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Juncker was chosen as the lead candidate of the conservative center-right European People's Party (EPP) at a party congress in Dublin. A veteran of EU politics, the former Luxembourg prime minister lost office last year after 18 years in the position. Juncker beat French rival Michel Barnier, the EU's regulation chief, with a first tally among EPP delegates showing he secured 382 votes to Barnier's 245. Delegates included German chancellor Angela Merkel.
Juncker was chosen as the lead candidate of the conservative center-right European People's Party (EPP) at a party congress in Dublin. A veteran of EU politics, the former Luxembourg prime minister lost office last year after 18 years in the position.
Juncker beat French rival Michel Barnier, the EU's regulation chief, with a first tally among EPP delegates showing he secured 382 votes to Barnier's 245. Delegates included German chancellor Angela Merkel.
Ballots for the vote in Crimea on joining Russia announced for 16 March appear to have been printed....Update: Kyiv Post has translated the rest of the ballot and concluded that there is no way to vote no:The ballot asks two questions and leaves no option for a "no" vote. Voters are simply asked to check one of two boxes:Do you support joining Crimea with the Russian Federation as a subject of Russian Federation?And:Do you support restoration of 1992 Crimean Constitution and Crimea's status as a part of Ukraine?That Constitution declares that Crimea is an independent state. The questions are written in Russian, Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar, the three most widely spoken languages on the peninsula, and the paper carries a warning in all three languages that marking both options will invalidate the ballot.
Ballots for the vote in Crimea on joining Russia announced for 16 March appear to have been printed.
...Update: Kyiv Post has translated the rest of the ballot and concluded that there is no way to vote no:
The ballot asks two questions and leaves no option for a "no" vote. Voters are simply asked to check one of two boxes:Do you support joining Crimea with the Russian Federation as a subject of Russian Federation?And:Do you support restoration of 1992 Crimean Constitution and Crimea's status as a part of Ukraine?That Constitution declares that Crimea is an independent state. The questions are written in Russian, Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar, the three most widely spoken languages on the peninsula, and the paper carries a warning in all three languages that marking both options will invalidate the ballot.
The ballot asks two questions and leaves no option for a "no" vote. Voters are simply asked to check one of two boxes:
Do you support joining Crimea with the Russian Federation as a subject of Russian Federation?
And:
Do you support restoration of 1992 Crimean Constitution and Crimea's status as a part of Ukraine?
That Constitution declares that Crimea is an independent state.
The questions are written in Russian, Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar, the three most widely spoken languages on the peninsula, and the paper carries a warning in all three languages that marking both options will invalidate the ballot.
Pieces of the $15bn aid package for Ukraine announced by the European Commission are contingent on coordination with the International Monetary Fund. IMF European director Reza Moghadam has just released a statement on his visit this week to Ukraine saying he had had "productive discussions" and is "positively impressed":"During my visit to Kyiv on March 6-7, I had productive discussions with the Prime Minister and his economic team. I am positively impressed with the authorities' determination, sense of responsibility and commitment to an agenda of economic reform and transparency. The IMF stands ready to help the people of Ukraine and support the authorities' economic program to put Ukraine firmly on the path of good economic governance and sustainable growth while protecting the poor and vulnerable."Our fact-finding mission that has been working in Kyiv from March 4 is progressing well. The mission is developing a good understanding of the extent to which imbalances need to be corrected to stabilize the economy. This will guide the mission's recommendations to the IMF management on the subsequent course of action. We will continue to consult with all key stakeholders."
Pieces of the $15bn aid package for Ukraine announced by the European Commission are contingent on coordination with the International Monetary Fund. IMF European director Reza Moghadam has just released a statement on his visit this week to Ukraine saying he had had "productive discussions" and is "positively impressed":
"During my visit to Kyiv on March 6-7, I had productive discussions with the Prime Minister and his economic team. I am positively impressed with the authorities' determination, sense of responsibility and commitment to an agenda of economic reform and transparency. The IMF stands ready to help the people of Ukraine and support the authorities' economic program to put Ukraine firmly on the path of good economic governance and sustainable growth while protecting the poor and vulnerable."Our fact-finding mission that has been working in Kyiv from March 4 is progressing well. The mission is developing a good understanding of the extent to which imbalances need to be corrected to stabilize the economy. This will guide the mission's recommendations to the IMF management on the subsequent course of action. We will continue to consult with all key stakeholders."
"During my visit to Kyiv on March 6-7, I had productive discussions with the Prime Minister and his economic team. I am positively impressed with the authorities' determination, sense of responsibility and commitment to an agenda of economic reform and transparency. The IMF stands ready to help the people of Ukraine and support the authorities' economic program to put Ukraine firmly on the path of good economic governance and sustainable growth while protecting the poor and vulnerable.
"Our fact-finding mission that has been working in Kyiv from March 4 is progressing well. The mission is developing a good understanding of the extent to which imbalances need to be corrected to stabilize the economy. This will guide the mission's recommendations to the IMF management on the subsequent course of action. We will continue to consult with all key stakeholders."
The IMF stands ready to help the people of Ukraine and support the authorities' economic program to put Ukraine firmly on the path of good economic governance and sustainable growth while protecting the poor and vulnerable.
Yeah...IMF is famous for "protecting the poor and vulnerable"...I am sorry I have to go to puke... Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind...Albert Einstein
Our fact-finding mission that has been working in Kyiv from March 4 is progressing well.
Besides which, their paychecks depend on them discovering that the situation is in accordance with pre-existing prejudices keep to the Fen Causeway
As for UN (military) representatives it is perfectly normal that they are not going to be allowed to go around without permission of all sides in conflict ( if there is a real conflict in Crimea
You're slipping up in your own bullshit. If there's no real conflict, where's the problem? The "Russians" could just let the UN observe and report...
Just some facts: both Russia and Ukraine are UN members and neither has officially rejected the presence of a UN observer. The UN representative (Robert Serry) is in no way military, but a diplomat, and he was on an observation mission. (UN "military" anyway is composed of units of member countries' armies, not of UN personnel).
So what did the UN observer observe? No doubt that there are armed thugs on the "Russian" side just as on the "Ukrainian" side.
Posted @Booman - link
Were the UN envoys send at the request of the illegitimate regime of Western Ukraine?
○ US Embassy to Kyiv, Ukraine: Truth [Правда in Soviet rhetoric] 'Sapere aude'
to satisfy the foreign reporters
Are you to be taken seriously?
In my post @BooMan I clearly listed UN evidence of the event. On a number of occasions, The Guardian is a pure propaganda mounthpiece. I have no problem to discern fiction from fact. Follow the link!
Shaun Walker in Sevastopol is to be classified as a Judith Miller of the Iraq campaign. Just warmongering, preference of the British readers? I doubt it. From his twitter account, propagating hearsay and the article on Robert Serry has an error in the headline. OK, I wasn't aware Walker reads this blog. I forgot, Shaun Walker was Moscow correspondent for the Independent, you know. Pls stop the bs. 'Sapere aude'
On a number of occasions, The Guardian is a pure propaganda mounthpiece
What has the Guardian got to do with it?
Oui:
I have no problem to discern fiction from fact.
Yes, you do have that kind of pretention. Other people, who consider that there is a fog of propaganda over all these events, are more modest. You could learn from them.
Your final paragraph about Shaun Walker leaves me astounded. What the fuck are you talking about? Where in the exchange above about the UN representative is there any refernce to any of what you write?
Pls stop the bs.
Please stop puffing yourself up as one of Internet's great truth-diggers, and give us all a rest here.
Here, it's intelligent debate we look for, not your frantic hair-on-fire rubbish.
Read my diary entry of 24.02.2014 and see who is closer to the truth. Indeed rubbish. 'Sapere aude'
A former top security official with Ukraine's main security agency, the SBU, waded into the confusion, in an interview published Thursday with the respected newspaper Dzerkalo Tizhnya. Hennady Moskal, who was deputy head of the agency, told the newspaper that snipers from the Interior Ministry and SBU were responsible for the shootings, not foreign agents. "In addition to this, snipers received orders to shoot not only protesters, but also police forces. This was all done in order to escalate the conflict, in order to justify the police operation to clear Maidan," he was quoted as saying.One of the victims of the snipers was Alexander Tonskikh, 57. He told AP that at around 10 a.m. on Feb. 20, he and dozens of opposition fighters moved south out of the main battleground on Maidan.Riot police withdrew suddenly, he said, and an instant later snipers began firing from at least two different directions, from what seemed to be the rooftops of government buildings, between 200 and 300 yards away.
A former top security official with Ukraine's main security agency, the SBU, waded into the confusion, in an interview published Thursday with the respected newspaper Dzerkalo Tizhnya. Hennady Moskal, who was deputy head of the agency, told the newspaper that snipers from the Interior Ministry and SBU were responsible for the shootings, not foreign agents.
"In addition to this, snipers received orders to shoot not only protesters, but also police forces. This was all done in order to escalate the conflict, in order to justify the police operation to clear Maidan," he was quoted as saying.
One of the victims of the snipers was Alexander Tonskikh, 57. He told AP that at around 10 a.m. on Feb. 20, he and dozens of opposition fighters moved south out of the main battleground on Maidan.
Riot police withdrew suddenly, he said, and an instant later snipers began firing from at least two different directions, from what seemed to be the rooftops of government buildings, between 200 and 300 yards away.
The rest is rubbish. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
16.01.2014 Berkut forces from Crimea were responsible for escalation of violence on 30 November 2013 under orders from police chiefs Oleg Marynenko. 26.02.2014 Moskal reveals a list of SBU subversive tactics prepared for Maidan revolt 27.02.2014 Moskal states Crimea insurgents are well trained "Berkut" who were discharged by new parliament, seeks urgency 07.03.2014 SBU Nalyvaychenko and Interior Minister Avakov say snipers represented a "third force", rejected by Moskal as a white-wash of its agents
WhoIs Hennadii Moskal
Not at all surprised, a USAID funded NGO Chesno with previous funding by Omidyar:
The fundraising papers show that from October 2011 to December 2012 USAID provided Chesno with a hefty sum of over $421,000, while also planting nine of Center UA experts on its staff whose duty it was to manage the NGO's affairs on the regional level, coordinate its efforts, provide photo and video coverage, as well as creative input.
You're welcome. These NGO links were covered in Pando article and my earlier diaries. 'Sapere aude'
<yawn>
© Steve Bell 2014
Ukraine: Are oligarch appointments at odds with new sense of fairness? | World news | The Observer
Although most of Ukraine's business elite have strong ties with Moscow, if the east of the country were to fall under the influence of the Kremlin then Ukraine's billionaires would quickly be overrun by their wealthier and better connected Russian counterparts. "The Ukrainian oligarchs have no political influence over Putin," says Leshchenko. "If the east were to secede, their businesses would be snatched. They would become the small businessmen of a Russian province".
As for using an oligarch in East Ukraine, here is the rationale of the government:
Following days of unrest, including pro-Russia rallies and the storming of the parliament building in Donetsk by Moscow's supporters, the region now seems to be slowly calming down. Pro-Russia squatters have now been removed from the administration building, and on the orders of the newly appointed regional governor and Ukraine's 16th-richest man, Serhiy Taruta, the pro-Kremlin activists' leader, Pavel Gubarev, has been arrested. ..."Those who think there was an alternative are not being realistic. Now the Party of the Regions [the pro-Russian party led by Yanukovych] has effectively gone, the oligarchs are the only actors with potential to stabilise this region," says Adam Swain, economic geographer at the University of Nottingham and a field researcher in Donetsk for more than 20 years. ..."Donetsk today is almost unrecognisable to the place I first visited in the 90s," says Swain. "The infrastructure and standard of living have improved immensely. The oligarchs have won respect here for their role in this."
..."Those who think there was an alternative are not being realistic. Now the Party of the Regions [the pro-Russian party led by Yanukovych] has effectively gone, the oligarchs are the only actors with potential to stabilise this region," says Adam Swain, economic geographer at the University of Nottingham and a field researcher in Donetsk for more than 20 years.
..."Donetsk today is almost unrecognisable to the place I first visited in the 90s," says Swain. "The infrastructure and standard of living have improved immensely. The oligarchs have won respect here for their role in this."
Well, we'll see in the following days and weeks if that's the case. At any rate, in Donetsk at least, it seems that the pro-Russian protesters didn't represent a majority, and support for secessionism might be more limited than in the Crimea. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
Ukraine's nationwide TV channels are broadcasting under a common logo, the flag of Ukraine, and a slogan in both Ukrainian and Russian: Yedyna Krayina/Yedinaya Strana (United Country).The initiative was launched five days ago (2 March) by Ukraine's five major media groups - Media Group Ukraine, Inter Media Group, Starlight Media, 1+1 Media and 5th Channel.<>...The chiefs of each group have also signed an open letter to the director-generals ("colleagues and friends") of three Russian media organisations - JSC Channel One, the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company and JSC NTV.
Ukraine's nationwide TV channels are broadcasting under a common logo, the flag of Ukraine, and a slogan in both Ukrainian and Russian: Yedyna Krayina/Yedinaya Strana (United Country).
The initiative was launched five days ago (2 March) by Ukraine's five major media groups - Media Group Ukraine, Inter Media Group, Starlight Media, 1+1 Media and 5th Channel.<>...The chiefs of each group have also signed an open letter to the director-generals ("colleagues and friends") of three Russian media organisations - JSC Channel One, the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company and JSC NTV.
"We have a single country to live in and shared values to unite us," says the press release issued by the media groups' executives. "There is nothing to come between us. There is nothing for us to quarrel over."
Can we have a bit of decency from you?
Bullshit. You can blame the Kohl government (and there was no EU back then) for escalating things by recognising Croatia's independence, but if anything, that only accelerated a process started by Milo and Tuđman and bound to continue with such leaders and all the militiamen arming themselves in the villages. And that guaranteed split-up due to internal forces already, whatever happened later. As for what happened later:
The survey indicated widespread public support for Chancellor Angela Merkel's policy of trying to stay away from anything but symbolic sanctions and backing the concept of a contact group that would reopen direct communications between Moscow and Kyiv.A total of 77 percent of Germans appeared to strictly oppose any considerations of excluding Russia from the G8 group of nations, while 92 percent believed severing diplomatic relations was completely out of the question. Seventy-two percent of Germans supported economic help for Ukraine, while only 12 percent backed any military cooperation with Kyiv.
The survey indicated widespread public support for Chancellor Angela Merkel's policy of trying to stay away from anything but symbolic sanctions and backing the concept of a contact group that would reopen direct communications between Moscow and Kyiv.
A total of 77 percent of Germans appeared to strictly oppose any considerations of excluding Russia from the G8 group of nations, while 92 percent believed severing diplomatic relations was completely out of the question.
Seventy-two percent of Germans supported economic help for Ukraine, while only 12 percent backed any military cooperation with Kyiv.
As I observed, this time the media is the most gung-ho and Atlanticist and doesn't even contain its displeasure with politics (and now the population). FAlso worth to recall how the New York Times mis-interpreted Merkel. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
The fact that they are cheating doesn't make it an unfair referendum, it just illustrates the unfairness for even the dumbest onlooker. Therefore, careless.
- Jake Friends come and go. Enemies accumulate.
The use of "careless" implies a mistake. There is no mistake.
What Russia cares about is a show of in-your-face whatya-gonna-do-about-it force.
Last year, Petko Elenkov, a security guard, shot and killed a Roma teenager, who had allegedly jumped over the wall of a refrigerator depot in Sofia in order to steal scrap metal. Elenkov, 50, denies any wrongdoing. A year on, the trial still hasn't begun. Elenkov was released on a 5000 leva (2500 euro) bail prompting Roma minority groups to demonstrate on the streets, calling for justice. Nationalist and pro-Nazi demonstrations ensued. "Nationalism is on the rise in Bulgaria," Daniela Mikhaylova, who heads the Equal Opportunities Initiative, an NGO based in Sofia's Roma ghetto, told DW. In her opinion, this "new level of violence came as a result of a specific nationalist attitude that has gone unchecked for too long. When such violence happens and people in the media forums write things like, 'Very good, they [Roma] got what they deserved,' people start thinking that this reaction is something natural and even legitimate."... Many of the state institutions today are influenced by Ataka - a nationalistic party that entered parliament for the first time in 2005, winning close to nine percent of the vote. Today, an Ataka MP presides over the parliamentary ethics commission, and the party has its own representative in the commission for protection against discrimination. "It's no big surprise that their rulings are often supporting the discrimination, rather than fighting it," said Kanev
Last year, Petko Elenkov, a security guard, shot and killed a Roma teenager, who had allegedly jumped over the wall of a refrigerator depot in Sofia in order to steal scrap metal. Elenkov, 50, denies any wrongdoing. A year on, the trial still hasn't begun.
Elenkov was released on a 5000 leva (2500 euro) bail prompting Roma minority groups to demonstrate on the streets, calling for justice. Nationalist and pro-Nazi demonstrations ensued.
"Nationalism is on the rise in Bulgaria," Daniela Mikhaylova, who heads the Equal Opportunities Initiative, an NGO based in Sofia's Roma ghetto, told DW. In her opinion, this "new level of violence came as a result of a specific nationalist attitude that has gone unchecked for too long. When such violence happens and people in the media forums write things like, 'Very good, they [Roma] got what they deserved,' people start thinking that this reaction is something natural and even legitimate."
... Many of the state institutions today are influenced by Ataka - a nationalistic party that entered parliament for the first time in 2005, winning close to nine percent of the vote. Today, an Ataka MP presides over the parliamentary ethics commission, and the party has its own representative in the commission for protection against discrimination. "It's no big surprise that their rulings are often supporting the discrimination, rather than fighting it," said Kanev
If they start passing laws against the roma and try to enforce them, bullets will fly.
It's daft as this is "middle class" prejudice. From what I saw, most people in BG know and like roma people, regard them as brilliant market traders who can always get things others cannot at prices people can actually afford. They may live just down the road and keep themselves to themselves, but they are seen as neighbours.
And more importantly they usually control the village rakia still. Mess with that and you are really in troulbe. keep to the Fen Causeway
Whether it's thousands of indignados camping out for weeks or a handful of older people rallying against a freeze in pensions, the backdrop is almost always the same: Madrid's Puerta del Sol square.And that's a problem, according to the city's mayor, Ana Botella, local businesses and the regional government, who are calling on the interior ministry to limit the number of protests in the Spanish capital's best known and busiest square....The mayor's response elicited derision from union leader Luis Miguel López Reillo. "The ideas of our mayor are often a bit strange," said the secretary general of the Unión General de Trabajadores. "How can you call it a protected area when it's a public space that belongs to Madrid and its citizens?" he said...."I think there are bigger problems in Madrid that she could focus on," he said.It may be within these bigger problems that the solution lies, one politician suggested delicately. As Ángel Pérez, spokesperson for the leftwing coalition Izquierda Unida in Madrid recently said: "If they want to avoid protests in Puerta del Sol, all the government has to do is stop applying the harmful policies that are generating these protests."
Whether it's thousands of indignados camping out for weeks or a handful of older people rallying against a freeze in pensions, the backdrop is almost always the same: Madrid's Puerta del Sol square.
And that's a problem, according to the city's mayor, Ana Botella, local businesses and the regional government, who are calling on the interior ministry to limit the number of protests in the Spanish capital's best known and busiest square.
...The mayor's response elicited derision from union leader Luis Miguel López Reillo. "The ideas of our mayor are often a bit strange," said the secretary general of the Unión General de Trabajadores. "How can you call it a protected area when it's a public space that belongs to Madrid and its citizens?" he said.
..."I think there are bigger problems in Madrid that she could focus on," he said.
It may be within these bigger problems that the solution lies, one politician suggested delicately. As Ángel Pérez, spokesperson for the leftwing coalition Izquierda Unida in Madrid recently said: "If they want to avoid protests in Puerta del Sol, all the government has to do is stop applying the harmful policies that are generating these protests."
In a speech at lunchtime on Friday, Theresa Villiers will say that even the 187 IRA "on-the-runs" - members who are wanted in either Great Britain or Northern Ireland for crimes committed during the Troubles between 1969 and 1998 - would not be immune from future arrests or detentions.Villiers will tell a gathering of European journalists in Belfast that "no-one holding one of these letters should be in any doubt, they are not 'get-out-of-jail-free cards'"....While in power, Labour attempted in 2005 to introduce legislation to grant immunity from prosecution for IRA fugitives who were wanted in the UK for past crimes. When the opposition scuppered the legislation after objections from Dublin and the nationalist SDLP, Labour created a secret scheme giving 187 IRA "on-the-runs" the letters of assurance.The existence of the letters was revealed at the Old Bailey two weeks ago when defence lawyers produced one held by John Downey, a convicted IRA member who was standing trial for the 1982 Hyde Park bomb atrocity. As a result of the letter being produced in court, the case against Downey collapsed.
In a speech at lunchtime on Friday, Theresa Villiers will say that even the 187 IRA "on-the-runs" - members who are wanted in either Great Britain or Northern Ireland for crimes committed during the Troubles between 1969 and 1998 - would not be immune from future arrests or detentions.
Villiers will tell a gathering of European journalists in Belfast that "no-one holding one of these letters should be in any doubt, they are not 'get-out-of-jail-free cards'".
...While in power, Labour attempted in 2005 to introduce legislation to grant immunity from prosecution for IRA fugitives who were wanted in the UK for past crimes. When the opposition scuppered the legislation after objections from Dublin and the nationalist SDLP, Labour created a secret scheme giving 187 IRA "on-the-runs" the letters of assurance.
The existence of the letters was revealed at the Old Bailey two weeks ago when defence lawyers produced one held by John Downey, a convicted IRA member who was standing trial for the 1982 Hyde Park bomb atrocity. As a result of the letter being produced in court, the case against Downey collapsed.
"Muzychko brutally tortured captive military men of Russia, and murdered them afterwards. Muzychko personally tortured, and then murdered at least 20 captive soldiers of troops of federal forces during the indicated period, demanding the necessary information," RIA Novosti quotes an official representative of the Russian Investigative Committee Vladimir Markin.
Investigators of Russia opened a criminal case against a well-known Ukrainian nationalist Alexandr Muzychko (Sasha Beliy) in connection with gangsterism and creation of the organized criminal group. He is accused of mass murders of the Russian military men in Chechnya in 1994-2000.
Hm, he is an asshole whether the Russian authorities' claims are true or not, but why open a case against him just now? *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
Further, did Russian authorities investigate any Russian soldiers for the documented war crimes in Chechnya? *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
So it's looks.
I am all for investigation.
So you believe it will be fair?
BTW, what do you think of this guy?
Pavel Gubarev - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
He was member of the neo-nazi Russian National Unity[1] and, later, of Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine. Gubarev had led Russian protesters who blockaded the Donetsk regional administration building and flew the Russian flag. He put forward a number of demands to the local authorities, including the holding of a referendum on the status of the region. During press-conference with journalists on March 6, 2014 his main message as a self-proclaimed governor was: referendum on the territorial status of Donetsk Oblast and non-recognition of Kyiv authorities and the central government's appointed governor, oligarch Serhiy Taruta.[2]
He was member of the neo-nazi Russian National Unity[1] and, later, of Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine.
Gubarev had led Russian protesters who blockaded the Donetsk regional administration building and flew the Russian flag.
He put forward a number of demands to the local authorities, including the holding of a referendum on the status of the region.
During press-conference with journalists on March 6, 2014 his main message as a self-proclaimed governor was: referendum on the territorial status of Donetsk Oblast and non-recognition of Kyiv authorities and the central government's appointed governor, oligarch Serhiy Taruta.[2]
Found a photo with him in his RNU uniform:
*Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
Sergey Aksyonov - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Some sources have alleged that Aksyonov served in the mid 1990s as a lieutenant or overseer in the organized criminal gang "Salem".[11] In the early 1990s, the gang fought a deadly contest with the rival "Bashmaki" that killed 30 people in Simferopol in one month of 1991, but by the mid-1990s, as their membership grew to 1200, they had taken a less violent approach, and in 1995 forty of their members had taken office as local deputies, receiving deputy inviolability.[12][13][14][15] In 2010, Aksyonov sued Mikhail Bakharev, vice speaker of the Crimean parliament, for making statements of this kind. Although the court of the original jurisdiction ruled for Aksyonov and demanded that Bakharev to publish a retraction, the decision was overturned by an appellate court which determined that there was not evidence to disprove the allegations.[16] Andriy Senchenko, a Crimean member of Verkhovna Rada from Batkivshchyna party alleged that Aksyonov was involved in these activities together with Supreme Council Chairman, Volodymyr Konstantinov.[12][17][18] [19][20]
Some sources have alleged that Aksyonov served in the mid 1990s as a lieutenant or overseer in the organized criminal gang "Salem".[11] In the early 1990s, the gang fought a deadly contest with the rival "Bashmaki" that killed 30 people in Simferopol in one month of 1991, but by the mid-1990s, as their membership grew to 1200, they had taken a less violent approach, and in 1995 forty of their members had taken office as local deputies, receiving deputy inviolability.[12][13][14][15]
In 2010, Aksyonov sued Mikhail Bakharev, vice speaker of the Crimean parliament, for making statements of this kind. Although the court of the original jurisdiction ruled for Aksyonov and demanded that Bakharev to publish a retraction, the decision was overturned by an appellate court which determined that there was not evidence to disprove the allegations.[16] Andriy Senchenko, a Crimean member of Verkhovna Rada from Batkivshchyna party alleged that Aksyonov was involved in these activities together with Supreme Council Chairman, Volodymyr Konstantinov.[12][17][18] [19][20]
As for his legitimacy:
Since 2010 he was a deputy of the Supreme Council of Crimea, elected as a member of Russian Unity, which had 4% of votes (warranting 3 seats of total 100 in Crimean parliament) during elections into Supreme Council of Crimea.[6] On February 27 during the 2014 Crimean crisis an emergency session was held by the Crimean legislature. A motion was passed with 55 of 64 votes that elected Aksyonov Prime Minister.[7]
Since 2010 he was a deputy of the Supreme Council of Crimea, elected as a member of Russian Unity, which had 4% of votes (warranting 3 seats of total 100 in Crimean parliament) during elections into Supreme Council of Crimea.[6]
On February 27 during the 2014 Crimean crisis an emergency session was held by the Crimean legislature. A motion was passed with 55 of 64 votes that elected Aksyonov Prime Minister.[7]
For the record, the Crimean parliament has 100 seats in total, and the elected government was deposed and the current puppet government was elected after 60 Russian soldiers stormed parliament (in a quite literal re-enactment of the Russian propaganda explanation for the desertion of Party of the Regions MPs in the Ukrainian parliament). *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
I am all for investigation. So you believe it will be fair?
The Somali telecommunications intercepted in Burum are collected to support the Dutch navy mission in the Gulf of Aden. But the Americans are likely to be doing something else with it altogether. According to the British Bureau of Investigative Journalism, the US has conducted between five and eight drone strikes in Somalia since 2011. Between 10 and 24 people were killed. According to the US, most of them were senior members of the extremist Al-Shabaab movement, which last year openly allied itself with Al-Qaeda. Metadata play a crucial role in these `targeted killings', according to research by the American website The Intercept, run by journalists Glenn Greenwald, Jeremy Scahill and Laura Poitras. Secret NSA documents show that the monitoring service works closely with the CIA and Joint Special Operations Command, which carries out the attacks. Greenwald and his colleague Scahill spoke to a drone operator who worked for the JSCOC. This anonymous source said the JSCOC leans heavily on signal intelligence. `Everything they turned into a kinetic strike or a night raid was almost 90 percent that,' he said. `You could tell, because you'd go back to the mission reports and it will say `this mission was triggered by SIGINT.'
The Somali telecommunications intercepted in Burum are collected to support the Dutch navy mission in the Gulf of Aden. But the Americans are likely to be doing something else with it altogether.
According to the British Bureau of Investigative Journalism, the US has conducted between five and eight drone strikes in Somalia since 2011. Between 10 and 24 people were killed. According to the US, most of them were senior members of the extremist Al-Shabaab movement, which last year openly allied itself with Al-Qaeda.
Metadata play a crucial role in these `targeted killings', according to research by the American website The Intercept, run by journalists Glenn Greenwald, Jeremy Scahill and Laura Poitras.
Secret NSA documents show that the monitoring service works closely with the CIA and Joint Special Operations Command, which carries out the attacks. Greenwald and his colleague Scahill spoke to a drone operator who worked for the JSCOC. This anonymous source said the JSCOC leans heavily on signal intelligence. `Everything they turned into a kinetic strike or a night raid was almost 90 percent that,' he said. `You could tell, because you'd go back to the mission reports and it will say `this mission was triggered by SIGINT.'
Also posted @TikunOlam - NSA Maintains Secret "Five Eyes" Satellite Facility in Israel. 'Sapere aude'
EU leaders are rapidly drawing up plans to send some of their stocks of Russian gas back to Ukraine and other eastern European countries that need it, if Vladimir Putin reacts to western sanctions over the Crimea crisis by starving the continent of energy.
I don't understand you...
Admittedly, if Ukraine really wants to be independent of Russia, that would have to change.
As for the EU, it's not in Russia's interest to inflict real pain, so it won't happen. Just as the EU will not attempt to inflict any pain on Russia over Ukraine.
Just as the EU will not attempt to inflict any pain on Russia over Ukraine.
(AFP) - French President Francois Hollande said a controversial sale of two state-of-the art warships by France to Russia was still on course despite Moscow's widely opposed stand over Crimea. The 2011 sale of the Mistral warships, worth one billion euros ($1.4 billion), was already a deep source of concern for France's NATO and European Union allies, coming only a few years after Russia's invasion of Georgia.But despite the threat of another war involving Russia, Hollande, who was in Brussels at a European summit on the Ukrainian crisis, said France's commitment to deliver the military vessels was still alive."We respect our signed contracts," Hollande said. "We are not yet at that stage and we hope to avoid getting there," he said, referring to the potential of halting the deal.
(AFP) - French President Francois Hollande said a controversial sale of two state-of-the art warships by France to Russia was still on course despite Moscow's widely opposed stand over Crimea.
The 2011 sale of the Mistral warships, worth one billion euros ($1.4 billion), was already a deep source of concern for France's NATO and European Union allies, coming only a few years after Russia's invasion of Georgia.
But despite the threat of another war involving Russia, Hollande, who was in Brussels at a European summit on the Ukrainian crisis, said France's commitment to deliver the military vessels was still alive.
"We respect our signed contracts," Hollande said. "We are not yet at that stage and we hope to avoid getting there," he said, referring to the potential of halting the deal.
And: London's Laundry Business - NYTimes.com
On Monday, a British civil servant was photographed arriving in Downing Street for a national security council meeting with an open document in his hand. We could read for ourselves lines from a confidential report on how Prime Minister David Cameron's government should respond to the Crimea crisis. It recommended that Britain should "not support, for now, trade sanctions," nor should it "close London's financial center to Russians."The White House has imposed visa restrictions on some Russian officials, and President Obama has issued an executive order enabling further sanctions. But Britain has already undermined any unified action by putting profit first.It boils down to this: Britain is ready to betray the United States to protect the City of London's hold on dirty Russian money. And forget about Ukraine
The White House has imposed visa restrictions on some Russian officials, and President Obama has issued an executive order enabling further sanctions. But Britain has already undermined any unified action by putting profit first.
It boils down to this: Britain is ready to betray the United States to protect the City of London's hold on dirty Russian money. And forget about Ukraine
In order to achieve these goals, I propose the following set of agreements: 1. A five-year moratorium on offers to Ukraine of accession or partnership agreements with the Eurasian Union, the EU or NATO. 2. Thereafter, a constitutional amendment would be introduced, making ratification of any such agreement dependent on a majority of at least 70% of voters in a referendum. 3. Russia reaffirms its agreement to the new elections in May. The elections will be supervised and monitored by the UN, to prevent intimidation by nationalist or pro-Russian forces. 4. Russia withdraws its troops in Crimea to military bases. The Ukrainian government cancels its military alert as well as its call-up of reservists. 5. Russia recognizes the new government in Kiev as legitimate on a provisional basis -- in return for placing the Defense, Security and Interior ministries under neutral professional officials. 6. A promise by the new government in Kiev not to pass any laws banning political parties or carrying out lustrations of former or serving officials, and not to take any action to replace elected officials and councils in eastern and southern Ukraine. The carrots If Russia agrees to these terms, then the existing Western threats of non-attendance at the G8 Summit in Sochi in early June 2014, and of economic and other sanctions, should be suspended. If the government in Kiev agrees to them, then the international community should move to put together a financial rescue package for Ukraine. No doubt, these terms will be difficult for both Russia and Ukraine to accept: Russia because it would involve abandoning Russian recognition of Yanukovych as elected president (though Putin has said publicly himself that he does not think that Yanukovych has any political future); the new Ukrainian government because it would have to accept certain internationally mandated restrictions on its internal actions. Without an agreement however, developments on the ground -- for example, actions by both Ukrainian and pro-Russian militias to seize control of provincial governments in the East and South -- could easily bring about a war that neither Kiev nor Moscow desires.
In order to achieve these goals, I propose the following set of agreements:
1. A five-year moratorium on offers to Ukraine of accession or partnership agreements with the Eurasian Union, the EU or NATO.
2. Thereafter, a constitutional amendment would be introduced, making ratification of any such agreement dependent on a majority of at least 70% of voters in a referendum.
3. Russia reaffirms its agreement to the new elections in May. The elections will be supervised and monitored by the UN, to prevent intimidation by nationalist or pro-Russian forces.
4. Russia withdraws its troops in Crimea to military bases. The Ukrainian government cancels its military alert as well as its call-up of reservists.
5. Russia recognizes the new government in Kiev as legitimate on a provisional basis -- in return for placing the Defense, Security and Interior ministries under neutral professional officials.
6. A promise by the new government in Kiev not to pass any laws banning political parties or carrying out lustrations of former or serving officials, and not to take any action to replace elected officials and councils in eastern and southern Ukraine. The carrots
If Russia agrees to these terms, then the existing Western threats of non-attendance at the G8 Summit in Sochi in early June 2014, and of economic and other sanctions, should be suspended.
If the government in Kiev agrees to them, then the international community should move to put together a financial rescue package for Ukraine.
No doubt, these terms will be difficult for both Russia and Ukraine to accept:
Without an agreement however, developments on the ground -- for example, actions by both Ukrainian and pro-Russian militias to seize control of provincial governments in the East and South -- could easily bring about a war that neither Kiev nor Moscow desires.
that threads the needle quite well 'The history of public debt is full of irony. It rarely follows our ideas of order and justice.' Thomas Piketty
2. Thereafter, a constitutional amendment would be introduced, making ratification of any such agreement dependent on a majority of at least 70% of voters in a referendum. Russia reaffirms its agreement to the new elections in May. The elections will be supervised and monitored by the UN, to prevent intimidation by nationalist or pro-Russian forces. Russia withdraws its troops in Crimea to military bases. The Ukrainian government cancels its military alert as well as its call-up of reservists. Russia recognizes the new government in Kiev as legitimate on a provisional basis -- in return for placing the Defense, Security and Interior ministries under neutral professional officials.
Since the end of the Cold War the United States has been surrounding Russia, building one base after another, ceaselessly looking for new ones, including in Ukraine; one missile site after another, with Moscow in range; NATO has grabbed one former Soviet Republic after another. The White House, and the unquestioning American mainstream media, have assured us that such operations have nothing to do with Russia. And Russia has been told the same, much to Moscow's continuous skepticism. "Look," said Russian president Vladimir Putin about NATO some years ago, "is this is a military organization? Yes, it's military. ... Is it moving towards our border? It's moving towards our border. Why?" The Holy Triumvirate would love to rip Ukraine from the Moscow bosom, evict the Russian Black Sea Fleet, and establish a US military and/or NATO presence on Russia's border. (In case you were wondering what prompted the Russian military action.) Kiev's membership in the EU would then not be far off; after which the country could embrace the joys of neo-conservatism, receiving the benefits of the standard privatization-deregulation-austerity package and join Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain as an impoverished orphan of the family; but no price is too great to pay to for being part of glorious Europe and the West!
The Holy Triumvirate would love to rip Ukraine from the Moscow bosom, evict the Russian Black Sea Fleet, and establish a US military and/or NATO presence on Russia's border. (In case you were wondering what prompted the Russian military action.) Kiev's membership in the EU would then not be far off; after which the country could embrace the joys of neo-conservatism, receiving the benefits of the standard privatization-deregulation-austerity package and join Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain as an impoverished orphan of the family; but no price is too great to pay to for being part of glorious Europe and the West!
The Ukrainian insurgents and their Western-power supporters didn't care who their Ukrainian allies were in carrying out their coup against President Viktor Yanukovych last month ... thugs who set policemen on fire head to toe ... all manner of extreme right-wingers, including Chechnyan Islamic militants ... a deputy of the ultra-right Svoboda Party, part of the new government, who threatens to rebuild Ukraine's nukes in three to six months. ... the snipers firing on the protestors who apparently were not what they appeared to be - A bugged phone conversation between Urmas Paet, the Estonian foreign minister, and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, reveals Paet saying: "There is now stronger and stronger understanding that behind the snipers it was not Yanukovych, but it was somebody from the new coalition." ... neo-Nazi protestors in Kiev who have openly denounced Jews, hoisting a banner honoring Stepan Bandera, the infamous Ukrainian nationalist who collaborated with the German Nazis during World War II and whose militias participated in atrocities against Jews and Poles. ...All in all a questionable gang of allies for a dubious cause; reminiscent of the Kosovo Liberation Army thugs Washington put into power for an earlier regime change, and has kept in power since 1999.
What is so annoying about your non-stop angry posting (and it is beginning to become almost spam) is that you don't seem to have read and understood anything that has been said here for years.
I am trying to read as much as I can here...but it seems to me ( maybe I am wrong) that when it comes to Russia some of you ( not all) simply can't resist to make that position of the "enemy"
If you want to accuse people of bias, then name names and link to examples.
I would probably just go to MoA where honestly I can see that even Americans are more aware of what's happening and are widely critical of their own policies. I may leave you alone for a while...
MoA might be a better fit for your ideas. You sure don't understand what it's about here.
A site where former followers of Billmon congregated when Billmon closed comments on hsi blog ten years ago. (See @billmon1 for what Billmon does now). A number of early ET members were also MoA commenters.
(BTW I'm not among those who used to be a MoA commenter, but read the blog.) *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
As I said to you a few days ago, when you slur people, name names. Since you persist in this, I troll-rated you, too.
what goes on my nerves is blatant propaganda in western media
That goes on the nerves of every single ET reader. But what goes also on my nerves is your simplistic black-and-white take that makes you read uncritically and adopt even the silliest and most transparent propaganda and conspiracy theories issued by others than Western governments and MSM, and makes you blind to the actual opinions of other people (leading to this accusation of seeing Russia as the enemy).
Am I annoying? Well maybe...
Your self-reflection always ends up as only self-justification. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
So any mediation now hinges on Germany. Berlin has no time for "sanctions" -- the sacrosanct American exceptionalist mantra; Russia is a plush market for German industry. And for all the vociferations at the Economist and the Financial Times, the City of London also does not want sanctions; the financial center feeds on lavish Russian politico/oligarch funds. As for the West's "punishment" for Russia by threatening to expel it from the Group of Eight, that is a joke. The G-8, which excludes China, does not decide anything relevant anymore; the G-20 does. If a wide-ranging poll were to be conducted today, it would reveal that the majority of Ukrainians don't want to be part of the E.U. -- as much as the majority of Europeans don't want the Ukraine in the E.U. What's left for millions of Ukrainians is the bloodsucking IMF, to be duly welcomed by "Yats" (as Prime Minister Yatsenyuk is treated by Vic "F**k the E.U." Nuland). Ukraine is slouching towards federalization. The Kiev regime-changers will have no say on autonomous Crimea -- which most certainly will remain part of Ukraine (and Russia by the way will save $90 million in annual rent for the Sevastopol base, which until now was payable to Kiev.) The endgame is all but written; Moscow controls an autonomous Crimea for free, and the U.S./E.U. "control," or try to plunder, disaster capitalism-style, a back of beyond western Ukraine wasteland "managed" by a bunch of Western puppets and oligarchs, with a smattering of neo-nazis.
France said it still plans to deliver two aircraft carriers to the Russian Navy despite this whole invading a sovereign country for no good reason thing. As Russia moves troops into Crimea region, and the European Union weighs punishment, France seems unwilling to dump the deal.
bizniz rulz 'The history of public debt is full of irony. It rarely follows our ideas of order and justice.' Thomas Piketty
France and Slovenia are the only two countries to have received a specific recommendation from the EU executive on public deficits. During the presentation of its country-specific analysis of macroeconomic imbalances on 5 March, the Commission has used "a new instrument to attract the attention of two eurozone member states, namely France and Slovenia on the risk of non-compliance with the recommended budget target for this year."
France and Slovenia are the only two countries to have received a specific recommendation from the EU executive on public deficits.
During the presentation of its country-specific analysis of macroeconomic imbalances on 5 March, the Commission has used "a new instrument to attract the attention of two eurozone member states, namely France and Slovenia on the risk of non-compliance with the recommended budget target for this year."
Significant economic imbalances exist in 14 EU member states, according to the Commission's latest in-depth review of macroeconomic imbalances, presented on Wednesday (5 March)....The report echoes previous warnings from the José Manuel Barroso, the Commission President, who urged Germany last November to do more to address economic imbalances in the eurozone by opening up its services market and allowing wages to rise at a faster pace....The fact that Germany exports much more than it imports "reflects strong competitiveness," the Commission report says, but "it is also a sign that domestic growth has remained subdued and economic resources may not have been allocated efficiently," it points out....the German government now seems to be more open-minded. For the first time, an internal paper from the economics ministry acknowledges that excessive and sustained trade imbalances are harmful for the stability of the eurozone, the Süddeutsche Zeitung reported on Wednesday. As a result, it is right for the Commission to put such imbalances under the microscope, the document said.
Significant economic imbalances exist in 14 EU member states, according to the Commission's latest in-depth review of macroeconomic imbalances, presented on Wednesday (5 March).
...The report echoes previous warnings from the José Manuel Barroso, the Commission President, who urged Germany last November to do more to address economic imbalances in the eurozone by opening up its services market and allowing wages to rise at a faster pace.
...The fact that Germany exports much more than it imports "reflects strong competitiveness," the Commission report says, but "it is also a sign that domestic growth has remained subdued and economic resources may not have been allocated efficiently," it points out.
...the German government now seems to be more open-minded. For the first time, an internal paper from the economics ministry acknowledges that excessive and sustained trade imbalances are harmful for the stability of the eurozone, the Süddeutsche Zeitung reported on Wednesday. As a result, it is right for the Commission to put such imbalances under the microscope, the document said.
The rate of female workers in Germany has risen significantly over the past decade, the statistics office has said. Female employment is way above the EU average, but this applies above all to the low-wage sector.
Works wonders for the unemployment rate.
George Osborne is facing a £20bn black hole in the public finances, which means austerity may have to continue until 2020, according to research by the Financial Times.
BRUSSELS - The European Central Bank (ECB) should scrap its target to keep price inflation at 2 percent, Nobel prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said on Thursday (6 March).Speaking at an event organised by the European Parliament's Socialist group, Stiglitz said central banks should look to strike a balance between controlling inflation and supporting job creation. "The ECB's mandate needs to be changed," he noted.
BRUSSELS - The European Central Bank (ECB) should scrap its target to keep price inflation at 2 percent, Nobel prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said on Thursday (6 March).
Speaking at an event organised by the European Parliament's Socialist group, Stiglitz said central banks should look to strike a balance between controlling inflation and supporting job creation.
"The ECB's mandate needs to be changed," he noted.
Irish Times @MarkPaulTimes gave Apple Sales International tax figures for 2004-08. But 2005-09 is $10.9bn pre-tax profit, $37.9m tax, 0.35%— Neil Chenoweth (@NeilChenoweth) March 8, 2014
Irish Times @MarkPaulTimes gave Apple Sales International tax figures for 2004-08. But 2005-09 is $10.9bn pre-tax profit, $37.9m tax, 0.35%
US Senate PCI figures: Apple Sales International 2010 pretax $12.1bn, tax $7m; 2011 pre-tax $22bn tax $10m. That's 0.045%, 45c per $1000.— Neil Chenoweth (@NeilChenoweth) March 8, 2014
US Senate PCI figures: Apple Sales International 2010 pretax $12.1bn, tax $7m; 2011 pre-tax $22bn tax $10m. That's 0.045%, 45c per $1000.
Interesting Apple Sales International reported $697m interest earnings 2002-09. Looks like the Irish didn't get much tax out of that either— Neil Chenoweth (@NeilChenoweth) March 8, 2014
Interesting Apple Sales International reported $697m interest earnings 2002-09. Looks like the Irish didn't get much tax out of that either
The International Criminal Court has found a Congolese ex-militia boss complicit in war crimes in an attack on a village in the DRC. He was acquitted, however, of charges he used child solders in the incident.
Libya threatens to bomb North Korean-flagged tanker if it takes oil from rebels Prime minister warns of an `environmental disaster' if tanker leaves rebel-held port of Es Sider with oil cargo The rebels, who have seized three major Libyan ports since August to press their demands for more autonomy, warned Tripoli against staging an attack to halt the oil sale after the tanker docked at Es Sider terminal, one of the country's biggest. The vessel started loading crude late at night, oil officials said. The government is struggling to control militias that helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but kept their weapons and now challenge state authority.
Prime minister warns of an `environmental disaster' if tanker leaves rebel-held port of Es Sider with oil cargo The rebels, who have seized three major Libyan ports since August to press their demands for more autonomy, warned Tripoli against staging an attack to halt the oil sale after the tanker docked at Es Sider terminal, one of the country's biggest. The vessel started loading crude late at night, oil officials said.
The government is struggling to control militias that helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but kept their weapons and now challenge state authority.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/09/iraq-checkpoint-suicide-bomb-hilla
Iraq suicide bomb attack leaves dozens dead in Hilla At least 50 cars are set ablaze with passengers inside after bomber detonates minibus packed with explosives at checkpoint
You're too loose and one-sided in your associations. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly asked his cabinet secretary to investigate a highly complicated Dutch-Belgian border arrangement, under which citizens of one country live in enclaves within the other, as a possible precedent to enable Jewish settlers in the West Bank to remain under Israeli rule inside a future Palestinian state. The prime minister has tasked Cabinet Secretary Avichai Mandelblit with researching the arrangements that prevail in the Belgian "Baarle-Hertog" and Dutch "Baarle-Nassau" areas -- complex border arrangements that originated in a mixture of medieval treaties, land swaps, land sales and other agreements -- to see whether they constitute a viable legal precedent for similar arrangements under which Jewish settlers could stay put within a Palestinian state, Israel's Channel 2 news reported on Sunday night.
The prime minister has tasked Cabinet Secretary Avichai Mandelblit with researching the arrangements that prevail in the Belgian "Baarle-Hertog" and Dutch "Baarle-Nassau" areas -- complex border arrangements that originated in a mixture of medieval treaties, land swaps, land sales and other agreements -- to see whether they constitute a viable legal precedent for similar arrangements under which Jewish settlers could stay put within a Palestinian state, Israel's Channel 2 news reported on Sunday night.
A bid to limit dangerous Nitrogen Oxide (Nox) emissions from new ships is in danger of being delayed until 2021, because of pressure from Russia that may be felt in a meeting of EU diplomats today (7 March). Pollution from international shipping is estimated to be responsible for more than 50,000 premature deaths in Europe alone and, by 2020, maritime Nox emissions are expected to equal or overtake those from land-based sources. Because they take place close to shore, such emissions can have a disproportionately damaging effect on human health. But last year, Russia called for a five-year delay to a deal cut at the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in 2008 which would have strictly limited the shipping pollution from 2016. Russia has given no indication that it would support any future curb on NOx emissions in 2021.
A bid to limit dangerous Nitrogen Oxide (Nox) emissions from new ships is in danger of being delayed until 2021, because of pressure from Russia that may be felt in a meeting of EU diplomats today (7 March).
Pollution from international shipping is estimated to be responsible for more than 50,000 premature deaths in Europe alone and, by 2020, maritime Nox emissions are expected to equal or overtake those from land-based sources.
Because they take place close to shore, such emissions can have a disproportionately damaging effect on human health.
But last year, Russia called for a five-year delay to a deal cut at the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in 2008 which would have strictly limited the shipping pollution from 2016. Russia has given no indication that it would support any future curb on NOx emissions in 2021.
"Each of the last three decades has been warmer than the last. Extreme events are on the increase. Even if what we have just had [this winter] was not caused by anthropogenic climate change, events of this nature are increasing both in intensity and frequency," said Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change."Two types of extreme events are going to occur more frequently - extreme precipitation and heatwaves. It is important for societies to deal with climate change if we want to avoid the impacts."Pachauri was speaking ahead of the publication next month of a major global assessment of the impact of climate change on the world's food supplies, human health, cities and rural areas. Leaked copies seen by the Guardian warn of crop yields falling 2% a decade even as the demand from rapidly growing population increases by 14% per decade. It also warns of extreme heat stress in cities, increased precipitation and widespread flooding.
"Each of the last three decades has been warmer than the last. Extreme events are on the increase. Even if what we have just had [this winter] was not caused by anthropogenic climate change, events of this nature are increasing both in intensity and frequency," said Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
"Two types of extreme events are going to occur more frequently - extreme precipitation and heatwaves. It is important for societies to deal with climate change if we want to avoid the impacts."
Pachauri was speaking ahead of the publication next month of a major global assessment of the impact of climate change on the world's food supplies, human health, cities and rural areas. Leaked copies seen by the Guardian warn of crop yields falling 2% a decade even as the demand from rapidly growing population increases by 14% per decade. It also warns of extreme heat stress in cities, increased precipitation and widespread flooding.
Arguably the single most important mistake the revolutionary movements of the 60s and 70s made was to overlook the resilience of capitalism. The idea - catastrophism, as it is often called - that the system was going to crumble under the pressure of its own contradictions, that the bourgeoisie produces its own "gravediggers" (as Marx and Engels put it in the Communist Manifesto) has been disproved. When the rate of profit started showing signs of decline in the first half of the 70s, the redistributive policies implemented after the second world war were terminated and the neoliberal revolution was launched.This resilience of capitalism has little to do with the dominant classes being particularly clever or far-sighted. In fact, they can keep on making mistakes - yet capitalism still thrives. Why?...the left would be better off learning from its past mistakes. Capitalism might well be capable not only of adapting to climate change but of profiting from it. One hears that the capitalist system is confronted with a double crisis: an economic one that started in 2008, and an ecological one, rendering the situation doubly perilous. But one crisis can sometimes serve to solve another.Capitalism is responding to the challenge of the ecological crisis with two of its favourite weapons: financialisation and militarisation. In times of crisis, for instance, markets will require simultaneously that wages be cut and that people keep consuming. Opening the flow of credit allows the reconciliation of these two contradictory injunctions - at least until the next financial crisis.
Arguably the single most important mistake the revolutionary movements of the 60s and 70s made was to overlook the resilience of capitalism. The idea - catastrophism, as it is often called - that the system was going to crumble under the pressure of its own contradictions, that the bourgeoisie produces its own "gravediggers" (as Marx and Engels put it in the Communist Manifesto) has been disproved. When the rate of profit started showing signs of decline in the first half of the 70s, the redistributive policies implemented after the second world war were terminated and the neoliberal revolution was launched.
This resilience of capitalism has little to do with the dominant classes being particularly clever or far-sighted. In fact, they can keep on making mistakes - yet capitalism still thrives. Why?
...the left would be better off learning from its past mistakes. Capitalism might well be capable not only of adapting to climate change but of profiting from it. One hears that the capitalist system is confronted with a double crisis: an economic one that started in 2008, and an ecological one, rendering the situation doubly perilous. But one crisis can sometimes serve to solve another.
Capitalism is responding to the challenge of the ecological crisis with two of its favourite weapons: financialisation and militarisation. In times of crisis, for instance, markets will require simultaneously that wages be cut and that people keep consuming. Opening the flow of credit allows the reconciliation of these two contradictory injunctions - at least until the next financial crisis.
EU-mandated spending cuts in the Greek healthcare system has brought the country decades back into time, with the new-born death rate jumping by 43% since the beginning of the crisis, according to Jorgo Chatzimarkakis, a liberal MEP from the German FDP party. The austerity policies, ordered by Greece's Troika of international creditors, have worsened the socio-economic situation in Greece to a level not seen since the Second World War, Chatzimarkakis said. The new-born death rate rose by 43% since austerity measures were implemented, he underlined. Speaking at the European Parliament in Brussels on Wednesday (5 March) Chatzimarkakis, who is of Greek descent, said that what the EU allows the Troika to do in Greece goes against fundamental human rights.
EU-mandated spending cuts in the Greek healthcare system has brought the country decades back into time, with the new-born death rate jumping by 43% since the beginning of the crisis, according to Jorgo Chatzimarkakis, a liberal MEP from the German FDP party.
The austerity policies, ordered by Greece's Troika of international creditors, have worsened the socio-economic situation in Greece to a level not seen since the Second World War, Chatzimarkakis said.
The new-born death rate rose by 43% since austerity measures were implemented, he underlined.
Speaking at the European Parliament in Brussels on Wednesday (5 March) Chatzimarkakis, who is of Greek descent, said that what the EU allows the Troika to do in Greece goes against fundamental human rights.
Billionaire mining magnate Gina Rinehart has attacked Australia's "entitlement mentality" and called on the nation's leaders to emulate former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher.
Across Germany, right-wing organizations are using anti-Islam rhetoric to further their ideas -- and finding a receptive audience. Now legal experts are debating whether it's time for a new kind of hate-crime legislation.
The more that scientists stare at it, the more a strange signal from the center of the Milky Way galaxy appears to be the result of dark matter annihilation. If confirmed, it would be the first direct evidence for dark matter ever seen. Dark matter is a mysterious, invisible substance making up roughly 85 percent of all matter in the universe. It floats throughout our galaxy, but is more concentrated at its center. There, a dark matter particle can meet another dark matter particle flying through space. If they crash into one another, they will annihilate each other (dark matter is its own antiparticle) and give off gamma rays. To search for a dark matter signal, astronomers use NASA's Fermi Gamma-Ray Telescope to map the gamma radiation throughout the galaxy. Then, they try to account for all known sources of light within this map. They plot the location of gas and dust that could be emitting radiation and subtract that signal from their gamma-ray map. Then they determine where all the stars are and subtract out that light, and so on for every object that might be emitting radiation. Once all those sources are gone, there remains a tiny excess of gamma radiation in the data that no known process can account for.
The more that scientists stare at it, the more a strange signal from the center of the Milky Way galaxy appears to be the result of dark matter annihilation. If confirmed, it would be the first direct evidence for dark matter ever seen.
Dark matter is a mysterious, invisible substance making up roughly 85 percent of all matter in the universe. It floats throughout our galaxy, but is more concentrated at its center. There, a dark matter particle can meet another dark matter particle flying through space. If they crash into one another, they will annihilate each other (dark matter is its own antiparticle) and give off gamma rays.
To search for a dark matter signal, astronomers use NASA's Fermi Gamma-Ray Telescope to map the gamma radiation throughout the galaxy. Then, they try to account for all known sources of light within this map. They plot the location of gas and dust that could be emitting radiation and subtract that signal from their gamma-ray map. Then they determine where all the stars are and subtract out that light, and so on for every object that might be emitting radiation. Once all those sources are gone, there remains a tiny excess of gamma radiation in the data that no known process can account for.
There's no left in the US today. Proof is that I am the most left-wing person I know and I'm a classical conservative http://t.co/G83nkJryWx— Bruce Bartlett (@BruceBartlett) marzo 9, 2014
There's no left in the US today. Proof is that I am the most left-wing person I know and I'm a classical conservative http://t.co/G83nkJryWx
Just how far Silicon Valley will go to remove such risks is at the heart of a class-action lawsuit that accuses industry executives of agreeing between 2005 and 2009 not to poach one another's employees. Headed to trial in San Jose this spring, the case involves 64,000 programmers and seeks billions of dollars in damages. Its mastermind, court papers say, was the executive who was the most successful, most innovative and most concerned about competition of all -- Steve Jobs.<aside style="display: none;" data-marginalia-type="sprinkled" data-skip-to-para-id="story-continues-5"> The suit shows how more than two years after his death, Mr. Jobs still casts a long shadow. It also offers a portrait of Silicon Valley engineers that differs sharply from their current caricature as well-paid villains who are driving up the price of real estate in San Francisco and making the city unbearable for others.
Just how far Silicon Valley will go to remove such risks is at the heart of a class-action lawsuit that accuses industry executives of agreeing between 2005 and 2009 not to poach one another's employees. Headed to trial in San Jose this spring, the case involves 64,000 programmers and seeks billions of dollars in damages. Its mastermind, court papers say, was the executive who was the most successful, most innovative and most concerned about competition of all -- Steve Jobs.<aside style="display: none;" data-marginalia-type="sprinkled" data-skip-to-para-id="story-continues-5">
The suit shows how more than two years after his death, Mr. Jobs still casts a long shadow. It also offers a portrait of Silicon Valley engineers that differs sharply from their current caricature as well-paid villains who are driving up the price of real estate in San Francisco and making the city unbearable for others.
Alan Hyde, a Rutgers professor who wrote "Working in Silicon Valley: Economic and Legal Analysis of a High-Velocity Labor Market," said the no-poaching accusations go contrary to what has made the valley so successful: job-hopping."There is a fair amount of research that tech companies, particularly in California, have distinctive personnel practices," he said. "They hire for short tenures and keep ties with former employees so there can be an exchange of information across company lines. The companies in this suit might have been killing the golden goose."
Alan Hyde, a Rutgers professor who wrote "Working in Silicon Valley: Economic and Legal Analysis of a High-Velocity Labor Market," said the no-poaching accusations go contrary to what has made the valley so successful: job-hopping.
"There is a fair amount of research that tech companies, particularly in California, have distinctive personnel practices," he said. "They hire for short tenures and keep ties with former employees so there can be an exchange of information across company lines. The companies in this suit might have been killing the golden goose."
8 March 1914 – birth of Yakov Borisovich Zel'dovich - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (d. 1987) Soviet nuclear scientist, co-discoverer of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (which allows the detection of dark matter, dark energy and cosmological constants by observing the cosmic microwave background radiation)
9 March 1934 – birth of Yuri Gagarin, Soviet cosmonaut, the first man in space (d. 1968)
Judges last April ordered the former French president Nicolas Sarkozy's phones to be bugged as part of an investigation into allegations his 2007 election campaign was bankrolled by Libya's then leader, Muammar Gaddafi, it was claimed on Friday.The phone tapping, believed to be the first of its kind against a French leader, was described by Sarkozy's lawyer as a "monstrous" violation of his legal rights. But transcripts of the taped conversations have reportedly embroiled him in further damaging corruption allegations....Somehow Sarkozy got wind of the move and became "laconic" in his phone manner, Le Monde claimed. He then obtained a second mobile which he used to contact his lawyer Thierry Herzog, who had also reportedly bought a second mobile using a "borrowed identity".It is not known what the phone taps revealed about Gaddafi, but transcripts of bugged conversations between president and lawyer, alerted investigators to how surprisingly "well informed" they were about a separate legal case, says Le Monde....Le Monde claims investigators established that he and his lawyer were being fed confidential information from the case files by a senior prosecutor, described as a "veteran supporter" of the political right.
Judges last April ordered the former French president Nicolas Sarkozy's phones to be bugged as part of an investigation into allegations his 2007 election campaign was bankrolled by Libya's then leader, Muammar Gaddafi, it was claimed on Friday.
The phone tapping, believed to be the first of its kind against a French leader, was described by Sarkozy's lawyer as a "monstrous" violation of his legal rights. But transcripts of the taped conversations have reportedly embroiled him in further damaging corruption allegations.
...Somehow Sarkozy got wind of the move and became "laconic" in his phone manner, Le Monde claimed. He then obtained a second mobile which he used to contact his lawyer Thierry Herzog, who had also reportedly bought a second mobile using a "borrowed identity".
It is not known what the phone taps revealed about Gaddafi, but transcripts of bugged conversations between president and lawyer, alerted investigators to how surprisingly "well informed" they were about a separate legal case, says Le Monde.
...Le Monde claims investigators established that he and his lawyer were being fed confidential information from the case files by a senior prosecutor, described as a "veteran supporter" of the political right.
So that's why he suddenly had to meet Merkel for a nice photo-op. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
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