country will continue to support Ukraine. The results show that a new government can only be formed by a coalition, which was expected. But the big question now would be, who is going to make the sweetest coalition offer to other parties? Fico came to his party headquarters almost as soon as voting stations closed at 22:45 local time. He refused to make any comments or statements. In the PS camp, their only hope is that the main point of their campaign would be followed by the new coalition government. 'I'm hopeful that, again, regardless of how the election plays out, Slovakia will continue to support Ukraine as it has until today,' PS leader Simecka said. Slovakia is one of the biggest suppliers of weapons and ammunition to Ukraine, its easterly neighbor with whom it shares a 100km border. But judging by what the third main party leader Peter Pellegrini said earlier, yesterday morning, it seems that PS hopes about continued support might not materialize. "Slovakia has depleted all options for any military help for Ukraine, so this, of course, is not a topic for Slovakia anymore," said Pellegrini. "Of course, humanitarian aid is available when needed. "What I would focus on and would like to do is agree a deal with Brussels to allocate some of the future help intended for Ukraine to come to Slovakia, to help flourish eastern Slovakia," he added. Some of the voters at a Bratislava voting station expressed their dissatisfaction with the country's Ukraine policies and admitted that some deep divisions exist in the country. "It is full of Ukrainians here," said one female voter. "This is what I seriously do not like. They get benefits. Energy costs went up, everything went up. So basically, they are getting benefits, and we, the citizens, are paying." Another Bratislava resident, Vladimir said: "There are a lot of problems because society is divided into two groups - one is pro-western, and the other is rather pro-eastern. Here in Bratislava, the majority of citizens are unambiguously pro-Western." Bratislava was one of only two regions in the country where pro-EU Progressive Slovakia has won. The issue of supporting Ukraine has dominated these elections, yet the end result of political wheeling and dealing as efforts get underway to form a coalition, remains to be seen. So, which concessions would determine whether Slovakia would continue its military support for Ukraine or if it would turn its back on Brussels's demands and join the ranks of Viktor Orbán's Hungary? Will Slovakia's new coalition government continue to support Ukraine? (Source: cgtn)

Oct. 1 (2023)  The pro-Russia Smer-SSD party won the largest share of seats in Slovakia's parliament during weekend voting, vowing to cut off the country's support for Ukraine. Smer-SSD, led by former Prime Minister Robert Fico, led all other parties with 22.9% of the vote. The Hlas-SD party, led by 'Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini', finished in third place with about 14% while the Slovak National Party won 5.7% of the vote. Those three parties together will hold 81 seats in the 150-seat parliament, good for a six-seat majority should they agree to form a ruling coalition. The pro-European Progesivne slovensko, or PS, led by Simecka, finished in second place with 18% of the vote. Fico was congratulated by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in a post on X,: "Guess who's back! Congratulations to Robert Fico on his undisputable victory at the Slovak parliamentary elections," Orbán wrote. "Always good to work together with a patriot. Looking forward to it!" (Source: upi)

01/10/2023  The career of a pro-Russian politician who was ousted from power five years ago after a journalist was murdered for revealing government corruption. Bodybuilding and misogyny: a fan of Putin, fast cars and football - Robert Fico, 59, leader of the centre-left Smer-D party should return to his former post as prime minister of Slovakia if he can find enough allies to form a government following early parliamentary elections yesterday. Fico’s centre-left party, Direction-Social Democracy (Smer-SD), won 22.9% of the vote, beating the centrist Progressive Slovakia party (17.9%). Fico, who has spent his life navigating the political chessboard, began his career with the Communist Party when he was a lawyer. He first forged a reputation on the European stage as his country’s representative to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg from 1994 to 2000. In 1999, he left the Party of the Democratic Left, the political heir to the Communist Party, to found his own, the Smer-SD. In 2006, this party won a landslide victory in parliament, catapulting Fico to the position of prime minister two years after Slovakia joined the EU. Fico then formed a coalition with the far-right Slovak National Party, which shared his anti-refugee rhetoric and populist leanings, and boosted his popularity during the 2007-2009 global financial crisis by refusing to impose austerity measures. Fico was twice elected as prime minister of this Eastern European country of 5.4 million inhabitants. During the 2015 migration crisis in Europe, he took a stand against migrants, refusing to "create a separate Muslim community in Slovakia" and criticising the European quota programme for distributing refugees. He was forced to resign in 2018 following the murder of investigative journalist Kuciak and his fiancée. The murdered journalist revealed ties between the Italian mafia and the Smer-SD in an article published posthumously. Kuciak's investigation focused on Troskova, a former model who became Fico's assistant. It uncovered links between an Italian businessman, the Calabrian mafia and Troskova, threatening thus Fico’s inner circle. The billionaire businessman Kocner was charged in 2019 with ordering the murder, before being acquitted the following year. Other suspects were convicted after they pleaded guilty, including the shooter, a former soldier who was given a 23-year prison sentence. At the time of the murder, Fico was already known for having a difficult relationship with the press: On more than one occasion, he publicly described Slovak journalists, who regularly accused the government of corruption, as "idiotic hyenas" and "dirty anti-Slovak prostitutes". Even though an anti-corruption coalition took power in 2020, Fico managed to keep his seat in parliament following his resignation.  A survey carried out in 2022 by the Globsec think-tank showed that 54% of Slovaks are vulnerable to the theory that the world is governed by secret groups that want to establish a totalitarian ‘New World Order’. Having previously hailed Slovakia's adoption of the euro as a "historic decision', Fico is now openly attacking the EU, NATO and war-torn Ukraine 'in the hopes of appealing to far-left and far-right voters'. In the streets of the capital Bratislava, the posters of Fico's party promise "stability, order and well-being", of which he claims to be the guarantor. In the new world that Fico promises, migrants and LGBT+ people – the targets of his most virulent attacks – are no longer welcome. "I will certainly never be a supporter of them [LGBT+ people] being able to marry, as we see in other countries," he told a press conference recently, after saying adoption by same-sex couples, which is not possible in Slovakia, was a "perversion". He is married to a lawyer with whom he has a son. The couple are separated. The politician is open about his admiration for Putin's authoritarian rule, writes Slovak sociologist Vasecka in his book 'Fico: Obsessed with Power'. Fico recently announced that he would not authorise the arrest of Putin, who is the subject of an international warrant for alleged war crimes in Ukraine, if he ever came to Slovakia. He also promised on the campaign trail to put an end to Slovakia's military aid to Ukraine. Fico now prefers to avoid all interaction with the press. While campaigning, he addressed his electorate mainly through videos posted on Facebook, YouTube and Telegram – videos that are among the most popular in Slovakia. True to form, he does this in a provocative and misogynistic manner, having made Slovak President Caputova his scapegoat for several years. The anti-corruption lawyer became the country’s president in 2019. 'The daily newspaper Le Monde described in an article one of Fico’s encounters with Caputova in vivid detail. During Labour Day celebrations in May 2022, he called Caputova an "American whore". And "the more of a whore a person is, the more famous they become", he said'. (Source: france24 'with AFP")

European Commission
October 1, 2023  After the U.S. Congress passed a stopgap funding bill late yesterday
that omitted aid to Ukraine, the 'proposition on the table' showed the EU wanted to increase military aid to Ukraine, European Union foreign policy chief Borrell said today after his first in-person meeting with Ukrainian Defence Minister Umerov, who was appointed last month. On X, Borrell said the bloc was preparing 'long-term security commitments for Ukraine'. He told he hoped member states would reach a decision on increasing aid 'before the end of the year'. Umerov said their discussions of EU military aid covered 'artillery & ammunition, air defense, EW (electronic warfare) & long-term assistance programs, trainings, and defence industry localization' in Ukraine. The European Defence Agency said that seven EU countries had ordered ammunition under a procurement scheme to get urgently needed artillery shells to Ukraine and replenish depleted Western stocks. (Source: Reuters)

Nagorno Karabakh
October 1, 2023  Azerbaijan’s prosecutor general
Aliyev issued an arrest warrant for ex-Nagorno-Karabakh leader Arayik Harutyunyan today who led the breakaway region largely populated by ethnic Armenians, between May 2020 and the beginning of September. Less than a month later, the separatist government said it would dissolve itself by the end of 2023 after a three-decade bid for independence. Azerbaijani police arrested one of Harutyunyan’s former prime ministers, Ruben Vardanyan. Arayik Harutyunyan and the enclave’s former military commander, Jalal Harutyunyan, are accused of firing missiles on Azerbaijan’s third-largest city, Ganja, during a 44-day war in late 2020d. The clash between the Azerbaijani military clash and Nagorno Karabakh forces led then to the deployment of Russian peacekeepers in the region. While Baku has pledged to respect the rights of ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, these days many have fled due to fear of reprisals or losing the freedom to use their language and to practice their religion and cultural customs. Today, Armenia’s presidential press secretary, Baghdasaryan, said that 100,483 people had already arrived in Armenia from Nagorno-Karabakh, which had a population of about 120,000 before Azerbaijan’s offensive. Some people lined up for days to escape the region because the only route to Armenia - a winding mountain road - became jammed with slow-moving vehicles. Armenian Health Minister Avanesyan said some people, including older adults, had died while on the road to Armenia as they were “exhausted due to malnutrition, left without even taking medicine with them, and were on the road for more than 40 hours.” Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan alleged Thursday, September 28, that the exodus of ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh amounted to “a direct act of an ethnic cleansing and depriving people of their motherland.” Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry rejected Pashinyan’s accusations, saying the departure of Armenians was 'their personal and individual decision and has nothing to do with forced relocation.' A United Nations delegation arrived in Nagorno-Karabakh today to monitor the situation. The mission is the organization’s first to the region for three decades. Local officials dismissed the visit as a formality. Tadevosyan, spokesperson for Nagorno-Karabakh’s emergency services, said the U.N. representatives had come too late and the number of civilians left in the regional capital of Stepanakert could be counted on one hand. “We walked around the whole city but found no one. There is no general population left,” he said. In Athens, Greece, several hundred Armenians gathered today evening outside the Greek Parliament to protest the upcoming dissolution of Nagorno Karabakh - or Artsakh, as they called it. They then marched to the European Union offices, a few blocks away. The protest was peaceful. (Source: apnews)

Russia
10/1/23  Videos have begun to circulate on social media today showing
a drone strike on a helicopter base. At approximately 7 a.m. ET, Nexta, an independent news outlet based out of Poland, took to X, to share a clip purportedly showing a drone flying over the Russian city of Sochi, a resort city on the Black Sea in southwestern Russia. Roughly an hour later, Gerashchenko, an adviser to the Ukrainian minister of internal affairs, online commentator wrote and shared another clip of the Sochi incident to X. 'Russian Telegram channels report a drone attack near Sochi,' a helicopter parking lot in Adler area was hit, he wrote. A little before 9 a.m. ET, Kyiv Post correspondent Smart shared a third clip of the drone strike, this time showing the craft actually crashing and exploding. Smart also claimed that flights in the Sochi area had been canceled as a result. Ukrainska Pravda reported that the strike in Sochi had been carried out by the Ukrainian Defense Intelligence agency. Around the same time as the strike in Sochi, The Kyiv Independent reported that another drone strike had been successfully carried out in Smolensk, near Russia's border with Belarus. This strike targeted an aircraft factory, operated by Russia's Tactical Missile Armament state corporation. (Source: newsweek)

October 1, 2023  At memorials to Prigozhin, who was killed in an unexplained plane crash exactly 40 days ago, dozens of mourners hailed the mercenary chief as a patriotic hero of Russia who had spoken truth to power. At memorials in Moscow and other Russian cities dozens of Wagner fighters and ordinary Russians paid their respects, though there was no mass outpouring of grief. Russian state television was silent. In eastern Orthodoxy, it is believed that the soul makes its final journey to either heaven or hell on the 40th day after death. Putin was yesterday shown meeting one of the most senior former commanders of the Wagner mercenary group and discussing how best to use "volunteer units" in the Ukraine war. (Source: Reuters)

1 Oct 2023  The regime in Chechnya is poised to stay intact if Kadyrov is to leave the position of governor early, it is resilient enough to survive any change of leadership. Kadyrov sits atop the regime hierarchy but he alone does not represent the entirety of the regime. It is a personalised, but stable regime. After taking over the reins of power from his father, Akhmat, who was assassinated in 2004, Kadyrov has systematically sought to eliminate anyone who could pose a threat to his position. Critics and rivals have been assassinated or have had to flee abroad, where they live in fear of being targeted. Kadyrov has also secured his post by developing a personal connection with Putin. Their familial, nearly paternal relationship is closer than any other the Russian president has had with a regional leader. Kadyrov receives significant funds from the federal budget. Chechnya is one of the most subsidised regions in Russia; by its leader’s own admission, it would not survive a month without funding from Moscow. The Kremlin perceives these funds as a way to buy stability and peace in the republic, which suffered through two wars in the 1990s. There are a number of powerful men who manage various aspects of governance. Chechnya’s Speaker of Parliament Daudov and Deputy Prime Minister Vismuradov handle internal affairs, particularly in relation to repressing the public and maintaining stability. Both men have reputations for extreme violence and have been connected to cases of torture. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the pair have also overseen deployments of Chechen fighters to the battlefield. Prime Minister Muslim Khuchiev, a traditional bureaucrat, manages conventional governance operations, having occupied a variety of government positions. Delimkhanov, Kadyrov’s most trusted lieutenant and a member of the Russian Duma, controls the regime’s informal, frequently criminal, operations outside Chechnya. He has been responsible for stamping out opposition to Kadyrov among the Chechen diaspora and has been accused of organising several assassinations. He has also played a prominent public role in Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine, deploying into occupied territories with Chechen forces. These powerful figures would be able to continue Kadirov's regime’s operations, likely with one of them serving as the acting regional head. Kadyrov is also grooming his eldest son, Akhmat, as his successor, although he remains roughly seven years away from meeting the legal age requirement to be a governor. The Kremlin is likely to accept Akhmat as Ramzan’s successor not just because his father desires it, but because it maintains the current structure of relations. This keeps Chechnya as a political constant, rather than an unpredictable vassal region. Stability is also guaranteed by its massive repressive apparatus, which swiftly roots out any form of opposition when it appears. For example, in September last year, after Moscow announced partial mobilisation, Chechen women went out in Grozny to demonstrate against the decision. The protesters were taken to the Grozny mayor’s office by the security services and beaten, while their male relatives were forcibly deployed to the front in Ukraine. In December, a fight between two security officials in the Chechen city of Urus-Martan was followed by a large-scale security campaign to detain residents who were entertained by the altercation, witnessed and recorded the incident on their phones. The Chechen public’s means to organise armed resistance are limited. In the 1990s, Chechens fought for independence from Russia but were defeated in the second Russo-Chechen war, with many fighters leaving the republic. Today, the bulk of Chechen opposition forces have moved to Ukraine to continue their struggle against Russia. They have no clear path to return to their homeland. Crossing overland from the Southern Caucasus appears not possible at the moment. Georgia remains unfriendly towards Chechens due to its fraught history of spillover conflict and a failed attempt to exploit fighters from the region. Azerbaijan likewise would not allow Chechen fighters to transit through its territory out of its own security considerations and reluctance to anger Moscow. The major challenge would be of a limited arms supply. Some weapons caches from the 2000s’ insurgency remain hidden in the woods, but their number and usability are questionable. The war in Ukraine could increase the availability of weapons within Russia, but that would not be sufficient on its own to supply a substantial armed resistance force. Kadyrov is also taking measures to prevent a new rebellion. He reduced the number of Chechen troops fighting in Ukraine within the first few months of the war and last summer ordered the security services to get better prepared for underground fighting. He can also rely on military backing from Moscow were there to be internal strife and his regime would keep Chechen aspirations for freedom and independence at bay. Rumours about Kadyrov’s health deteriorating have surfaced for a few years now. On September 15, Yusov, a spokesman for the Ukrainian military intelligence, told journalists that Kadyrov, the governor of the North Caucasian republic Chechnya, was in a coma. Some suggested he was in a hospital in Moscow, receiving treatment for kidney problems, others that he was suffering from the negative effects of drug addiction, and a minority even declared his death. There seem to be hopes in some quarters that in the event of Kadyrov’s debilitating illness or death, Chechnya, and by extension Russia, would be destabilised, which would help Ukraine win the war.  The health condition of Chechnya’s leader does not matter much. (Source: aljazeera)

Ukraine
September 30, 2023  Earlier this year government officials effectively banished clergy loyal to the Moscow patriarch from the most sacred parts of a gold-domed monastery complex called the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra. Some told they worry their church's banishment from parts of the monastery is only a beginning. "Our monks lived here from ancient times," said Metropolitan Clement. "Access is closed now to clergymen and to many believers who could come to to pray here even in Soviet times." Metropolitan Clement is spokesman for the largest Orthodox community in Ukraine, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate, which has been governed by the Moscow patriarch since the 1600s. He says millions of his church's believers face religious persecution. In February 2022, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine with the blessing of Kirill, the Moscow patriarch and head of the Russian Orthodox Church. Speaking last year, Kirill promised Russian soldiers who die in the conflict that their sacrifice washes away all sins. Kirill's embrace of the war sparked growing rage and division within Ukraine, where millions worship in Moscow-affiliated Orthodox churches. The war has placed their traditional faith, dating back generations, in conflict. Officials with the Moscow-aligned church say they have taken steps to distance themselves from Patriarch Kirill.  In May 2022, clergy within Ukraine's Moscow-aligned Orthodox church circulated a resolution that would have led to a complete divorce from Russia and its influence. That resolution was never ratified. Clergy in Kyiv issued a statement last year formally condemning the invasion. They also note that many soldiers fighting against Russia are members of the Moscow-aligned church. Researchers say before the war began there were roughly 12,000 Orthodox parishes in Ukraine linked to Russia. Over the last 19 months, only about 1,500 of those congregations have voted to join a break-away Ukrainian-led church. Russia-aligned parishes remain particularly popular in eastern Ukraine. "Thousands of our believers and hundreds of sons of our priests defend Ukraine,' said Metropolitan Clement. 'Burials of defenders of Ukraine take place every day at our churches." Public anger at Orthodox clergy who remain under Patriarch Kirill's purview surged again earlier this year after Ukraine's intelligence service, known as the SBU, released a wire-tap phone recording of a top religious leader, Metropolitan Pavel, apparently praising Russia's invasion. "There are already Russian flags everywhere," Pavel can be heard saying. "And people are happy. People are happy." A separate recording released last November appeared to show Moscow-aligned Orthodox believers in Kyiv singing, "Mother Russia is awakening." Outside the monastery complex in Kyiv angry Ukrainians' counter-protests turn up on most days to confront Orthodox worshippers loyal to the Russian tradition, shouting insults through bullhorns and accusing them of disloyalty. Metropolitan Pavel is accused of secretly backing Russia's invasion. He remains under house arrest in Kyiv awaiting trial on charges of disloyalty. Meanwhile at religious services in Kyiv, many worshippers carry his photograph and describe him as a martyr of their faith. There's a growing debate in Ukraine over just how much their society should tolerate Orthodox believers loyal to the Moscow church in a time of bitter war. Religious scholars say roughly a hundred different religions are practiced freely and without interference within the country. But Ukraine's government views Orthodox clergy influenced by Russia as a threat. The SBU has been raiding Moscow-aligned churches, searching homes of some top clergy and prosecuting priests suspected of actively aiding Russia. Some religious leaders in Ukraine say it's time for the Moscow-aligned church to be banned outright. Omelian, a priest and spokesman for the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, which is fully independent of Moscow, governed entirely within Ukraine, describes the Moscow-aligned church as a threat. This accusation - that Orthodox believers loyal to the Moscow patriarch are a danger to national security - frightens some believers, who insist that their faith is nonpolitical. "We're living in a country that's not free and we can't be sure of our safety," said a man who would only identify himself as Vladislov. He told he feared persecution if he provided his full name. Nikiforov, a religious scholar who worships in a Moscow-aligned church, told that government officials should arrest and prosecute anyone, including priests, found to be actively aiding Russia. But the country and its police should respect the faith of millions who want to go on worshipping as they did before the full-scale invasion. "People still will go to underground churches. They will go to [worship] in their rooms or their houses and this is very dangerous for the Ukrainian state." "It's impossible to close or to destroy the biggest religious organization in Ukraine," Nikiforov said. (Source: npr)

01.10.2023  Ukraine reported today that the Russian army launched attacks across the country during the night. An announcement from the Ukrainian Air Force said that Russia used 30 Iranian-made Shahed UAVs in the attacks. Sixteen of these UAVs were shot down by Ukrainian air defense systems, it added. The military administration of the northeastern Kharkiv region also said that the Russian army carried out an attack on the city with three S-300 missiles. A fire broke out as a result of one of the missiles hitting a facility. (Source: aa) 

United Kingdom
01 October, 2023  UK Defence Minister Shapps, who was appointed to the role last month, said that after a discussion on Friday, September 29 with British military chiefs, he wanted to deploy military instructors to Ukraine in addition to training Ukrainian armed forces in Britain or other Western countries. 'Particularly in the west of the country, I think the opportunity now is to bring more things 'in country',' he added. Shapps added that he hoped British defence companies such as BAE Systems would proceed with plans to set up arms factories in Ukraine. Hours after his comments were published, PM Rishi Sunak told reporters at the start of the governing Conservative Party's annual conference in Manchester that there were no immediate plans to send British troops to Ukraine. "That's something for the long term, not the here and now. There are no British soldiers that will be sent to fight in the current conflict." Britain has provided five-week military training courses to around 20,000 Ukrainians over the past year, and intends to train a similar number going forward. To date, Britain and its allies have avoided a formal military presence in Ukraine to reduce the risk of a direct conflict with Russia. Former Russian President Medvedev today said any British soldiers training Ukrainian troops in Ukraine would be legitimate targets for Russian forces. (Source: thenewarab)

China
1st October 2023  Abandoned railways, half-built bridges & a sea of roads to nowhere - under Xi, China has admitted it has grand plans to establish itself on the world stage as a pioneering global influence by 2050. Xi unveiled the world’s most ambitious infrastructure project 10 years ago this month – wooing Asia, Africa and the Middle East with bold promises. Dubbed the “project of the century', the Belt and Road Initiative was billed as a mega plan to create trade routes through huge swathes of Eurasia, with China at the centre. They boast of an “all-weather” partnership with Pakistan, a mutual defence treaty with North Korea, and an “unbreakable” friendship with Belarus. With promises of loans and vast infrastructure projects like roads, railways and bridges, more than 150 countries have signed up. It substantially broadened China’s sphere of influence and China’s tendrils now extend far beyond the Indo-Pacific – reaching deep into the Middle East, Africa and beyond. In most parts of Sub-Saharan, China has already displaced the US and has become the primary influencer. Even in Israel, China’s influence has expanded rapidly. In the coming years, the potential flashpoints will be Iran and Ethiopia. It all forms part of Xi’s plan for China to become the most powerful global power by extending a friendly hand to a web of potential new allies. But a decade on, his vision appears to be crumbling in many parts of the world – halted by bankruptcy, corruption and mountains of debt. According to research lab AidData, one-third of projects have been plagued by furious protests, corruption scandals, labour violations, or environment problems. Many have been left unable to keep up with the return payments. Building projects end up being ditched or unfinished until the debt is settled. After a decade of construction, experts told that Xi’s flagship project has mostly crumbled – leaving many poorer countries trapped by China’s control. As debt mounts, it’s feared more of these projects will go unfinished – and greedy Chinese lenders will seize control of land and key assets in lieu of repayment. Some suggest that it is a plan to further China’s ambitions using 'predatory loans' and 'debt traps' to bring nations’ under their sphere of influence. Some countries have become too reliant on China – ending up in forms of debt dependence on China, in a debt spiral with unfinished projects. British MI6 chief Moore warned China’s use of money is means to “get people on the hook” - he said the country has also enlisted the use of 'data traps' as it attempts to build it’s global intelligence. “If you allow another country to gain access to really critical data about your society, over time that will erode your sovereignty, you no longer have control over that data,” he explained. In terms of power politics, Xi has successfully realised his objectives through the Belt and Road Initiative – positioning China at the forefront of global power politics. In some places, the money associated with it has bled away due to corruption, in others because of inefficiency, and elsewhere because of change of governments and broader political factors. Countries such as Kazakhstan, Kenya, Laos, Montenegro and Sri Lanka have found themselves crippled by debt and reliant on Beijing. In Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, enormous concrete columns are a daily reminder of a China-funded railway that was stopped after a corruption scandal. In Kenya, the Standard Gauge Railway, supposed to weave 290 miles, connecting the coastal city of Mombasa to Nairobi was halted in 2019 after China withheld funding – 'ending in a field a few hundred miles' short of its destination. The new highway connecting the city of Bar on Montenegros Adriatic coast to landlocked neighbour Serbia, (Bar-Boljare highway) is being constructed by China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC), the large state-owned Chinese company. Chinese workers have spent six years carving tunnels through solid rock and raising concrete pillars above gorges and canyons, but the road in effect goes nowhere. Two sleek new roads vanish into mountain tunnels high above a sleepy Montenegrin village, the unlikely endpoint of a billion-dollar project that is threatening to derail the tiny country's economy. Almost 130 kilometres still needs to be built at a likely cost of at least one billion euros ($1.2 billion). The government has already burnt through $944 million in Chinese loans to complete the first stretch of road, just 41 kilometres, making it among the world's most expensive pieces of tarmac which has left the country crippled with debt. Where the environment is less stable – like in parts of Africa or the Middle East – then Chinese investment continues to be prone to accusations of low local benefit coming due to import of Chinese labour, poor environmental standards, and corruption. But the bottom line is that for many countries, the BRI offers an alternative to western support. When it comes to China, that if it’s a choice between an imperfect project, and no project at all, more often than not the former is the best option. (Source: thesun)

United States
October 1, 2023  President Biden has given the Pentagon the green light to supply Ukraine with an unspecified number of MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile Systems, or ATACMS - a series of short-range, surface-to-surface ballistic missiles that have been in service for more than three decades. The U.S. military first used them against the forces of Iraqi dictator Hussein during the First Gulf War in 1991. The U.S. has around 3,000 ATACMS and will likely send either the Block 1 or Block 1A ATACMS to Ukraine. Weighting almost 3,700 pounds, the older Block 1 version has a range of up to 103 miles and can carry a single warhead of up to 1,250 pounds. The main available Block 1 warhead is essentially a big cluster munition that can pack almost 1,000 M74 bomblets that are designed to kill and maim enemy infantry and destroy weapon systems through blast and fragmentation. 'Cluster munitions have proven extremely effective on the ground', and even the Russian military leadership is warning about the danger. An ATACMS Block 1 strike against a concentrated large Russian force could completely wipe it out and stop an offensive or counteroffensive in its tracks. In the current battlefield, Block 1 ATACMS munitions can reach almost all of Russian-occupied Ukraine. The newer Block 1A version has a similar weight but a much longer range which depends on the warhead it packs. It can either carry a cluster warhead with 300 M74 bomblets for a range of 186 miles or a unitary high explosive 350-pound warhead for a range of 168 miles. A Block 1A with a high explosive unitary warhead can take out a whole Russian command and control element or targets of similar importance in a single strike. The longer-ranged Block A1 ATACMS missiles can also reach the southern parts of the Crimean Peninsula, as well as portions of Russia. ATACMS munitions are solid-propellant fueled and have internal GPS systems to ensure pinpoint accuracy. The number of ATACMS munitions the U.S. will send to Ukraine will firstly depend on the number of deliveries. If the U.S. is tilting toward one big delivery, then the number of munitions might be smaller compared to a scenario in which the Pentagon sends several waves of ATACMS over the next months. Another consideration is the status of Ukraine’s artillery arsenal. Ukraine is going through several thousand artillery shells – particularly 155mm rounds – daily and between 150,000 and 200,000 a month. Even though the Pentagon alone has sent Kyiv more than two million 155mm shells, the U.S. and the West are having a very hard time meeting the Ukrainian artillery’s needs. Sending ATACMS munitions would slightly ease the need to send seemingly inexhaustible batches of rounds to Ukraine. The ATACMS can be fired by either the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) or the M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS). The Ukrainian military has used both the M142 HIMARS and M270 MLRS in the war, taking out a considerable amount of Russian logistical nodes, fortified positions, troop concentrations, important infrastructure, and high-value targets. ATACMS could change the war. The Ukrainian military could use ATACMS against high-value targets that are also within range of its 155mm guns. The potential delivery of ATACMS to the Ukrainian military would enable additional deep strikes against the faltering Russian logistical system and other strategic targets. (Source: thenationalinterest)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video russia hungary china iran nato book montenegro italy israel iraq pakistan georgia armenia poland slovakia greece sahara ukraine serbia caucasus belarus communist unitedkingdom europeanunion persiangulf unitednations unitedstates europeancommission sovietunion indianocean blacksea eurasia pacificocean azerbaijan crimea europeancouncil adriaticsea europeancourtofhumanrights nagorno-karabakh

2023. IX. 30. Hungary, Poland, Sweden, Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia, Ukraine, Europe, Pakistan, United States

2023.10.01. 00:07 Eleve

.

Europe

Hungary
30.09.2023  Hungarian Prime Minister
Victor Orbán said his country views Ukraine’s EU membership in the near future as unrealistic. Orbán noted that accession should be approved by all members of the bloc. “The Hungarian parliament does not have an ‘irresistible desire’ to vote on it within the next two years,” he told public broadcaster, Radio Kossuth, yesterday. Regarding the question about whether it is permissible to start negotiations with a country that is in a territorial war, he said, is not possible to know how big the territory and population would Ukraine have. But the allocation of subsidies by the Union is based on that data, said Orbán. More EU funds to Kyiv means less money for Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Croatia as the bloc’s budget is not unlimited, he said. Orbán also argued that some in the West have globalized the war in Ukraine, which should be isolated. “The front lines don't change, yet tens of thousands die without knowing when it will end. Meanwhile, more and more dangerous weapons are deployed that can reach us, who are on the side of peace,” he added. (Source: aa)

30.09.2023  Hungary reiterated yesterday its strong opposition to the EU’s new migration pact which was adopted by the Justice and Home Affairs (JHA) Council in June. EU member states will have to accept an initial quota of 30,000 migrants from countries that bear the pressure of irregular migration from the Middle East and Africa, including Greece and Italy, or pay about €22,000 ($23,300) per non-admitted migrant, according to the pact. The Head of the Prime Minister's Office, Gulyás, said: “The EU should change its fundamental attitude toward illegal migration. “Everybody is free to decide whom they want to live together with controlling the bloc’s external borders is the EU’s obligation,” he said. The pact does not tackle the problem of asylum and would fail to curb illegal migration, said State Secretary of the Interior Ministry Rétvari. “Hungary rejects this new pro-migration proposal by Brussels,” he said. He argued that the pact, which he called a potential migrant magnet, would open a new door to mass illegal migration to Europe. Rétvari said that the deal, currently under discussion, would define Europe’s future, security, economic competitiveness and the composition of its population in the long term, if adopted. Hungary argued that consensus-based decision-making is important on strategic issues such as the migration pact, he said. Poland and Hungary were against the new rules but were outvoted. (Source: aa)

Poland
September 30, 2023  Polish and U.S. officials
signed an agreement Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023 in Warsaw for the construction of Poland's first nuclear power plant, part of an effort by the Central European nation to move away from polluting fossil fuels. Two weeks before the Oct. 15 vote, Polish opposition leader Tusk is facing an uphill battle to win new hearts in his efforts to unseat the conservative government in Poland’s upcoming parliamentary election. The ex-prime minister and former European Union leader returned to Polish politics several years ago. Tusk, 66, is hoping a major rally that he organized for Sunday, October 1, will energize his supporters. His electoral alliance, the Civic Coalition, trails a few percentage points behind Law and Justice in opinion polls. He faces many obstacles, including divisions among his opposition ranks and, even more importantly, powerful government forces that depict him as disloyal to the nation. Shaping the campaign is a long and bitter personal rivalry between Tusk and Law and Justice chief Kaczynski, who is the country’s 74-year-old de facto leader. Kaczynski, other government figures and state media repeatedly allege that Tusk’s time as prime minister from 2007 to 2014 was harmful to Poland. They point to the good terms he was on with then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel to make unproven allegations that he represented the interests of Germany. They also accuse him of abandoning Poland when he went to Brussels in 2014 to become European Council president, a top EU post. “Herr Donald, you left Poland to serve German interests in Brussels, for big money. … I gave up a high salary in order to serve Poland,” Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, a former banker, recently tweeted after Tusk questioned whether he was hiding his wealth. Tusk has denied being partisan to Germany. The march, the coalition’s biggest campaign event, was inspired by the success of a similar march on June 4 that drew hundreds of thousands of opposition supporters from across Poland. Tusk's campaign symbol is a heart in the national colors of white and red to show that 'we all have Poland in our hearts." 'On June 4, you gave Poland hope, so I am asking you now: On Oct. 1, let’s give not just hope, but the full belief in victory, in our success in removing these evil people from power,' Tusk said when announcing Sunday’s march. The June 4 march was held after Law and Justice passed legislation establishing a state commission for investigating Russian influence in Poland. The law was seen as the governing party’s way of targeting Tusk and removing him from public life. Opposition groups put aside their differences and marched with Tusk then. But this time, divisions complicate Tusk’s attempts to return to power. Tusk's electoral alliance includes his Civic Platform party and three other small parties. An opposition alliance called the Third Way - a coalition of the centrist Poland 2050 party and agrarian Polish People’s Party (PSL) - won’t take part in Sunday’s march. Tusk’s coalition, the Left and the Third Way together haven’t worked out a joint electoral strategy. Some analysts see the disunity in the opposition as partly Tusk’s fault. Tusk, a leader with long political experience at home and internationally has a reputation for being domineering toward others in his party, and that has led some to leave and join other groups. Tusk recently moved his centrist alliance to the left, courting women and younger voters. After a near-total ban was imposed on abortion under Law and Justice, Tusk vowed to liberalize the abortion law and has threatened to ban party members who criticize his plan from running in the election. Apart from the Third Way, there is also the Left party in the opposition camp and it’s competing for younger voters against the far-right Confederation party which gathers strength, pushing a new, less friendly course on Ukraine. Polls show the party has been growing in popularity, especially among young men. The party has already done a lot to push the government to take a more confrontational stance to Ukraine. (Source: apnews)

Sweden
30.09.2023 
Sweden is facing a growing crisis as it struggles to contain a surge in gang-related violence. While the European average stands at 1.6 deaths per million people annually due to such attacks, Sweden has four deaths per million people. The country recorded 44 murders in 2023, with 13 in last 15 days, and has held the distinction of leading European nations in armed attacks and murders per capita for the past five years. Statistics provided by the Swedish police showed 283 armed attacks between rival gangs recorded in 2023. Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson addressed the nation, announced a multi-faceted strategy to combat escalating gang violence, involving collaboration between the government, police and the military. He noted that a law allowing police to wiretap telephones of suspected gang members without a warrant would take effect from tomorrow. He also disclosed the possibility of deploying the military to assist police in battling criminal organizations, underlining the gravity of the situation. (Source: aa)

Kosovo
September 30, 2023  Tensions grew
after about 30 heavily armed Serbs stormed the northern Kosovo village of Banjska last Sunday, September 24. A Kosovo policeman and three of the attackers were killed in gun battles. Radoicic, the vice president of Serb List, the main Kosovo-Serb political party, resigned yesterday after admitting to setting up the armed group responsible for the attack. 'We need NATO because the border with Serbia is very long and the Serbian army has been recently strengthening its capacities,' Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti told. “They have a lot of military equipment from both the Russian Federation and China,” he said. White House National Security Council spokesperson Kirby confirmed the buildup of a “large military deployment” of Serbian tanks and artillery on the border as 'a very destabilizing development' and called on Serbia to withdraw these forces. Hovenier, the U.S. ambassador to Kosovo earlier warned of potential further escalation, adding the gunmen appeared to have had military training. “The quantity of weapons suggests this was serious, with a plan to destabilize security in the region,” he said. Kirby added that U.S. Secretary of State Blinken had called Serbian President Vučić to urge “immediate de-escalation” and a return to dialogue. The White House also 'underscored the readiness of the United States to work with our allies to ensure KFOR [NATO’s Kosovo Force] remained appropriately resourced to fulfill its mission', according to a readout of a call between the U.S. National Security Adviser Sullivan and Kurti. The U.K. also said it was sending troops to support NATO’s peacekeepers on the ground. NATO said yesterday it is increasing its peacekeeping presence in northern Kosovo as a result of escalating tensions with neighboring Serbia. The EU and the U.S. have pushed for years to broker a lasting peace between Kosovo and Serbia. A deal has remained elusive amid continued divisions over the status of northern Kosovo, where a majority of the population is Serbian. (Source: politico)

Nagorno-Karabakh
Sat September 30, 2023  Though internationally seen
as part of Azerbaijan, the Armenian-majority Nagorno-Karbakh had spent decades under the control of a separatist, de facto government until Azerbaijan reclaimed the territory in a lightening offensive and victory last week. The former breakaway republic will cease to exist as of next year. Azerbaijan has long been clear about the choice confronting Karabakh Armenians: Stay and accept Azerbaijani citizenship, or leave. As of today morning, 100,417 people had been “forcibly displaced,” from the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karbakh – more than four-fifths of the population – the Armenian prime minister’s spokeswoman, Baghdasaryan, told. Asking the International Court of Justice, a judicial arm of the UN, Armenian authorities requested order Azerbaijan to “withdraw all military and law-enforcement personnel from all civilian establishments in Nagorno-Karabakh,” while refraining from “taking any actions directly or indirectly” that would have the effect of displacing the remaining ethnic Armenians or preventing those who fled from returning. Azerbaijan should also allow people to leave the region “without any hindrance” if they wanted to, the Armenian authorities demanded. Armenia also asked the court to direct Azerbaijan to grant the UN and the Red Cross access to Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan should “refrain from taking punitive actions against the current or former political representatives or military personnel of Nagorno-Karabakh,” the Armenian authorities said. The rapid exodus has prompted the United Nations to send its first mission to the territory in about 30 years. The UN team on the ground would identify the humanitarian needs for both people remaining and the people that are on the move. Azerbaijani state media reported yesterday that the security services in the country had detained two former commanders of the self-proclaimed “Republic of Artsakh’s” military. Mnatsakanyan who reportedly served as defense minister from 2015 to 2018 was accused of illegally entering its territory and taken to the Azebaijani capital of Baku. Manukyan, who reportedly served as the former deputy commander of Nagorno-Karbakh’s armed forces, was detained on September 27. He was accused of engaging in terrorism, setting up illegal armed groups, illegal possession of a firearm, and illegally entering Azerbaijan. They were intercepted while attempting to cross from Nagorno-Karabakh into Armenia via the Lachin Corridor, the one road connecting the landlocked enclave to Armenia. The announcement of the arrests came after the indictment of prominent Nagorno-Karabakh politician and businessman Vardanyan on multiple charges in Azerbaijan on September 28, after being detained while trying to cross into Armenia the day before. A former Minister of State of the self-proclaimed republic, Vardanyan is accused of financing terrorism, participating in the creation and activities of illegal armed groups, and illegally crossing Azerbaijani borders. On September 28, local politician Babayan, an adviser to Shahramanyan, the president of the self-styled “Republic of Artsakh,” wrote on Telegram that he would hand himself over to Azerbaijan. “My failure to appear, or worse, my escape, will cause serious harm to our long-suffering nation, to many people, and I, as an honest person, hard worker, patriot and Christian, cannot allow this,” Babayan wrote. (Source: cnn)

30 September 2023  As a result of local anti-terror measures, the combat positions and support points abandoned by the Armenian armed forces' formations are liquidated, communication lines are restored in the territory, Azernews reports with reference to Azerbaijan's Defence Ministry. On September 29, the combat position on the Tartar-Aghdara road has been liquidated and the safe movement of vehicles was ensured. /photo, video/ (Source: azernews)

30 September 2023   Azerbaijan destroyed the self-declared Nagorno Karabakh Republic by force. The first phase of the operation was the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh War, the second phase started by imposing a blockade on the Lachin corridor, and the third phase was the Azerbaijani offensive on September 19, 2023. Abandoned by all, authorities of the Republic were forced to accept Azerbaijani demands, starting the dissolution of the self-defense army and, on September 28, declaring that the Republic would cease to exist by the end of 2023. The destruction triggered a massive forced displacement of Armenians from their homeland. As of September 29, almost 90 000 Armenians left Nagorno Karabakh and entered Armenia. "In the upcoming days, all remaining Armenians will leave". Azerbaijani officials are stating that Azerbaijan is ready to provide necessary rights to Armenians within Azerbaijan's constitutional framework. Given the 35 years of the conflict history, which was full of violations of international humanitarian law, war crimes, and hate speech, no one with a basic understanding of the regional context may take Azerbaijani statements seriously. The influx of refugees will put an enormous economic burden on Armenia, a less than three million country. "Armenia cannot cope with the problems without massive international assistance". The promised support from the EU, the US, and a handful of other countries must be significantly increased. The second humiliation of Armenia within three years has already triggered significant backlash among Armenians. Many are still in shock, which is why Yerevan witnessed only small protests recently. Many seek to understand the future of peace negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan's destruction by force of the self-declared Nagorno Karabakh Republic is seen by some as removing one of the key obstacles in the negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, that will resume in the next days in Granada, Spain. The process started immediately after the end of the first Karabakh War in 1994, was paused during the 2020 war, and resumed in 2021. In 2022, three platforms were established – Moscow, Brussels, and Washington. The war in Ukraine prevented any potential cooperation between Russia and the West. There were moments in 2022 and 2023 when many hoped that the peace agreement was within reach, but escalations followed rounds of negotiations. In 2023, Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers met twice in Washington, while several rounds of negotiations took place in Russia, Brussels, and Chisinau. Before the Azerbaijani latest attack, there was an agreement to have another meeting in Granada on October 5, during the third European Political Community summit, with the participation of the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders, as well as the President of France, the German chancellor, and the President of the European Council. On September 26, the secretary of the Armenian Security Council, Grigoryan, met with foreign policy aide to President Aliyev to prepare the Granada meeting, despite recent developments in Nagorno Karabakh. The meeting will probably take place, but the prospects of the Armenia - Azerbaijan peace agreement are still vague. In general, there are two visions concerning the impact of the destruction of the self-declared Nagorno Karabakh Republic on the negotiations. According to the first narrative, now, as the self-declared Nagorno Karabakh Republic will cease to exist in a few months, this may facilitate the peace process, making it easier for Armenia and Azerbaijan to reach a deal. The supporters of this narrative believe that the international community should assist Armenia in coping with refugees and use this momentum to push forward for the signature of the Armenia – Azerbaijan peace agreement by the end of 2023 or early 2024. According to this scenario, recent events in Nagorno Karabakh may also significantly weaken Russia's position in the region. After the exodus of Armenians, it will be challenging for Russia to secure the extension of the peacekeepers' mandate beyond November 2025. Normalization of Armenia – Turkey relations may facilitate the further drift of Armenia away from Russia, especially as the inaction of Russian peacekeepers triggered more anti-Russian sentiments among Armenians. According to the second vision, scenario, the end of Nagorno Karabakh will mark the beginning of a new phase of the Armenia – Azerbaijan conflict, this time focused on Armenia. The enclaves, the "Zangezur corridor", and the recently emerged concept of "Western Azerbaijan" and Azerbaijani demands that tens if not hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis should settle in Armenia remain challenging barriers on the road to any agreement. The destruction of Nagorno Karabakh will allow Azerbaijan to focus all its resources on Armenia, seeking to force Yerevan to accept these demands. The lack of action by any international actor regarding the Azerbaijani attack on Nagorno Karabakh may create a temptation in Azerbaijan to launch additional attacks against Armenia, similar to incursions that happened in May, November 2021, and September 2022; while these attacks may or may not be preliminary agreed with external players. Many Armenians are fed up with permanent losses, and there is a growing feeling that Armenia, in the long–term perspective, should become stronger to reclaim its position in the region. In the current environment, any attack of Azerbaijan against Armenia, regardless of pretexts or reasons, will only strengthen this feeling among Armenians and will be a direct path to long-term instability and conflicts in the South Caucasus. (Source: commonspace)

Russia
Saturday, September 30, 2023. 
Russia may introduce quotas on overseas fuel exports if a complete export ban imposed last week does not bring down persistently high gasoline and diesel prices for Russians, the country’s Deputy Prime Minister Novak said. (Source: aljazeera)

Saturday, September 30, 2023.  Russian President Putin signed a decree setting out his country’s routine autumn conscription campaign, which will see 130,000 people called up for statutory military service. Adult men in Russia are required to do a yearlong military service between the ages of 18 and 27 or equivalent training while pursuing higher education. The new Russian conscription campaign will include the four Moscow-annexed regions: Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhia. The departure of conscripts from collection points will begin on October 16, and each person will be expected to serve for 12 months, TASS said. Putin has tasked Troshev, a former aide of late Wagner chief Prigozhin, to oversee volunteer fighter units in Ukraine. (Source: aljazeera)

30.09.2023.  Moscow announced that it had annexed the Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions on September 30, 2022. Russian President Putin claims residents of annexed regions 'confirmed' will to join Russia - residents of Russia-held regions in southern and eastern Ukraine expressed their desire to be part of Russia in recent local elections. Russian forces do not entirely control any of the regions Putin claims were annexed and part of Russia. Putin argues that Russia's invasion of Ukraine saved people from nationalist leaders in Kyiv who unleashed a 'full-scale civil war.' (Source: dw)

30.09.2023.  Russia is celebrating the first anniversary of the "accession of new regions," the annexation of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions on September 30. Russia has been giving out Russian passports in the annexed areas, it held an election there in early September and promises prosperity and stability. The Russian currency, the ruble, has now replaced the Ukrainian hryvnia in Donetsk and Luhansk. Russia has minted special anniversary coins to mark the occasion, and concerts and festivals will be on show in the occupied territories. Residents of the self-proclaimed "People's Republics" of Donetsk and Luhansk, which declared independence in 2014, have a different opinion of their "accession" to Russia, how their lives have changed in the past year, than those territories that were annexed after Russia's 2022 invasion. An estimated 1 million to 2 million people have fled the Russian-annexed regions this year alone. Many in the Donbas region, especially in the cities spared from the fighting, welcome the annexation, as it ended years of economic isolation and legal uncertainty that prevailed since 2014. "The water supply has worked around the clock for nine years," L., a nurse from Luhansk, tells proudly. K. is happy to see the post office again delivering items sent from outside the "Republic" after having to drive over Ukraine's border with Russia to pick up items from Russian online shops. And the mobile phone network has improved. M. worries about the devaluation of the ruble and the resulting inflation. "Gas has become 70% more expensive, and original replacement parts for foreign cars are no longer available," she complains. Real estate prices have risen sharply in Luhansk, says S. "A two-bedroom apartment that was valued at €7,500 to €9,400 ($8,000 to $10,000) in the fall of 2021 can now sell for €23,600 to 28,300 ($25,000 to $30,000)" she tells. In Donetsk and Luhansk urban beautification projects were launched after the 2022 annexation. Mariupol residents complain it is not as easy to get a replacement for a destroyed home as Russian propaganda claims. "Papers issued by the Russian administration for damaged apartments do not allow for registering ownership for new buildings. Instead, they only provide something like a right to long-term free rent," says S.. According to UN estimates, 90% of Mariupol apartment buildings and 60% of single-family homes were damaged. They are being demolished by heavy duty machines. To acquire ownership of a new apartment, you must prove that your old home is completely destroyed and that you own no other real estate in Ukraine or Russia. More and more of teachers in occupied parts of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhya regions are ready to teach the Russian school curriculum.  Even though Ukrainian schools continue paying teachers to give online classes, these teachers can no longer buy anything in Ukrainian currency.  Former teacher T. says there were 30 schools in her district before the war, whereas now there are only six. "There are neither teachers nor pupils in our village," she tells. "There are only two families with schoolchildren.  They wanted to attend distance learning classes offered by a Ukrainian school, but the Russian occupiers forced the children to attend a 'normal' school in a village 40 kilometers away." She tried teaching online classes for a Ukrainian school until the spring of 2023, when Russian occupiers in the city began questioning unemployed educators about their sources of income and arrested one of her friends. Meanwhile, Ukrainian teachers who teach at "Russian" schools face up to three years in prison in Ukraine and a 15-year ban from teaching for collaborating with Russia. "The new Russian textbooks begin spreading propaganda from the very first page, so I prefer being unemployed," says T. Meanwhile, hospital directors appointed by Russia are regularly prosecuted by Ukraine for collaborating with the enemy. Ukrainian passport holders cannot get a job or a pension. Residents say it is extremely tough to live in the annexed regions without a Russian passport, which is often the only way to access health care. Without Russian citizenship, they also cannot register a car or real estate, cannot get a SIM card, and are not served in banks. However, it is still possible to leave the occupied territories with a Ukrainian passport, even if this is difficult. Russian occupiers vigorously check and interrogate such individuals, says O., who owns a small bus company. "Everyone is scrutinized, men are interrogated and strip-searched," he says. (Source: dw)

Ukraine
September 30, 2023  While Iran and Turkey produce large, military-grade drones used by Russia and Ukraine, the cheap consumer drones that have become ubiquitous on the front line largely come from China, the world’s biggest maker of those devices. For the better part of a decade, Chinese companies such as DJI, EHang and Autel have churned out drones at an ever-increasing scale. They now produce millions of the aerial gadgets a year for amateur photographers, outdoor enthusiasts and professional videographers, far outpacing other countries. DJI, China’s biggest drone maker, has a more than 90 percent share of the global consumer drone market, according to DroneAnalyst, a research group. In the war’s first weeks, Ukrainian soldiers relied on the Mavic, a quadcopter produced by DJI. That has given China a hidden influence in a war that is waged partly with consumer electronics. Russian and Ukrainian soldiers also began using non-drone DJI products, including one called AeroScope. An antenna-studded box, it can be set up on the ground to track drone locations by detecting the signals they send. The system’s more dangerous feature is its ability to find the pilots who remotely fly DJI drones. DJI’s products continued to have a life-or-death impact on the front. Each time the company updated its software, pilots and engineers raced to break its security protections and modify it, sharing tips in group chats. In April 2022, DJI said it would discontinue its business in Russia and Ukraine. The company shut its flagship stores in those countries, and halted most direct sales. As Ukrainians have looked at all varieties of drones and reconstituted them to become weapons, they have had to find new ways to keep up their supplies and to continue innovating on the devices. One advancement that flooded the front this year: hobbyist racing drones strapped with bombs to act as human-guided missiles. Known as F.P.V.s, for first-person view - a reference to how the drones are remotely piloted with virtual-reality goggles - the devices have emerged as a cheap alternative to heavy-duty weapons. The machines and their components are sold by a small number of mostly Chinese companies like DJI, Autel and RushFPV. Yet less than one-third of attacks are successful, pilots said. Soldiers probably need as many as 30,000 a month. Ukraine’s government has plans to secure 100,000 of the devices for the rest of the year, said Mr. Shchyhol, the Ukrainian official. Direct drone shipments by Chinese companies to Ukraine totaled just over $200,000 this year through June, according to trade data. In that same period, Russia received at least $14.5 million in direct drone shipments from Chinese trading companies. Ukraine still obtained millions in Chinese-made drones and components, but most came from European intermediaries. The country has also earmarked $1 billion for a program that supports bootstrapping drone start-ups and other drone acquisition efforts, government project overseen by the Ministry of Digital Transformation. Yet in recent months, Chinese companies have cut back sales of drones and components to Ukrainians. New Chinese rules to restrict the export of drone components took effect on Sept. 1. Ukraine loses an estimated 10,000 drones a month, according to the Royal United Services Institute, a British security think tank. Fedorov, Ukraine’s digital minister has led the effort to revamp Ukraine’s military-technology base since late last year, using deregulation and state funding to build a remote-control strike force that the country can call its own. That includes helping fund the Bober program, as well as seeding a new generation of Ukrainian companies to build a drone fleet. Part of the idea is to diversify away from foreign suppliers like China. The start-up spirit has its limits. Makers complain about small-scale contracts from the government, shortages of funds and a lack of planning. (Source: dnyuz)

30.09.2023.  Authorities in the western Ukrainian region of Vinnytsia have ordered a partial evacuation, saying that an infrastructure site had been struck. "At this time there is no need for a general evacuation, apart from the immediate area around the site of the hit," Polischuk, the head of administration for the town of Kalynivka, said. Regional Governor Borzov also reported the hit on an unspecified infrastructure strike. Neither report specified what target had been struck or what weapon had been used. (Source: dw)

Europe
Sep 30, 2023  The disruption to the planet's climate systems is making extreme weather events like heatwaves, drought, wildfires and storms more frequent and intense. Scientists say the world is at around 1.2C of warming above pre-industrial levels. Higher temperatures are likely to be on the horizon as the El Nino weather phenomenon - which warms waters in the southern Pacific and beyond - has only just begun. The European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service said earlier this month that global temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere summer were the hottest on record in a year expected to be the warmest humanity has experienced. The Alpine nations of Austria and Switzerland recorded their hottest-ever average September temperatures. French weather authority Meteo-France said the September temperature average in the country will be around 21.5 degrees Celsius, between 3.5C and 3.6C above the 1991-2020 reference period. Average temperatures in France have been exceeding monthly norms consistently for almost two years. In Germany, weather office DWD said this month was almost 4C higher than the 1961-1990 baseline, the hottest September since national records started. Poland's weather institute announced September temperatures were 3.6C higher than average and the hottest for the month since records began more than 100 years ago. A study revealed Swiss glaciers lost 10 percent of their volume in two years amid extreme warming. The Spanish and Portuguese national weather institutes warned abnormally warm temperatures were going to hit this weekend, with the mercury topping 35C in parts of southern Spain yesterday. "Until we reach carbon neutrality, heat records are going to be systematically broken week after week, month after month, year after year," UN climate report lead author Gemenne told this week. World leaders will gather in Dubai from November 30 for crunch UN talks aimed at curbing the worst effects of climate change, including limiting warming to 1.5C, a goal of the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement. Slashing planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions - notably by phasing out the consumption of polluting gas, oil and coal - climate finance and boosting renewable energy capacity will be at the heart of the discussions. (Source: indiatoday)

Asia

Pakistan
Sep 30, 2023  Suicide bombings ripped through two religious ceremonies in Pakistan yesterday, killing at least 56 people and injuring dozens more as worshipers celebrated the birthday of the Prophet Mohammad. At least 52 people were killed and a further 50 wounded by a suicide attack at a religious procession in the Mastung district of the southwestern Balochistan province. Hours later, a separate blast took place during Friday prayers at a mosque near Peshaway City in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, killing at least four people and injuring 11. The explosion caused the roof of the mosque to collapse. It was not clear how many people remained inside. No group has yet claimed responsibility for either of the explosions, as it has weathered a surge of militant attacks in the buildup to general elections being held in January. Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by area, has witnessed a spate of attacks in recent months, fueled by a decades-long insurgency by separatists who demand independence from the country, angered by what they say is the state’s monopoly and exploitation of the region’s mineral resources. Last month, an attack on Chinese engineers in Balochistan was thwarted by Pakistan’s military, leaving two militants dead and the Chinese workers unharmed. In March this year, at least nine police officers were killed and 11 others injured in a suspected suicide blast. (Source: cnn)

North America

United States
30 September 2023  The US Congress is scrambling to pass a deal to avoid a disruptive government shutdown due to start at 00:01 EST (05:01 BST). A shutdown would means government employees would be furloughed without pay, and would affect everything from air travel to marriage licences to food aid. Treasury Secretary Yellen warned that "key government functions", including loans to farmers and small businesses, food and workplace safety inspections, and major infrastructure improvements would all be affected. Shutdowns take place when Congress is unable to approve the roughly 30% of the federal budget it must approve before the start of each fiscal year on 1 October. This means that, on Monday, October 2, hundreds of thousands of federal workers except those deemed "essential" will be at home without pay. Many of these employees live paycheque to paycheque, according to the American Federation of Government Employees. More than 1.4 million active-duty members of the military and tens of thousands of air traffic controllers will be among those working, without pay. It is a troubling development for any federal workers holding student loan debt. Loan repayments for over 40 million people will restart tomorrow after being paused since the start of the pandemic. The shutdown will also have an immediate impact on the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC), which provides grocery assistance to seven million pregnant women and new mothers. A prolonged shutdown could also affect the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), a grocery benefit known as "food stamps" that serves 40 million low-income Americans, and hinder the implementation of a new programme to serve free breakfast and lunch to students in high-need school districts. Museums, national parks, research facilities and communities health centres with federal government oversight or funding are likely to suspend operations for the period of the shutdown. The government agency at the helm of relief and recovery from natural disasters is currently scrambling to conserve cash in the event a shutdown collides with an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season. The House of Representatives is considering a bill to extend government funding for 45 days, which needs two-thirds of the vote to pass. Today morning, Speaker McCarthy said he would put a 45-day continuing resolution (CR) plan to the floor - a stop-gap that would keep federal agencies open until Congress can agree on a new funding bill. A rebel faction of right-wing Republicans demanded significant cuts in spending, including a call for no more US funding of the war in Ukraine. The CR would include disaster relief funding, but would not include US foreign aid for Ukraine, which Democrats have been insisting on. Faced with a rebellion by hard-line Republicans in his party, House Speaker McCarthy needs support from Democrats. Republicans control the House by a slim majority, while Democrats hold the Senate by a single seat. That means spending bills to keep the government open require buy-in from both parties in order to advance through both chambers to President Biden's desk. Mr McCarthy has also refused to take up a short-term funding bill making its way through the Senate. The bill, which includes $6bn for Ukraine and $6bn for disaster aid, is a last-ditch effort to avert a lengthy shutdown and appears to have strong bipartisan support in the upper chamber. Yesterday, House Republicans' short-term funding measure, which included strict border policies championed by the hardliners, was rejected by as many as 21 members of the party and failed to pass. But the rebel lawmakers asserted they would not budge for anything less than a long-term spending bill with their priorities addressed. Republican Congressman Gaetz has publicly threatened to oust McCarthy as Speaker. The last government shutdown, under Mr Trump in 2019, lasted a record 34 days. It erased $11bn in economic output, according to the Congressional Budget Office, and federal workers were seen standing in line at food banks. (Source: bbc)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video russia hungary sweden china photo nato france book germany europe italy pakistan africa armenia turkey parliament kosovo austria poland slovakia switzerland spain greece ukraine serbia caucasus donbass alps unitedkingdom europeanunion unitednations unitedstates czechia pacificocean atlanticocean azerbaijan europeancouncil nagorno-karabakh internationalcourtofjustice

2023. IX. 1. European Parliament, Russia, Ukraine, United States

2023.09.01. 16:01 Eleve

.

Europe

European Parliament
2023. szept. 1.  EU citizens will elect the next class of EU lawmakers in June next year.  The future dynamics of parliamentary seat allocation, power shifts and leaders’ reactions - the results show prominent gains in the right-wing spectrum. All estimates always agree on the same thing: the next Commission president will only be able to count on the same majority as now – EPP, S&D, Renew. There is no other possible, neither from the left nor from the right. Despite efforts from some European parties to promote the spitzenkandidat system, whereby the lead candidate of the party that gathers a majority in the Parliament becomes European Commission President, EU countries will most likely end up making their own choice.        Centrist majority prevails against right-wing surge.    The EPP drops from 177 to 160 seats. Italy’s governing coalition partner Forza Italia is set to lose four seats from its current 9, as the party’s voters migrate to Meloni’s Fratelli d’Italia. Ireland’s “Fine Gael” drops from 5 to 2 seats. The German Christian democrats (“CDU”) lose three seats, staying at 20, and its sister party CSU would also lose 1 seat, with the German EPP delegation as a whole reducing in total from 29 to 25 seats. Spain’s Partido Popular would rise from 13 to 21 MEPs after winning the national snap elections in July. Poland’s Koalicja Obywatelska, led by Tusk, rises from 11 to 16 seats (14 of which are allocated to EPP), and the appearance of the new party “Nieuw Social Contract” in the Netherlands ahead of national elections on 22 November scores record-breaking seven seats in its first entrance to the European Parliament by snatching votes from existing Dutch centre-right party “CDA”, going from five to one seat. EPP questions polls.      S&D and Left groups freeze but undergo seat reshuffle. The Socialists and Democrats group (S&D) and the Left group stay where they are with a slight increase of three and one seats totalling 146 and 38 MEPs, respectively. Spain’s governing PSOE earns one extra seat and remains S&D’s biggest national delegation with 21 MEPs. Italy’s Partito Democratico scores four new seats, becoming the second largest national delegation with 19. Germany’s SPD scores two extra seats but falls short by one MEP with 18 seats. The biggest winners are France’s Parti Socialiste and Romania’s Partidul Social Democrat, with both scoring five extra three from three to eight and from eight to 13, respectively. Poland’s “Lewica”, Estonia’s “Sotsiaaldemokraatlik Erakond”, and Malta’s “Partit Laburista” all lose one seat. In the Netherlands, the Labour party’s (“Partij van de Arbeid”) MEPs are halved, with only three seats left.        The Left group, “La France Insoumise” would win two seats, from 5 to 7. Ireland’s Sinn Féin would scale from one to six seats. Ireland’s “Independents” would lose 2. Both Spain’s “Anticapitalistas” and Germany’s “Die Linke” would lose 1. Spain’s left-wing coalition “Sumar”, which is both Green and Left, would score three seats for the Left group, one less from 2019, and 3 seats for the Greens.       Renew Europe seeks to remind voters of the importance of the group’s kingmaker role, while drops from 101 to 89 seats. Spain’s liberal “Ciudadanos” party’s death translates into 8 MEPs less for Renew. Macron’s “Renaissance” would also lose one seat. Poland’s new coalition Trzecia Droga would enter the Parliament with five MEPs, 3 for Renew. Czechia’s ANO would contribute to Renew’s balance with four extra seats, from five to nine, if the party does not get expelled from ALDE and Renew, as ANO has been under heavy scrutiny for not committing to liberal values.       The national-conservative European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) Group predicted to grow by 16 from its 66 seats in the 2019 elections. Italy’s governing party, Fratelli d’Italia led by Georgia Meloni, is the biggest winner with 19 extra seats. Polish governing party PiS could lose five seats, from 24 to 19. Spain’s VOX is projected to increase its seats from four to nine. In Romania, the far-right AUR party is now the third force and is projected to enter the European Parliament for the first time with eight seats.      'The far-right' and eurosceptic Identity and Democracy (ID) groups score 27 extra seats, projected to secure 73 seats, 11 more than in 2019. Salvini’s Lega party is losing 16 seats out of the 25 they won back in 2019. ID could shift from Italian to French leadership, as current President Zanni’s party Lega would give way to France’s Rassemblement National with five-seat increase from 18 to 23,  as the strongest force in the group. ID’s other wins include three more MEPs for Austria’s “FPÖ” and three seats for Portugal’s far-right party “Chega!” (Enough!), which could enter Parliament for the first time.      The Non-Inscrits, a group comprising many right-wing or far-right parties, is slated to ascend from 47 to 56 seats.      The biggest loser is the Greens/EFA group, which is projected to attain 52 seats, signifying a notable decrease from their current 72. In Greens’ traditional strongholds, Germany and Austria they lost five and one seat respectively. Italy’s Green Party loses its three seats, Belgium’s Ecolo loses one, France’s Europe Écologie Les Verts (EELV), Finland’s Vihreä liitto, Sweden’s “Miljöpartiet de gröna” and Ireland’s Green Party all lose 2 seats each. In Croatia the party “Možemo!” enters the parliament for the first time with two seats. In Lithuania Greens/EFA score double the seats to reach four. In Spain the new coalition “Sumar” win two extra seats, to a total of three. The co-chairs believe that extreme weather events over the past year - record-breaking heatwaves and wildfires - will motivate people to vote for them. 77% of EU citizens believe that climate change is a ‘very serious problem’ according to June 2023 Eurobarometer.      Nine seats go to unaffiliated parties, including leftist coalition Sumar (Spain) with two seats and Course of Freedom (Greece), NIKI (Greece), Spartans (Greece), “DieBasis” (Germany), “Yes, Bulgaria”, and Stabilitātei! (Latvia) with one seat each.      One seat is unnamed due to the nature of the mass probability model (methodology). /Source: euractiv/

Russia
9:57 ET, Sep 1 2023  
Borisov, head of the Russian Space Agency, issued the chilling announcement earlier today. 'The Sarmat strategic complex has been put on combat duty,' he told a crowd of students at an event. The Armageddon weapon is 116 feet in length and can be loaded with 15 light nuclear warheads at once. The weapon was designed to carry out nuclear strikes in countries thousands of miles away in the US and Europe. TV propagandist Kiselyov formerly claimed: 'It is capable of destroying an area the size of Texas or England'. It can travel at hypersonic speeds. The nuke can reach speeds of nearly 16,000 mph - it has the potential to obliterate the United Kingdom some 1,600 miles away in just six minutes. With an operational range of up to 11,180 miles, the deadly missile is reported to have no equivalent in the West in terms of the terror it could unleash. The 208-tonne missile was meant to go on duty in late 2022, but was mysteriously delayed. The first and only known full-scale test of Satan-2 was announced as soon as it took place on 20 April 2022, with Putin in touch by video-link. It passed the test launch. The following month, close Putin ally Rogozin said almost 50 Satan-2 missiles would soon be on combat duty. In February, tests were held for the Satan 2 missile while US President Biden was visiting Ukraine. The launch of the missile – capable of delivering multiple nuclear warheads – appeared to have failed, officials said. (Source: the-sun)

September 1, 2023  As the Russian occupation of Ukraine rolls on, testimonies increasingly demonstrate a propensity to engage in practices which may be qualified as enforced disappearance. If proven, such practices will amount to serious and gross violations of the human rights of those disappeared and their families. Witnesses repeatedly recall that those in occupied Ukrainian territories can be arrested at any time, commonly due to hearsay evidence regarding their allegiance or views on the Russian occupation. Individuals are often held without families being officially informed of their whereabouts. Although in some cases families will have rough information on their whereabouts from external sources, in others, they will have no such indication, with Russian forces either refusing to engage altogether or claiming to have no knowledge of the detained person. It is doubtful whether the fact of accepting a package can be equated to a confirmation of whereabouts. Parcels from family members are sometimes accepted by guards, but it is unclear whether the acceptance of the parcels is done as an acknowledgment that the individual is in fact detained in the facility. Whilst detention can range from a few days to a few months, testimonies also demonstrate a disturbing uptick in detained individuals later being found deceased, either having had their body concealed or having been brazenly left in the open, often mutilated. The Russian Federation is neither a party nor a signatory to the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (‘CPED’). Thus, any group examining allegations of disappearances carried out by the Russian Federation, such as the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, would have to rely upon the customary framework outlawing the practice. The definition posited in the 1992 Declaration on the Protection of all Persons from Enforced Disappearance (‘Declaration’) adopted by the United Nations General Assembly is characterised by the presence of three constitutive and cumulative elements: (1) deprivation of liberty; (2) by state authorities or groups or persons acting with the authorisation, support or acquiescence of the state; and (3) a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or to disclose the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person. The Rome Statute, however, adopts a definition that contains additional elements necessary to qualify conduct as enforced disappearance. Under art. 7(2)(i), ‘“[e]nforced disappearance of persons” means the arrest, detention or abduction of persons by, or with the authorization, support or acquiescence of, a State or a  political organization, followed by a refusal to acknowledge that deprivation of freedom or to give information on the fate or whereabouts of those persons, with the intention of removing them from the protection of the law for a prolonged period of time.’ Here, we see an additional element of intent of removing a person from the protection of the law – and this, for a prolonged period of time. Every minute counts when a person is placed outside the protection of the law. And when a person has disappeared, every minute of anguish spent by his or her relatives without news of him or her is too much. The inclusion of a temporal element in the definition of enforced disappearance was considered during the drafting of the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (CPED), adopted on 23 December 2010, and ultimately rejected (at 22-23). Neither the definition of enforced disappearance nor the practice and pronouncements of states suggest a minimum timeframe for considering conduct as amounting to an enforced disappearance. Today, as we recognise the continuing disturbing trend of enforced disappearance around the world, it is more important than ever to pursue all available accountability avenues to ensure justice for the disappeared and their close ones, and to signal the international community’s commitment to ending this abhorrent practice. (Source: ejiltalk)

September 1, 2023  Russian shelling struck the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson today close to 12:50 p.m. local time (0950 GMT) and a business in Vinnytsia region was hit by a Russian missile. Ukraine's air force said it shot down a second missile fired overnight over the central Kirovohrad region. (Source: reuters)

1 Sep 2023  Early morning today a Ukrainian drone attack on the Russian town of Kurchatov - located just a few kilometres from the Soviet-era Kursk nuclear power station which is one of Russia’s largest - damaged an administrative and residential building, while a second drone was shot down near Lyubertsy, which is located approximately 20km southeast of central Moscow, local officials said. Moscow’s three main airports – Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo and Vnukovo – were reported to have cancelled and rescheduled flights early today morning due to reports of unidentified object flying in the capital’s airspace. Vnukovo airport resumed operations at 7:28am local time (04:28 GMT). (Source: aljazeera)

Ukraine
September 1, 2023  President
Zelenskiy says he will stand for re-election if scheduled elections are held earlier next year, despite promising to only serve one term in office when he took over in 2019. In an interview with Portuguese public television RTP, Zelensky affirmed that if Ukraine remains embroiled at war in 2024, he will seek re-election for another term in office, should elections be held. Indeed, last week Zelenskiy warned citizens to brace themselves 'for a long war.' Technically Zelenskiy's four-year first term in office expires early next year and  presidential elections should be held on March 31, 2024. However, Ukraine’s constitution forbids elections if the country is under martial law, which was imposed immediately following Russia’s invasion last year. The Rada extended martial law for another 90 days last week and will continue to do so until a ceasefire is called, theoretically making elections impossible, as there is no end to the hostilities in sight. The issue of elections came up during a visit to Kyiv by US Senator Graham as part of a US delegation on August 23. He said elections should go ahead. Zelenskiy glibly replied that he was open to the idea, 'if our Western partners pay for them.' He estimated the cost to be UAH5bn ($135mn) and also called on the West to send election observers to the front line, something that is very unlikely to happen as the battles there rage. Ukraine’s casualty figures are mounting, according to US intelligence reports. Official casualty figures remain a Ukrainian state secret, but a US intelligence report put the number of dead at 70,000, with over 100,000 wounded out of a total force of half a million men and women – a third of the Armed Forces of Ukraine have been killed or wounded. (Source: intellinews)

North America

United States
September 1, 2023  Western allies and Ukrainians themselves had hung much hope on a counteroffensive that might change the balance on the battlefield, expose Russian vulnerability and soften Moscow up for a negotiated end to the fighting, which has stretched on for a year and half. Even the most sanguine of Ukraine’s backers did not predict that Ukraine would push Russian occupiers fully out of the country, an outcome that appears increasingly distant in light of the modest gains of the counteroffensive so far. Ukraine’s fight falters. The conditions on the battlefield raise the question of what might be done off it, even right now neither President Putin of Russia nor President Zelensky of Ukraine are ready to negotiate anything. Mr. Putin’s forces seem to be holding their defensive lines, and most analysts suggest he thinks that the West will tire of supporting Ukraine. He may also hope that Trump returns to the White House. Mr. Trump has promised to stop U.S. support for Ukraine and finish the war in a day. Even if he is not re-elected, he could be a strong voice in pushing the Republican Party to limit its support for Kyiv. But it is also not clear that Mr. Zelensky, after so much Ukrainian sacrifice, would feel politically able to negotiate even if Russia were pushed back to its positions when the war started, in February 2022. 'Even President Biden says the war is likely to end in negotiations'. Jenssen, the chief of staff to the secretary general of NATO, recently had his knuckles rapped when he commented on possible options for an end to the war in Ukraine that did not envision a complete Russian defeat. “I’m not saying it has to be like this, but I think that a solution could be for Ukraine to give up territory and get NATO membership in return,' he said during a panel discussion in Norway, according to the country’s VG newspaper. He also said that “it must be up to Ukraine to decide when and on what terms they want to negotiate,” which is NATO’s standard line. The remarks provoked an angry condemnation from the Ukrainians; a clarification from his boss, Stoltenberg; and ultimately an apology from Mr. Jenssen. The contretemps, say some analysts who have been similarly chastised, reflects a closing down of public discussion on options for Ukraine just at a moment when imaginative diplomacy is most needed, they say. Charap, a senior political scientist at the RAND Corporation, has also been criticized for suggesting that the interests of Washington and Kyiv do not always coincide and that it is important to talk to Russia about a negotiated outcome. “The lack of success hasn’t opened up the political space for an open discussion of alternatives. We’re a bit stuck,” he said. With the counteroffensive going so slowly, and American defense and intelligence officials beginning to blame the Ukrainians, Western governments are feeling more vulnerable after providing so much equipment and raising hopes, said Kupchan, a professor at Georgetown University and a former American official. The American hope, he said, was that the counteroffensive would succeed in threatening the Russian position in Crimea, which would put Ukraine in a stronger negotiating position. That has not happened. “So the political atmosphere has tightened,” he said, “and overall there is still a political taboo about a hardheaded conversation about the endgame.” Mr. Kupchan and Haass, the former president of the Council on Foreign Relations, wrote a piece in Foreign Affairs in April, urging Washington and its allies to come up with “a plan for getting from the battlefield to the negotiating table,” and were widely criticized for doing so. That criticism worsened considerably when the two men, together with Graham, a former American diplomat in Moscow, had private conversations with Russia’s foreign minister, Lavrov, to explore the possibility of negotiations. When the fact of those conversations leaked, there was a major outcry. While the three men have agreed not to discuss what was said, the reaction was telling, Mr. Kupchan said. “Any open discussion of a Plan B is politically fraught, as Mr. Jenssen found out the hard way, as do we who try to articulate possible Plan B’s,” he said. “We get a storm of criticism and abuse. What was somewhat taboo is now highly taboo.” If the counteroffensive is not going well, now would be the time to explore alternatives, he said. Instead, he suggested, Mr. Stoltenberg and others were simply doubling down on slogans like supporting Ukraine 'as long as it takes.'  For many, the suggestion of a negotiated solution or a Plan B is too early and even immoral, said Stelzenmüller of the Brookings Institution. Mr. Putin shown no interest in talking, but the younger generation of officials around him are, if anything, even harder line, she said, citing a piece in Foreign Affairs by Stanovaya. “So anyone who wants to articulate a Plan B with these people on the other side is facing a significant burden of proof question,” she said. “Putin has said a lot of times he won’t negotiate except on his own terms, which are Ukraine’s obliteration. There is no lack of clarity there.” Any credible Plan B would have to come from the key non-Western powers - like China, India, South Africa and Indonesia — that Russia is depending upon telling Moscow it must negotiate. “These are the countries Putin is betting on,” she said. 'It’s nothing we can say or do or offer.' German officials are eager for a negotiated solution and are talking about how Russia might be brought to the negotiating table, but are only doing so in private and with trusted think tank specialists, said Puglierin, director of the Berlin office of the European Council on Foreign Relations. 'They understand that they can’t push Ukraine in any way, because Russia will smell weakness,' she said. Still, there is a desire in Berlin as in Washington that the war not continue indefinitely, she said, in part because political willingness for indefinite military and financial support for Ukraine is already beginning to wane, 'especially among those on the right and far-right, who are gaining ground". Eagerness from Paris or Berlin to negotiate too early will simply embolden Mr. Putin to manipulate that zeal, divide the West and seek concessions from Ukraine, said Speck, a German analyst. “Moving to diplomacy is both our strength and weakness,” he said. “We’re great at compromise and coalition, but that requires basic agreement on norms and goals. The shock of Ukraine is that this simply doesn’t exist on the other side.' (Source: dnyuz)

Friday, September 1, 2023   A U.S. congressional delegation visiting Taiwan said today the U.S. would act if the island was attacked and promised to resolve the $19 billion backlog in its defense purchases from the U.S, adding that both Republicans and Democrats were working on the issue. “Know that any hostile unprovoked attack on Taiwan will result in a resolute reaction from the U.S.,” said Wittman, vice chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, in a speech, ahead of meetings with President Tsai. U.S. law requires Washington provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself and treat all threats to the island as matters of “grave concern,” but remains ambiguous on whether it would commit forces in response to an attack from China. Wittman of Virginia, along with Gimenez of Florida and Kiggans of Virginia, arrived yesterday for a three-day visit to Taiwan. The three Republicans are meeting with Tsai and the head of Taiwan's National Security Council Koo. Taiwan, a self-ruled island claimed by China, has faced increasing military harassment in recent years as Chinese fighter jets and navy ships hold daily exercises aimed at the island, often coming near the island or encircling it. Over the years, to beef up its defense, Taiwan has bought $19 billion in military items from the U.S., but most of that remains undelivered. In July, the United States has announced $345 million in military aid in a major package drawing on America’s own stockpiles. On August 30, the Biden administration approved the first-ever U.S. military transfer to Taiwan under a program generally reserved for assistance to sovereign, independent states. The amount was modest at $80 million, and officials did not specify what exactly the money would be used for. (Source: torontostar)

09/02/23 Across the United States, COVID-related hospitalizations have risen week over week since mid-July. Last week, hospitalizations rose by 19%, while deaths increased by nearly 18%. Facilities that care for the elderly are being hit especially hard. In the last week, one out of every four nursing homes or assisted living facilities in New Jersey has reported a COVID outbreak, according to official state data. Among the 615 nursing homes and assisted living facilities in the state, there are currently 158 active outbreaks affecting 534 employees and more than 1,300 residents. Since July, COVID hospitalizations across the state have more than doubled, but they still remain low, at 359 this week as of August 30. At the same time last year, there were around 1,000 hospitalizations in the state. Bergen County, just northwest of New York City, has by far the highest number of facilities reporting outbreaks, at 25. As of August 29, there were 248 active cases among residents, with 56 staff members also said to have tested positive for the virus. Four residents have died. School closures due to COVID have started to sporadically pop up throughout the country as well, with two districts in Kentucky and one in Texas being forced to temporarily close their doors mere weeks after opening them to students. Mask mandates have also started to reemerge at some schools, hospitals and businesses across the U.S. as well. Despite this, neither health experts nor government officials have signaled that widespread mandates will make a return. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that mask requirements are not expected to be needed again, at least not any time soon. The Transportation Security Administration recently shot down rumors that they had briefed their managers in preparation of reinstating masking policies; a spokesperson for the administration denied the claims. Health experts still recommend that members of vulnerable populations, such as the elderly and immunocompromised, and those who care for them practice caution during this time. 'Many have suggested that this group mask up in public places and also consider getting the updated COVID boosters when they become available later in the fall'. (Source: themessenger)

Fri, Sep 1, 2023  Labor Day weekend may bring an increase in Covid cases as people flock to beaches to celebrate the end of summer with friends and family. There is potential for a major spike in Covid cases following Labor Day weekend, when socializing will be at its peak with people going to parties, parades, and celebrations. The CDC recommends that all people are up to date on their vaccines before they travel. "Anyone may choose to wear a mask in crowded or poorly ventilated indoor areas, including on public transportation and in transportation hubs at any time," CDC spokesperson Pauley told. Carnethon, a professor of Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University, told that she expects the new Covid BA.2.86 variant - dubbed ‘Pirola’ - will “spread rapidly through travel this Labor Day weekend.” “The urgency and concern about Covid infection in the general population appears to be very low. I anticipate that masking will remain a personal choice,” she said. “I do not believe that any regulatory bodies are likely to issue mask mandates because the public is not likely to be compliant," Carnethon added. Some health experts are recommending people begin taking precautions again - starting with mask-wearing. New Yorkers told to mask up for Labor Day as new Covid variant sparks superspread fears. "As cases rise, precautions become increasingly important, especially for our most vulnerable New Yorkers who are older, disabled, or have underlying health conditions," Gallahue of the New York City Department of Health told. "Staying up to date with Covid vaccines, along with other proven prevention tools – like masking, testing, and staying home when sick – continue to be our best defense against Covid and other respiratory viruses." 'An updated vaccine for new strains is expected to be available by the end of September - the CDC recommends everyone receive a booster shot'. (Source: the-express)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video space russia india taiwan sweden china virus nato romania france belgium croatia germany europe england italy finland bulgaria ireland lithuania austria poland portugal spain greece norway ukraine indonesia estonia europeanunion unitednations unitedstates europeanparliament europeancommission southafrica sovietunion czechia thenetherlands northamerica

2023. VIII. 31. Germany, Russia, Ukraine, China - Kína, Moon

2023.08.31. 13:20 Eleve

.

Europe

Germany
31 08 2023  The German government
will make it easier to reject asylum applications from Georgia and Moldova by classifying them as safe countries of origin, the Interior Ministry announced yesterday. Asylum applicants from safe countries face an accelerated review of their claims. Georgians and Moldovans were only involved in 4.5% of applications in 2023. Fewer than 1% of those applications were accepted, meaning that many rejected applicants would be deported faster. The two new additions join the member states of the European Union, Ghana, Senegal, and the Western Balkans countries as safe countries. (Source: euractiv)

Russia
Aug. 31, 2023  Ukrainian forces
have penetrated the main Russian defensive line in southeast, raising hopes of a breakthrough that would reinvigorate the slow-moving counteroffensive.Ukrainian paratroopers are fighting through entrenched Russian positions on the edge of the village of Verbove, an agricultural village of some 1,000 residents before the war. Ukrainian forces have also reached the main defensive line to the south of nearby Robotyne village. The advance marks the first time Ukraine has penetrated the main Russian defensive line, an extensive system of minefields, trenches and antitank obstacles covered by artillery. Ukrainian forces are now working to expand the cracks in the line to create a hole large enough for Western-provided armored vehicles to push through with sufficient logistical support. A breach at Verbove could open a path to the Russian-occupied port cities of Berdyansk and Mariupol, while progress south of Robotyne could threaten Tokmak. Still, Russia has significant fortifications in the southeast, including a second thick defensive line. Ukrainian advances in recent days have led to cautious optimism among Western intelligence services that Ukraine can retake the occupied city of Tokmak, a logistical hub for Russia. Any breakthrough would be a major boost for Ukraine’s three-month-old counteroffensive, which has turned into a grinding, field-by-field advance rather than the lightning operation that Kyiv and its allies had envisaged. The counteroffensive is aimed at slicing down to the Sea of Azov in southeast, cutting Russian occupation forces in two and seizing back some of the nearly 20% of Ukrainian territory that Moscow holds. The West supplied Ukraine with hundreds of armored vehicles, including tanks, and trained thousands of troops for the operation. There are still serious obstacles to turning the current penetration into a full-fledged breach. Ukraine’s push to retake territory has been slow, as its forces face a deadly problem: land mines. Russia is targeting Ukrainian troops there with heavy artillery fire directed by aerial drones. There is no sign of a collapse in Russian lines. Russia appears to be sending reinforcements, including paratroopers, to help hold their positions. During the early summer, Ukraine seized a handful of villages in the eastern Donetsk region and forced Russian troops back around the city of Bakhmut, but made little progress with its main push south toward the Sea of Azov from the city of Orikhiv. Powerful Russian defenses thwarted initial assaults, so Ukraine switched to methodical advances by small teams on foot. The slow progress accelerated in August. Accurate counter-battery fire helped suppress Russian artillery. Infantry advances seized trenches and lines of trees along the edges of farm fields. Ukrainian troops took the village of Robotyne and pushed south toward Tokmak. Ukrainian forces’ main goal has been to  advance south from Orikhiv. It could allow Ukraine to move forward artillery and target Russian positions that were previously out of range. Ukraine deployed fresh troops, including airborne units like the 82nd Air Assault Brigade, equipped with Western-made Stryker armored fighting vehicles. The advance is facing fierce resistance, elite Russian forces, including the 7th Guards Air Assault Division. Russia is targeting Ukrainian troops and vehicles using heavy artillery fire guided by aerial drones and explosive drones directed from the ground by pilots wearing video goggles. For now, the Ukrainians must resupply front-line troops on foot or, at best, using motorcycles, all-terrain buggies or pickup trucks, rather than Western-supplied armored vehicles, which attract massive fire as soon as they appear on the battlefield. Even small vehicles, used to avoid attracting attention, are vulnerable. In some places, there are so many drones flying that the Ukrainians call the phenomenon “Boryspil,” after the country’s main international airport in Kyiv. Ukraine’s aim is to create a corridor through the Russian lines, pushing enemy artillery back far enough to allow Western-provided armored vehicles to move through the gap and receive supplies. U.S.-supplied cluster bombs are having a significant impact, soldiers said. Ukrainians on the offensive are using the munitions -  which release dozens of smaller bomblets and can cause devastation over a broader area than ordinary artillery shells - to target Russian troops running across open ground, either to flee or to provide reinforcements. (Source: wsj)

31/08/2023  The role of drones in the war and the future of warfare. Drone strikes are routine in Russia's war against Ukraine. Both sides use unmanned aircraft systems to attack each other's territory daily. We've seen their capabilities developing and evolving over the course of the war and becoming more sophisticated and long-range. We're starting to see sort of the fruition of some of these projects and their ability to hit Ukraine, hit Russia or the Russian-controlled territory. The Ukrainian drone industry has taken off in this war. Overall, the Ukrainians have many lessons the United States military and other militaries can learn from about drone warfare, military expert Grieco, a senior fellow with the Reimagining US Grand Strategy Program at the Stimson Center, a Washington-based think tank said. 'I think they've really been at the leading edge in innovation around drone use', she said. According to the Ukrainian government, there are over 80 Ukrainian-manufactured drone companies at this point. This has actually been an important source of advantage for the Ukrainians. At the beginning of the war, they were able to use the Turkish-made (Bayraktar) TB2 drones to strike some of those armored columns that the Russians had. It provided them with a strike capability, particularly early in the war. That was very important in slowing down the Russian advance. And then thousands of quadcopters, which are not as expensive as something like the TB2, that Ukraine is using on the battlefield have really provided an advantage in terms of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance over the Russians and have been very important for its battlefield situational awareness and giving it an edge. Ukraine is looking to sorts of longer-range drones that they can make inside Ukraine as an alternative to sort of long-range strike capabilities that the West is more reluctant to give to them. There's a range of systems, some fairly large. They are not quadcopters but larger drones that seem to be remotely controlled. Some have an autonomous capacity to fly, allowing them to fly longer. And they're working on expanding the number of explosives they can deliver. These tend to be drones that are slow and steady. It can be hard to spot on these kinds of drones that are flying not all that fast and are maybe trying to hide closer to the ground and some of the ground cover. And the Russians are learning that this is harder to detect. Russia does seem to have some capacity to interfere with these drones electronically. Many of the drones that have crashed near Moscow have resulted from drone interference. At the start of the war, the Russian forces were very much behind in drone capabilities. They had some more advanced military-grade drones, the Orion, which is a drone for surveillance and reconnaissance. But they were very much behind and sort of understanding the importance of commercial quadcopters and commercial technology. The day the war started, Ukrainians began massive online drone campaign to try to fund a drone effort. The Russians understand the value of drones, and they've had to turn to the Iranians for some of that technology and capability. Russia is also developing new systems, not just using the Iranian Shahed drones. They're trying to move more of it into Russia, even if it's the manufacturing. Russia is already assembling them on its own territory, and Ukrainians fear that Russia might be ahead of Ukraine in developing new drones. We are headed towards hundreds or even thousands of drones used simultaneously to hit one target. "I hope, obviously, that this war ends sooner rather than later. But warfare, in general, is headed in that direction". Cheap mass and firepower is really making the defense very strong - many uncrewed drone systems that can communicate with each other, coordinate and then cooperate in their action to attack a target - that's really a huge change in warfare. (Source: dw)

August 31, 2023  Russian officials said today the country’s air defenses shot down a Ukrainian drone flying toward Moscow, destroyed over the Voskresensky district. Sobyanin, Moscow’s mayor, said on Telegram there were no reports of casualties or damage. (Source: voa)

31 Aug 2023  Top Russian rocket scientist Professor Melnikov, 77, had headed up the Department of Rocket and Space Systems at RSC Energia, Moscow’s leading spacecraft manufacturer. He had worked as chief researcher at TsNIIMASH, a division of Roscosmos, the Russian space agency. Melnikov was the author of 291 scientific articles, and was regarded among the most imminent space scientists. He cooperated with foreign colleagues, including at NASA. Latterly, he was a professor at the Peoples' Friendship University of Russia. The source of his poisoning was inedible mushrooms, according to a “preliminary version”, reported Moskovsky Komsomolets. Doctors were unable to save him after battling the “severe poisoning” for more than two weeks. Professor Melnikov's death comes just weeks after astronomer Marov, 90, suffered a "sharp deterioration" in his health weeks after the Luna-25 unmanned spacecraft' failed moon landing which was smashed into pieces after it crashed into the lunar surface after spinning out of control. (Source: thesun)

August 31, 2023  Russian unemployment hits fresh all-time low of 3% in July among individuals aged 15 years and above, down from 3.1% in June, RosStat reported on August 30. The overall count of unemployed individuals in Russia for July totalled 2.3mn people. The war in Ukraine has drawn off hundreds of thousands of young men to the front line. Companies are reporting difficulties in finding skilled employees, as even those men that remain at home are being hired away by military factories that are running three shifts a day seven days a week. (Source: intellinews)

August 31, 2023  In July, Russian President Putin’s approval rating was 82%, according to the last available Levada centre poll. Despite the speculation that the Russians might rise up and rebel following the start of the war in Ukraine, Russian President Putin’s popularity remains higher than ever according to Levada. Putin’s popularity had been hovering in the mid- to high-60s for much of the pandemic years, falling to a one-time low of 53 points in April 2020 when the first lockdowns were introduced before recovering to 66 in August that year. However, following the invasion of Ukraine his popularity leaped over 10 points to 83 in March 2022 and has remained at between 81 and 83 points throughout the duration of the war, with the exception of September to November when it fell to 77-79 following Ukraine’s successful Kharkiv counter-offensive. Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin has also enjoyed a bump in popularity, with his approval rating rising from the mid-50s pre-war to 69-71% since the start of this year. His approval was slightly down to 69% in July. Mishustin’s government has also been lifted from around 50% approval pre-war to 67% in July and has consistently polled at 67-69% all year. Russia’s regional governors are even more popular, as they have in the last ten years become more effective and have concerned themselves with dealing with the immediate needs of their constituents. Region governors received consistent ratings of between the high-50s to low-60s pre-war that rose to 69% following the start of the war and have stayed at 69-74 in since. In July their approval fell slightly to a still high 72%. The overall majority of Russians still approve of the Duma with the rate split 57/35 approve/disapprove in July, the last data available, with the remainder expressing no view. Pre-war around 50% of respondents thought the country was going in the “right” direction, with roughly 44% believing it was going in the “wrong” direction and the remainder having no opinion. Following the start of the war the number of respondents saying Russia was going in the “right” direction jumped to 69% in March 2022 and wrong fell to 22%. Since then respondents have very consistently polled at 67-68% for the right direction. The “don’t know” category has remained the same, circa 10% for both pre-war and post-start of the war periods. The propensity to protest with political demands has oscillated around 27-30% for most of the last five years, but it fell sharply in the first poll after the start of the war in May 2022 to 16% and was 17% in July. After the initial shock of the invasion wore off a small minority of around 15% remain opposed to the Putin regime and war has not added significantly to their numbers. The same people don’t like Putin now as didn’t like him before the war. In the May 2022 poll that fell to 17% that thought protests could happen and 14% saying they would participate if they did. In the July poll 17% said protests could happen but the number willing to participate has fallen to 10%. (Source: bneintellinews)

31/09/2023 How stable is Russia after the Wagner rebellion? Since the cancellation of the uprising, there has been some debate about the stability of Russia. Putin's regime has managed to win over a large part of the population with repression and propaganda and is managing to circumvent Western sanctions to some degree, Russia expert Meister of the German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP) said. Many companies, including some Western ones, are still active in Russia. He has observed a reduction in prosperity among the Russian population. However, he says the country cannot be said to be disintegrating, nor is Putin showing signs of weakness. Putin is "firmly in the saddle" and has sufficient resources to pursue his war against Ukraine for another two or three years. His view is that Putin's system is actually demonstrating strength — including with the death of Prigozhin. He doesn't believe that oligarchs, society, the military or the people who surround Putin and depend on him could call his power into question. Only the intelligence services or the security apparatus might one day be able to do that, he says. According to Meister, minor military defeats in Ukraine do not put Putin's power at risk. The only thing that might make a difference, he says, would be if Ukraine succeeded in taking  back Crimea, for example, and all its territories currently occupied by Russia. (Source: dw)

Ukraine
31 August 2023  After months of fighting their way through heavy minefields, Ukraine's forces have finally reached the main Russian defensive lines in the Zaporizhzhia region, in recent days. If troops can find a way past anti-tank defences and other Russian traps, a further advance there would provide the first test of Russia’s deeper defences, which Ukraine hopes will be more vulnerable and less heavily mined than the areas its troops have traversed so far. Ukraine’s foreign minister Kuleba has said this week that recent gains on the southern front could enable them to recapture the annexed Crimean peninsula. He suggested those who criticised the pace of its three-month-old counteroffensive to ''shut up' – the sharpest signal yet of Kyiv’s frustration with some Western officials, quoted in US media reports, that Kyiv’s troops are moving too slowly. 'Criticising the slow pace of [the] counteroffensive equals ... spitting into the face of [the] Ukrainian soldier who sacrifices his life every day, moving forward and liberating one kilometre of Ukrainian soil after another,” Kuleba said.  'I would recommend all critics to shut up, come to Ukraine and try to liberate one square centimetre by themselves,” he said at a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Spain. (Source:  independent)

August 31, 2023  Ukraine is investigating its military medical commissions for corruption after finding that some branches accepted bribes in exchange for falsified health documents that made men ineligible to draft. President Zelensky said in his nightly address that the number of men removed from military registers by the medical commissions increased tenfold in some regions since February. (Source: washingtonpost)

Asia    Ázsia

China
August 31, 2023  Indian state and some Malaysian waters now inside 'nine-dash line'; Malaysia, India and Taiwan reject China's new territorial map. The 2023 edition of China's "standard map," published Monday, August 28, on China's Ministry of Natural Resources website, claims the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh and the Aksai Chin plateau as Chinese territory. It also includes part of Malaysia's maritime area off Borneo, as well as Taiwan and swaths of the South China Sea. Malaysia and India have lodged protests against the new map that appears to expand Beijing's territorial claims. Malaysia on August 30 rejected China's unilateral claims over its maritime area. 'The map has no binding effect on Malaysia," its statement read. "Malaysia is consistent in its position of rejecting any foreign party's claims to sovereignty, sovereign rights and jurisdiction on Malaysia's maritime features or maritime area based on the 1979 Map," said the statement, referring to a Malaysian map showing the territorial waters and continental shelf boundaries of Malaysia. Malaysia's national oil company Petronas last week announced its first gas production at its Timi field, located about 200 km off the coast of Sarawak - well within China's 'nine-dash line'. India also lodged a protest ahead of next week's Group of 20 summit in New Delhi, which Chinese President Xi is expected to attend. "We reject these claims as they have no basis," External Affairs Ministry spokesman Bagchi said in a statement on August 30. "Such steps by the Chinese side only complicate the resolution of the boundary question." The Philippines' foreign ministry also issued a statement rejecting the new map. "This latest attempt to legitimize China's purported sovereignty and jurisdiction over Philippine features and maritime zones has no basis under international law," adding that a 2016 ruling by an international tribunal in The Hague "invalidated the nine-dashed line." The map also painted Taiwan as Chinese territory and included the Taiwanese mainland and outlying islands inside China's U-shaped "nine-dash line," which covers most of the South China Sea and the Taiwan Strait. "Taiwan, the Republic of China, is a sovereign and independent country  and is not affiliated with the People's Republic of China," Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs told. "The People's Republic of China has never ruled Taiwan. This is a fact and a status quo that is generally recognized by the international community," the ministry said. "No matter how the Chinese government distorts its claim to Taiwan's sovereignty, it cannot change the objective fact of our country's existence." The Chinese Foreign Ministry on August 30 called on relevant parties to remain objective. It is 'a routine practice in China's exercise of sovereignty in accordance with the law,' spokesperson Wang said. "We hope relevant sides can stay objective and calm, and refrain from over-interpreting the issue.' The map is expected to further raise tensions in the South China Sea and along the 3,000-kilometer Sino-Indian border, where tens of thousands of soldiers are amassed on both sides in the western Himalayas. Some analysts say that the publication of the new map is an attempt by Beijing to distract its citizens from the country's deepening economic woes. "The general idea is that the economy and people's livelihood are so bad that Xi is playing the nationalism card by arousing people's patriotic fervor.  Xi has no other weapon in his toolbox,' said Wo-Lap Lam, a senior fellow at Washington-based think tank Jamestown Foundation. (Source: nikkei)

Kína
2023. augusztus 31. 
Kína földrajzi helyzete nem túlságosan kedvező Tajvan megtámadásához, főképp, hogy az Egyesült Államok a térségben állomásozik. A szomszédok fegyverkezése és a harctéri tapasztalat hiánya sem mellettük szól, igaz, katonai költségvetésük hatalmas. Az viszont csak egy katonai konfliktus során derül ki, hogy mire képes a haderő valójában, ahogy azt Oroszország esetében is láthattuk. ... (Forrás: portfolio): https://tinyurl.com/ccu5bssd

China
August 31, 2023  In a speech while traveling in Urumqi,
the capital of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, on August 26, President Xi affirmed “the outcomes of [China’s] Xinjiang policies.'  He pledged to “consolidate hard-won social stability,' ensure that “the public [in Xinjiang] have correct views … on ethnicity, history and religion,' and “forge a consciousness of a united Chinese nation.' Since 2017, the Chinese government has carried out a widespread and systematic attack against Uyghurs and Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang. It includes mass arbitrary  detention, torture, enforced disappearances, mass surveillance, cultural and religious persecution, separation of families, forced labor, sexual violence, and violations of reproductive rights. Since the 2022 UN report, Beijing has demonstrated little change in the trajectory of its Xinjiang policies. Although some 'political re-education' camps appear closed, there has been no mass release from prisons, where a half million Turkic Muslims have been held since the start of the crackdown. Uyghurs abroad continue to have little to no contact with their family members, some do not even know if their loved ones taken into custody or forcibly disappeared are still alive. Xinjiang authorities also deepened their efforts to forcibly assimilate Uyghurs. The Xinjiang Communist Party secretary, Ma, vowed in November 2022 to continue 'counterterrorism and stability maintenance' measures, require “various ethnic groups … to fully embed' into the Chinese nation, 'Sinicize” Islam so it is consistent with 'socialist values,' and deepen cultural and ideological control over the region. Following the publication of the UN report, a group of countries tried to put the Xinjiang situation on the formal agenda of the UN Human Rights Council for discussion, which Beijing and its allies narrowly defeated. Türk, the UN rights chief, should update the UN Human Rights Council on the situation in Xinjiang, following up on the recommendations of his office’s report, and present an action plan for advancing accountability. (Source: hrw )

Space

Moon
August 31, 2023  The moon appeared to be bigger and brighter than usual, given its close proximity to Earth: just 357,344 kilometers or so. It was the second full moon of August. The next blue supermoon isn’t until 2037. (Source: apnews): https://tinyurl.com/4d82pa53

August 31, 2023   August's rare blue supermoon, an astrological phenomenon that won't fire up the skies again for more than a decade - Photo.  (Source: miamiherald): https://tinyurl.com/33rfpjtc

 

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video space russia india taiwan nasa china map iran photo moldova earth germany moon himalaya asia georgia borneo malaysia ghana turkey spain ukraine senegal philippines communist europeanunion unitednations unitedstates southchinasea crimea balcans taiwanstrait seaofazov

2023. VIII. 1. II. Niger, China, Persian Gulf, Philippines, United States

2023.08.03. 02:36 Eleve

.

Africa

Niger
Tuesday, 1 August 2023  Niger coup: Why some people want Russia in and France out? Since General Tchiani overthrew president Bazoum in a coup in Niger on 26 July, there has been a war of words between the military and the West. The demonstrations in favour of Niger's military takeover have often featured Russian flags. Niger hosts a French military base and is the world's seventh biggest producer of uranium. A quarter of the fuel is going to Europe, especially former colonial power France. Mr Bazoum was a staunch ally of the West in the fight against militant Islamists, and was a strong economic partner as well. He entered office in 2021 in Niger's first democratic and peaceful transition of power since independence in 1960. But his government was a target for  Islamist militants linked to the islamic state group and al-Qaeda who roam across parts of the Sahara Desert and the semi-arid Sahel just to the south. Under pressure from the Islamists, the armies in both neighbouring Mali and Burkina Faso, also former French colonies with considerable French interests, seized power in recent years, saying this would help in the fight against jihadists. Like Niger, both these countries previously had significant numbers of French troops helping them but as the Islamist attacks continued, anti-French sentiment rose across the region, with people in all three countries starting to accuse the French of not doing enough to stop them. Once in power, the junta in Mali welcomed Russia's mercenary Wagner Group as they first forced out French troops and then pushed for thousands of UN peacekeepers to leave. Although Islamist attacks have continued in Mali, Burkina Faso's junta has also grown close to Russia and expelled hundreds of French forces. In Niger, anti-French protests were frequently banned by Mr Bazoum's administration. Several civil society groups began escalating anti-French protests in mid-2022, when Mr Bazoum's administration approved the redeployment of France's Barkhane forces to Niger after they had been ordered to leave Mali. Key among them is the M62 movement, formed in August 2022 by a coalition of activists, civil society movements and trade unions. They led calls against the rising cost of living, poor governance and the presence of the French forces. Various planned protests by the group were banned or violently put down by Niger's authorities with its leader Seydou jailed for nine months in April 2023 for "disrupting public order". The M62 appears revitalised in the wake of President Bazoum's removal. Its members were quoted by state TV mobilising mass protests in support of the junta, as well as denouncing sanctions by West African leaders over the coup. It is unclear if the group is linked to the junta known as the National Council for Safeguarding the Homeland (CNSP) or to Russia. But it was the umbrella group organising Sunday's protest, where smaller civil society groups such as the Coordination Committee for the Democratic Struggle (CCLD) Bukata and Youth Action for Niger were also present. Thousands took part in a protest in the capital Niamey on Sunday, 30 July, with some waving Russian flags and even attacking the French embassy. Now this 'movement' is spreading across the country. In the central city of Zinder thousands had taken part in yesterday's protest in support of the military takeover. Niger is home to 24.4 million people where two in every five live in extreme poverty, on less than $2.15 a day. (Source: BBC)

Asia

China
Monday, August 1, 2023 
China’s ex-foreign minister has not been seen in public for more than a month. Hours after China’s top legislature convened a special meeting last week to remove foreign minister Qin, photos and mentions of the 57-year-old started disappearing from his former ministry’s website and he does not feature on the website’s list of “former ministers”. Some information reappeared days later. China named veteran diplomat Wang to replace Qin who lasted barely half a year in the role after becoming one of the country’s youngest foreign ministers in December 2022, a position with a five-year tenure. Beijing-based political analyst Wu said he could “almost certainly rule out health as the real reason”. If that was the case, the state could have assigned a deputy to fill in for him. There are precedents for officials disappearing and being scrubbed from the collective memory in China, erasures go back decades. A state-commissioned painting depicting the historic moment when Mao stood on top of Tiananmen Gate to announce the founding of the people’s republic was altered three times between 1955 and 1972 to erase officials that subsequently fell foul of Mao. The foreign ministry removed all online traces to its former chief protocol officer Zhang who was found guilty of corruption and using his position of power to obtain sex in 2016. Industry minister Xiao vanished for nearly a month last year before it was revealed he was being investigated for corruption. How the whole saga reflects on the man that supported his rise, President Xi? Does Qin saga expose the vulnerability of Xi’s one-man politics? Since coming to power in 2012, Xi has put in place a slew of regulations to combat corruption and enforce party discipline in a bid to address corruption in ways that analysts say have consolidated members’ loyalty towards him. Potential candidates' names were decided under Xi’s direct leadership. Qin’s meteoric ascent through the ranks has been partly attributed to his closeness to the president. Qin came to Xi’s attention when he served as chief protocol officer during Xi’s first term, a job that would give him direct access to Xi whenever the latter meets with foreign leaders. Then he was U.S. ambassador and then foreign minister and state councillor in five years - bullet-train speed by China standards. The National People’s Congress Standing Committee that convened on Tuesday did not remove Qin’s other title of State Councillor, a cabinet member who ranks higher than a minister, despite having the power to do so, experts say. Analysts point out that Qin would have gone through a rigorous vetting process to take the role just months ago. Communist Party regulations say leaders are vetted based on their ideologies, work performance and adherence to party discipline, while they also have to declare details about their family, including whether they have lived overseas and what assets they have. A portrait of the former U.S. envoy Qin remained hanging prominently on the wall of the Chinese embassy in Washington on Thursday. (Source: TheAsahiShimbun)

August 1, 2023  China today announced export controls on some drones and drone-related equipment, saying it wanted to safeguard “national security and interests” amid escalating tension with the United States over access to technology. China has a large drone manufacturing industry and exports to several markets, including the United States. The restrictions on equipment, including some drone engines, lasers, communication equipment and anti-drone systems, will take effect on Sept. 1. The controls also affect some consumer drones, and no civilian drones can be exported for military purposes, a ministry spokesperson of the commerce ministry said. Congress in 2019 banned the Pentagon from buying or using drones and components manufactured in China. U.S. lawmakers have said that more than 50% of drones sold in the U.S. are made by Chinese-based company DJI, and they are the most popular drone used by public safety agencies. A German retailer in March 2022 accused DJI of leaking data on Ukrainian military positions to Russia, which the company rejected as “utterly false.” China’s commerce ministry said in April this year that U.S. and Western media were spreading “unfounded accusations” that it was exporting drones to the battlefield in Ukraine, adding the reports were an attempt to “smear” Chinese firms and it would continue to strengthen export controls on drones. 'We have never designed and manufactured products and equipment for military use, nor have we ever marketed or sold our products for use in military conflicts or wars in any country,” the drone maker said. “China’s modest expansion of the scope of its drone control this time is an important measure to demonstrate our stance as a responsible major country, to implement global security initiatives, and maintain world peace,' a spokesperson said. Authorities had notified relevant countries and regions, the spokesperson said. The drone export curbs come after China announced export controls on some metals widely used in chipmaking last month, following moves by the United States to restrict China’s access to key technologies, such as chipmaking equipment. (Source: AsahiShimbun)

August 1, 2023  China said today it has complained to the United States about a weapons aid package to Taiwan. The U.S. unveiled an aid package for Taiwan worth up to $345 million on Friday, July 28, as Congress authorised up to $1 billion worth of weapons aid for the island as a part of the 2023 budget. "The Taiwan issue concerns China's core interests and is a red line that cannot be crossed in China-U.S. relations," Tan, spokesperson for China's defence ministry, said. Taiwan rejects China's sovereignty claims and says only Taiwan's people can decide their future. China's People's Liberation Army is paying close attention to the situation in the Taiwan Strait and is always on high alert, Tan said. The United States is Taiwan's most important arms supplier. (Source: Reuters)

Aug 1, 2023  Beijing and nearby cities stepped up rescue efforts today after rains and floods brought by remnants of Typhoon Doksuri disrupted services and food supplies and claimed 20 lives. Beijing recorded an average of 260mm of rainfall from Saturday, July 29, to early Monday, with the Changping Wangjiayuan Reservoir logging the largest reading at 738.3mm. In Hebei, precipitation from Saturday to Monday at one local weather station totalled more than the amount normally seen over a year and a half, with rainfall amounting to 1,003mm for the three-day period. Precipitation in the county where the station is located averages 605mm a year. Further west in Shanxi, a total of 42,211 people in the province had been relocated as of yesterday. The death toll in Beijing rose to 11 today with 13 people still missing. In nearby Tianjin, where rain has become intermittent, 35,000 people have been evacuated from homes and the local government fortified river banks and stepped up the inspection and repairs of power, water and communications lines. In Hebei province, nine people died and six were missing. China's finance ministry announced it would allocate 110 million yuan ($15 million) for rescue work in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, where rainfall stretched into a fourth day. Rivers have swollen to dangerous levels, prompting Beijing to use a flood storage reservoir for the first time since it was built 25 years ago. As of yesterday night, China's capital city had evacuated more than 52,000 people from their homes. The city government said rainfall over the past few days had surpassed levels seen in July 2012, when Beijing was hit by what was then the strongest storm since the founding of modern China. Nearly 400 flights were cancelled today and hundreds delayed at Beijing's two airports, tracker app Flight Master showed. Food delivery giant Meituan added staff and extended delivery times as orders for vegetables, meat and eggs rose 50% on its app. Doksuri swept through coastal Fujian last week, taking a 14.76 billion yuan ($2.06 billion) direct economic toll on the southeastern province and affecting almost 2.7 million people, with close to 562,000 evacuated from homes and more than 18,000 houses destroyed. Doksuri weakened as it rolled inland and dumped non-stop precipitation in northern cities over a few days. (Source: Reuters)

Persian Gulf
August 1, 2023  An escalating dispute over a gas field in the Persian Gulf poses an early challenge to a Chinese-brokered agreement to reconcile regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran. Saudi Arabia and neighboring Kuwait jointly claim the offshore Al-Durra gas field. Iran says it has rights to the field, which it refers to as Arash. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait agreed last year to jointly develop the gas field. Kuwait said at the time that they aimed to produce 1 billion cubic feet of natural gas and 84,000 barrels of liquefied gas per day. Iran denounced the agreement as illegal and said it should be included in any such plans. The two sides held talks in Iran in March but were unable to agree on a border demarcation. Kuwait’s oil minister told last week that his country would commence drilling and production without waiting for a deal. Saudi Arabia has sided with Kuwait, saying the two countries have exclusive ownership of the field, and has called on Iran to return to negotiations. Saudi Arabia and Iran formally restored diplomatic relations in April following a seven-year freeze. They have since reopened embassies and welcomed senior officials on visits. But they continue to back opposite sides in Yemen’s civil war, which is ongoing despite a 15-month cease-fire. Saudi Arabia is also in negotiations with the United States over potentially normalizing relations with Israel, which Iran’s leaders have said should be wiped off the map. It’s unclear whether the dispute over the gas field, which goes back to the 1960s, will escalate beyond rhetoric. But tensions are already high in the Persian Gulf, where the U.S. is building up military forces in response to what it says is Iran’s unlawful seizure of oil tankers and harassment of commercial vessels. (Source: AP)

Philippines
August 1, 2023  The ascension of ‘Bongbong’ Marcos jnr to the presidency of the Philippines has been a game-changer in attracting European investment and pledges to boost security ties, European officials have revealed, noting improvements on human rights in the Philippines. Former president Duterte’s self-proclaimed war on drugs is estimated to have led to the deaths of 12,000 Filipinos, according to Human Rights Watch. In her first visit to the Philippines, European Commission President von der Leyen pledged to restart negotiations on a trade deal. The EU is trying to de-risk Europe’s critical supply lines from any single supplier. Speaking in Manila, Von der Leyen declared that security in the Indo-Pacific was indivisible from security in Europe, where Ukraine is fighting Russia’s invasion. She said the use of force would not be tolerated in Europe or in the Indo-Pacific. 'Challenges to the rules-based order in our interconnected world affect all of us”. 'This is why we are concerned about the rising tensions in the Indo-Pacific, because an Indo-Pacific free of the threats of coercion is key to all our stability, to our peace, and to the prosperity of our people', Von der Leyen said. 'We could not choose our neighbours, but we can choose who to do business with, and on what terms,” she said. 'We made a mistake with Russia.' Von der Leyen also pledged to boost the Asian nation’s ability to process its critical minerals and increase data-sharing through satellites and undersea cables. She has stepped up her visits to Asia, having travelled to South Korea, Japan and India on top of her Manila trip. (Source: WAToday)

North America

United States
08/01/23  Did the government confirm aliens exist?
Whistleblower Grusch, a former member of the UAP Task Force, claims the Pentagon is covering up a UFO retrieval program. He provided no evidence to support his claims. Grusch, indicated he would be willing to say more in a secure, classified briefing. At the heart of Grusch’s whistleblower complaint is his claim that the government, specifically the Department of Defense, is operating programs to retrieve material from crashes that are extraterrestrial in nature and are keeping those programs secret from the public while also operating without appropriate Congressional oversight. Grusch spoke exclusively to NewsNation regarding his experiences, which he said include the U.S. government recovering the “non-human” pilots of downed craft. Former Navy Commander and pilot Fravor recounted a first-hand experience with the so-called Tic Tac UFO but said he was never briefed on the object or its potential origins. Former Navy pilot Graves, who founded the Americans for Safe Aerospace, also recounted an encounter he had with an object he described as a black sphere floating inside a clear cube. Graves indicated such encounters were extremely common among pilots. There was no evidence presented to support this claim. All three witnesses agreed these unidentified objects constituted a potential national security threat. Only Rep. Gaetz, R.-Fla., said he had seen any evidence of alien life firsthand. Official government bodies, including the White House, Pentagon, and NASA have all stated they have no reason to believe unexplained objects are extraterrestrial in nature. National Security Council Spokesman Kirby said after the hearing there are “no hard and fast” answers to the question but that the administration is taking it seriously. Following Wednesday’s widely-watched Congressional hearing on UAPs and  UFOs, the government has not issued any official confirmation of alien life. What was said at the hearing, by witnesses and even a lawmaker, remains unverified. Lawmakers have vowed to push for more investigations into the claims. (Source: TheHill)

Tue 01 Aug, 2023 - 17:13 ET  Fitch Ratings has downgraded the United States of America's Long-Term Foreign Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to 'AA+' from 'AAA'. The Rating Watch Negative was removed and a Stable  Outlook assigned. The Country Ceiling has been affirmed at 'AAA'.A full list of rating actions is at the end of this rating action commentary. The rating downgrade of the United States reflects the expected fiscal deterioration over the next three years, a high and growing general government debt burden, and the erosion of governance relative to 'AA' and 'AAA' rated peers over the last two decades that has manifested in repeated debt limit standoffs and last-minute resolutions. In Fitch's view, there has been a steady deterioration in standards of governance over the last 20 years, including on fiscal and debt matters, notwithstanding the June bipartisan agreement to suspend the debt limit until January 2025. The repeated debt-limit political standoffs and last-minute resolutions have eroded confidence in fiscal management. In addition, the government lacks a medium-term fiscal framework, unlike most peers, and has a complex budgeting process. These factors, along with several economic shocks as well as tax cuts and new spending initiatives, have contributed to successive debt increases over the last decade. Additionally, there has been only limited progress in tackling medium-term challenges related to rising social security and Medicare costs due to an aging population. /.../ Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to negative rating action/downgrade:     A marked increase in general government debt, for example due to a failure to address medium-term public spending and revenue challenges;     A decline in the coherence and credibility of policymaking that undermines the reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar, thus diminishing the government's financing flexibility.      Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to positive rating action/upgrade: Implementation of a fiscal adjustment to address rising mandatory spending or to fund such spending with additional revenues, resulting in a medium-term decline in the general government debt-to-GDP ratio;     A sustained reversal of the trend deterioration in governance. /.../ (Source: FitchRatings): https://tinyurl.com/4d9w2dyc

1 August 2023  Conservative Republicans are urging the party to consider possible impeachment proceedings against President Biden. Hunter put his father, Biden, on speakerphone up to 20 times whilespeaking with business associates, a US congressional panel has heard behind closed doors from Hunter's business associate, Archer. He told lawmakers Joe did not discuss business on the calls, according to those at the hearing. Earlier this month, Republicans released an FBI memo with unverified allegations - but no proof - that Joe and Hunter had accepted multi-million dollar bribes from Burisma. Both Archer and Hunter sat on the board of Ukrainian energy company Burisma in 2014, while Biden was vice-president. Archer's testimony came as he negotiates with the US Department of Justice on when he should report to prison to begin serving his sentence for a 2018 conviction in a conspiracy to defraud a Native American tribe. (Source: BBC)

August 1, 2023  The charges facing Trump in the Jan. 6 investigation - Case 1:23-cr-00257-TSC (Source: Storage.Courtlistener): https://tinyurl.com/ecnd4ryd

Tue 1 Aug 2023  In January, the US House Oversight Committee launched an investigation into the Biden family's domestic and international business dealings and whether these activities compromised US national security. House Republicans allege that Jr. One used his father's status as vice-president under president Obama in an influence-peddling scheme while he was sitting on the board of Ukrainian energy company Burisma. Burisma played a central role in former US president Trump's 2019 impeachment over his alleged efforts to pressure Ukraine to investigate the Bidens and help him win re-election. This week, Biden Jr.'s former business partner, Archer, testified before the House Committee in a closed-door interview. He said Joe was never directly involved in their financial dealings, though Hunter 'would often put his famous father on speakerphone to impress clients and business associates'. Goldman, who was representing Democrats inside the room, told after the interview that Mr Archer testified that Biden Jr. sold the 'illusion of access' to his father by taking credit for things his father did as vice-president that he had no part in. Biggs, who has co-sponsored legislation to impeach Biden, said Mr Archer's testimony implicated the current US president. He quoted the witness as saying Burisma could not have survived without the "Biden brand". "I think we should do an impeachment inquiry." "Archer talked about the 'big guy' and how Hunter always said, 'We need to talk to my guy,'" Mr Biggs told. Committee chairman Comer added: "Biden was 'the brand' that his son sold around the world to enrich the Biden family." "When Biden was vice-president of the United States, he joined Hunter's dinners with his foreign business associates in person or by speakerphone over 20 times," he said. Mr Comer's committee previously heard testimony from two Internal Revenue Service whistleblowers who said their investigation of Junior One was stymied by the US Justice Department - claims that House Republicans view as evidence of political influence to ensure lenient treatment for Biden's son. House Speaker McCarthy has warned that Republicans could begin an impeachment inquiry against Biden if the federal agencies fail to cooperate with oversight committees looking into his administration and family's business dealings. (Source: ABC.Net)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: russia india taiwan japan nasa china iran photo kuwait germany asia israel ukraine yemen philippines communist europeanunion persiangulf unitedstates southkorea europeancommission saudiarabia indianocean pacificocean northamerica taiwanstrait

2023. VIII. 1. Hungary, Poland, Moldova, Russia, Ukraine

2023.08.01. 17:50 Eleve

.

Europe

Hungary
01.08.2023  A vote in Hungary’s parliament
to ratify Sweden’s accession to NATO was adjourned due to the absence of ruling party lawmakers yesterday. Last week, Hungary said it would back Türkiye's decision on Sweden's bid to join NATO. Ahead of a NATO summit in July, Turkish President Erdogan agreed to forward to parliament Sweden's bid to join NATO following a trilateral meeting with NATO Secretary-General Stoltenberg and Swedish Prime Minister Kristersson in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius. Although Türkiye approved Finland's membership to NATO, it is waiting for Sweden to fulfill its commitments not to provide shelter to terrorists and supporters of terrorists and not to greenlight their actions. Following Türkiye's move, Hungarian FM Szijjártó said his country's ratification of Sweden's NATO bid is now 'only a technical question.' (Source: AnadoluAgency)

Poland
Tue, Aug 1, 2023  Earlier today, residents living near the border with Belarus reported witnessing helicopters with Belarusian insignia flying overhead, and some shared photos of the aircraft. Poland has reported a violation of its airspace in the Białowieża area near the border with Belarus. NATO has been informed of the incident. Poland's Ministry of Defence has reported that two Belarusian military helicopters, that were training near the border, violated Polish airspace during a training exercise. The Belarusian side had previously informed Poland about the  training drills. The border crossing reportedly took place in the Białowieża area at a very low altitude, making it difficult to detect by radar systems. Initially, Poland's military denied any airspace violation by the Belarusian helicopters. Minsk denies any infringement of airspace. The Belarusian Ministry of Defense stated: "The accusations of violation of the Polish border by Mi-24 and Mi-8 helicopters of the Belarusian Air Force are too far-reaching and created by the Polish military and leadership to justify the concentration of troops and equipment on the Belarusian border." Belarus and Poland have been on high alert along the border in recent weeks after the Wagner Group's mercenary fighters were relocated to Belarus close to the border with Poland. Błaszczak, Poland's Minister of Defence has ordered the number of soldiers on the border to be increased. Over the past two years, a significant number of migrants and refugees from the Middle East and Africa have been attempting to enter Poland and Lithuania. European countries view this migration influx as a potential effort by Belarus, which is allied with Moscow, to create instability in the region. Polish government has accused Belarus and Russia of using migrants as a form of warfare to destabilise the country. (Source: Express)

Moldova
01.08.2023  Moldova’s Information and Security Service (SIB) said yesterday that it has terminated its partnership agreement with Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB). It plans to withdraw from a cooperation agreement with Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR). Saying that cooperation with Russian special services was stopped as of Feb. 24 last year, the SIB noted that such agreements “no longer meet Moldova’s national interests.' Official notifications have been sent to the relevant Russian authorities. (Source: AnadoluAgency)

Russia
01.08.2023  In April, a Russian court
sentenced Kara-Murza, an opposition politician and Kremlin critic on charges of treason, spreading 'false information" about the Russian military, and leading an "undesirable" organization. Three judges and two prosecutors as well as an "expert witness" have been sanctioned for their roles in the sentencing of dual British national Kara-Murza, who is facing 25 years in a penal colony after the rejection of his appeal, the British Foreign Office said. Last month, the European Council also blacklisted nine Russians in response to Russia's 25-year prison sentence against Kara-Murza. (Source: AnadoluAgency)

1 Aug 2023  At least two people were killed by Ukrainian shelling of the city of Donetsk, the Russian-installed head of the region said. The governor of Belgorod region said that Ukraine fired at settlements multiple times. Gladkov said 12 artillery shells were fired at the village of Shchetinovka and that mortar shells also landed on the villages of Novaya Tavolzhanka, Krasnoe and Leninsky. The governor of Bryansk region said a Ukrainian drone hit a police station overnight but there were no casualties. Russian Defence Minister Shoigu said Moscow intensified  strikes on Ukrainian military infrastructure in retaliation for attacks on Russian-controlled territory. He said Western weapons are only prolonging the war and not leading to success on the battlefield. Mexican President Lopez Obrador called for an end to the “irrational” war in Ukraine and urged upcoming peace talks in Saudi Arabia to include Russia. He said Mexico would only take part in the talks if both sides were present. The Russian foreign ministry said Moscow will continue dialogue for a peaceful resolution of the Ukraine crisis with China, Brazil and African partners. Export prices for Russian wheat remained at elevated levels last week after spiking a week earlier due to Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal. According to the IKAR agriculture consultancy, the price of 12.5 percent-protein Russian wheat scheduled for delivery in the second half of August was $241 per tonne last week, down from $242 per tonne a week earlier. (Source: AlJazeera)

1 August 2023  The Russian defence ministry, in a message on Telegram today, said its anti-aircraft units had “thwarted a terrorist attack by the Kyiv regime” and downed two drones in the suburbs west of the city centre. But another drone, having been “hit by radio-electronic equipment and, having run out of control, crashed on the territory of the complex of non-residential buildings” in Moscow City, the ministry said, referring to a business district in the capital. Earlier, Moscow Mayor Sobyanin said the building hit today was the same one struck in a drone attack on Sunday, July 30. “The facade has been damaged on the 21st floor. Glazing was destroyed over 150 square metres,” he said. “There is no information on casualties,” he added. Ukraine began its long-awaited counteroffensive in June but has made modest advances in the face of stiff resistance from Russian forces on the front line. (Source: BBC)

Ukraine
Tue, August 1, 2023  During World War I, 41,000 Britons and 67,000 Germans required amputations. Since the beginning of the Russian military aggression, the number of Ukrainians left without one or more limbs has reached 20-50,000. Estimates by the Houp Foundation charity show that 200,000 people were seriously injured during the war, while amputations are frequently necessary in about 10% of major injuries. Due to the length of time required to register patients following an operation, the actual number may be higher. After being injured, some people don't have their limbs amputated for weeks or months. The prostheses are not cheap, with some prices reaching EUR 50,000. The Ukrainian authorities pay the wounded up to 20,000 euros. Civilians who are injured find it difficult to afford treatment. (Source: Yahoo / UkrainskaPravda)

Aug 1 2023  Ukraine's new fleet of crowd-funded kamikaze attack UAVs - 'Bober' (Beaver) drones, these long-distance weapons are believed to be responsible for a recent spout of attacks on Russia as they can fly for over six hours at a range of 500 miles. They are also nifty at evading Russia's air defense systems owing to their aerodynamic "duck" system that allows for a rapid change in flight altitude. Costing around £86,000-a-piece, Kyiv has been ramping up production of the Ukrainian-invented and Ukrainian-manufactured drone. 'Ukraine currently has the highest level of UAV production in the world,' said Kamyshin, Ukraine's minister responsible for increasing military production, adding that Ukraine already has over 100 companies producing drones. Ukrainian influencer Lachenkov helped crowd-fund for the Bobers. And 'prominent TV personality Prytula' on the weekend posed in front of freshly-made Bobers. He raised over £4million to buy them for Ukraine's army, which wants a fleet of over 100. On the weekend, he declared: 'Muscovites! Shudder from the sirens. Go to bomb shelters. Watch as it flies into strategic objects. Do not sleep from the work of air defense.' Last night, footage showed a massive explosion after a fresh drone strike hit a skyscraper in Moscow that houses the Russian Ministry of Economy and Ministry of Communications. (Source: TheU.S.Sun)

1 AUG 2023  President of Ukraine Zelenskyy mocked claims that the Ukraine and Russia war could last for three decades. Zelenskyy, 45, believes that 70-year-old Putin won't live another decade. He told Brazil’s TV Globo: 'It can’t, Putin won't live that many years. He did not fight in Syria at the pace he is fighting us. That is why he will not stand 30 years. He will not exist, he will die. This, obviously, is absolute.' He vowed that he and his generation would resist any future bid by Russia to regroup and seek to defeat Ukraine. 'As long as we are alive, we will not  let them become as strong as they were,' he said. (Source: DailyStar)

August 1, 2023  'Ukrainians are always looking for ways to give the middle finger to Russia.' Spending money on an anti-Russia gesture, Kyiv’s Motherland monument gets a makeover - but at what cost? Ukrainian authorities are replacing the 62-meter-tall statue of the woman monument’s hammer and sickle with a trident. Affectionally known locally as Baba, it has stood atop a hill on the right bank of Kyiv since 1981. Sternly looking east, she holds a 16-meter-long sword in her right hand and an eight-meter-long shield in her left. On the shield are the hammer and sickle, symbols used as the emblem of the former Soviet Union. On Sunday, July 30, workers started dismantling the Soviet emblem and replace the hammer and sickle with the coat of arms of Ukraine, a trident. Not everyone is pleased of using the country’s wartime resources. The view from the frontline, said Ukrainian combat medic Prylypenko, is that changing the statue is 'a waste of money.' “It is also a symptom of the lack of creating a state military strategy for civilian spending,” he added. The Ministry of Culture and Information Policy has said repeatedly the state has not spent a single hryvnia on the project, which is estimated to cost 28 million hryvnias (around €700,000), and that cash is coming from big businesses. 'We’ve been working on this project since last year when 85 percent of Ukrainians supported the change via online voting,” Tkachenko, now Ukraine’s former culture minister, said 'earlier this month'. Zelenskyy issued a video statement on July 20 urging the government to fire Tkachenko. The state must focus its maximum attention on defense needs, Zelenskyy said. "Culture during the war is as important as drones,' Tkachenko said in a statement on Friday, July 28, the same day the Ukrainian parliament approved his resignation. 'This is €700,000. This is more than 2,000 FPV drones, for example, or 240 sniper rifles, 350 thermal imagers of good quality, or much more. Why changing the coat of arms of the USSR to a trident right now is a more urgent need than strengthening the technical support of the army is a mystery to me,' Stavska, a dentist from Kyiv, who also buys supplies from volunteers for the Ukrainian army, wrote in a Facebook post. While people are fighting over her, Motherland Monument still dominates the skyline over Kyiv. According to the Ministry of Culture, Metinvest Group, owned by Akhmetov - Ukraine’s wealthiest man and owner of football club Shakhtar Donetsk - is going to make the trident to be held by the Motherland monument, as well as one of the financial partners for the project. The steel for the trident was supposed to come from the local firm Zaporizhstal but on July 25 the ministry said European steel be used instead as the local steel did not meet the technical requirements. Zaporizhstal protested the decision, claiming its steel is perfectly suited for the job. (Source: Politico)

1 August 2023  In the region of Kherson, the head of President Zelensky's office, Yermak, said four people were killed in what local officials called merciless Russian shelling. A dormitory was damaged in an overnight Russian drone attack on Kharkiv, says the mayor of the north-eastern Ukrainian city  'Earlier this month', the UN said there have been some 25,671 civilian casualties since Russian launched its invasion of Ukraine last year, but the true figure is likely to be far higher. (Source: BBC)

August 1, 2023  Ukraine’s plan 'if Russia assassinates Zelenskyy.' Caesar’s murderers failed in their goal of saving the doomed Roman Republic from dictatorship, but instead only triggered the civil wars that accelerated the seemingly inevitable transition to the imperial system of the Caesars. Ukraine it is far from the decaying Roman Republic, whose days were almost certainly numbered whether the Ides of March slaying was successful or not. 'And Europe is already at war'. 'Assassinations of autocrats produce substantial changes in the country’s institutions, while assassinations of democrats do not,' a data-driven paper written by academics Jones and Olken for America’s National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) concluded on the effect on institutions and war of the 59 assassinations of national leaders that took place between 1875 and 2004. If there’s a weak link in the scenario it’s probably not in Ukraine but among its allies. When Zelenskyy was asked by CNN last month whether he was worried by Russian attempts to kill him, he answered he couldn’t afford to be. 'Of course, my bodyguards should think how to prevent this from happening, and this is their task. I don’t think about it.” The risks now are less than they were in the first chaotic weeks of the war. But no one in the Ukrainian government or the country’s parliament doubts the danger remains high. Ukrainian officials tend to brush off requests to discuss what would happen were Russia to succeed - or they decline to go on the record, worrying the topic appears far too macabre. And yet, despite the reluctance to publicly engage with the question, there is a plan in place. Indeed, U.S. Secretary of State Blinken said as much: “The Ukrainians have plans in place - that I’m not going to talk about or get into any details on - to make sure that there is what we would call ‘continuity of government’ one way or another,” he told last year. Formally, under the constitution, the line of succession is clear. “When the president is unable to fulfill his duties, the chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine [the Ukrainian parliament] takes over his responsibilities,” said Knyazhytsky, an opposition lawmaker from the western city of Lviv. “Therefore, there would be no power vacuum.” The chairman of the Verkhovna Rada - Stefanchuk, a member of Zelenskyy’s Servant of the People party - doesn’t have an especially high trust rating in opinion polls.  It is around 40 percent, less than half of Zelenskyy’s. And he’s not popular with opposition lawmakers. The governing council would most likely consist of Stefanchuk as the figurehead, along with Yermak, the former movie producer and lawyer who’s the head of the office of the president, Foreign Minister Kuleba and Defense Minister Reznikov. Zaluzhny would remain as the  country’s top general. Ukrainians have a balanced view of Zelenskyy, seeing both strengths and weaknesses. While he has been praised for his fine wartime leadership, he has also been criticized for missteps - notably for failing to better prepare for an invasion he thought unlikely. His shutting out of opposition lawmakers now and his thin-skinned brusqueness with even constructive criticism have been noted, as has his tendency to blame others for mistakes. TV personality Prytula now runs major charitable initiatives and has a sky-high public trust rating, said Karatnycky, author of “Battleground Ukraine: From Independence to the Russian War.” He noted that Ukraine has created 'a well-honed' administrative, military and diplomatic machine. 'I don’t want to say that Zelenskyy is hardly irrelevant to this,” he added. “But I think the country’s unity is the indispensable thing.” “It is important to remember that the key factors in Ukraine’s struggle against Russian aggression are the resilience of the armed forces, the skill of its command and victories on the front', said Knyazhytsky. 'This is what matters most in terms of Ukraine’s political stability.' Zelenskyy's rhetoric and oratory 'have captured the hearts of audiences from Washington to London and Brussels to Warsaw'. His elimination would likely leave many of those same people stunned and unsure of what to do next. Nonetheless, this isn’t a one-man war. And in Ukraine at least, few doubt that other  leaders, just as worthy, would rise to the occasion as they have done since the invasion. It could add to pressure for negotiations and compromise. (Source: Politico)

August 1, 2023  A report last week from the U.N. humanitarian office said lack of funding “is hampering operations, adding to the challenges imposed by insecurity and other obstacles.” The $3.9 billion UN humanitarian appeal for Ukraine is only 30% funded, UN aid official says. The country starts preparing for a second winter with more residential buildings damaged and destroyed and thousands of people homeless following the collapse of the Kakhovka hydroelectric dam, and emptying of its reservoir on the Dnieper River on June 7, Brown, the country’s U.N. humanitarian coordinator said yesterday. Brown said a government-led assessment is under way with support from the U.N., European Union and World Bank on needs following the dam collapse and should be ready “in a couple of weeks.” She said acute needs have been managed, but “longer-term needs are very large.” She told a virtual news conference from Kyiv that 17 million Ukrainians need aid and the U.N. is targeting between 11 million and 12 million - but funding is becoming a serious issue. By the end of June, it said, the U.N. and its humanitarian partners reached 7.3 million people but in some parts of Ukraine’s south, east and north, more than 25% of targeted people couldn’t be reached “due to a combination of funding shortages and other operational challenges.” A top priority is ensuring shelter for people who have lost their homes this year. Another priority is the growing need for psycho-social support for people who have struggled through 17 months of war, she said. Ukraine is far from alone in facing a serious funding shortfall. On Friday, July 28, a top U.N. official said the United Nations has been forced to cut food, cash payments and assistance to millions of people in many countries because of “a crippling funding crisis” that has seen its donations plummet by about half as acute hunger is hitting record levels. Skau, deputy executive director of the U.N. World Food Program, told a news conference that at least 38 of the 86 countries where WFP operates have already seen cuts or plan to cut assistance soon - including in Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen and West Africa. (Source: AP)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video brazil russia hungary sweden china photo nato mexico book germany europe africa finland turkey parliament lithuania poland ukraine yemen afghanistan belarus syria unitedkingdom europeanunion unitednations unitedstates sovietunion saudiarabia blacksea worldbank europeancouncil westafrica ancientrome dnieper

2023. VII. 31. European Parliament, Belarus, Russia, Ukraine

2023.07.31. 16:46 Eleve

.

European Parliament
July 31, 2023 
The European Parliament’s response to Qatargate: Fight corruption with paperwork. And blame foreign interference, not an integrity deficit. When Belgian police made sweeping arrests and recovered €1.5 million from Parliament members in a cash-for-influence probe last December, it sparked mass clamoring for a deep clean of the institution, which has long languished with lax ethics and transparency rules, and even weaker enforcement. The Belgian authorities’ painstaking judicial investigation is still ongoing, with three MEPs charged and a fourth facing imminent questioning. Much is unknown about how the alleged bribery ring really operated, or what the countries Qatar, Morocco and Mauritania really got for their bribes. The Parliament and its president, Metsola, seven months later can claim to have tightened some rules - with accused MEPs Kaili and Tarabella back in the Parliament and even voting on ethics changes themselves. The reforms lack the political punch ahead of the EU election next year. The Parliament declined to launch its own inquiry into what really happened, it decided not to force MEPs to declare their assets and it won’t be stripping any convicted MEPs of their gold-plated pensions. Calls for a more profound overhaul in the EU’s only directly elected institution - including more serious enforcement of existing rules for MEPs - have been met with finger-pointing, blame-shifting and bureaucratic slow-walking. EU Ombudsman O’Reilly, who investigates complaints about EU administration, lamented that the initial sense of urgency to adopt strict reforms had 'dissipated.' After handing the EU a reputational blow, she argued, the scandal’s aftermath offered a pre-election chance, “to show that lessons have been learned and safeguards have been put in place.” The Parliament was occasionally looking outward rather than inward for people to blame. Metsola’s message in the wake of the scandal was that EU democracy was “under attack” by foreign forces, actors, linked to autocratic third countries. Instead of creating a new panel to investigate how corruption might have steered Parliament’s work, Parliament repurposed an existing committee on foreign interference and misinformation to probe the matter. The result was a set of medium- and long-term recommendations that focus as much on blocking IT contractors from Russia and China as they do on holding MEPs accountable - and they remain merely recommendations. Metsola did also turn inward, presenting a 14-point plan in January she labeled as “first steps” of a promised ethics overhaul - a finely tailored lattice-work of technical measures that could make it harder for Qatargate to happen again, primarily by making it harder to lobby the Parliament undetected. The package includes a new entry register, a six-month cooling-off period banning ex-MEPs from lobbying their colleagues, tighter rules for events, stricter scrutiny of human rights work. But the central figure in Qatargate, an Italian ex-MEP called Panzeri, enjoyed unfettered access to the Parliament, using it to give prominence to his human rights NGO Fight Impunity, which held events and even struck a collaboration deal with the institution. An initial idea to ban former MEPs from lobbying for two years after leaving office - which would mirror the European Commission’s rules - instead turned into just a six-month 'cooling off' period. Metsola’s promise in December was that there would be “no business as usual,” which she repeated in July. MEPs, primarily in Metsola’s large, center-right European People’s Party group pushed an argument, that changing that 'business as usual' will only tie the hands of innocent politicians while doing little to stop the few with criminal intent. They’re bolstered by the fact that the Socialists & Democrats remain the only group touched by the scandal. Wieland, a long-serving EPP member from Germany, who sits on the several key rule-making committees, chairs an internal working group on the Parliament’s rules that feeds into the Parliament’s powerful Committee on Constitutional Affairs, where Metsola’s 14-point plan will be translated into cold, hard rules. Those rule changes are expected to be adopted by the full Parliament in September. The measures will boost existing transparency rules significantly. The lead MEP on a legislative file will soon have to declare (and deal with) potential conflicts of interest, including those coming from their "emotional life.” And more MEPs will have to publish their meetings related to parliamentary business, including those with representatives from outside the EU. Members will also have to disclose outside income over €5,000 - with additional details about the sector if they work in something like law or consulting. Negotiators also agreed to double potential penalties for breaches: MEPs can lose their daily allowance and be barred from most parliamentary work for up to 60 days. They fully delivered on Metsola’s plan, Wieland told. 'Not more than that.'  Yet the Parliament’s track record punishing MEPs who break the rules is virtually nonexistent. As it stands, an internal advisory committee can recommend a punishment, but it’s up to the president to impose it. Of 26 breaches of transparency rules identified over the years, not one MEP has been punished. (Metsola has imposed penalties for things like harassment and hate speech.) And hopes for an outside integrity cop to help with enforcement were dashed when a long-delayed Commission proposal for an EU-wide independent ethics body was scaled back. The Commission opted for suggesting a standards-setting panel that, at best, would pressure institutions into better policing their own rules. 'I really hate listening to some, especially members of the European Parliament, who say that ‘Without having the ethics body, we cannot behave ethical[ly],’' Commission Vice President for Values and Transparency Jourová lamented in June. Metsola, for her part, has pledged to adhere to the advisory committee’s recommendations going forward. But MEPs from across the political spectrum flagged the president’s complete discretion to mete out punishments as unsustainable. (Source: Politico)

Belarus
July 31, 2023 
Russia's Wagner mercenary group has begun training mechanized units of the Belarusian military, the Belarusian Defense Ministry said yesterday. 'Training is being conducted to organize departments, platoons, and companies, taking into account the experience of the [Wagner] specialists,' the ministry said. Thousands of Wagner mercenaries have arrived in Belarus since the group's short-lived rebellion in Russia. (Source: rferl)

Russia
July 31, 2023   Russian President
Putin is forming a network of private military companies across Russia. The plans for the "special enterprises" were noted in a new bill that raises the draft age for the Russian military. The move is aimed at countering sabotage and internal threats, according to a statement by Duma defense committee chairman Kartapolov. According to the Daily Beast report, Putin's militias would be under the command of regional governors, operate at Putin's behest, and would be armed by the Russian Ministry of Defense. They are a tool to enhance security [important given clandestine actions by Ukrainian military intelligence], and can, as necessary, help against any new mutiny, Sokov,a former Kremlin official, told The Daily Beast. The Barents Observer, a Norwegian outlet, said the units' job is to "protect the state border, fight illegal armed groups and combat foreign sabotage and intelligence formations," as well as quashing internal threats. Russia already has a national guard. (Source: msn)

31 Jul 2023  Russian President Putin reviewed a parade of warships and nuclear submarines in his native St Petersburg and announced that the Russian Navy would receive 30 new ships this year. Former Russian President Medvedev again raised the spectre of a nuclear conflict over Ukraine, saying Moscow may have to use an atomic weapon if Kyiv’s ongoing counteroffensive was a success. “Imagine if the… offensive, which is backed by NATO, was a success and they tore off a part of our land then we would be forced to use a nuclear weapon,' he said on Telegram. The Russian defence ministry said it brought down three Ukrainian drones over the capital, Moscow, damaging a high-rise building reported to house government offices. Nobody was hurt and the attack briefly forced the closure of the city’s four airports. Separately, the Russian defence ministry said it had successfully thwarted an overnight attack on the peninsula of Crimea by 25 Ukrainian drones. Ukrainian forces say they are retaking ground near Bakhmut, lost when Russian forces took the city in May. Ukrainian Deputy Defence Minister Maliar said Russian forces were “tenaciously trying to seize back” areas on the southern front. Ukraine, she said, had recaptured 200 square kilometres in the south but advances were limited by entrenched Russian positions and mines. President Zelenskyy said the war was 'gradually returning to Russia’s territory – to its symbolic centres'. In the northeastern Kharkiv region, a Russian attack set off a fire at a 'non-residential” building but caused no casualties. Russia’s defence ministry, in its daily account of military activity, said its forces had spotted and deployed rockets to destroy an аrmoured brigade of Ukrainian troops near Svatove, a key Russian-held town in Ukraine’s northeast. Russian forces, it added, had also repelled four Ukrainian attacks near the town of Lyman, further south. (Source: AlJazeera)

Ukraine
July 31, 2023  Two months after it began its counteroffensive, analysts observe that 'Ukrainian forces made notable gains' in the east and south of the country at the center of some of the most fierce fighting in recent days. 'The independent' Institute for the Study of War noted in its latest update that forces 'loyal to Kyiv' have opened up three new fronts, including around the contested city of Bakhmut. The institute assesses Ukraine has made “small successes' in these regions and are gradually advancing west toward the region around Zaporizhzhia. Local commanders have offered tempered optimism about their progress. Ukrainian troops are "slowly but surely' gaining momentum around Bakhmut and elsewhere in the contested province of Donetsk, Cherevaty, a spokesman for Ukraine’s Eastern Group of Forces, said today. Ryan, a former Australian army general who regularly analyzes developments in Ukraine, calls the latest reports 'excellent news.' 'Although we must acknowledge the Ukrainian lives this has cost to achieve,' he wrote in his latest analysis in Substack. 'Notwithstanding this achievement, there is still some way to go before Ukrainian ground forces are able to make an operational breakthrough and advance to their southern seacoast.' Beyond focus on the literal front lines in Ukraine, both sides have also turned their attention on Russian public opinion and perception of the conflict in an attempt to shape the war. Ukraine appears to have escalated its use of drone attacks on Moscow and other key hubs in Russia with several last week, including one that landed near the Russian Ministry of Defense building. The strikes have targeted key Russian logistics nodes and also parts of the city center in the capital. 'Western governments assess that these attacks have the potential to dramatically affect what has so far been universal support for Putin at home and for his decision to invade Ukraine'. So far, Putin’s government has contained the potential fallout from these stories – chiefly by its iron-fisted control of news media in Russia. State news services have underreported the drone strikes and placed broad emphasis on operations it says have targeted drone manufacturing facilities in Ukraine. The biggest story locals are following are Russian news reports of Ukrainian casualties since it began the counteroffensive, which Defense Minister Shoigu said recently exceeds 20,000. And Russian support for the war does appear to be continuing. The latest poll released on Friday, July 28, by the independent Levada Center - a reliable glimpse into public opinion within the authoritarian state – shows an increase in the number of Russians who support the war, now at 75%. The biggest jump came from the 45% who now say they “definitely support” Russia’s invasion compared to the 30% those who “rather support” it. Levada noted however, that support for peace negotiations with Ukraine also appears to be rising, particularly as new avenues for diplomatic engagement regarding the conflict accelerate. (Source: UPI)

July 31, 2023  Saudi Arabia and Ukraine have invited 30 countries to participate in the summit in Jeddah, the latest multilateral talk called by Ukraine to try to increase international support for a 10-point peace plan proposed by Zelensky in December, which called for full restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and the withdrawal of all occupying Russian troops. They hope to win the support of countries such as India and Brazil. U.S. national security adviser Sullivan is expected to attend the Ukrainian-backed 'peace' summit in  Saudi Arabia this weekend. Russia will not attend the conference. Kremlin spokesman Peskov said Moscow would monitor the meeting. “We’re in touch with our partners. As concerns the event that will be held by Saudi Arabia, if it helps the West realize the Zelensky plan’s complete futility, then it won’t be useless,” Zakharova, the spokeswoman for Russia’s foreign ministry, said today. Early today morning Russian forces launched two missiles at Kryvyi Rih, an industrial city about 275 miles southeast of Kyiv, killing six and injuring 75. In a video address today, Zelensky said Russia fired Iskander ballistic missiles from Crimea. One of the missiles ripped through five floors of a residential building, while the other destroyed a university building, Zelensky said. Today, two early-morning Russian strikes killed at least four people and wounded 17 in southern port city Kherson. With Moscow having reimposed a blockade on Ukraine grain in the Black Sea, the Ukrainian and Croatian foreign ministers agreed today on the “possibility” of using Croatian ports to export Ukrainian grain. It was not clear how such an arrangement would work. (Source: TheWshingtonPost)

31 July 2023  Elite snipers, 'The Ghosts', a team of around 20 soldiers, have been operating on the edges of Bakhmut for the past six months. They often hunt for high-value targets. The team electronically records every shot through the sights of their rifle. How many Russians the team have killed? 'There's a confirmed number - 524'. Every member of the team was 'handpicked based on their humanity and patriotism' rather than their military experience and skills. (Source: BBC)

31 July 2023  8.6% of Ukraine’s total housing stock is damaged or destroyed, amounting to $54bn in damages, according to a June report from the Kyiv School of Economics. The immense costs of redevelopment were estimated in April to be $411bn by the World Bank in April. Former EuroMaidan revolutionary turned politician Nayyem, the former Deputy Minister of Infrastructure will be responsible for rebuilding Ukraine when the war comes to an end. Nayyem' Agency was established in January. He believes Ukraine could potentially become one of the most modern and greenest countries in the world – if the money to pay for it can be found. As Nayyem points out, this figure is only going up. “It is too early to estimate because we do not know what is going on in the occupied territories. It is obvious they will have [far] more problems than the de-occupied and liberated territories or the peace side,” Nayyem tells. Pointing to Kherson as an example, he explains that Russian troops have destroyed everything in the occupied zones, including municipal transportation, bridges, roads and administrative buildings. The Agency has received over 400,000 inquiries from liberated territories, 40% of which concern housing. The Agency has small projects with the UK, World Bank, European Investment Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) for rebuilding, although not at the level that Ukraine needs. Currently funding from allies and institutions is simply filling the holes in the state budget. Countries like Poland, Lithuania and Estonia are implementing their own projects on the ground. Warsaw is funding temporary accommodation for raining program for interns in the architecture profession (IDPs) in the de-occupied towns outside Kyiv. Repairing damaged roads and bridges is one of the Agency’s key priorities. The Agency is focusing on energy infrastructure in preparation for the heating season as well as utilities, such as water. Following the destruction of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant last month, the Agency is building a pipeline to provide water to 1.5mn people in southern Ukraine. The Fund for Liquidation of the Consequences of Russian Aggression launched by Ukraine in January 2023, consists of seized funds and assets belonging to the Russian Federation and Russian citizens. The 2023 state budget allotted UAH35.5bn ($965mn) to the fund, with priority on rebuilding destroyed housing and critical infrastructure facilities. And the government confiscated $462mn from Russian banks at the start of the year. The private sector was pinpointed at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London last month. However, many expressed concerns about Ukraine’s corrupt reputation. Nayyem believes implementing transparency and corruption prevention measures in all agencies will help change the approach for procurement and other issues and build trust with partners. He points to the recently launched DREAM platform, which aims to make the reconstruction process as transparent as possible. Currently, only Ukrainian construction firms are involved in the rebuilding process. The overwhelming majority of Ukrainian citizens and businesses (73% and 80% respectively) listed the resumption of corruption schemes as their top fear post-war. The physical reconstruction process will begin in August, trialled in six settlements in the Kherson, Kyiv, Sumy, Kharkiv and Chernihiv regions, which should become fully habitable within a year, according to Nayyem. Ukraine has its own big capacity to produce materials and enough experts and specialists and labour who can work on this project, he stresses. Ukraine's depleted workforce has suffered a 30% drop since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion. 2,000 members of the Agency are in communication with locals on the ground. Nayyem thinks restoration itself will be part of economic development and part of job creation. Housing is the responsibility of the government, "because housing is something that people cannot bring back fast enough [themselves] so the government should help them,' he explains. (Source: bneIntelliNews)

31 Jul 2023  Yermak, the chief of staff to Ukraine’s president, writing on Telegram, said officials from several countries were preparing to meet in Saudi Arabia to discuss Zelenskyy’s peace plan for Ukraine, based on the departure of all Russian troops. He said Kyiv is to start consultations with the United States this week on providing security guarantees for the country pending the completion of the process of joining NATO. The Wall Street Journal first reported on the meeting in Saudi Arabia on July 29, saying it would be held in Jeddah on August 5-6. (Source: AlJazeera)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video brazil russia india china nato belgium croatia germany italy mauritania lithuania poland norway australia ukraine qatar belarus morocco unitedkingdom estonia europeanunion unitedstates europeanparliament europeancommission saudiarabia blacksea worldbank crimea europeaninvestmentbank europeanombudsman europeanbankforreconstructionanddevelopment

Danube photos

2023.07.18. 20:35 Eleve

 

Budapest, 2023. VII. 18. 20:35 CEST. Hullámtükrös alkonyatban

 

.3 8 14 0:19

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: magyarország híd németország hungary duna photos ég víz hajó germany felhők fényképek

Danube photos

2023.07.18. 20:21 Eleve

 

Budapest, 2023. VII. 18. Városkép lapátkerekes gőzhajóval.

Az első balatoni, 1846. évi gőzhajó, a Kisfaludy 2013-ban megépített replikája

 

3 8 12 3:48

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: balaton magyarország hungary nyár duna photos építészet víz hajó fák városkép fényképek

2023. VII. 1. France, Poland, Romania, Spain, Európai Bizottság - European Commission, Belarus, Russia, Ukraine, Vatican, Japan, Canada, United States, International Atomic Energy Agency

2023.07.04. 04:25 Eleve

.

Europe    Európa   

France
Friday, 01/07/2023.  Paris time: GMT+2  Poverty, lack of jobs and lack of opportunities are problems
that have plagued many of the poorer suburbs surrounding Paris and other French cities for decades despite efforts to improve conditions by multiple French presidents, says following a third night of violence FRANCE 24's international affairs commentator Herbert, at 4:34pm. A 17-year-old victim was shot at point-blank range by a police officer on June 27, Tuesday morning in the Paris suburb of Nanterre. He was driving a Mercedes when he was pulled over for traffic violations. Police initially reported that he was shot after driving his car at police, but this was contradicted by a video that rapidly went viral across social media and was later authenticated. The footage shows the two policemen standing by the stationary car, with one pointing a weapon at the driver. A voice is heard saying, "You are going to get a bullet in the head.' The police officer then appears to fire as the car abruptly drives off before gradually coming to a stop. The incident has sparked nights of violent unrest in the capital and cities across France that have seen protesters clash with police. On Thursday night public buildings were the target of violence throughout France. The country engulfed in a third night of riots with unrest across major cities. Police officers faced new incidents in Marseille, Lyon, Pau, Toulouse and Lille, including fires and fireworks. Videos on social media showed numerous fires across the country, including a bus depot in a suburb north of Paris and a tram in the eastern city of Lyon. 40 000 police officers were deployed across France - nearly four times the number mobilised on Wednesday - but there were few signs that government appeals to de-escalate the violence would quell the widespread anger. According to Le Figaro newspaper, there have been 421 arrests so far nationwide, more than half of them in the Paris region with the majority between 14 and 18 years old. 667 people were arrested during third night of unrest in France, said Interior Minister Darmanin at 7:45am. 249 police officers and gendarmes were injured on Thursday night amid protests that erupted for the third consecutive night in France, the interior ministry announced. The rioting has escalated. Looting of businesses, shops were seen during third night of violent unrest, protests in France. In the suburb of Drancy, rioters used a truck to force open the entrance to a shopping centre, which was then partly looted and burned. An elementary school and a district office was set on fire in Lille. In the city centre of Marseille, France's second city, a library was vandalised. Scuffles broke out nearby when police used tear gas to disperse a group of 100 to 150 people who allegedly tried to set up barricades. Police fired tear gas grenades during clashes with youths in the tourist hotspot of Le Vieux Port. In Nanterre, 'the working-class town on the western outskirts of Paris", the epicentre of the unrest, residents expect more of the same to come over the weekend, after third night of violent protests. Tensions rose around midnight, with fireworks and explosives set off in the Pablo Picasso district. Protesters torched cars, barricaded streets and hurled projectiles at police following a peaceful vigil. In central Paris, a Nike shoe store was broken into, 14 people were arrested, and 16 more were arrested with stolen objects after store windows were smashed along the rue de Rivoli shopping street. Protesters scrawled  "Vengeance for Nahel" across buildings and as night set a bank was lit on fire before firefighters put it out and an elite police unit deployed an armoured vehicle. Firefighters in the northern municipality of Roubaix, dashed from blaze to blaze throughout the night, with a hotel near the train station also catching fire, sending its dozen or so residents fleeing into the streets. Multiple public buildings were also targeted in Seine-Saint-Denis, in the Paris metro area. Today at 9:51am French Prime Minister Borne said she had gathered ministers at her office to discuss a third night of "unbearable and inexcusable" rioting. The government was getting an update on the violence and abuses overnight, Borne wrote on Twitter, posting pictures with figures including Interior Minister Darmanin and Justice Minister Dupond-Moretti. At 11:24am she said that the government was considering all options, including declaring a state of emergency, with one priority: restoring order after a third night of unrest across the country. Some right-wing opposition parties have demanded state of emergency being considered. Public transport in Paris was disrupted today after protesters destroyed a dozen buses in a depot in the north of the French capital overnight. There was very significant damage but no one was hurt as the buses were torched after Molotov cocktails were hurled into the depot in Aubervilliers north of the centre of Paris. Today morning some 23 bus lines out of a total of 350 in the city were not working while two tram lines were completely closed and others offered partial service or had major delays. The metro has largely continued working without problem. Services were resuming bit by bit, based on the state of the routes and the local security situation. "Traffic on the bus and tram networks will be very severely disrupted today," the IDFM regional transport authority said on Twitter. Bus and tram services in the Paris region will stop at 9:00pm each evening until further notice, after three nights of violent protests. The early shutdown was for the safety of workers and passengers, following attacks on transport and public infrastructure during the violence. Marseille, France's second-largest city, bans public demonstrations today at 1:12pm and all public transport in Marseille will also stop from 7pm local time today. 875 people were arrested yesterday night during the third night of violent protests in France, the interior ministry has said at 1:15pm. At 4:12pm it said that bus and tram services would be halted nationwide at 9pm from today and sales of large fireworks would be banned, under measures intended to tamp down on violent protests. Regional prefects, who are in charge of security around the country, would also be asked to ban the sale and transport of petrol cans, acids and other inflammable liquids. 4:55pm: The French gendarmerie will use armoured vehicles to suppress riots, Prime Minister Borne said. Additional mobile forces would be deployed along with the vehicles. She was also announcing the cancellation of large-scale events binding personnel and potentially posing risks to public order. France 24's  Jacinto talks at 6:30pm about the 'current' crisis in France and 'the repetitive' cycle of 'police violence'. 45,000 police and gendarmerie officers will be deployed throughout the country today evening to suppress riots today night, says Interior Minister Darmanin at 8:32pm, as the country braces for more violence on the streets. On the fourth night of violence in France, by 8pm in Lyon, despite the ban by the Rhône prefecture, the crowd swelled to 1,300 The police responded with tear gas to fireworks mortars fired by hooded demonstrators. The former presidential candidate, leader of France's left-wing political party France Unbowed (La France Insoumise), Mélenchon, in a video released on social networks around 8:55pm insisted on the youngest especially not to touch schools, libraries or gymnasiums, "everything that belongs to us all, our shared property". About 9pm: In the centre of Grenoble, shopfronts were smashed and shops looted by hooded youths. After 9pm clashes broke out between demonstrators and the police in front of the Hôtel de Ville in Lyon, at the start of a rally against police violence that had been banned. After 10pm police in Marseille announced 49 arrests at around 10pm among small, highly mobile groups near the center of the city, some of whom were attempting to loot several thoroughfares. Two police officers were slightly injured. Before 11pm rioters looted a gun store in the centre of Marseille, France's second city, and took away some hunting rifles but no ammunition. One individual was arrested and the store is guarded by police. Around 9pm in Nanterre, presence of quite a few police officers stationed throughout the streets there. Flowers have been laid at the site of youth's killing. 'Relative quiet for the moment' despite bands of young men driving by shouting insults and warnings about violence to come. 9:22pm: Police started clearing protesters from the central Paris square of Place de la Concorde today evening after an impromptu demonstration started amid nationwide unrest. A police station in the Pyrenees city of Pau was hit with a Molotov cocktail. Around 10:30pm a young man died after falling from the roof of the Bruyeres shopping centre, a supermarket being looted by rioters during overnight riots in the suburb of Petit-Quevilly of the northern French city of Rouen. Today at 11:22am President Macron cancelled a media conference scheduled for the second and last day of an EU summit in Brussels and left early to return to France, to go back to Paris. He made no comment to reporters as he left. A total of 492 buildings were damaged, 2,000 vehicles were burned and 3,880 fires were started, according to figures given by President Macron at the start of a crisis meeting. Denouncing the "unacceptable exploitation of a death of an adolescent," he said that additional security forces would be mobilised by the interior ministry to contain nationwide unrest. He also called on social media outlets to remove sensitive rioting content and called on parents to keep teen rioters off the streets today, adding that around a third of the 875 people arrested overnight for rioting were young, or very young. It's the responsibility of parents to keep them at home, Macron told reporters. 'It's not the state's job to act in their place,' he added. Citing TikTok and Snapchat, he said in televised remarks that social media play a significant role in the events of the past few days, help rioters organise themselves but also contributed to "mimicking" behaviour by some young people, who repeated what they saw online and lost track of reality. It sometimes feels like some of them re-live in the streets the video games that have intoxicated them, he said. Today the UK updated its official travel advice to warn citizens planning to visit France about unrest. "Locations and timing of riots are unpredictable. You should monitor the media, avoid areas where riots are taking place," said the latest advice issued by the foreign ministry. Geneva's cross-border public trams and buses were not running across the Swiss frontier into France today evening following riots. The decision had been made in response to the French restrictions on public transport this evening. The city is surrounded by France on three sides. Many of its public transport lines run across the border into dormitory towns on the other side. Some lines were stopping at the border while three cross-border routes were stopped altogether. The United Nations rights office said today it was concerned by the fatal shooting of a teenager by police that has sparked unrest across France. 'This is a moment for the country to seriously address the deep issues of racism and racial discrimination in law enforcement,' spokesperson Shamdasani said. "We also emphasize the importance of peaceful assembly. We call on the authorities to ensure use of force by police to address violent elements in demonstrations always respects the principles of legality, necessity, proportionality, non-discrimination, precaution and accountability.' France rejected UN accusations of racism among its police. "Any accusation of racism or systemic discrimination in the police force in France is totally unfounded," the foreign ministry said. /Videos, photo/ (Source: Frnce24): https://tinyurl.com/yc78ydrp

Poland
1 Jul 2023 
Siewiera, head of Poland’s national bureau of security, fears the relocation of Wagner mercenaries to Belarus could see the destabilisation of Central and Eastern Europe, Financial Times reported. (Source: AlJazeera)

Romania
01.07.2023  A Russian plane landed at the Henri Coanda airport in Bucharest today
despite EU airspace ban. Romania made an exception for Russian aircraft, the approval was obtained from the National Defense Ministry. A total of 40 personnel at the Russian embassy in Bucharest will leave Romania with their families on the civilian plane. Romania had asked Russia to reduce the number of staff at its embassy in Bucharest on June 8, and that accreditation of some employees would be canceled if the decision is not followed. (Source: Anadolu Agency)

Spain
July 1, 2023  Spanish Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez arrived in Ukraine today to meet with Zelensky, as his country takes over the rotating presidency of the European Union council. Sánchez tweeted: “I wanted the first act of the Spanish Presidency of the Council of the E.U. to be in Ukraine,' as he expressed European solidarity. Zelensky tweeted his appreciation after a joint news conference, thanking Spain "for supporting Ukraine on the way to joining the European Union.' Zelensky told a Spanish broadcaster that Kyiv wants to 'show results' on the battlefield before the next NATO summit, which starts July 11 in Lithuania. In May NATO nations were divided over how quickly Ukraine should be brought into the Western alliance. (Source: TheWashingtonPost)

Európai Bizottság
2023. július 01. 04:39  "Megszegte a magyaroknak tett ígéretét Brüsszel, és most még fizuemelést is kér (Videó).  A Bizottság szerint higgyük el: noha a kassza üres, a mi pénzük 'megvan, náluk van'. És majd oda is  adják, ha 'jól viselkedünk”. Az uniós tagállamok azonban „fenik a kést”. Teljesen jogosan. (Forrás: Mandiner): https://tinyurl.com/mpj2kw6p
Ugyanott: A magyar kormányfővel a közmédia brüsszeli stúdiójában készített 26 perces video-interjú. Részlet:
"Mi, magyarok, nem tudjuk elfogadni, hogy a rezsi-csökkentést megszüntessék Magyarországon, nem adunk pénzt arra, hogy itt a bürokraták fizetését megemeljék, nem adunk pénzt Ukrajnának addig, többet, amíg meg nem mondják, hogy hová lett az a 70 milliárd, amit korábban adtunk, és teljesen nevetségesnek, abszurdnak, lehetetlennek tartjuk azt a kérést, hogy adjunk oda egy olyan hitelhez kamatnövekmény céljából plusz pénzt, amelyből a nekünk járó összeget soha nem kaptuk meg". /Orbán Viktor

European Commission
1 Jul 2023  European Union leaders have declared they will make long-term commitments to bolster Ukraine’s security, following a summit in Brussels. Belgium’s prime minister said Russia’s frozen assets could provide 3 billion euros ($3.27bn) a year to rebuild Ukraine. Hungary has rejected the European Commission’s plans to grant more money to Ukraine and is not willing to contribute additional funds to finance the EU’s increased debt service costs, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said. (Source: AlJazeera)

Belarus
1 Jul 2023  Belarusian journalist
Padabed was sentenced to four years in prison after being convicted of “aiding extremist activities”. (Source: AlJazeera)

Russia
1 Jul 2023 
Putin discussed with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi the situation around Ukraine and how Moscow had resolved an armed mercenary mutiny, the Kremlin and Indian government said. Russia has said it saw no reason to extend the Black Sea grain deal with Ukraine beyond July 17 but assured poor countries that grain exports would continue. “If the Black Sea Initiative ceases to operate, we will provide grain deliveries of a comparable or larger size to the poorest countries at our own expense, free of charge,” Russian foreign minister Lavrov said. The Russian government will increase salaries for military servicemen by 10.5 percent from October 1, a decree published on an official web portal has shown. Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov denied that Russia intentionally attacked civilian targets in Ukraine, saying it only targeted military infrastructure or other military targets. Lavrov also said he believed the West wants to freeze the conflict in Ukraine to buy time to send more weapons to Kyiv. In response to a question about the Wagner Group’s aborted mutiny last weekend, Lavrov said his country has always emerged stronger and more resilient from any difficulties. Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Zakharova said Ukraine was preparing to commit a “terrorist” attack at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. Russian communications watchdog Roskomnadzor blocked media outlets linked to Prigozhin, chief of the Wagner mercenary force, newspaper Kommersant reports. Russia introduced a ban on Polish trucks transporting cargo in its territory, with some exceptions. Russia demanded an explanation from Poland over its arrest of Russian citizens, state news agency RIA reported, citing foreign ministry spokeswoman Zakharova. Poland arrested a Russian ice hockey player on suspicion of having spied for Moscow while playing for a Polish club. (Source: AlJazeera)

July 1, 2023  After mutiny, Kremlin looks to unwind holdings tied to Wagner mercenary boss. It has begun dismantling and taking control of Prigozhin’s sprawling empire, which included not only the army-for-hire but also a propaganda media wing and internet troll factories. But handling his operations poses a challenge for the Russian government. Belarusian President Lukashenko said he offered Wagner troops an abandoned military base in Belarus, the country where Prigozhin, the mercenary group’s leader, relocated this week, although he has not made a public appearance there yet. Lukashenko signed a law allowing the ban of media outlets based in countries that he deems unfriendly to Belarus. Satellite imagery captured yesterday showed what could be the rapid construction of a new camp in Belarus to house Wagner forces. Prigozhin represents a structure that is trying to work on the ideological front, on the political front, said Korotkov, a Russian investigative journalist who first uncovered the Wagner Group. 'All this works in a tight ecosystem with other sides of his business.' The Russian military, for instance, relies on Prigozhin’s businesses to feed soldiers fighting in Ukraine and cannot afford disruptions. (Source: TheWashingtonPost)

Ukraine
1 Jul 2023  The World Bank
approved a $1.5bn loan to Ukraine to support reconstruction and recovery, Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said. Human Rights Watch said it uncovered new evidence of indiscriminate use of antipersonnel landmines by Ukrainian forces against Russian troops. The group called on Ukraine to follow through with a commitment to not use the banned weapons, investigate their suspected use and hold accountable those responsible. A Russian missile attack on a village school near the front line in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region killed two women and injured six, Ukrainian police said. Ukraine’s military intelligence agency said Russia is reducing the number of personnel at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power. Ukrainian prosecutors charged a Russian politician and two suspected Ukrainian collaborators with war crimes over the alleged deportation of dozens of orphans from Ukraine’s Kherson region. Ukraine hopes to use Spain’s rotating EU presidency to try to “gain influence” in Latin America, where several countries have opposed Kyiv’s efforts to retake territory occupied by Russia, President Zelenskyy has told Spanish media. (Source: AlJazeera)

1 Jul 2023  Ukraine’s counteroffensive plans have been slowed by a lack of adequate firepower, from modern fighter jets to ammunition for artillery guns, the country’s military commander-in-chief Zaluzhny has said in an interview with the Washington Post published yesterday. Complaining about the slow deliveries of weapons promised by the West, Zaluzhny said that Kyiv’s Western supporters would not themselves launch an offensive without air superiority, but Ukraine is still awaiting F-16 fighters promised by its allies. 'I do not need 120 planes. A  very limited number would be enough,' he told. 'They are needed. Because there is no other way. Because the enemy is using a different generation of aviation,' he said. He also complained he has a fraction of the artillery shells that Russia is firing. Zaluzhny said he is in constant contact with Western partners, like Pentagon Joint Chiefs Chairman General Milley, who are keenly aware of Ukraine’s needs. 'We have an agreement: 24/7, we’re in touch. So, sometimes I can call up and say, ‘If I don’t get 100,000 shells in a week, 1,000 people will die. Step into my shoes,’' he told. But Milley alone can’t make the decision, and the delays are deadly, Zaluzhny said. 'It’s just that while that decision is being made, in the obvious situation, a lot of people die every day – a lot. Just because no decision has been made yet,' he said. 'Every day, every metre is given by blood,' he said. The Washington, DC-based think tank, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), said yesterday that Zaluzhny responded to a question regarding military equipment losses in battles with Russian forces saying that Ukraine used its tanks and armoured cars in combat and did not save them up for 'parades'. Speaking later yesterday in Washington, Milley said the United States and allies were working hard to supply Ukraine. 'We are giving them as much help as humanly possible,' he said. Milley said the US was still in talks on providing Ukraine with F-16s and ATACMS, precision missiles that could more than double the range Ukraine forces are able to target. He acknowledged that some people had expressed impatience with the pace of the counteroffensive. Milley told an audience at the National Press Club in Washington that Ukraine’s counteroffensive was “advancing steadily, deliberately working its way through very difficult minefields … 500 metres a day, 1,000 metres a day, 2,000 metres a day, that kind of thing”. He said he was unsurprised that progress was slower than some people and computers might have predicted. 'War on paper and real war are different. In real war, real people die. Real people are on those front lines and real people are in those vehicles. Real bodies are being shredded by high explosives,' he said. 'What I had said was this is going to take six, eight, 10 weeks, it’s going to be very difficult,' he added. 'It’s going to be very long, and it’s going to be very, very bloody. And no one should have any illusions about any of that.' Yesterday, President Zelenskyy said his forces advanced 'in all directions of our active operations'. Maliar, the country’s deputy defence minister, said Ukraine’s military assessed progress as 'going according to plan', and that the counteroffensive should be evaluated by 'a lot of different military tasks.' Zelenskyy also ordered security to be beefed up at the country’s border with Belarus, where fighters from the Russian mercenary group Wagner have been offered exile. Zelenskyy said he had been informed yesterday of the situation in Belarus by the Ukrainian intelligence service GUR, foreign intelligence services and border guards. 'By the decision of the Stavka [chief of staff], Commander-in-Chief Zaluzhny and General Nayev were instructed to strengthen the northern direction in order to guarantee peace. There are appropriate deadlines,' he said in a video posted on Telegram. Western officials now fear that Wagner forces could destabilise Central and Eastern Europe from the soon-to-be bases in Belarus. The ISW said yesterday that sources report that Wagner will operate three large field camps in Belarus, and media reports have claimed that recruitment centres for the private mercenary force are still open in Russia and accepting new recruits. (Source: AlJazeera)

Vatican
1 Jul 2023  Pope Francis said there is no apparent end in sight to the war in Ukraine as his peace envoy completed three days of talks in Moscow. “The reality of this war, that seems to have no end, demands of everyone a common creative effort to imagine and forge paths of peace,” the pope told a religious delegation from the patriarchate of Constantinople. (Source: AlJazeera)

Asia

Japan
July 1, 2023  Japan said it spotted two Russian Navy ships in the waters near Taiwan and Japan’s Okinawa islands over the last four days, according to its Defense Ministry. Tokyo said last month that repeated Russian military activity near Japanese territory posed a “serious concern” for the country’s national security. (Source: TheWashingtonPost)

North America

Canada
Saturday, (July 1, 2023)  Canada is experiencing its worst fire season on record. Right now, a map from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre (CIFFC) shows a country spotted red with blazes. Some of the fires active now have been burning for weeks; others are just beginning: In the past 10 hours alone, CIFFC logged three  additional fires. These fires aren’t clustered in a single region: Their spread is the northern equivalent of New York and California burning at the same time, with additional fires stretched in between. According to the CIFFC, more than 509 fires are active in Canada, 253 of which are classified as “out of control.” It has burned through a record-breaking 8.2 million hectares so far this year, sending smoke plumes as far as Europe. Despite the best efforts of  hundreds of firefighting personnel who have come from all over the world to pitch in, the fires don’t look like they will be winding down anytime soon. Every single fire has its own behavior. Different fires burn at different speeds and for different lengths, depending on where they are located and what is burning. In 2017, Canada’s Elephant Hill fire burned for well over two months. California’s largest fire on record, the August Complex, burned for 87 days, while its second-largest, the Dixie fire, burned for more than 100 days. Fires tend to burn uphill, and may struggle to jump a lake or a river. The area’s  topography also changes how accessible it is to firefighters. Remote, hard-to-access areas sometimes call for parachuting firefighting squads, known as smokejumpers. What vegetation is burning, how much, and how dry it is can speed up or slow down fires. Grasslands burn rapidly. A more forested area, with thicker, denser brush, might linger. Most of Canada is classified as boreal forest -  chilly, northern forest - and much of the fire is happening in that kind of ecosystem. This type of forest tends to burn at higher intensity and over larger areas because of the kinds of trees and how densely packed they are. Some boreal forests contain peat, which can slow fire - if it’s wet. But if that peat is dry, it can burn underground and spread fires even farther. Weather matters, too. Hot temperatures supercharge fires; the wind spreads them. Snow and rain help dampen flames, sometimes ending fires altogether. Though precipitation doesn’t always put them out entirely: In recent years, zombie fires in the Arctic have quietly smoldered under the snowpack throughout the winter, only to reignite in the following spring. In Canada, the mean duration of a fire that’s more than 1,000 hectares is 23 days - or a little over three weeks, according to Jain, a research scientist at the Canadian Forest Service. A fire that’s more than 10,000 hectares, burns for a mean duration of 39 days. The smoke that’s been descending over America is the cumulative effect of all those burns. Particularly nasty fires can certainly take weeks or months to resolve. For some of these enormous fires would take some huge rain events to completely stop them, MacNab, the head of Wildland Fire Information Systems with Natural Resources Canada, told. Pelletier of SOPFEU, Quebec’s forest-firefighting agency, told that this year, barring many heavy periods of rainfall, the agency expects firefighting operations to last until September. Broadly speaking, Canada’s fire season tends to start waning by the fall. Millions of Americans will have to brace themselves for more extreme smoke days. (Source: msn)

United States
July 1, 2023  In April, President
Biden told a group of children that he had 'six grandchildren". 'And I’m crazy about them. And I speak to them every single day. Not a joke.” The story surrounding the president’s grandchild in Arkansas, who is not named in court papers, is a tale of two families, one of them powerful, one of them not. The story is about money, corrosive politics and what it means to have the Biden birthright. There is a 4-year-old girl in rural Arkansas, aware that her paternal grandfather is the president of the United States. She has not met them. Her maternal grandfather, Roberts, described her as whip-smart and funny. In strategy meetings in recent years, aides have been told that the Bidens have six, not seven, grandchildren. A trial planned for mid-July has been averted - Ms. Roberts, 32, the daughter of a rural gun maker said she dropped a request to have the girl’s last name changed from Roberts to Biden. Ms. Roberts graduated with honors from Southside High School in Batesville, played basketball for Arkansas State University. Her father is a 'red-state' gun manufacturer. After graduating, she moved to Washington to study forensic investigation at George Washington University. She never completed the program. Along the way, she met the son of a future president who was sliding into addiction and visiting Washington strip clubs. In mid-2018, Ms. Roberts was working as a personal assistant to Mr. Biden. Shortly after their daughter was born in November 2018, he removed Ms. Roberts and the child from his health insurance. Her public Instagram account tells its own story. She filed a lawsuit in May 2019, and DNA testing that year established that Mr. Biden was the father of the child. In a photo, shared to her account in April 2022, her daughter wore an Air Force One baseball cap. She said she brought her to Washington because not many little girls get to say that their grandfather is the president. Before Thursday’s settlement, Mr. Biden had paid Ms. Roberts upward of $750,000, according to his attorneys, and had sought to reduce his $20,000-a-month child support payment on the grounds that he did not have the money. The parents ended a yearslong court battle over child support on June 29, agreeing that Mr. Biden, 53, who has embarked on a second career as a painter whose pieces have been offered for as much as $500,000 each, would turn over a number of his paintings to his daughter in addition to providing a monthly support payment. The little girl will select the paintings from Mr. Biden, according to court documents. The most recent round kicked off after he struck a deal with the Justice Department to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax charges and accept terms that would allow him to avoid prosecution on a separate gun charge. On top of that, Mr. Biden has been the subject of multiple congressional investigations, and the contents of the laptop he left at a repair shop have been pored over and disseminated by activists, who say his private communications show criminal wrongdoing. 'I’m very proud of my son,” the president told reporters recently. The younger Mr. Biden is recovering from crack cocaine addiction. The Republican pollster Luntz said voters do not care about Hunter’s legal and personal problems as much as they care about other issues, including Ukraine and inflation. (Source: dnyuz)

1 Jul 2023  Former US President Trump, 'a longtime admirer of Russian President Putin', says Putin had been “somewhat weakened” by an aborted Wagner mutiny and that now is the time for Washington to try to broker negotiated peace settlement between Russia and Ukraine. (Source: AlJazeera)

July 1, 2023  Today, speaking in a lecture at Britain’s Ditchley Foundation, CIA Director Burns reiterated the Biden administration’s insistence that the United States “had and will have no part” in last week’s rebellion by Prigozhin and his Wagner Group. The impact of Prigozhin’s "scathing indictment of the Kremlin’s mendacious rationale' for the Ukraine invasion and the conduct of Russia’s military leadership in the war 'will play out for some time, a vivid reminder of the corrosive effect of [President] Putin’s war on his own society and his own regime.' 'Disaffection with the war will continue to gnaw away at the Russian leadership' and create a 'once in a generation opportunity' for U.S. intelligence, said Burns, a former U.S. ambassador to Russia. 'We’re not letting it go to waste,' Burns said today. Intelligence initiatives have included the unprecedented release of classified information on Putin’s war plans before the invasion and subsequent intelligence sharing with allies and Ukraine, and the use of  social media through the Telegram channel “to let Russians know how to contact us safely on the dark web,' he said. 'We had 2.5 million views in the first week, and we’re very much open for business.' The United States has seen an 'increasing need' for cluster munitions, which could help address ammunition shortages in Ukraine, a U.S. official told. The Biden administration is weighing whether to supply Kyiv with cluster bombs. Senior U.S. administration and defense officials have contacted lawmakers to assess their comfort with sending the munitions. The Biden administration has concerns about the optics of the move and the potential for long-term harm to civilians because the munitions can leave behind unexploded bomblets that remain deadly for decades. 'We’ve always said our security assistance would evolve as battlefield conditions have evolved, and that continues to be the case,' the official said. The United States is not among the more than 120 nations that have signed an international convention banning the use, transfer or production of cluster munitions, which international rights groups and other governments have long condemned as inhumane. (Source: TheWashingtonPost)

Saturday(, July 1, 2023)  During a secret visit to Ukraine by CIA Director Burns earlier this month, Ukrainian officials revealed an ambitious strategy to retake Russian-occupied territory and open cease-fire negotiations with Moscow by the end of the year. Burns’s trip occurred just before the aborted rebellion by Russian mercenary leader Prigozhin against Russia’s defense establishment. Although the U.S. intelligence community had detected in mid-June that Prigozhin was plotting an armed assault of some kind, those findings were not discussed during the meetings with Zelensky and others, an U.S. official said. Biden administration officials have repeatedly emphasized that Washington and Kyiv had nothing to do with the failed march on Moscow, a rare challenge to Russian President Putin that the United States has characterized as an internal matter. In an effort to reinforce that line, Burns made a phone call to his Russian counterpart, Naryshkin, after the event and underscored that the United States was not involved in any way, the Wall Street Journal reported. 'Director Burns recently traveled to Ukraine, as he has done regularly since the beginning of Russia’s recent aggression more than a year ago,' said a U.S.official. Its purpose was to reaffirm the Biden administration’s commitment to sharing intelligence meant to help Ukraine defend itself, the official added. Publicly, Ukrainian officials have expressed frustration with critics of the pace at which the counteroffensive has played out thus far. But in private, military planners in Kyiv have relayed to Burns and others bullish confidence in their aim to retake substantial territory by the fall; move artillery and missile systems near the boundary line of Russian-controlled Crimea; push further into eastern Ukraine; and then open negotiations with Moscow for the first time since peace talks broke down in March of last year. Whether Ukraine can deliver on those plans, on such a truncated timeline, remains to be seen. Ukraine faces mines and manpower challenges in offensive’s early weeks. Zelensky and his military commanders, facing deeply entrenched Russian forces in occupied parts of Ukraine’s east and south, are under pressure from the Western nations that provided Kyiv with billions of dollars in advanced weaponry and training ahead of the counteroffensive. Ukraine has taken heavy casualties as its troops and armored vehicles navigate thick minefields and fortified trenches across wide-open territory. The challenging terrain has left troops vulnerable to Russian airstrikes and missile attacks. The Zelensky government has pushed hard for the United States and Europe to make firm commitments on Ukraine’s accession to NATO and the European Union - but the U.S. and Western European governments remain cold to the idea, more interested in offering pledges of long-term security assistance instead of the expansion of NATO, which  risks a direct conflict with Russia. While U.S. and Ukrainian officials differ on the topic of NATO membership, they say there is broad agreement on Kyiv’s aims for the offensive. 'The U.S. agrees that Ukraine should enter the negotiations from a strong position,' said a senior Ukrainian official. 'The U.S. is satisfied that our command does not do anything stupid, it keeps soldiers and equipment. The support is strong, and it makes our motivation higher.' Still, signs of stress are abundant. Zelensky has acknowledged that the counteroffensive is going 'slower than desired,' and officials have confirmed the destruction of some Western-provided Leopard 2 tanks and Bradley Fighting Vehicles. But Defense Minister Reznikov has dismissed skeptics, saying the “main event” is yet to come. The country’s top military commander, Gen. Zaluzhny, has called for patience, saying the offensive is being 'carried out' as diligently as possible. 'Yes, maybe not as fast as … the observers would like, but that is their problem,' Zaluzhny told The Washington Post this week. While U.S. military leaders want to see Ukraine accelerate its offensive, Zaluzhny has begun venting that the West has not sent ammunition and fighter jets to the battlefield fast enough. Military analysts say Ukraine’s goal of forcing a negotiation is ambitious given Russia’s fortified defenses, but not out of the question. If Ukraine can inflict enough losses on Russian forces and equipment, and interdict the movement of reinforcements, Ukraine may be able to weaken Moscow’s defenses enough to achieve a breakthrough, said Lee, a military analyst at the Foreign Policy Research Institute.'It’s possible they can cut off the land bridge to Crimea, either by seizing the terrain or putting it within range of HIMARS and other artillery, but much depends on the level of attrition,' Lee said. In preparation for the fall, Zelensky and top aides have begun thinking about how Kyiv can force an end to the fighting on terms that are acceptable to Russia and the Ukrainian people. If Ukraine sustains too many losses, its offensive could culminate early, Lee added. (Source: msn)

(Saturday), July 01, 2023  The U.N. expressed concern yesterday that no new ships have been registered since June 26 under a deal allowing the safe Black Sea export of grain from Ukraine. Russian President Putin spoke by phone with Indian Prime Minister Modi yesterday. Moscow said Modi expressed support for what the Kremlin called the Russian leadership's decisive actions in handling the mutiny by the Wagner mercenary group last Saturday. India has yet to condemn ally Russia for the invasion of Ukraine. The call comes after the U.S. and India declared themselves "among the closest partners in the world' last week during a state visit to Washington by Modi. CIA Director Burns held secret meetings in Ukraine in June with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy and  intelligence officials to discuss Ukraine’s counteroffensive strategy. The clandestine discussions are reported to have occurred before Russian mercenary leader Prigozhin’s thwarted rebellion against Russian President Putin and the Russian defense establishment. Ukrainian officials have expressed frustration in recent days, calling on Washington and the West to provide it more advanced weaponry to help dent Russian defensive positions and allow for Ukrainian troops to retake more territory. They have repeatedly called on the U.S. and its other allies to provide not just tanks and armored vehicles, but cluster munitions, long-range missiles, and modern fighter jets, such as F-16s. Reports of the secret meetings emerged yesterday. Earlier yesterday, Ukraine’s top general Zaluzhny told The Washington Post his forces are in desperate need of ammunition and other advanced weaponry. It “pisses me off,” said Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Zaluzhny. 'This is not a show … It's not a show the whole world is watching and betting on or anything. Every day, every meter is given by blood.' “Without being fully supplied, these plans are not feasible at all," he added. The failure of Ukraine’s  counteroffensive against Russian troops to make rapid advancements 'is not causing any panic' among top U.S. military officials. 'The United States is confident Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russia is making progress despite the lack of any significant break in the Russian lines'. Joint Chief of Staff Chairman General Milley told in Washington yesterday the slow pace of Ukraine’s advance is 'part of the nature of war.' Ukrainian forces are “advancing, steadily, deliberately," Milley said during an appearance at the National Press Club. U.S. officials remain confident Ukraine’s counteroffensive will make  headway, even if it takes six to eight weeks before Ukrainian forces see more substantial gains. "It’s going to be very difficult. It’s going to be very long. And it’s going to be very, very bloody and no one should have any illusions about any of that,' he said. Milley also said the U.S. is openly considering providing Ukraine with cluster-munitions - despite concerns by some allies about the nature of the bombs - long-range Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) missiles and even some of its own F-16 fighter jets. 'These things are on the table,' he said. “There's no decision at this point.” A number of humanitarian groups say cluster-munitions have a high rate of failure and often lead to civilian casualties. So far, the U.S. has said it will allow its allies to provide Ukraine with the U.S.-made jets and is training its pilots to fly them. Washington says the focus has been on giving Ukraine systems and weapons it can immediately deploy to the front lines. The U.S. will “continue to monitor Wagner's activities wherever they are around the world, and we're going to continue to hold them properly accountable for the kinds of egregious violent, deadly and illegal conduct ... that they are still capable of conducting,” White House national security spokesperson Kirby told. Ukraine took steps to tighten the defense of its border with Belarus, a close ally of Russia. President Zelenskyy has asked his senior military leadership to strengthen Ukraine’s northern military sector after mercenary leader Prigozhin  flew from Russia into exile in Belarus. "The decision … is for Commander-in-Chief Zaluzhny and 'North' commander [General] Naev to implement a set of measures to strengthen this direction," Zelenskyy said on the Telegram messaging app. Defense Minister Reznikov has said Kyiv’s forces have liberated nine settlements in Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, though the main attack is yet to come. (Source: VOANews)

International Atomic Energy Agency

July 1, 2023  There is no visible evidence of 'mines or other explosives' at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog said. However, additional access and checks are still required, said Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency. He added that the agency takes seriously reports that the area has been mined, and he said that mines were previously placed inside and outside the perimeter of the plant, which is occupied by Russian forces. Russia is reducing its presence at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, and Ukrainian employees have been told to evacuate, Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence Directorate said yesterday. Last week, Zelensky warned that Russia was planning a 'terrorist act' at the plant. He reiterated that assertion todays. Russia has denied the claims, including in a letter to the United Nations this week, Russian state media reported. (Source: TheWashingtonPost)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video magyarország russia india taiwan japan map photo nato romania france belgium arctic europe asia canada vatican quebec lithuania poland switzerland spain ukraine pyrenees belarus unitedkingdom europeanunion európaibizottság unitednations unitedstates southamerica blacksea worldbank crimea europeancouncil northamerica internationalatomicenergyagency

2023. VI. 30. European Council, Russia, India, United States

2023.07.04. 04:21 Eleve

 . 

Europe

European Council
30 June 2023  EU leaders broke off migration talks early Friday (30 June)
as Poland and Hungary blocked 'progress'. Migration has been one of the most contentious issues for the EU since the 2015 "migration" crisis, since when the bloc had tried and failed to overhaul the bloc’s process for welcoming and relocating 'asylum' seekers. On the eve of the summit, Italy was among nine EU countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea have urged the bloc to create a formal ‘southern partnership’ with African countries based on cooperation on energy and migration. Earlier this month, Warsaw and Budapest were outvoted when EU home affairs ministers, after months of tense negotiations, 'agreed' on reforming the bloc’s rules on the relocation of migrants and procedures for processing asylum seekers. 'The final compromise' had set quotas for willing countries and mandatory financial contributions of €20,000 for each migrant for countries that refuse to relocate migrants. The blueprint, which still needs to be approved by the European Parliament, gives a derogation for countries that have accepted at least one million asylum seekers. Poland and Hungary voted against the position adopted by a qualified majority, meaning 55% of member states, representing at least 65% of the EU population, voted in favour. EU leaders called off yesterday’s summit talks after last-ditch efforts by France and Germany and European Council President Michel to break the stalemate with Poland and Hungary. Warsaw and Budapest used the summit to express their discontent. Warsaw argues that since an estimated 1.5 to 2 million refugees fleeing Ukraine following Russia’s invasion last February are still housed in their country, they should be exempted. “We don’t have to be taught what solidarity is,” Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told reporters before heading into the summit talks, pointing to his government’s support for Ukrainian refugees for which he later demanded financial support from the EU. “We cannot treat in a discriminatory manner people from Ukraine and people from the Middle East or Africa,” added the Polish premier. Warsaw had also proposed to hold a referendum on the issue. Budapest, meanwhile, has consistently opposed any attempts to create a compulsory EU policy on relocations. “The Poles and Hungarians en bloc are saying that they do not recognise the validity of the agreement, they want to return to the logic of 2018 whereby decisions are taken by consensus,” a French diplomatic source said. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte proposed to counterparts to discuss the issues again at their next summit. Viktor Orbán’s political director, Orbán, summed up the discussions by tweeting: “Heavy fight against the pro-migration forces of Brussels!” But some EU diplomats suggested the topic will likely stay - the migration deal struck earlier this month will remain in place. 'Although neither country can veto the position which has been agreed by ministers' and will now be negotiated in trilogues with the European Parliament, Poland tabled an amendment to the post-summit conclusions stressing the need for a voluntary approach to relocations and for unanimity among EU governments. The proposal was rejected 'by all other EU leaders'. Alongside the debate on migrant relocations, EU leaders also discussed the prospect of striking more cash for migrant control and deals with African states following the agreement of a €1 billion pact with Tunisian President Saied. The details of a memorandum of understanding for Tunisia are still being thrashed out. A separate group of member states have been working on 'innovative solutions' to address migration flows, including third-country agreements. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni told reporters in Brussels that “on migrants, Tunisia and flexibility of resources allocation, the Council’s conclusions are quite a satisfactory starting point.” “We are very pleased to have a paragraph on Tunisia, not only regarding migration but also on establishing a strategic partnership with North African countries,” she added. A draft of the post-summit communiqué suggested that EU leaders were expected to endorse the European Commission’s ambitions to broker further agreements with Egypt, Morocco and Nigeria. 'We have made a lot of progress on migration, and in the area of the migration pact, there has been clear progress,' Belgian Prime Minister Alexander de Croo told reporters. (Source: euractiv)

Russia
June 30, 2023  Western accounts often fall victim to a lack of documented factual information and the same Western analytic bias,
which stubbornly believes that Russia and Russians are just like Westerners, only with crappy weather and better literature and ballet. Russia functions in a manner foreign to Western expectations. Those who tried to ascribe deep political astuteness to Prigozhin on Saturday woke up with egg on their face on Sunday, when it turned out that there was no real thought, much less political, in any of his actions. A coup that really wasn’t in a country that resembles a functioning state less and less. Prigozhin’s tantrum over the weekend made everyone look ridiculous, most of all his patron in the Kremlin and all those trying to find method to his madness. Even those closest to the halls of power privately acknowledge that they have no idea of what is happening and what, if anything, Putin is thinking. The most interesting, if completely farcical, explanation of the entire affair was offered by Kadyrov, whose troops, invariably, were once again last to the battle and first to claim success. He wrote an extensive post claiming that Prigozhin’s actions were driven by recent business deals gone bad, including his daughter not getting a coveted piece of land in St. Petersburg. The claim is silly and irrelevant. The more they speak in an effort to explain or downplay what happened, the more lies are revealed, and the  clearer the picture of a criminal rather than a statesman mentality is revealed. The fact that the Police, National Guard and military either laid down their arms or refused to fight altogether or simply evacuated cities in anticipation of Wagner’s arrival has already been forgotten. In his effort to deflect blame, Putin stumbles into openly acknowledging that the Russian state has allocated $1bn in 2023 to finance the Wagner group. To put this into perspective, here are the annual budgets of some of Russia’s largest cities: Kazan ($473mn), Voronezh ($490mn), Rostov ($675mn), Krasnodar ($812mn), Ekaterinburg  ($828mn) and Novosibirsk ($952mn). The ruthless world depicted in the mafia epic "The Godfather," offers a more authentic lens through which to examine and comprehend Russia than the dry analysis of scholarly treatises. It transcends the limitations of guesswork and fabricated narratives. It stands as an enduring masterpiece, meticulously chronicling the rise of Corleone from the depths of poverty to the heights of the criminal world and the subsequent descent of son Michael from a wartime hero into its treacherous underworld. The vivid characters in the film are true political powerhouses. They have clear goals, formulate brilliant strategies and employ surgical tactics to achieve their ultimate vision. Putin’s refusal to treat Prigozhin in a manner befitting a traitor only highlights his weakness and the lack of unity within the regime he created. His refusal to put down a rabid dog does not seem to be a reflection of his desire, as he is infamous for his intolerance of treachery. It is rather an affirmation of his weakness and of powerful elements within his government that may be holding back his hand. The same can be said of his inability to deal with Shoigu, a man who has proven his abject incompetence as a Defence Minister time and again, yet Putin either refuses or is unable to replace him. The labyrinth of lies that have been created to keep Putin isolated and docile has come back to bite him and his handlers at the worst possible moment. Woltz understood that anyone in a position of power cannot afford to look ridiculous if they are to stay in power. Putin and the political machine he created cannot seem to look ridiculous and incompetent. It resembles less a state and more like a criminal organisation, and that leads to failure to draw the right conclusions. Prigozhin’s outburst shattered the last remnants of Putin’s regime as a political entity, further exposing the lies and reinforcing the image of a criminal mentality rather than statesmanship. In any other situation, if tens of thousands of lives were not on the line, this would provide exceptional theatre; in the current environment, not so much. Prigozhin signals the start of Putin’s problems, not the end, and the West needs to wake up to the fact that it is dealing with a fragmented criminal clan and not a functioning country. (Source: bneIntelliNews)

Asia

India
June 30, 2023  Christians make up 41.29 percent of the hilly northeastern Manipur state’s 3.2 million people. Manipur is gripped by violence and bloodshed since May 3. Tribal groups, comprising mainly Christians, are fighting against the majority Meitei Hindu community opposing the Meitei demand for inclusion in the Scheduled Tribe category. Christian leaders say some 50,000 Kuki people are displaced and live in some 300 relief camps, and they get little support from the state administration, headed by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Many have taken shelter in the forest and close to 300 churches have been set on fire. Indian prelate Catholic Archbishop Pamplany of Tellicherry has termed the ongoing sectarian violence in Manipur state “ethnic-cleansing of Christians” and criticized BJP-led government for its failure to restore peace after nearly two months and more than 130 deaths. A realistic head count could increase the number considerably. The prelate, in one of the strongest criticisms of the BJP from any Church leader in India, equated the sectarian violence in Manipur to the 2002 riots in the western Gujarat state, where some 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, were killed when Prime Minister Narendra Modi was its chief minister. “When such ethnic cleansing is happening in our country, our prime minister told the American Congress that there is absolutely no discrimination in India,” Pamplany told a solidarity meeting in Kannur, in Kerala, on June 28. In an official release from the Syro-Malabar Church today, Archbishop Pamplany from the southern Kerala state dared Modi to repeat his claim in the US during a press conference with President Biden that “there was no religious discrimination in India.” Archbishop Pamplany had courted controversy in March after he offered the BJP help to win a parliamentary seat from Kerala in exchange for increasing the rubber prices to Rs. 300 (US$4) for a kilogram. Syrian Christians in Kerala are mostly farmers, a majority of them engaged in rubber cultivation. Antony, a lay Catholic leader of the Archdiocesan Movement for Transparency (ATM) in Ernakulam-Angamaly archdiocese, lauded the prelate for his stand in a video message today. “At least now, the Syro-Malabar Church leadership understood the reality in Manipur and responded positively.” "It is better to be late than never.” The Syro-Malabar Church was seen as hobnobbing with the pro-Hindu party ahead of the 2024 national elections while ignoring its agenda of turning India into a theocratic Hindu nation. Amid the rising persecution of Christians and Muslims, Cardinal Alencherry, head of the Syro-Malabar Church, too, had given a clean chit - a controversial statement in an interview published by The New Indian Express on April 9 - to the BJP, saying Christians do not feel insecure under its rule in the country. Many influential BJP leaders have met Eastern rite bishops as part of an outreach program to woo Syrian Christians in the tiny state. Their bonhomie had invited criticism from within the Church as Archbishop Machado of Bangalore along with other Christian groups had filed a petition in the country's  top court seeking direction to end the persecution of Christians. (Source: UnionofCatholicAsianNews)

North America

United States
June 30, (2023)  This week CIA Director Burns called the head of Russia's SVR foreign intelligence service Naryshkin after last week's aborted mutiny in Russia to assure the Kremlin that the United States had no role in it. The phone call was the highest-level contact between the two governments since the attempted mutiny, the Wall Street Journal said. President Biden said on Monday, June 26, the brief uprising by Russian mercenaries against the Kremlin was part of a struggle within the Russian system and that the United States and its allies were not involved in it. (Source: Reuters)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video russia india hungary egypt france belgium germany europe italy asia africa nigeria poland tunisia ukraine morocco europeanunion unitedstates europeanparliament europeancommission mediterraneansea thenetherlands europeancouncil northamerica

Danube photos

2023.07.01. 12:03 Eleve

 

München, 2023. VII. 1. Májusfa

 

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: ünnep németország nyár photos mezőgazdaság ég építészet bayern fák bajorország germany felhők fényképek járművek

2023. VI. 1. Poland, Slovakia, European Commission, Kosovo, Moldova, Russia, Ukraine, United States.

2023.06.01. 09:54 Eleve

.

Europe

Poland
June 1, 2023  Despite a significant cooling of relations due to their different stances on the war in Ukraine, Poland and Hungary remain united
in opposing what they see as undue interference from Brussels over reforms that critics say undermine judicial independence. Poland rebuked today the European Parliament backing a resolution that questions Hungary's ability to hold the European Union presidency next year due to concerns about judicial independence. "It is a clear violation of European rules in their most important form, that is treaty rules," Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said at a conference in Moldova. "Destroying the entire way of managing the EU in this way is not only a road to nowhere, but it is a road to the abyss." The resolution, which was approved 442-114 with 33 abstentions, questioned how Hungary could hold the presidency 'in view of incompliance with EU law and the values enshrined in Article 2 of the Treaty of the European Union as well as the principle of sincere cooperation'. According to a calendar agreed by all EU governments in 2016, Hungary is to hold the presidency of the bloc between July and December 2024. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's chief political aide Orbán, who is not related, said on Twitter that Hungary was being "blackmailed by Brussels because of its antiwar position". Hungary has refused to provide any military equipment to its neighbour to help it fight off a Russian invasion, and Hungary has criticised EU sanctions against Moscow. The EU has frozen billions of euros in funds for Budapest and Warsaw 'due to its concerns'. Hungary could receive some 5.8 billion euros in free grants and a further 9.6 billion euros in cheap loans from the EU, but the bloc has suspended any payments 'until Budapest's government implements reforms to improve judicial independence and tackle corruption'. Hungary and Poland have long been at odds with the EU over multiple issues, such as the rule of law, media freedoms and LGBTQ rights. (Source: Reuters)

Slovakia
1 June 2023  Bratislava faced massive cyber-attack
during GLOBSEC conference. Electronic systems and parking services were down during an international security conference, GLOBSEC, yesterday, with an anti-NATO group claiming responsibility for the attack. GLOBSEC’s conference covers a range of security topics, including hybrid threats and supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression. The massive DDoS cyber-attack disabled city hall’s website in the early morning. Bratislava Mayor Vallo said that no data was breached. The attack also disabled Bratislava’s parking services. As a result, City Hall stopped giving out parking tickets for the day as people could not pay for them. A cyber group claimed responsibility early morning on Twitter. It used #GLOBSEC in its posts, connecting the attack to the conference attended by von der Leyen and Macron, among others. The group also said it was responsible for the cyber-attacks on Hiroshima on the occasion of the G7 summit, which was attended by President Zelenskyy. “We can no longer watch as the US and NATO lead society into WWIII. We are to stop it!" wrote the group earlier in May. (Source: euractiv)

1 June 2023  The EU Commission plans to organise and finance a purchase of firefighting aircraft. In 2022 Europe experienced one of the worst wildfire seasons on record, scorching more than 700,000 hectares of land in more than a dozen countries from June to August. The impact of climate change has made wildfires more catastrophic than ever before and with a larger geographic spread – now commonly appearing in areas of central Europe as well. Last year, the EU’s Emergency Response Coordination Centre (ERCC) under the rescEU scheme had a fleet of 13 firefighting aircraft at its disposal. Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, and Spain provided two water bombers each, Sweden provided two air tractors, and Greece provided one helicopter. This year, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Germany, and Portugal have decided to make their aircraft available as well. In addition, Austria, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Latvia, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia pledged to send some 450 firefighters for standby duty in areas at risk from forest fires in France, Greece, and Portugal. Croatia is one of six EU countries that applied to get new firefighting aircraft through the EU Commission’s plan to negotiate a joint purchase of planes. The entire European order is for 22 brand-new aircraft, intended to be used by Mediterranean countries including Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. This includes 12 planes which will be financed entirely by EU funding, with the price of each unit estimated at €52 million. The operational costs of the amphibious firefighting fleet – which includes pilot salaries, fuel costs, and standby duty – are also covered by the European Commission. Although the production of large amphibious Canadian-made Canadair CL-415 water bombers ceased in 2015, the Commission is reportedly negotiating with the Canadian aerospace company De Havilland, which is expected to relaunch production. The production is expected to start in 2026, and the deliveries are reportedly expected in early 2028. (Source: euractiv)

Kosovo
June 01, 2023  North Kosovo crisis persists.
The situation in Zvecan, Leposaviq, and Zubin Potok was calm on May 31. On the ground in Zvecan on May 31, members of the NATO-led KFOR protection force put up razor-wire barricades to further secure the area. Kosovo police and KFOR troops have installed barbed-wire barricades around municipal buildings to keep protesters at bay. Mayors of the three towns were sworn in despite a turnout of under 3.5 percent in the April 23 by-elections amid the Serb boycott. The Belgrade-backed Serbian List (Srpska Lista) said the protests will stop only when their demands for the removal of Kosovar Albanian mayors and the withdrawal of special police units from the north are met. Ethnic Serbians gathered again on June 1 in the town of Zvecan, the theater of violent clashes on May 29, but in smaller numbers than in the previous days, amid a vow from the largest Kosovar Serbian party to continue protests over the presence of the mayors elected in a vote boycotted by ethnic Serbs. Serbian structures have been operating in the north of Kosovo since the 1998-99 war that led to Kosovo declaring independence from Serbia in 2008. During a summit taking place in Moldova, European Union leaders are due to discuss the situation in Kosovo on June 1 as part of international efforts to end a crisis that for days has drawn ethnic Serbian demonstrators into the streets of northern towns of the former province of Serbia. The leaders of France and Germany have announced plans to meet with top Serbia and Kosovo officials at the summit. EU foreign policy chief Borrell is expected to meet there with Serbian President Vucic and Kosovar President Osmani. On May 31, Borrell and the EU envoy for the Kosovo-Serbia dialogue met Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti on the sidelines of a security conference in Bratislava. Kurti has rejected a demand by the protesters in ethnic Serb-majority northern Kosovo to remove ethnic Albanian mayors whose forced entrance into municipality buildings in three towns in the region triggered a standoff after violent clashes with Kosovar police and KFOR troops. Kurti has insisted that the ethnic Albanian mayors have the legal right to take over municipal buildings in the towns where they were elected. U.S. Secretary of State Blinken reiterated that the Kosovar government's decision to forcefully install the mayors had escalated tensions "sharply and unnecessarily." Kurti and his government "should ensure that elected mayors perform their interim duties from alternative locations, outside municipal buildings, and withdraw police forces from there," Blinken said. Blinken also said Serbian President Vucic and the Serbian government 'should downgrade the security status of the Serbian Armed Forces and call on the Kosovo Serbs to stop defying KFOR and refrain from further violence." NATO said it would send 700 additional soldiers to Kosovo and place another battalion on high alert. (Source: RfeRl)

Moldova
Thursday, 1 Jun 2023  47 European leaders meet in Moldova to discuss war in Ukraine. It is the second gathering of the so-called European Political Community, brainchild of French President Macron, established last year to allow continental leaders to discuss areas of mutual concern, such as migration, energy and cyber security. EU and non-EU leaders meet twice a year to discuss the pressing challenges of the day. Moldova, the small, impoverished country which has a breakaway region of Russian speakers presses for EU accession negotiations to begin. President Zelensky has been invited to attend the meeting, but other regional conflicts, such as those between Kosovo and Serbia and between Armenia and Azerbaijan, will be under the spotlight. In a statement, NATO said it was providing surveillance aircraft to watch the skies over the venue. (Source: RTÉ)

Russia
1/06/2023 Thursday  Ukraine rejected all proposals for ensuring the safety of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant put forward by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) because the country does not have the capacity to make such decisions, senior Russian diplomat Grushko said yesterday. “In this question, as in many others, Ukraine is deprived of legal personality. The leadership of this country fulfills the demands of Washington and London, which, for the sake of political interests, easily sacrifice both people's lives and the safety of nuclear facilities on the European continent,” he said. The diplomat said that Russia will continue to take measures to provide security for the Zaporizhzhia plant. “We have never deployed and do not plan to deploy military contingents and military equipment intended for offensive operations on the territory of the nuclear power plant. There are only those forces at the nuclear power plant that are necessary to protect it from Ukrainian attacks, as well as to eliminate their possible consequences,” he said. Grushko also urged the IAEA to “openly condemn” and disclose information about Ukrainian attacks on the nuclear power plant. “We hope the IAEA’s management will demonstrate the agency’s impartiality and non-involvement in this matter,” he said. (Source: YeniSafak)

01/06/2023  Russia's defence ministry said it had repelled three cross-border attacks today near the town of Shebekino, and it accused Ukraine of using what it said were "terrorist formations" to carry out attempted attacks on Russian civilians. "No violations of the state border were allowed." Russian army units, border guards and units of the Federal Security Service, repelled the first attack at around 0100 GMT as two units with vehicles and tanks tried to penetrate the border near Novaya Tavolzhanka and Shebekino, the defence ministry said, adding there were three attacks from the Ukrainian side. Ukraine says the incursions into Belgorod are conducted by Russian volunteer fighters. Russian officials say the group of fighters is a proxy run by Ukraine. More than 50 Ukrainian fighters were killed and four armoured vehicles were destroyed, the ministry said. It added that up to 70 fighters, five tanks and four armoured vehicles were involved in the attack. (Source: France24)

1 Jun 2023  Shelling of the border region of Russia’s Belgorod is intensifying. Today, one person was reportedly killed and two others were wounded in a strike on a centre for displaced people in Belgorod. “We have not heard a single word of condemnation from the West so far,” Kremlin spokesman Peskov said of the attacks which have affected Russian civilians in the region. The Kremlin also said yesterday that it was not considering the introduction of martial law in Russia despite the drone attacks on Moscow and the ongoing shelling of border regions. The Kremlin’s Peskov said the imposition of martial law in Russia was not currently being discussed. According to media reports, Peskov was reacting to Chechen leader Kadyrov’s demands for harsher attacks on  Ukraine and the declaration of martial law after the drone attacks on Moscow. Peskov said such a decision was up to Moscow and not the regions. “Measures are being taken,” Peskov said. Authorities have begun evacuating children from the districts of Shebekino and Graivoron. Governor of Russia's Belgorod region said that the situation in Shebekino was deteriorating amid ongoing cross-border attacks from Ukraine. Evacuation of children from the Shebekinsky and Grayvoronsky districts of the Belgorod region was set to begin on 31 May. The first group of 300  people will be sent to the city of Voronezh, a city about 250km further into Russia. Buses had arrived with about 150 people on board yesterday. Another 1,000 children will be removed from border areas to other provinces over the coming days, he said. The Institute for the Study of War (ISW), DC-based think tank, said in its latest report today that Russian military commanders had likely ordered the Chechens into battle following the withdrawal of Wagner Group mercenary forces from the destroyed city of Bakhmut. According to the ISW, Kadyrov claimed  yesterday that his forces had received new orders and would be deploying to “active combat activities” to “liberate” a series of settlements after assuming responsibility for the front line in Ukraine’s southeast Donetsk region, which includes the contested city of Bakhmut. Chechen fighters have primarily operated in areas behind the front line following their involvement in the bloody battles in Ukraine’s cities of Mariupol, Severodonetsk and Lysychanak, the institute said. Describing himself as a “foot soldier” of Russian President Putin, Kadyrov had previously deployed his Chechen forces in support of Russian military operations in Syria and Georgia. The ISW also noted that if reports of 7,000 Chechen troops in Ukraine are correct, Kadyrov’s forces will not have the numbers “to mount multiple significant offensive operations successfully'. 'The governor of Belgorod region also urged Russian forces yesterday to launch attacks and capture Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, including Kharkiv city, to create a buffer zone between Belgorod and Ukraine', according to the ISW. (Source: AlJazeera)

Ukraine
01/06/2023  President Zelensky said today he had received a strong show of support from allies attending a summit in Moldova on the question of supplying fighter jets to Kyiv. He made the comments at a news conference after a summit of over 40 European leaders in Moldova but gave few details. He has long been asking allies to provide Ukraine with fighter jets. Zelensky warned European leaders today that any doubts they show before admitting Kyiv into the NATO alliance 'will embolden Russia to attack more countries'. He said today in Moldova that Ukraine 'was ready to join the NATO military alliance', and that Kyiv was waiting for the bloc to be ready to admit his country. 'Our future is in the EU. Ukraine is ready to join NATO,' he said. Moldova is hosting the EPC summit at a castle about 20 kilometres from Ukrainian territory. Zelensky arrived in Moldova for European summit to discuss Ukraine defence. He said he was working on building support for a coalition of powers to supply fighter jets to help Ukraine repel Russian forces, and that he would also discuss his peace plan as well as Kyiv's aspirations to join NATO and the European Union. (Source: France24)

01/06/2023  Ukraine's air force said that air defences shot down all 10 ballistic and Iskander cruise missiles launched from Russia's Bryansk region in the 18th attack on the capital since the start of May. Police said a medical clinic, kindergarten, residential buildings and cars were damaged. The Kyiv military administration said three people - a young girl, her mother and another woman - were killed and 10 hurt in a Russian missile strike on Kyiv's Desnyansky district, early today. The attack began around 3am local time (0000 GMT). 'It is international children's day. At night, Russia again killed a child in Kyiv,' said Yermak, chief of President Zelensky's office. There's quite a lot of anger in Kyiv because the shelter that they were trying to get into was closed. The mayor of Kyiv, Klitschko, has ordered all of the shelters to be open at all times and for an examination of all the shelters to be carried out. There have been many complaints actually about shelters not being open or not being properly set up. (Source: France24)

North America

United States
01/06/2023  The US said it would stop giving Russia some notifications required under the New START arms control treaty from today, including on its missile and launcher locations, to retaliate for Moscow's "ongoing violations" of the accord. The State Department said the United States would also stop giving Russia flight telemetry information - remotely gathered data - on launches of US intercontinental and submarine-launched ballistic missiles. (Source: France24)

1 June 2023  According to the Pentagon, the Biden administration has allocated more than $37.6 billion in military aid to Ukraine since February 2022. In a meeting last week, US Defense Secretary Austin at the 12th meeting of the Ukraine Defense Liaison Group that it is important to enhance Ukraine's air defense capabilities. The Biden administration announced a new military aid package to Ukraine yesterday. This latest $300 million in military aid is the 39th draw of Defense Department supplies to Ukraine since August 2021. The package will use the president's recall authority, which allows the Pentagon to take weapons from its own stockpiles and quickly deliver them to Ukraine. It includes more ammunition for Patriot missile batteries and high-mobility artillery missile systems, as well as Avenger air defense systems, Stinger air defense systems and air defense AIM-7 missiles. It also includes multiple artillery and anti-tank capabilities, precision air munitions, demining equipment, unguided Zuni anti-aircraft missiles, night vision goggles and more. Citing the danger of escalation, the Biden administration made it clear to Ukraine that US-made weapons should not be used for attacks inside Russian territory, said Kirby, the National Security Council's strategic communications coordinator. (Source: EpochTimes)

June 01, 2023 The House of Representatives overwhelmingly voted yesterday night, with wide support from Republican and Democratic lawmakers alike, to allow the government to continue to borrow more money over the next year-and-a-half to meet its financial obligations, exceeding the current $31.4 trillion debt limit. The House approved the legislation on a 314-117 vote. Seventy-one lawmakers from the majority Republican party in the House voted against the bill, as did 46 Democrats. The U.S. Senate could vote as soon as today on a measure to suspend the government’s borrowing limit until early 2025 to avert a first-ever default when the United States in four days runs out of cash to pay its bills. The borrowing authority would extend to January 2, 2025, two months past next year’s presidential election. The legislation calls for maintaining most federal spending at the current level in the fiscal year starting in October, with a 1% increase in the following 12 months. Both Democratic Senate Majority Leader Schumer and McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, support suspension of the debt limit and are calling for swift passage of the legislation so it can be sent to President Biden for his signature. The measure does not raise taxes, nor will it stop the national debt total from continuing to increase, perhaps by another $3 trillion or more over the next year-and-a-half until the next expiration of the debt limit. Other pieces of the legislation include a reduction in the number of new agents hired by the country's tax collection agency, a requirement that states return $30 billion in unspent coronavirus pandemic assistance to the federal government and extending from 50 to 54 the upper age bracket for those required to work in order to receive food aid. (Source: VoANews)

1 June 2023  The president has suffered a series of near falls while in office, often while navigating stairs. White House blames a sandbag and insists commander-in-chief Biden, 80, wasn't injured when he fell again on stage. The fall came while Biden was handing diplomas to graduating Air Force Academy cadets in Colorado today. After his fall, the president walked away without help. He was helped up after falling during the graduation ceremony. It comes at the start of a presidential campaign where the White House is already fielding questions about why Biden has not been on the road more or held any formal campaing rallies. (Source: DailyMail)

1 June 2023  US News sources say Mr Trump is the frontrunner for the Republican nomination to be the next US President. As the situation in Ukraine remains volatile, the intentions and actions of former President Trump regarding financial and military support continue to be subjects of speculation. The quest for peace and the reduction of bloodshed appears to shape his approach, leaving room for potential shifts in strategy in the future. In an interview with Ferrari, Johnson, the former United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom, discussed the extent of former President Trump's commitment to providing financial and military support to Ukraine. Johnson suggested that Trump's focus is on achieving peace. "He wants to reduce the killing and the bloodshed. He said that over and over. And so I don't think he's going to commit to anything like that until he gets in." Ferrari inquired whether this means leaving President Zelenskyy to rely solely on other Western partners for support. Zelenskyy has forged close ties with many world leaders since the war in Ukraine began. The former diplomat said he though Trump would prioritise avoiding further bloodshed and the expenditure of US dollars. Stating, "I think that's his number one goal, is to reduce the bloodshed on both sides. And so he'll probably hold to that position until he decides to change it, whether as President or not." (Source: LeadingBritain'sConversation)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: russia hungary sweden nato romania france moldova croatia germany latvia europe italy georgia canada malta armenia bulgaria kosovo slovenia austria poland slovakia portugal spain greece ukraine serbia cyprus syria unitedkingdom europeanunion unitedstates europeanparliament europeancommission czechia azerbaijan northamerica internationalatomicenergyagency

2023. V. 31. Bulgaria, Finland, Germany, Russia, China, North Korea, South China Sea, NATO, globalization

2023.05.31. 17:44 Eleve

.

Europe

Bulgaria
31 May 2023 
Bulgaria has refused political asylum to Russian citizen Stotzky. He arrived in Bulgaria legally with a one-year visa but submitted documents for refugee status. Since he has been in Bulgaria, he has participated in protests against Russian aggression and made media appearances in which he declares himself against Putin’s actions. Last year, when considering other cases, the Bulgarian courts paid attention to the resolutions of the European Parliament regarding the intensifying repressions against civil society and human rights defenders in  Russia. On 29 May, the Bulgarian Supreme Administrative Court refused to grant the individual refugee status. “There is no reason to assume that the official authorities in the Russian Federation are undertaking massive repression against citizens who express dissatisfaction with the president’s (Putin) policy,” the court said. In December 2022, the Russian citizen reported receiving a notice of mobilisation at his home address, which the Bulgarian authorities ignored. “His fears that upon returning to the country he will be persecuted for his different political views or be mobilised. These are only assumptions that are not supported by evidence,” the court decision said. “There is no persecution in Russia because of a different race, religion, nationality, belonging to a certain social group or because of political opinions or convictions,” the Bulgarian court said. Stotzky says that the Bulgarian court and the State Refugee Agency have ignored the fact that he received a call-up letter for the army. (Source: euractiv)

Finland
2023. máj. 31. Finland’s Defence Forces have suggested raising the age limit for military reservists to 65 as the parties set to form the new Finnish government continue with their negotiations. Finland’s NATO membership and the need to have more experienced personnel in the ranks domestically and abroad were cited as reasons for the proposal. Another reason cited was that people are now more physically capable the longer they live. Under current legislation, enlisted personnel remain in the reserves until 50 and officers until they turn 60. The Finnish Reservists’ Association, long in favour of raising the age limit, welcomed the Defence Forces’ proposal. Compared to the previous survey published three years ago, around 30% of people now believe aggression against their country to be possible, an increase of 15% from 2020. (Source: euractiv)

Germany
May 31 2023  The German government
will deploy additional police forces at the Polish border to crack down on increasing traffic from the Belarus route. Germany has been facing a new surge in irregular migrant crossings, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan by way of irregular migration at the Polish border. Authorities suspect much of the migration is being driven by the Belarusian and Russian governments to cause social disruption in European countries that support Ukraine. Already in 2021, Belarusian President Lukashenko opened his country’s borders to Poland for migrants to retaliate for EU sanctions after he crushed post-election protests. The situation at the Polish-Belarusian border has since remained tense. Migrants frequently stuck between the borders of Belarus and Poland, with neither of the two sides showing a willingness to admit the refugees. A similar case also made headlines on Monday, May 29, when Poland refused to take in refugees who were left stranded between the two countries. Regional governments in Germany’s border region have called for reintroducing continuous controls at fixed checkpoints. Stationary controls are already in place at the border between Germany and Austria. “We have by every definition a last-resort situation,” Saxony’s Interior Minister Schuster told. The police registered more than 8,000 illegal border crossings related to the migrant route from Belarus to Poland nine months before March, Welt reports. “We’re acting as is required by the current situation and hand in hand with our neighbours,” Interior Minister Faeser said after a visit to the joint centre for German-Polish Police and Customs Cooperation in Poland in  May 30. “Several police units” will be deployed to conduct mobile checks in the area. Faeser criticised Belarus for orchestrating a - "to some extent controlled" - migratory pressure. Faeser had previously called stationary controls “a last resort measure”. Yesterday, the interior minister reaffirmed her opposition to this step for their disruptive effect on everyday cross-border interactions. (Source: euractiv)

Russia
31 May 2023  The mothers going to get their children back from Russia.
The International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Russia's president in March, accusing him and his children's ombudswoman, Lvova-Belova, of the unlawful deportation of Ukrainian children. Russia insists that its motives are purely humanitarian, evacuating, saving children to protect them from danger. Senior officials scorn the ICC indictment, even threatening retaliatory arrests against its representatives. The Telegram channel of the children's ombudswoman is full of videos showing her escorting groups of Ukrainian children, where bewildered youngsters are greeted by Russian foster parents with gifts and hugs as the cameras roll. She adopted a teenager from Mariupol herself, posting pictures with his new Russian passport. Officials in Kyiv maintain that more than 19,000 children have been taken from occupied areas since the full-scale invasion. We understand that many have come from care homes and residential schools.    Sasha and Artem were among 13 children taken from their special educational needs school in Kupyansk, north-eastern Ukraine last September by armed Russian soldiers. Scrolling through the website of Perevalsk Special School, the photograph of Artem on public display was taken in February 2023, in a class to mark Defenders of the Fatherland Day. Ukrainian children were dressed in Russian military uniforms, and taught the Russian curriculum. The lesson was dedicated to learning "gratitude and respect" for Russian soldiers. Russian officials made minimal or zero effort to locate any relatives. Ukrainian children were frequently told there was nothing in their country to return to and were subjected, to varying degrees, to a "patriotic" Russian education. There is also a clear, overriding ideology: Russia, led by Putin, openly proclaims everything in occupied areas of Ukraine as its own, including the children. The 15-year-old Sasha even has grey hairs from all the stress. He and his mother, Tetyana're now are living in the western German town of Dinklage as refugees. Tetyana wants nothing more than to go home to her husband, but Kupyansk is under heavy fire again. Before the war, Sasha went to Kupyansk Special School. He would board during the week, returning home at weekends. When Russia invaded in February 2022, much of the Kharkiv region was overrun immediately and Tetyana kept her son home for safety. As September approached, the occupying administration, often using teachers from Russia to replace those locals who refused to collaborate, began insisting that all children return to school, now with the Russian curriculum. The teenager was bored stiff after seven months in their village, so on 3 September she dropped him off in Kupyansk. Days later, Ukrainian forces launched their operation to re-take the region. The armed Russian soldiers didn't care about taking any documents or contacting parents, they just shoved the kids in a bus with some refugees and left. Russia's defence in such cases: that it was removing children from danger. Tetyana went six weeks not knowing what had become of her son when a friend spotted a video on social media, dated early September 2022. It reported that 13 children from Kupyansk Special School had been moved east to a similar facility in Svatove, still under Russian control. Another fortnight after that, Tetyana's phone beeped with a message: Sasha was at a Special School in Perevalsk, she read, and his mum could call to talk to him. Communication with areas of heavy fighting is not easy. There Kupyansk children passed through three institutions before anyone tried to reach any relatives. Tetyana would have to return Sasha home in person, but the direct route crossed the frontline. Instead, Tetyana travelled from Ukraine through Poland and the Baltics before crossing on foot into Russia, where the FSB Security Service then interrogated her about Ukrainian troop movements. She had another reason to be frightened. By then, Russia has changed its laws to make it easier to get Russian citizenship and to adopt Ukrainian children. In late September Putin announced the annexation of four regions of Ukraine, including Luhansk where Sasha was then located. When Tetyana finally reached Perevalsk, after an exhausting five days on the road, she hugged her son who was crying from happiness.    Kherson city, in southern Ukraine had been occupied since the very start of the invasion. When Alla packed her 13-year-old son off to camp in Crimea, she thought Danylo was heading for two weeks by the sea. It was meant to be a break from the stress of war: other kids from Kherson had been to camp and come back, so Alla wasn't worried. But days after Alla waved Danylo off, the officials responsible for him announced that the children would not return. The Russians had begun retreating from Kherson. If the children's parents wanted them back, they were told they should come for them. They talked of being taken on excursions at the start, and being reasonably fed and clothed. On Russian-controlled territory they were treated and taught as Russians. When inspectors visited from Moscow, the Ukrainians had to line up beside the Russian flag and sing the Russian anthem. Alla pleaded with the regional administration but was told they would only return the children "when Kherson is Russian again." She called the Prosecutor's Office in Crimea, but they insisted she had to get Danylo herself. And so for weeks, Alla reassured her son that she was coming for him even as she tried to work out how. The distance from Kherson to Yevpatoria is short but the direct route was closed by the Russian military and a far longer route through Zaporizhzhia was too dangerous. "There was a less than 5% chance of getting there and back safely," Alla was told. She would also need around $1,500 for a driver, as well as her first ever passport and all the paperwork the Russians were demanding to prove her link to her son. Alla was already starting to despair when Danylo said officials at his camp were threatening to place the children in care if their parents didn't hurry. She finally set off in a train carriage full of other mums and grandmothers on the most anxious journey of their lives. The women were being helped by a group called Save Ukraine. Some were from broken homes or struggling with the logistics and funding for the trip. Other parents had been hesitant about returning their children to cities under heavy Russian fire. Save Ukraine had instructed the women to turn off their phones when they entered Russia. 'They kept us like cattle, separate from anyone else. Fourteen hours with no water, no food, nothing," Alla described being held by Russia's FSB security service at a Moscow airport. "They kept asking us what military equipment we had seen, they checked our phones a million times and asked about all our relatives." The women continued the 24-hour drive south to Crimea. "The moment I saw my child running towards me in tears, it made up for everything we'd been through," Alla described her reunion, at last, with Danylo. Over a week later, Alla was one of the last to cross the border back from Belarus, dragging a big suitcase into Ukraine past concrete boulders and anti-tank defences. Danylo, with his dimpled grin, was finally safe beside her. She admits there was some bad feeling towards the summer-camp mums at the start, seen as 'collaborators' for sending their children to Russian-run facilities in the first place. But Alla feels that has faded. Danylo is still in a group chat with the other children from camp and most who remained have now been collected. But he says five were transferred to a care home somewhere in Russia. (Source: BBC)

May 31, 2023  Drones attacked two Russian oil refineries near major oil port Novorossiisk in southern Russia today, sparking a fire at one and causing no damage to the other, according to Russian officials. Russia has accused Ukraine of increased attacks on targets inside the country. At around 0100 GMT a drone struck the Afipsky oil refinery in Russia's Krasnodar region, causing a fire which was later extinguished, Governor Kondratyev said. Another drone crashed into the Ilsky refinery, which lies around 40 miles east of Novorossiisk. The Afipsky refinery lies 50 miles east of the Black Sea port of Novorossiisk, one of Russia's most important oil export gateways. The plant can process around 6 million tonnes (44 million barrels) of oil each year. Novorossiisk, together with the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) terminal, bring about 1.5% of global oil to market. Last year, CPC exported via the South Ozereyevka terminal 58.7 million tonnes of oil, mainly from Kazakhstan, while the terminal of Sheskharis at Novorossiisk handled about 30 million tonnes of oil. According to the Ilsky refinery's web site, its five processing units have the combined capacity of 3 million tonnes per year. Refineries across Russia have been frequently attacked by drones following the start of what the Kremlin casts as the "special military operation" in Ukraine in February 2022. (Source: Reuters)

31 May ,2023  Five people were killed and 19 wounded in Ukrainian shelling of a village in the Russian-controlled region of Luhansk. Ukrainian forces had used HIMARS rocket launchers to attack a poultry farm in the village of Karpaty. (Source: Alarabiya)

Wed, May 31, 2023  "The last warship of the Ukrainian navy, the Yuriy Olefirenko, was destroyed at a warship mooring in the port of Odesa," Defence Ministry Spokesman Konashenkov said. He said the vessel had been hit with "high-precision weapons" - a phrase he uses to mean missiles - on May 29. Ukrainian officials said on Monday that Russia had put five aircraft out of action in an attack on a military target in western Ukraine and caused a fire at the Black Sea port of Odesa in heavy air strikes early on Monday. The Russian defence ministry also said today that its forces had pushed Ukrainian units out of positions around the settlements of Krasnohorivka and Yasynuvata in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, which Moscow claims to have annexed. The ministry said "fierce fighting" was continuing around Avdiivka, a town located between the two settlements, which has been largely razed to the ground during months of fighting. (Source: Yahoo)

31 May 2023  The head of Russia’s Wagner mercenary force has again criticised the Russian military and political elite following the drone attack on Moscow that injured two people, damaged property. In an expletive-drenched statement posted on Telegram by his press service yesterday, Prigozhin blamed the drone attack on out-of-touch officials living in Moscow’s western affluent suburbs of Rublyovka. Russian military blogger Girkin – whom a Dutch court found guilty of the murder of 298 people who were killed when flight MH17 was shot down over Russian-controlled eastern Ukraine in 2014 – also criticised Rublyovka residents yesterday who, he said, had “never thought about the country”. In a post on Telegram after the attack yesterday, Khinshtein, a prominent member of Russia’s parliament from the ruling United Russia bloc, said three of the eight drones had been downed over three Rublyovka villages, one of which is located just 10 minutes drive from Russian President Putin’s residence at Novo-Ogaryovo. Rublyovka, a patchwork of elite gated communities in the forests west of Moscow, which once boasted some of the world’s highest real-estate prices, is home to much of Russia’s political, business and cultural elite. Former President Medvedev and Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin have been reported to own homes in Rublyovka, alongside many of Russia’s richest business figures. Following the drone attacks, Kadyrov, the strongman leader of the Russian province of Chechnya, urged the Kremlin to declare martial law nationwide and use all its resources in Ukraine “to sweep away that terrorist gang”. Some Kremlin watchers noted that Putin’s calm reaction to the drone attack contrasted starkly with angry statements from Russian hawks and appears to reflect his belief that the Russian public will not be unsettled by the attack. Putin said it was clear that Moscow’s air defences need to be improved against what he described as Ukrainian “terrorism”. (Source: AlJazeera)

May 31, 2023  Washington is encouraging Kyiv by publicly ignoring the drone attack that struck several districts of Moscow yesterday, Russia's envoy to the United States said today. The attack on Moscow came after Russia launched three air assaults within a day on Kyiv and 17 in May so far, killing, sowing destruction and fear. The White House said it did not support attacks inside of Russia and that it was still gathering information on the incident. Russia has long accused the "collective West" of staging a proxy war against Moscow by supporting Ukraine with military and financial aid. Putin yesterday cast the assault, which brought the 15-month war in Ukraine to the heart of Russia, as a terrorist act. Moscow calls the war a "special military operation" to "denazify" Ukraine and protect Russian speakers. Kyiv and its allies say it is an unprovoked land grab. A Ukrainian presidential aide denied Kyiv was directly involved in the drone attack on Moscow, but said Ukraine was enjoying watching events and forecast more to come. (Source: Reuters)

May 31, 2023  A woman who accused Biden of sexual assault has turned up in Moscow, announcing plans to seek Russian citizenship. “I just didn’t want to walk home and walk into a cage or be killed, which is basically my two choices,' Reade suggested in a statement published on Kremlin-owned Sputnik overnight. She is also receiving the help of a woman convicted of spying for Russia. Butina had sought to infiltrate conservative US political groups and promote Russia’s agenda without registering as a foreign agent. Butina pleaded guilty in the US to acting as an agent for Russia in 2018. She was jailed for 18 months. After being released from jail in 2019, she was deported back to Russia. Butina, who appeared with Reade, has pledged to “discuss the possibility of granting Russian citizenship” to Reade, and ask Russian President Putin to “fast track” her citizenship application. Sputnik reported Butina’s current role as a member of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs. Reade, who had once served on Biden’s Senate staff, filed a complaint against the then-presidential candidate in April 2020, accusing him of sexual assault in 1993. In 2020, Reade told media interviewers she complained in 1993 about sexual harassment, though not sexual assault, to three of Biden’s Senate aides. (Source: WAToday)

Asia

China
Wed, May 31, 2023  The ruling Communist Party hardens efforts
to counter any perceived internal and external threats. Beijing faces a host of challenges, from a struggling economy to what it sees as an increasingly hostile international environment. “The complexity and difficulty of the national security issues we now face have increased significantly,' Chinese leader Xi, General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party said yesterday at a meeting of the party’s National Security Commission. 'We must adhere to bottom-line thinking and worst-case-scenario thinking, and get ready to undergo the major tests of high winds and rough waves, and even perilous, stormy seas,” he added. In face of what he called a 'complex and grave' situation, Xi said China must speed up the modernization of its national security system and capabilities, with a focus on making them more effective in 'actual combat and practical use.' He also called for China to push ahead with the construction of a national security risk monitoring and early warning system, enhance national security education and improve the management of data and artificial intelligence security. Since coming to power a decade ago, Xi has expanded the concept of national security to cover everything from politics, economy, defense, culture and ecology to cyberspace - it extends from the deep sea and the polar regions to space, as well as big data and artificial intelligence. China has introduced a raft of legislation to protect itself against perceived threats, including laws on counter-terrorism, counter-espionage, cybersecurity, foreign non-government organizations, national intelligence and data security. Most recently, it broadened the scope of its already sweeping counter-espionage law from covering state secrets and intelligence to any “documents, data, materials or items related to national security and interests.' The perception that security has replaced economic growth as Beijing’s top priority is compounded by multiple recent raids on foreign companies, including American consultancy Bain & Company and due diligence firm Mintz Group. At a time when the Chinese government is trying to woo foreign investment to help revive a slowing economy hampered by three  years of zero-Covid restrictions, the raids have spooked international businesses. (Source: Yahoo)

May 31, 2023  Musk hailed as "Brother Ma' during a trip to China, where he's been lavished with a 16-course meal and treated like a king. He is making his first trip to China in three years. The nation heaped praise on the billionaire, holding him in the same high esteem as business magnate Ma. Musk's views on electric vehicles and artificial intelligence are of particular interest. He arrived in Beijing by private jet yesterday. Since arriving, Musk has been greeted by top ministers from the Chinese government's foreign, commerce, and industry departments, with social-media users labeling him a 'global idol."  Musk has made China a critical part of Tesla operations in recent years, seeing a big opportunity to sell electric vehicles to Chinese consumers. However, Tesla is facing increased pressure in China from growing domestic competition. The visit to China by Musk comes at a low point in US relations with China, as tensions over Taiwan and Xi's stance over Russia's invasion of Ukraine are threatening to boil over. The billionaire, who has previously called himself a "free-speech absolutist," has not commented publicly about his trip to the country. Twitter is blocked in China. (Source: BusinessInsider)

North Korea
May 31, 2023  Wailing air raid sirens and mobile phone alerts calling for rare evacuations rattled residents of the South Korean capital, Seoul, the densely populated city of 9 million early today, at 6.32am after North Korea launched what it said was a satellite. The North launched the rocket - a purported space-launch vehicle - towards the South, prompting emergency alerts and evacuation warnings in parts of South Korea and Japan. The rocket was launched from North Korea’s north-western Tongchang-ri area, where the country’s main space-launch centre is located. Seoul issued a “Presidential Alert” asking citizens to prepare for potential evacuation. Then came a second mobile alert minutes later calling for an actual evacuation, which remained in place for at least 10 minutes until the city said it was a false alarm sent in error. Residents of Seoul are used to living in the shadow of threats from their nuclear-armed neighbour. The two countries are still technically at war seven decades after the Korean War ended in an armistice. In a statement published on state media North Korea said today that it attempt to launch the country’s first spy satellite had failed. The Kim regime said a rocket carrying the spy satellite crashed into waters off the Korean Peninsula’s western coast after it lost thrust following the separation of its first and second stages. The Japanese government activated a missile warning system for its Okinawa prefecture in south-western Japan, believed to be in the path of the rocket. Ri, a top North Korean official and close associate of leader Kim, had said a day earlier that the North would launch a spy satellite in June. A satellite launch by North Korea is a violation of UN Security Council resolutions that ban the country from using ballistic technology because it’s regarded as a cover for missile tests. (Source: TheSydneyMorningHerald)

South China Sea
May 31, 2023  The US is looking to arrange high-profile visits to China by senior officials to reengage with Beijing on substantive issues but yesterday the Pentagon said China had rejected a proposal for Defence Secretary Austin to meet with his Chinese counterpart Li at the Shangri-La Dialogue Security Forum in Singapore this week. A Chinese fighter jet conducted an "unnecessarily aggressive manoeuvre" during an intercept of a US spy plane in international airspace over the South China Sea on May 26, the US military said today. The Chinese J-16 fighter cut directly in front of the nose of the US RC-135 Rivet Joint reconnaissance aircraft, forcing it to fly through the wake turbulence of the intercepting aircraft. The RC-135 was conducting 'safe and routine operations' in international airspace, US Indo-Pacific Command said. A Chinese Navy J-11 fighter jet intercepted another RC-135 Rivet Joint over the South China Sea in late December in what the US called an "unsafe manoeuvre.' The Chinese fighter came within six metres of the nose of the US spy plane, forcing the larger, heavier US aircraft to take evasive manoeuvres, US Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) said at the time. Over the past several years, the South China Sea has emerged as a major potential flashpoint in the Asia Pacific. China claims historic jurisdiction over almost the entirety of the vast sea, and since 2014 has built up tiny reefs and sandbars into artificial islands heavily fortified with missiles, runways and weapons systems - sparking outcry from the other claimants. (Source: 9News) 

NATO

31 May 2023  NATO aircraft and troops are participating in arctic military exercises. Finland is hosting its first joint training since becoming part of the Western alliance in April. Nearly 1,000 allied forces from Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States - as well as NATO applicant Sweden - joined approximately 6,500 Finnish troops and some 1,000 vehicles for exercises this week. Finland formally joined NATO on April 4. Sweden has been what NATO describes as an “official invitee” since 2022, which allows attendance at meetings and the coordinating of  activities with other NATO allies. Sweden hopes to be a NATO member by the time of the alliance’s summit in Vilnius, Lithuania in July 11-12. Full membership will take place once all NATO allies have ratified Sweden’s accession application. Turkish President Erdogan says Sweden has not yet met all of his country’s demands on securing his support for membership, particularly because of what he sees as Sweden providing safe haven to members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and the Democratic Union Party (PYD) in Syria, both of which Ankara considers 'terrorists'. Overseeing NATO exercises just a two-hour drive from the Russian border at one of Europe’s largest artillery training grounds in Rovajarvi, northern Finland, US Army Major-General Anderson from the 10th Mountain Division said his country stood ready to defend Finland. Some 150 aircraft from 14 NATO members and partner countries are also participating in Arctic Challenge 2023 exercises. (Source: AlJazeera)

Globalization

31 May 2023  While current AI has yet to achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI), potentially allowing it to make independent decisions, researchers at Microsoft in March said that GPT-4 showed “sparks of AGI” and was capable of solving 'novel and difficult tasks that span mathematics, coding, vision, medicine, law, psychology and more, without needing any special prompting'. Since then, warnings about the potential dangers of AI have grown. Last month, Hinton, a renowned computer scientist, quit his job at Google so he could spend more time advocating about the risks of AI. In an appearance before the United States Congress earlier this month, chief executive of OpenAI, Altman called on legislators to quickly develop regulations for AI technology and recommended a licensing-based approach. “Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war,” a group of AI experts and other high-profile figures said in a brief statement released by the Center for AI Safety, a San Francisco-based research and advocacy group, yesterday. The signatories include technology experts such as Altman, Hinton, known as the “godfather of AI”, and Tang, Taiwan’s digital minister, as well as other notable figures including the neuroscientist Harris and the musician Grimes. The warning follows an open letter signed by Musk and other high-profile figures in March that called for a six-month pause on the development of AI more advanced than OpenAI’s GPT-4. “Powerful AI systems should be developed only once we are confident that their effects will be positive and their risks will be manageable,' the letter said. The rapid advancement of AI has raised concerns about potential negative consequences for society ranging from mass job losses and copyright infringement to the spread of misinformation 'and political instability'. Some experts have raised fears that humanity could one day lose control of the technology. (Source: AlJazeera)

May 31 2023  Earlier this month OpenAI CEO Altman testified at Congress saying AI could "cause significant harm to the world" by spreading disinformation and emotionally manipulating humans. Despite the incredible leaps in capabilities that "generative" chatbots like OpenAI's ChatGPT, Microsoft's Bing and Google's Bard have demonstrated in the last six months, they still have a major fatal flaw: They make stuff up all the time - the "hallucinations." "Hallucinations' are both a feature and a bug of large language models. 'Hallucinations' have now become a key focus for the AI community. When Microsoft launched its Bing chatbot, it quickly started making false accusations against some of its users, like telling a German college student that he was a threat to its safety. The bot adopted an alter-ego and started calling itself "Sydney." It was essentially riffing off the student's questions, drawing on all the science fiction it had digested from the internet about out-of-control robots. Microsoft eventually had to limit the number of back-and-forths a bot could engage in with a human to avoid it from happening more.In Australia, a government official threatened to sue OpenAI after ChatGPT said he had been convicted of bribery, when in reality he was a whistleblower in a bribery case. And last week a lawyer admitted to using ChatGPT to generate a legal brief after he was caught because the cases cited so confidently by the bot simply did not exist. 'Hallucinations' have also been documented in AI-powered transcription services, adding words to recordings that weren't spoken in real life. Microsoft and Google using the bots to answer search queries directly instead of sending traffic to blogs and news stories could erode the business model of online publishers and content creators who work to produce trustworthy information for the internet. Hallucinations are part of what allows the bots to be creative and generate never-before-seen stories when they do not have an internalised understanding of the world around them. The issue is mentioned in dozens of academic papers posted to the online database Arxiv and Big Tech CEOs like Google's Pichai have addressed it repeatedly. As the tech gets integrated into critical fields including medicine and law, understanding hallucinations and finding ways to mitigate them has become even more crucial. The most apt thing to say is based on the huge amounts of data they've digested from the internet, but don't have a way to understand what is factual or not. The model itself also trains on a set amount of data, so anything that happens after the training is done doesn't factor into its knowledge of the world. Clever ways to decrease the rates of false answers: A popular approach is to connect chatbots up to databases of factual or more trustworthy information, such as Wikipedia, Google search or bespoke collections of academic articles or business documents. Some firms are using human trainers to rewrite the bots' answers and feed them back into the machine with the goal of making them smarter. When Google generates search results using its chatbot technology, it also runs a regular search in parallel, then compares whether the bot's answer and the traditional search results match. If they don't, the AI answer won't even show up. The company has tweaked its bot to be less creative, meaning it's not very good at writing poems or having interesting conversations, but is less likely to lie. Manakul and a group of other Cambridge researchers released a paper in March suggesting a system they called "SelfCheckGPT" that would ask the same bot a question multiple times, then tell it to compare the different answers. If the answers were consistent,  it was likely the facts were correct, but if they were different, they could be flagged as probably containing made-up information. Researchers proposed using different chatbots to produce multiple answers to the same question and then letting them debate each other until one answer won out. This "society of minds" method made them more factual. "Language models are trained to predict the next word," said Du, a researcher at MIT. "They are not trained to tell people they don't know what they're doing," Du, who was previously a research fellow at OpenAI, and one of the authors of a paper released by a team of MIT researchers last week, said. (Source: Stuff)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video russia taiwan japan sweden china photo nato germany arctic europe singapore finland turkey bulgaria lithuania austria poland norway australia ukraine kazakhstan belarus syria communist unitedkingdom europeanunion unitednations unitedstates northkorea southkorea europeanparliament blacksea globalization pacificocean southchinasea thenetherlands caspiansea crimea internationalcriminalcourt

2023. V. 1. Hungary, France, Germany, Russia, Ukraine, Vatican, Syria, United States

2023.05.01. 20:52 Eleve

.

Europe

Hungary
01 May 2023  At the conclusion of Pope Francis’ 41st Apostolic Journey abroad,
the Primate of Hungry said the “people felt the Holy Father’s warmth and responded to it, and that the Holy Father, amid these troubling times, truly came as a pilgrim of peace and man of faith." Cardinal Erdő, Archbishop of Esztergom-Budapest, reflects on Pope Francis' Apostolic Journey to Hungary, and says the Pope brought the faithful a sense of immense joy and a call to work for peace. "I have the feeling that the Holy Father came here first of all with great love, specifically love for us,” according to him. "The visit of Pope Francis was a special joy for the Hungarian Catholic community in particular, but I believe also for the whole nation," said Cardinal Erdő. “It is not some international event or other purpose that has brought him here, but specifically pastoral love; that he wanted to visit us,” he said, noting, “This is a great encouragement for us.” “When we went to St. Stephen's Basilica, the city was full of people. Not only in the square in front of the basilica, but also along the streets, crowds were greeting him," he said, adding that the Pope expressed great affection for those whom he met. Pope Francis frequently stopped his popemobile - or papal golf cart - to shake hands with the faithful and to show his affection for babies and young children. "It was really a great, loving relationship with the faithful community," he said. “There were numerous ecumenical guests, representatives of social life, many of whom were not Catholics or non-believers," he said, “who were overjoyed to receive the Holy Father, because they saw that this journey is for us,” he said. “Through the person of the Pope we experience that Christ is coming to us - and that is a very great thing," said the Cardinal. "Jesus comes in every Mass. We see Him in the poor person. And yet, when the Pope comes, we are emotionally affected by this reality." In his Regina Coeli address at the end of Mass on Sunday, Pope Francis offered Hungary and Europe to the protection of the Virgin Mary and prayed for peace. "It was especially beautiful at the end of the Mass," said the Cardinal, "because we know that it was he who last year called on the bishops of the world to consecrate Ukraine and Russia to the Blessed Virgin Mary. And we Hungarians have a very old tradition of this, because it was Saint Stephen who, according to historical tradition, dedicated the whole country, the whole nation, to the Virgin Mary." A statue of St Stephen, he recalled, still stands in Fatima in memory of that historic event. "We made this gesture last year, and the faithful - Eastern and Western Christians - have come to understand that here we are truly entrusting this situation to Divine Providence and the intercessory love of the Virgin Mary, which we cannot resolve by human power alone," said the Cardinal. He recalled that Pope Francis prayed before the icon of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the end of Mass on Sunday. "This is the icon which, according to historical tradition, found its way to the Bakócz Chapel when the city of Esztergom was liberated from the Turks, and this old icon was found under the ruins of the basilica," he said. “They displayed and prayed before it, and many of them thanked the Virgin Mary." The Cardinal concluded the interview by reflection on a few highlights of the Apostolic Visit. "Great encouragement was felt by bishops, priests, deacons, religious, teachers of the faith, and all those actively involved in the life of the Church, as well as by the poor, the disabled, the blind children, the homeless, and of course, refugees, and those who care for refugees," he said. The Hungarian faithful will never forget the unforgettable testimony offered by a refugee family in St. Elizabeth's Church, the Pope's reverent and moving visit to the Greek Catholic Community, and the contagious joy and peaceful and prayerful atmosphere of the Holy Mass in 'Parliament Square" on Sunday morning, Cardinal Erdő said. (Source: VaticanNews)

France
1 May 2023  Protestors and police clashed during demonstrations over the French governments plans over pension as groups of extremists allegedly caused chaos in Paris, France. Bank windows and bus stops were smashed, bicycles were torched and cops were also hit by objects after Mr Macron raised the retirement age from 62 to 64 last month. Around a million marched across France as part of the protest with 500,000 pouring onto the streets of Paris. The General Confederation of Labour (France) claim the figure is much higher with 2.3m demonstrators across the country. French union members were joined by labour activists from other countries, environmental activists and other groups fighting for economic justice, or just expressing anger at Macron. Activists are also opposed to the 2024 Paris Olympics and their impact on society and the environment also demonstrated. Clashes with police were also reported in Lyon and Nantes. Around 108 police officers were reportedly injured across France, including 20 in Paris. French police deployed drones exceptionally to film unrest, a move that has raised concerns among privacy defenders and activist groups. (Source: DailyStar)

Germany
May 01, 2023  In spring 2022, Germany had expelled some 40 Russian diplomats who Berlin believed to represent a threat to its security. Last October, the head of German's cybersecurity agency, Schoenbohm, was fired after news reports revealed his proximity to a cybersecurity consultancy believed to have contacts with Russian intelligence services. A month later, a German reserve officer received a suspended prison sentence of a year and nine months for spying for Russia. Germany expelled Russian diplomats mid-April in order "to reduce the presence of intelligence services" in the country, the government said today. The Foreign Ministry had been in contact with Russia in recent weeks about the matter. The departure of the diplomats triggered the expulsion of some 20 German embassy staff in Moscow. They left Moscow today. (Source: VoANews)

Russia
01.05.2023  A freight train derailed
in the western Russian region of Bryansk, around 60 kilometers north of Russia's border with Ukraine, after an "explosive device" detonated on the rail tracks, local governor Bogomaz said on Telegram, adding there were "no casualties." The incident occurred at 10:17 Moscow time (0717 GMT). The locomotive and seven freight wagons were derailed and the locomotive caught fire. The governor of Russia's Leningrad region near St. Petersburg said a power line had been blown up overnight and an explosive device found near a second line. (Source: DW)

May 01, 2023   Imagery shows that Russia “has made a particular effort” to strengthen the northern border of occupied Crimea, “including with a multi-layered defensive zone near the village of Medvedevka,” the British Defense Ministry posted on Twitter today. In addition, Russia has dug “hundreds of miles of trenches well inside internationally recognized Russian territory, including in the Belgorod and Kursk regions.” (Source: VoA)

May 01, 2023  'More than 19,000 children from Russian-occupied territories have been subjected to forced deportations to Russia', according to Children of War, a Ukrainian national database. Ukraine has retrieved 364 of them. Earlier this month at a Moscow news conference, Lvova-Belova, the Russian official 'overseeing the deportations of Ukrainian children' to Russia was saying her commission acted on humanitarian grounds to protect the interests of children in an area where military action was taking place. (Source: VoA)

May 1, 2023  Russia's defence ministry said today its forces had carried out missile strikes overnight against Ukrainian military sites, including weapons depots and ammunition factories, and that all its designated targets had been hit. "The work of enterprises making ammunition, weapons and military equipment for Ukrainian troops has been disrupted," it said. Ukraine said 15 of 18 cruise missiles launched by Russia were successfully shot down, shielding the capital Kyiv and other major cities. The air strikes - the second such wave in three days - had caused a fire in the Ukrainian city of Pavlohrad, a railway hub behind the southern and eastern fronts, wounding at least 34 people and damaging dozens of homes. (Source: Reuters)

Ukraine
May 1, 2023  Thousands of fighters from across the post-Soviet world
have come to Ukraine’s aid since the Russian invasion. Foreigners from Chechnya and former Soviet republics Belarus and Georgia say their countries will never enjoy freedom or democracy unless Russia is defeated in Ukraine. And so Ukraine’s war is their war. Cmdr. Mamuka “Ushangi” Mamulashvili heads the Georgian Legion of Ukraine. He has some 1,800 men under his command, 65% of them battle-hardened Georgians. “The guys are very experienced,” he says. 'They were prepared by NATO instructors. They can use NATO equipment. They can use post-Soviet equipment, and that makes them effective.' Moscow invaded Georgia in 2008, capturing Abkhazia and South Ossetia in an operation that foreshadowed the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. 'Ukrainian volunteers also fought in Georgia against Russia in 2008'. The Kastuś Kalinoŭski Regiment (named for a Polish-Belarusian 19th-century revolutionary) was formed in March 2022 and is made up entirely of Belarusian opposition volunteers. The Belarusian regiment is less experienced in warfare than its Georgian counterpart. The Belarusian government’s close ties with Moscow complicate Belarusian volunteers’ efforts to join the fight in Ukraine. On the one hand, President Lukashenko’s security forces seek to track down potential combatants; on the other, Ukrainian security forces are suspicious of  would-be fighters. They found three people who were agents of the Belarusian KGB. The Chechens fighting with Ukrainian forces are in a particularly unusual position. Those continuing the battle against Russia alongside Ukrainian troops in the Dzhokhar Dudayev Chechen Peacekeeping Battalion find themselves up against other Chechen troops, loyal to Chechen strongman and close Putin ally Kadyrov. Both sides hate each other and see each other as traitors who betrayed the idea of the nation. Chechens who come to Ukraine get screened by security services. For young Chechens, the war in Ukraine offers an opportunity to gain the kind of military experience their elders earned in the two Chechen wars against Moscow, or more recently in Iraq and Syria, where  some Chechens fought with radical Islamist groups. (Source: TheChristianScienceMonitor)

Vatican
May 01, 2023  The Holy See has a project underway related to peace between Russia and Ukraine. "There is a mission underway that is not public yet; when it is public, I will tell you about it," Pope Francis told reporters traveling with him from Budapest, Hungary, back to Rome on his two-hour flight April 30. Pope Francis spent about 20 minutes answering five questions from reporters traveling with him. Asked if he had discussions in Budapest with Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and with Russia Orthodox Metropolitan Hilarion of Budapest and Hungary about peace in Ukraine or sought contacts with Moscow during his meetings with them, the pope responded that "peace is made by opening channels. You cannot create peace with closure. I invite everyone to open doors, channels of friendship." As for his conversation with Metropolitan Hilarion, the pope said, "well, we weren't talking about Little Red Riding Hood." "I am willing to do anything that must be done" to promote peace, he said. He also said discussions already were underway with Indigenous communities in Canada for the repatriation of cultural artifacts held in the Vatican Museums. What can be returned to its rightful owners should be, the pope said. "This is good for everyone, so no one gets used to putting their hands in someone else's pocket." Other topics included his health and his travel plans. Pope Francis said that when he got sick in late March, he did not lose consciousness, as some media reported, but he was in such pain that he skipped lunch and went to take a nap. He spent three  nights March 29-April 1 in Rome's Gemelli hospital. "It was a strong case of pneumonia in the lower part of the lungs," he said. The day before the trip to Hungary, Pope Francis said, he had seen his doctor, "who came to look at things a bit," and they spoke about his travel plans, which include Lisbon, Portugal, in early August for World Youth Day. "Then there is the trip to Marseille (France), a trip to Mongolia and there's another one that I don't remember." During the inflight news conference, Pope Francis refused to criticize Orbán directly on migration even though the prime minister has enacted a tough "no migrants" policy and built fences along Hungary's borders with Serbia and Croatia. Asked about Hungary's policy, Pope Francis insisted - as he has before - that the European Union must act. Currently, he said, only five countries - Greece, Cyprus, Italy, Spain and Malta - are bearing a disproportionate burden in taking in hundreds of thousands of people fleeing poverty and civil strife. After Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal met Pope Francis at the Vatican April 27, the prime minister told reporters he had asked for the Vatican's help in returning to Ukraine children taken by force to Russia. Asked on the plane if he thought the Vatican could help, Pope Francis responded, "I think so because the Holy See has been a go-between in some of the prisoner exchanges" between Russia and Ukraine. "The Holy See is willing to try because it's the right thing and we have to help," the pope said. He explained it's not about helping with the war effort, but with a humanitarian cause. "All humanitarian gestures help," he said. "Gestures of cruelty do not." (Source: UnionofCatholicAsianNews)

Asia

Syria
Monday 01/05/2023  Turkish President
Erdogan said Sunday that Turkish intelligence forces killed islamic state (isis) leader al-Quraishi in Syria. “This individual was neutralised as part of an operation by the Turkish national intelligence organisation in Syria yesterday,” Erdogan said in an interview. In some cases, senior isis figures have been targeted while hiding out in areas where Turkey has major influence. Syrian local and security sources said the raid took place in the northern Syrian town of Jandaris, which is controlled by Turkey-backed rebel groups and was one of the worst-affected in the February 6 earthquake that hit both Turkey and Syria. Isis selected al-Quraishi as its leader in November 2022 after the previous isis leader was killed in a US operation in southern Syria. The isis' remaining thousands of extremist fighters have in recent years mostly hid out in remote hinterlands of Syria and Iraq, though they are still capable of carrying out major hit-and-run attacks. The US-led coalition alongside a Kurdish-led alliance known as the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) is still carrying out raids against is officials in Syria. (Source: TheArabWeekly)

North America

United States
May 1, 2023  More than 20,000 Russian troops have died and another 80,000 were wounded in five months of fighting in eastern Ukraine, particularly in Bakhmut, White House official National Security Council spokesman Kirby said today. Citing newly declassified US intelligence, he said that about half of those killed were soldiers recruited by the private military company Wagner. Kirby said he was not giving estimates of Ukrainian casualties. The White House will not put “information in the public domain that makes it any harder” for the 'close Western ally', whose army is being armed and trained by a US-led coalition of countries, he said. (Source: TheDefensePost)

May 01, 2023  The First Republic Bank was closed by regulators today in the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history.  It was seized by California regulators and sold to JPMorgan Chase, which will assume responsibility for all deposits and assets. Depositors with First Republic Bank will have their accounts switched over to JPMorgan Chase and can still access their money. This is the third central bank failure of 2023, following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. (Source: macon)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: film russia hungary photo nato france croatia germany europe italy mongolia asia iraq georgia canada vatican malta turkey earthquake portugal spain greece olympics ukraine serbia cyprus belarus syria unitedkingdom europeanunion unitedstates sovietunion crimea northamerica ottomanempire abkhazia southossetia

2023. IV. 30. Magyarország. Látogatása harmadik napján, Ferenc pápa szentmiséje Budapesten, a Kossuth Lajos téren

2023.05.01. 00:21 Eleve

.

Ferenc pápa szentmiséje Budapesten

(Forrás: YouTube / EWTN):

https://tinyurl.com/33nrekjc

*****

Pope Francis in Hungary

Homily of His Holiness

Kossuth Lajos' Square (Budapest)
Sunday, 30 April 2023

// AR - DE - EN - ES - FR - IT - PL - PT //

(Source: Vatican):

https://tinyurl.com/2s3zw68s

.3 4 30 17:44

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video tavasz magyarország hungary duna ének építészet fák vatican

2023. IV. 28. Magyarország. Látogatása első napján, Ferenc pápa Budapesten

2023.04.28. 18:20 Eleve

.

Novák elnök asszony köszönti a vendéget, majd Ferenc pápa beszéde

(videón, olasz nyelvű beszéd szövegének magyar nyelvű tolmácsolásával)

(Forrás: Híradó):

https://tinyurl.com/m76nuu7d

Kulcsszavak:      II. Guerra Mondiale    II. Világháború    Alaptörvény     comunista     Danubio     Duna     ENSZ    Europa     Európa     híd     Hungría     Impero Romano     Kárpátalja     kommunista     kommunizmus     Legge Fondamentale     Libano     Libanon     Magyarország     Monarchia Austro-Ungarica     ONU     Osztrák-Magyar Monarchia     Pannonia    Pannónia    ponte     Római Birodalom     Siria     Szíria     Ucraina     Ukrajna     Vatikán     video     virág

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: video magyarország ukrajna híd ensz libanon európa szíria kárpátalja duna kommunizmus virág hungría kommunista vatikán europa pannónia pannonia ponte alaptörvény danubio rómaibirodalom osztrákmagyarmonarchia másodikvilágháború secondaguerramondiale comunista imperoromano leggefondamentale libano monarchiaaustroungarica onu siria ucraina

2023. IV. 1. Magyarország, Ukraine, China, United States, the International Monetary Found, United Nations

2023.04.01. 23:49 Eleve

.

Európa    Europe

Magyarország
2023. április 1. Az Országgyűlés 5/2023. (III. 31.) OGY határozatának szövege:     "Az orosz-ukrán háború egyéves évfordulójáról. Egy éve zajlik a háború Oroszország és Ukrajna között, és nincs jele annak, hogy rövid időn belül véget érne. A következmények drámaiak: a háború már eddig is több százezer emberéletet követelhetett és az elmúlt évek legnagyobb európai humanitárius válságát okozta. Európa a háborúba sodródás napjait éli. Az Európai Parlament további fegyverszállításokat követel. Vadászgépeket, helikoptereket, rakétarendszereket, harckocsikat és még több lőszert küldenének a hadszíntérre. A tagállamok egy része már el is kötelezte magát a további fegyverszállítások mellett. Ezek a lépések világháborúhoz vezethetnek. Mindezekre és a 2022. évi áprilisi választás egyértelmű üzenetére tekintettel az Országgyűlés az alábbi megállapításokat teszi:    1. Kifejezzük elkötelezettségünket a béke mellett. Azt várjuk el a nemzetközi közösség minden tagjától, hogy a mielőbbi béke érdekében lépjenek fel, és kerüljék azokat a lépéseket, amelyek a háború kiterjedésével járnak.    2. Ismételten elítéljük Oroszország katonai agresszióját, és elismerjük Ukrajna jogát az önvédelemhez.    3. Álláspontunk szerint a Brüsszelben elfogadott gazdasági szankciók nem csillapították a háborút, és az orosz gazdaságot sem kényszerítették térdre, sőt a szankciók eredményezte magas energiaárak megfizetésével Oroszország háborúját finanszírozza Európa. Az energetikai szankciók egekbe lökték az energiaárakat, gazdasági károkat és tomboló inflációt okoztak minden uniós tagországban. Nincs olyan család, amely ne érezné a szankciós infláció terheit.    4. Ellenezzük azokat a brüsszeli terveket, amelyek tovább szélesítenék az energetikai szankciók körét. A gáz- és olajimport teljes befagyasztása, a nukleáris fűtőelemek behozatali tilalma jelentős ellátásbiztonsági zavarokat és még nagyobb inflációt okoznának számos tagországban, így Magyarországon is. Elvárjuk a brüsszeli döntéshozóktól, hogy ne hozzanak olyan döntéseket, amelyek gazdasági kárai nagyobbak, mint nehezen jósolható előnyei. Elfogadhatatlan, hogy Európa, és benne Magyarország legyen a háború fő gazdasági teherviselője.    5. Magyarország a háború kirobbanása óta történetének legnagyobb humanitárius segélyakcióját hajtotta és hajtja végre. Felhívjuk a Kormányt, hogy továbbra is minden lehetséges módon folytassa az Ukrajnából menekültek megsegítését.    6. Felhívjuk a figyelmet arra, hogy a katonai konfliktus súlyosan érinti a kárpátaljai magyar közösséget. Már eddig is sokan adták az életüket a háborúban, miközben jelenleg is zajlik a sorozás annak érdekében, hogy további kárpátaljai férfiakat vigyenek a frontvonalba.    7. Magyarország a NATO és az Európai Unió elkötelezett tagja. Teljes jogú tagként és szuverén államként Magyarország mindent meg fog tenni a béke előmozdítása érdekében. A 2022. évi áprilisi választások és a szankciókról szóló konzultáció eredményei egyértelműek, ezek alapján megerősítjük: fegyverszállítások és további szankciók helyett mielőbbi béketárgyalásokra van szükség.    8. Felszólítjuk a magyar közéleti szereplőket, hogy tartózkodjanak az olyan állásfoglalásoktól és politikai akcióktól, amelyek jelentős gazdasági károkat okozhatnak hazánknak, vagy Magyarország háborúba sodródását eredményezhetik. A háború folytatása, a halált okozó fegyverek szállítása emberek ezreinek életébe kerülhet. Csak azonnali tűzszünettel, tárgyalásokkal és békével lehet életeket menteni!    9. Ez a határozat a közzétételét követő napon lép hatályba".   Kövér s. k., az Országgyűlés elnöke; Dr. Aradszki s. k., az Országgyűlés jegyzője; Dr. Vadai s. k. (Forrás: InfoStart)
Megjegyzés: A határozati javaslatot az Országgyűlésnek  2023. II. 28-án nyújtotta be két frakcióvezető: Kocsis (Fidesz) és Dr. Simicskó (KDNP). A javaslat szövegét lásd: "Az orosz-ukrán háború egyéves évfordulójáról" címmel: https://www.parlament.hu/irom42/03086/03086.pdf

Ukraine
Saturday, April 1, 2023  Persecution of Christians. Ukraine’s top security agency notified a top Orthodox priest, Metropolitan Pavel today that he was suspected of justifying Russia’s aggression amid a bitter dispute over the Ukraine’s famed, most revered Orthodox site, the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra Orthodox monastery. The monks in the monastery belong to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC). The dispute surrounding the property, also known as Monastery of the Caves, is part of a wider religious conflict that has unfolded in parallel with the war. The Ukrainian government has cracked down on the Ukrainian Orthodox Church over its historic ties to the Russian Orthodox Church, whose leader, Patriarch Kirill, has supported Russian President Putin in the invasion of Ukraine. The monastery is owned by the Ukrainian government, and the agency overseeing it notified the monks that they had until Wednesday to leave the site. Metropolitan Pavel, the abbot of the monastery, has strongly resisted the authorities’ order to vacate the complex. During a court hearing in the Ukrainian capital, the metropolitan strongly rejected the claim by the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), that he condoned Russia’s invasion. SBU agents raided his residence. Prosecutors asked the court to put him under house arrest pending the investigation. Pavel described the accusations against him as politically driven. Many Orthodox communities in Ukraine have cut their ties with the UOC and transitioned to the rival Orthodox Church of Ukraine, which more than four years ago received recognition from the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. Bartholomew I is considered the first among  equals among the leaders of the Eastern Orthodox churches. Patriarch Kirill and most other Orthodox patriarchs have refused to accept his decision authorizing the second Ukrainian church. Earlier in the week, Metropolitan Pavel cursed President Zelenskyy, threatening him with damnation. (Source: AP)

Asia

China
04/01/2023  Two contradictory news stories have emerged from China that - when read together - perfectly demonstrate the two faces of the situation of Christians in the country. The general secretary of the Universal Bible Alliance on a visit to China - in Beijing, Shanghai and Nanjing - met with the leaders of the official churches, reviving cooperation. Gevers, the Pentecostal pastor from South Africa since last November has been secretary general of the Universal Biblical Alliance, the body that sees Biblical Societies from all over the world collaborating with one another with the aim of spreading Scripture in every language in every part of the world. Promoted by the Chinese Christian Council and the Three Self Patriotic Movement - the official bodies of the Protestant world in China - the visit is certainly not unprecedented. In fact, there has been a collaboration that has its most obvious face in the Nanjing Amity Printing Co. plant, a large printing house in Nanjing that is the result of a joint venture between a Chinese foundation directly linked to the Three Self Patriotic Movement and the Universal Biblical Alliance. Active since 1988, it produces Bibles not only for Chinese communities but also for Christian denominations around the world. On its website, a counter offers a real-time update of printed copies: as of April 1 there were more than 246 million: 89 million for China, the others in every language in 140 countries around the world. Gevers'  visit was an opportunity to consolidate this cooperation project, which now also has a satellite plant in Ethiopia. In Beijing he had the opportunity to meet with Chen, the new of the Religious Affairs Administration (Sara), as well as with the leadership of official Catholic bodies. The official website of the Patriotic Association reported Gevers' meeting with Shen, the bishop of Haimen who is chairman of the Chinese Council of Bishops (the collegial body not recognized by the Holy See). Indeed, the Catholic community, too, has been able to benefit from the effort made by the Universal Biblical Alliance to disseminate Scripture in China. In the interview with Shen, there was no shortage of emphasis on how translations are an aspect of "Sinicization,' the watchword given to the world of religions by President Xi. But just as all this was happening, however, in Hohhot, the capital of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, some Christians go on trial for "illegally' buying and distributing copies of Scripture printed in Nanjing at the plant visited by Pastor Gevers. Bitter Winter issued a call to prayer circulating in China these hours among "domestic," that is, unofficial, Protestant communities. It concerns a legal proceeding underway in Hohhot, where this month some local Christians belonging to these communities will go on trial for "illegally" distributing Bibles and face up to 15 years in prison. In their defense the defendants report these are precisely copy Bibles printed by the Nanjing Amity Printing Co. purchased in bulk and distributed to those who could not afford them, without any commercial activity. In this case, therefore, the "illegality' would simply lie in the fact that promoting the dissemination of Scripture in Chinese are communities that are not registered and controlled by the government. Which confirms - once again - what the real meaning of Beijing's insistence on "Sinicization" is. (Source: AsiaNews)

North America

United States
April 1, 2023  Trump, the embattled ex-president took to his Truth Social platform today to rage against Manhattan District Attorney Bragg, who brought the charges against him, and accused Democrats of weaponizing the FBI and Department of Justice. “I want to thank everybody for the tremendous support you have given me against this assault on our Nation. Our once beautiful USA is now a Nation in Decline,” Trump posted. “Radical Left Thugs & Insurrectionists have taken over our Country, & are rapidly destroying it. They are using the levers of Law Enforcement, and have completely Weaponized the FBI & DOJ to Interfere with, Rigg, and Steal our once Sacred Elections. “We are now living in a Third World Country, but we will Come Back & Make America Great Aagain” he raged. In the 24 hours after his indictment was announced, he raised over $4 million. Trump’s arrest could be a major catalyst for his reelection campaign, friends and foes of Trump alike have predicted. (Source: NewYorkPost)

1 April 2023  Weather expert and US Air Force veteran Helms is one of many digital volunteers worldwide. He publishes his forecasts on social media under the hashtag "#NAFOWeather," a likely reference to the North Atlantic Fellas Organization, an online anti-Russian propaganda movement. For the front in Ukraine, Helms has the following prediction: "The loss of moisture from the soil really picks up by May 1st and beyond". Helms also worked for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the US, where he studied the hydrological consequences of climate change - that is, changes in the composition of soils like what is going on just now in Ukraine. In southern Ukraine, the soil will be dry from around mid-April, then two weeks later in the Donetsk region, and from mid-May in the Russian-occupied Luhansk region further north, he explained. While Russian tanks are still stuck in the mud in Eastern Ukraine, the Ukrainian army could begin a counteroffensive in the south toward the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol. He writes, for example, about when there will be "optimal optical satellite intelligence opportunities." When clear skies allow for the best photos from space, other activists then use donations to order satellite imagery from private vendors like Maxar, passing it along to Ukrainian commanders on the front lines. (Source: DW)

The International Monetary Fund

April 01, 2023  The International Monetary Fund's board in Washington has approved a 48-month Extended Fund Facility - worth $15.6 billion - support package for Ukraine yesterday. Russia's invasion has devastated Ukraine's economy, causing activity to contract by about 30% last year, destroying much of its capital stock and spreading poverty, according to the IMF. The two-step program will look to stabilize the country's economic situation while the war continues, before turning to 'more ambitious structural reforms' after the end of hostilities, IMF deputy managing director Gopinath said. It forms the IMF's portion of a $115 billion overall support package comprised of debt relief, grants and loans by multilateral and bilateral institutions, the IMF's Ukraine mission chief Gray told yesterday. 'The goal of Ukraine's new IMF-supported program is to provide an anchor for economic policies — policies that will sustain macroeconomic financial stability and support … economic recovery,' he said. $2.7 billion is being made available to Ukraine immediately, with the rest of the funds due to be released over the next four years. 'This program has been designed in such a way that it would work even if economic circumstances are considerably worse than ... the current baseline,' he said. If the conflict were to extend into 2025, it would raise Ukraine's financial needs from $115 billion to about $140 billion, Gray said. The program includes additional guarantees from some IMF members in the event that active combat continues beyond its current estimate of mid-2024. (Source: AgenceFrance-Presse)

United Nations

01/04/2023  The Russian Ambassador to the UN, Nebenzya will chair the Security Council for the next four weeks. On 1 April, Russia - a permanent council member - took up the presidency of the 15-nation UN Security Council. Each of the council's 15 members takes up the presidency for one month. Ukraine's foreign minister described the situation as 'the worst joke ever for April Fool's Day". The last time Russia was in charge was in February 2022. Russia is one of five nations, the others being France, UK, US and China, which can veto Security Council decisions. "The Security Council is responsible for maintaining peace worldwide'. Twice last year, Russia prevented the passage of resolutions calling for the end of the invasion of Ukraine and the restoration of territory occupied by Moscow's troops. Nebenzya, told the Russian news agency TASS that he intends to oversee several debates, including one on arms control. He said he hoped to discuss a "new world order' which would end global domination by the United States. (Source: rfi)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: space magyarország ukrajna oroszország európa kárpátalja china nato imf france országgyűlés asia vatican európaiunió ethiopia unitedkingdom európaiparlament unitednations unitedstates southafrica northamerica

2023. III. 31. European Commission, Russia, United States

2023.04.01. 23:32 Eleve

.

Europe

European Commission
31 March 2023 
EU is cautious on summer payments of blocked funds to Hungary. On 30 November, the European Commission recommended freezing the disbursement of EU recovery funds until Hungary complies with 27 'essential milestones' linked to the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary. Commission recommends EU funds for Hungary remain frozen. While recommending the freezing of EU funds under the rule of law conditionality mechanism, the European Commission gave a formal green light to Hungary’s recovery plan. However, the disbursement of the recovery money would be linked to 27 ‘supermilestones’. Hungary has made progress on bolstering guarantees of judicial independence but is 'not quite there yet', and needs to improve democratic credentials in other areas before getting billions worth of blocked European Union funds, officials said yesterday. Four officials cautioned about expecting aid for Hungary from the bloc’s long-term budget, or up to €15.4 billion from the EU’s COVID recovery stimulus to start flowing this summer. “We are progressing well. We are reaching the end of the discussions on the judicial milestone,” said one. 'But we don’t only have the judicial reforms. There also is a whole list of corruption reforms” needed, including on improving public procurement, to get the money, they said. In more than a decade in power, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has had many bitter run-ins with the EU and its executive arm, the European Commission, over Budapest 'restricting the rights of gays' and migrants, as well as tightening state controls over non-governmental organizations, academics, media and courts. Last month, Hungary’s negotiator said ironing out remaining issues with Brussels over democratic reforms prescribed to win the recovery funds could last until the summer. “We are almost there, not quite there yet, but we are getting there” with the judicial reforms, said the second EU official, who is involved in negotiations between the Brussels-based Commission and Budapest. Hungary’s parliament passed the first of a series of anti-corruption bills on March 27, as Budapest seeks to avoid a loss of European Union funds when its economy is headed into recession, 'and the forint has plunged to record lows'. The person said that meeting those requirements would open Budapest’s access to up to €20 billion in development funds, but it was unlikely that any would be sent straight away. The lag is due to how these funds are spent, with member countries first financing projects on their own and only later asking the Commission for reimbursement. The officials said Budapest would unlikely have the bills ready to send in even if it unlocks access to the money mid-year. The sources said some recovery payments could be possible this summer but that mostly the money would come later in the year if Hungary meets the necessary conditions. Hungary and Poland are the only EU members lagging behind in getting the recovery funds, which the Commission has blocked over accusations that the countries’ governments 'damage democracy and the rule of law'. The Commission is withholding Hungary’s access to the development funds over the same concerns around corruption and freedom of courts. Under pressure from high inflation at home, Orbán has sought to strike a deal with Brussels on the money, while also 'wrangling' with the EU on issues including support for Ukraine and punishing Russia for invading its neighbour. (Source: euractiv)

Russia
31 March 2023  President Putin today signed new guidelines aimed at curbing Western "dominance" and identifying China and India as key partners for the future. The 42-page document - a de facto handbook for Russian diplomats - was published on the Kremlin's website. The document designated the United States as the greatest threat facing the country. It describes the US as "the main instigator, organizer and executor of the aggressive anti-Russian policy of the collective West." Russia's foreign policy, according to the document, should reflect that the US is "the source of the main risks to Russia's security, international peace and a balanced, just and sustainable development of mankind." "The Russian Federation intends to give priority to the elimination of vestiges of the dominance of the United States and other unfriendly countries in world politics,' the strategy document read. The doctrine also described Russia as a "state-civilization" tasked with defending what it called the "Russian world" and "traditional spiritual and moral values" against "pseudo-humanistic and other neo-liberal ideological attitudes." Russia would aim to "create the conditions for any state to reject neo-colonialist and hegemonic aims." Russia has sought to boost political and economic ties with countries in Asia such as China, India and in Africa, that taken a more neutral stance towards its offensive in Ukraine. The document stressed the importance of "the deepening of ties and coordination with friendly sovereign global centers of power and development located on the Eurasian continent." The doctrine singled out China and India as Russia's strategic partners and argued that Moscow will position itself towards other countries. Moscow has stepped up energy supplies to both China and India. Presenting the new strategy, Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov told a televised meeting of Russia's Security Council that the country faced "existential threats" to its security and development from "unfriendly states.' 'According to Lavrov, the start of what Moscow calls its "special military operation" in Ukraine had ushered in 'revolutionary changes" in world affairs that now needed to be reflected in Russia's main foreign policy document. Putin said that updates to Russia's strategy for engagement on the global stage were necessary due to "radical changes" in the world. (Source: DW)

31 Mar 2023  Putin calling up extra 147,000 men aged between 18 and 27 from tomorrow. Russia is also planning to raise the draft age from 27 to 30 in 2024, while moving the younger age bracket from 18 to 21. Putin made the shock announcement  earlier this week to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus and said the move was triggered by Britain’s decision this past week to provide Ukraine with armour-piercing rounds containing depleted uranium. Russia plans to maintain control over those it sends to Belarus, and construction of storage facilities for them will be completed by July 1, Putin said. “We are doing what they (the West) have been doing for decades, stationing them in certain allied countries, preparing the launch platforms and training their crews, he said. (Source: DailyStar)

North America

United States
March 31, 2023  Former US president Trump has been indicted by a grand jury. He will be the first former president in US history to face criminal charges. Grand jury proceedings in the US remain secret until the defendant is in custody. The hearings focused on an alleged hush money payment made to adult performer Daniels in 2016. It's believed this jury was asked to decide whether it was illegal for Trump to order his former fixer Cohen to pay Daniels for her silence. In 2016, when Trump was running for presidency, the adult star went public with her claim that she had sex with him when he was married. Cohen alleged he was directed to give her $US130,000 and conceal the nature of the payment as a legal expense. In a statement, Trump declared "this is political persecution and election interference at the highest level in history", describing the charges as part of a "witch hunt" by "the radical left". He did take direct aim at the Manhattan District Attorney Bragg, who has been overseeing the case. Trump is currently residing at his sprawling Mar-a-Lago home in Florida, so as part of that process he will have to make his way to New York City. In the unlikely scenario that Trump refuses to cooperate with authorities and surrender, he may choose to hunker down at Mar-a-Lago. Officials would need to negotiate with Florida for permission to extradite the former president to New York. DeSantis today announced on Twitter that Florida "will not assist" in an extradition request. Once Trump arrives at the New York court house, he will be processed as a defendant. He will be fingerprinted and photographed, and read his Miranda rights (have the right to remain silent). Trump will then wait in a holding cell to be called before a judge to enter a plea in what's called an arraignment - which will be open to the public. Trump will be accompanied by Secret Service agents throughout the process. It's likely Trump will be released on his own recognisance, which means he will get bail without having to pay a bond. Given he has publicly maintained his innocence in the lead-up to this indictment, it appears more likely Trump will plead not guilty, which would mean the case proceeds to trial. It could take more than a year for the trial to begin. If Trump is found not guilty, he would be acquitted. Bragg may be considering charges related to falsifying business records with the intent to conceal another crime, likely related to campaign finances. This would be considered a low-level felony, with a maximum sentence of four years in prison. However, it is entirely possible the charges could be downgraded, or a lesser sentence handed down. This means even if Trump is convicted of a felony charge, he may not spend any time in jail. In any event, a conviction would not legally prevent Trump from running for president again in 2024, though the pending case may complicate his campaign. (RNZ)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: russia india hungary china photo europe asia africa poland ukraine belarus unitedkingdom europeanunion unitedstates europeancommission eurasia northamerica

Danube photos

2023.03.28. 15:40 Eleve

 

Budapest, 2023. III. 28.  A Budai Várban, kővé váltan védői szerepemben

 

.3 8 11 02:54

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: tavasz magyarország hungary photos ég építészet felhők fényképek

2023. II. 28. Russia, China, India

2023.03.01. 01:51 Eleve

.

Russia
Feb. 28, 2023   Energy exporters are increasingly getting paid in yuan. Russia began cutting its dependence on the dollar in 2014 after its annexation of Crimea. By 2018, as the U.S. imposed additional economic sanctions, the country began to sell its holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds and explore trade in rubles and other currencies. De-dollarization went into overdrive, and widened to include the euro, last year. Western countries froze some $300 billion of Russia’s foreign reserves and banned some of its banks from the SWIFT messaging system that underpins most global payments in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. China launched a cross-border payments system known as CIPS in 2015 that has been billed as an eventual competitor to the 50-year-old SWIFT  network. But its system hasn’t yet been widely adopted by other countries. China has become a major buyer of Russian oil that is shunned by the West, while Russia has grown more dependent on China for semiconductors and other technology. Russian and Chinese banks rely on networks of local branches and correspondent banks to process transactions without SWIFT. Russian companies issued bonds in the Chinese currency also known as renminbi worth the equivalent of more than $7 billion last year. Aluminum giant Rusal was the first company to issue yuan bonds inside Russia last August, and other commodity exporters like oil firm Rosneft followed. The share of Russian exports paid for in yuan rose to 14% by September, according to data from the central bank. That is up from 0.4% before the start of the war. Russia’s sovereign-wealth fund, which doubled the share of yuan it can hold to 60% in December, is using the Chinese currency to store its oil riches. The Russian Finance Ministry started selling yuan in January to plug its widening budget deficit. The first yuan-denominated exchange-traded fund launched on the Moscow Exchange in January. In recent weeks, the yuan-ruble was often the most traded currency pair on the Moscow Exchange based on daily volume.The Russian central bank this month set up an international settlements department it said would focus on expanding settlements in national currencies. Russian households are stashing savings in yuan. Russians don’t face an outright ban on using dollars or euros, and non-sanctioned banks continue to do business in foreign currencies. Russian financial blogger and consultant Gogaladze, who has more than 2 million Instagram followers, in October published a guide to the yuan after being inundated with questions about the currency last year. Russians have long bought dollars and euros to protect themselves against the ruble’s volatility. That changed last year as banks instituted fees on those accounts and many worried about the impact of Western sanctions. “Conversations were going around about the end of the dollar,” Ms. Gogaladze said. “The yuan was presented as an available alternative.” Households held almost $6 billion worth of yuan deposited at the end of last year at Russian banks, according to data from the central bank. That is up from zero at the start of the year, and is now more than a 10th of the $53 billion in foreign currency that households held. Nearly 50 financial institutions offer yuan savings accounts, according to comparison site Banki.ru. Bistrodengi, a Russian lending platform, started selling yuan bonds last year despite not doing any business in the Chinese currency. While Russia’s use of the yuan doesn’t mean the end of dollar supremacy, it may usher in the beginning of a more fractured system that could ultimately blunt the U.S.’s ability to use financial sanctions as a weapon, said McDowell, a professor at Syracuse University who recently wrote a book on the topic. “The more countries you force to find those alternatives,” Mr. McDowell said, “effectively what you’re going to do is increase economies of scale and experience in those areas.” (Source: TheWallStreetJournal)

China
2023.02.28  Party leader Xi - who is now serving a third term with no formal requirement to step down - told a high-level political meeting in Beijing today that the upcoming session of China's rubber-stamp parliament, the National People's Congress, would see the party strengthen "unified leadership" over scientific and technological institutions, as well as over the country's financial institutions and over 'government responsibility.' The announcement suggests further internal crackdowns to come within the government and party. A draft institutional reform plan is currently under discussion that will "be more relevant, more intensive, have a broader reach and touch on deeper interests" than previous structures, state broadcaster CCTV quoted Xi as telling the meeting. The ministries of human resources and social security may integrate with the ministry of civil affairs, the pro-China Singapore-based Lianhe Zaobao newspaper reported. The paper also quoted analysts as saying that the reform 'will further highlight the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party and weaken the power of the government.' Japan-based China commentator Hong said the plans will likely include bringing the ministry for public security, which governs the police system, and the ministry for state security, which governs the state security apparatus and overseas intelligence operations, under the aegis of the party. "It will turn government departments into administrative offices, tasked with running errands and doing the gruntwork," Hong said. "They will carry out the basic administrative work, but the core of policy-making will be taken away, and go to strengthen the leadership of the party," he said. The reforms will likely include the setting up of a powerful internal affairs committee under the central leadership of the Communist Party in Beijing. China's reforms could create Soviet-style super-commission under party control. If the reforms do implement such a plan, the internal affairs committee could look fairly similar to the People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs under the former Soviet Union, which was responsible for ensuring internal revolutionary order and the security of the state, as well as the internal safeguarding of state property, the guarding of national borders, and the registration of births, deaths, marriages and divorces, according to a July 11, 1934 report in the Soviet newspaper Izvestia. Such a plan, if implemented, comes at a time of unprecedented official control over people's personal and political lives, with the transfer of law-enforcement powers to local neighborhood committees and the setting up of local militias to boost "stability maintenance," a system of law enforcement aimed at forestalling dissent and nipping protest in the bud. Structural reforms by the ruling Chinese Communist Party leadership that could bring government security and intelligence branches under the direct control of the ruling party, at the expense of the state rather, suggest a further bid to consolidate political power in the hands of leader Xi as well as a possible preparation for war, analysts said. The Chinese state is already subordinate to the political power of the ruling party, but Xi has sought to amplify that principle still further in his own brand of political ideology. Veteran journalist Ma said the theme of the reforms appeared to herald more aggressive party control over every aspect of people's lives, a concept that is in line with reforms that have already taken place under Xi. Since taking power in 2012, Xi has already boosted his own personal power at the expense of other high-ranking leaders, particularly his premier, from whom he has taken back responsibility for running the economy in recent years. 'Now we're seeing that they need to sharpen their knives, for use both externally and internally.' 'They will control everything, plan everything and order everything.' They'll be taking China back to the 1950s by setting up the Commissariat for Internal Affairs, or rather putting China back on a wartime footing," Ma said. "The ministry of public security has always been obedient to the party, but now it's going to need to cooperate with decisions passed just a couple of days earlier, as part of a military-led system engaged in the mighty struggle," he said, in a possible reference to Xi's threat to invade democratic Taiwan. The Lianhe Zaobao quoted Lu, an assistant professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, as saying that the restructuring will further blur the distinction between party and state. "The status of the State Council and the importance of the prime minister in the country's operation and decision-making process will be further weakened." "China is gearing up for the new development era [under Xi's leadership] while facing complicated domestic and international situations," the English-language Global Times newspaper said. The 14th National People's Congress will open in Beijing on March 5. (Source: RadioFreeAsia)

India
Friday, February 24th 2023  India abstains on UN resolution calling for ‘just and lasting peace’ in Ukraine. India’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Kamboj, said it was important for the global community to ask itself some pertinent questions. “Are we anywhere near a possible solution acceptable to both sides?” she asked while explaining India’s decision to abstain. “Can any process that does not involve either of the two sides, ever lead to a credible and meaningful solution?” “Has the UN system, and particularly its principal organ, the UN Security Council, based on a 1945-world construct, not been rendered ineffective to address contemporary challenges to global peace and security?” The diplomat said that India continues to remain concerned about the situation in Ukraine. “The conflict has resulted in the loss of countless lives and misery, particularly for women, children, and the elderly, with millions becoming homeless and forced to seek shelter in neighbouring countries,” the Indian statement read.  “Reports of attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure are also deeply worrying.” The Indian representative said that no solution could be reached at the cost of human lives. “In this context, our prime minister’s statement that this cannot be an era of war bears reiteration,” she said. Kamboj said that India’s approach to the Ukraine conflict continues to be people-centric and that it is providing humanitarian assistance to the east European country. (Source: Scroll)

.

Szólj hozzá!

Címkék: russia india taiwan japan china book singapore ukraine communist rosneft unitednations unitedstates sovietunion crimea

süti beállítások módosítása