Mystery Deepens Over Venezuela’s Gold 

The Kremlin may have helped Venezuela’s embattled socialist leader Nicolas Maduro swap gold for cash, transporting Venezuelan bullion deposited in Moscow to the United Arab Emirates and then flying U.S. currency into the Venezuelan capital, an investigative newspaper has claimed. 

The report in the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta is adding to the fears of pro-democracy activists in Venezuela that the Kremlin will try to make good on its pledge to stand by Maduro to help him survive a popular uprising against him.

Russian officials have condemned U.S. sanctions imposed last month against Venezuela’s vital oil sector, a move aimed at depriving Maduro of the funds he needs to pay his army, which has so far remained loyal to him. The Kremlin says the sanctions are illegal meddling in Venezuela’s domestic affairs. And it rejects, too, the widespread Latin American and European endorsement of the popular protests against Maduro.

Gold swapped for dollars?

Citing unnamed sources in the United Arab Emirates, the newspaper alleged that on Jan. 29, a Russian-operated Boeing 757 cargo plane took Venezuelan gold stored in Russia’s central bank to Dubai. The bullion was replaced with containers full of U.S. dollars and the aircraft, which is owned by the Russian company Yerofei, took off again and flew via Morocco to Venezuela, the paper said.

The director of Russia’s central bank, Elvira Nabiullina, denied the allegation, saying the bank was holding no Venezuelan bullion.

On Friday, a senior Venezuelan official told the Reuters news agency that Caracas plans to sell 29 tons of gold to the UAE in return for euros and said the sale of the nation’s gold began with a shipment of three tons on Jan. 26, following the export last year of $900 million in unrefined gold to Turkey. But the official said Moscow was not involved in the gold-for-cash operation. 

Social media theories

Turkey has been refining and certifying Venezuelan gold since last year after Maduro switched operations from Switzerland, fearing Venezuelan bullion could end up being impounded. 

The Jan. 29 flight, though, is the second unexplained Russian plane to have landed in Caracas since the high-stakes standoff began between opposition leader Juan Guaido and Maduro. A Boeing 777 belonging to a Russian charter company called Nordwind flew from Moscow’s Vnukovo airport on Monday to the Venezuelan capital, according to flight tracking data. Nordwind normally only flies Russian tourists to vacation destinations in the Mediterranean and southeast Asia.

The arrival of the Nordwind jet in Caracas triggered an avalanche of social media theories about what it was doing in the Venezuelan capital. Some anti-Maduro lawmakers claimed that it brought Russian mercenaries to help guard the socialist leader. One theory that prompted jubilation among street protesters was that it was there to spirit Maduro into exile.

The flight also prompted Venezuelan lawmaker Jose Guerra, who previously worked as an economist in Venezuela’s central bank, to warn in a tweet: “We have received information from officials at the Central Bank of Venezuela: A plane arrived from Moscow, with the intention of taking away at least 20 tons of gold. We demand that the Central Bank of Venezuela provide details about what is happening.”

‘Fake news’

Dmitry Peskov, press spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin, told reporters midweek the reports about Venezuelan gold and the Kremlin were inaccurate and urged journalists to “deal carefully with fake news’ of various kinds.” 

He dismissed Guerra’s claims, saying, according to TASS, “Russia is prepared to promote a settlement to the political situation in Venezuela without meddling in that country’s internal affairs. Russia is categorically against any meddling by third countries in Venezuela’s internal affairs.”

For Moscow and Beijing, the high-stakes standoff between Guaido, who declared himself interim president in late January, and Maduro represents a geopolitical headache. Both Russia and China have lent billions of dollars to Maduro. Russia’s oil-giant Rosneft has stakes in five onshore oil projects, according to Bloomberg News, and has loaned the Maduro government more than $7 billion, which is meant to be repaid in oil deliveries.

The Bank of England this week refused a Venezuelan request for the return of more than one billion dollars’ worth of gold it has on deposit. The refusal came after the United States urged Western countries to block the Maduro government from accessing any assets outside Venezuela’s borders.

Журналісти оголосили про створення руху проти цензури після звільнення Аласанії

Незалежні журналісти виступили на підтримку голови правління НСТУ Зураба Аласанії, з яким Наглядова рада «Суспільного» на засіданні 31 січня 2019 року достроково розірвала договір, та оголосили про створення неформальної спільноти для протидії цензурі під назвою Ініціатива «34».

«Ми, що нижче підписалися, вважаємо дії Наглядової ради Суспільного телебачення прямим проявом цензури та надзвичайно небезпечним прецедентом для країни», – йдеться в оприлюдненій заяві.

Журналісти вимагають «негайного скасування результатів голосування та відставки нинішнього складу Наглядової ради, яка своїми діями поставила під загрозу реформу суспільного мовлення в країні та створила небезпечний прецедент звільнення керівника незалежної інституції через політичні мотиви».

Підписанти заявили, що вважають рішення щодо звільнення Аласанії неприйнятним – адже воно було здійснено «непрозорим, таємним голосуванням з очевидним порушенням процедури, духу закону про суспільне мовлення, функцій незалежної Наглядової ради та здорового глузду». А голосування Наглядової ради називають «огидним проявом боягузтва та підлабузництва».

«Опублікована частина претензій до Аласанії, на жаль, не залишає сумнівів у тому, що це рішення є політичним та було ухвалене на догоду владі. Жодні помилки, яких міг припускатися Аласанія та його команда в роботі, не виправдовують його звільнення в гарячу та відповідальну політичну пору, за два місяці до президентських виборів», – зазначено в заяві.

Відтак журналісти заявили про створення неформальної спільноти незалежних журналістів під назвою Ініціатива «34» – адже саме 34-та стаття Конституції України гарантує кожному право на свободу думки і слова, на вільне вираження своїх поглядів і переконань.

До нового об’єднання увійшли незалежні журналісти, в тому числі учасники відомого руху «Стоп Цензурі», який протидіяв наступу на свободу слова за часів президентства Віктора Януковича. Серед підписантів: Катя Горчинська, Олексій Мацука, Сергій Андрушко, Наталка Седлецька, Михайло Ткач, Олександр Чорновалов, Катерина Каплюк, Олена Притула, Євген Будерацький, Роман Романюк, Наталія Судакова, Катерина Сергацкова, Тетяна Пеклун, Денис Бігус, Крістіна Бердинських, Ольга Руденко, Кіра Толстякова, Валерія Єгошина, Анна Бабінець, Дарина Шевченко, Євгенія Моторевська, Катерина Лихогляд, Настя Станко, Наталя Гуменюк, Олег Новіков, Аліса Юрченко, Дмитро Дєнков, Ірина Андрейців, Аліна Полякова, Сергій Сидоренко, Максим Савчук, Федір Попадюк, Христина Бондарєва, Данило Мокрик, Анатолій Марциновський, Катерина Гладка, Андрій Яніцький, Тетяна Козак, Дмитро Бобрицький, Іван Верстюк, Наталка Ричкова, Катерина Шаповал, Наталія Міняйло, Юрій Бутусов, Наталія Гривняк, Інна Борзило, Олександр Чекмишев.

Наглядова рада «Суспільного» 31 січня більшістю голосів проголосувала за дострокове розірвання контракту з головою правління ПАТ НСТУ Зурабом Аласанією. Після цього він заявив про порушення з боку членів Наглядової ради НСТУ під час цього голосування.

У ймовірному фрагменті проекту рішення Наглядової ради щодо відсторонення Аласанії, який він згодом оприлюднив, йому закидали «деполітизацію новин» і «відсторонення від влади».

Зураб Аласанія є головою правління Національної суспільної телерадіокомпанії України з квітня 2017-го. Згідно з контрактом, він мав працювати на цій посаді до 14 травня 2021 року.

20 грудня минулого року Наглядова рада ухвалила рішення про продовження мовлення ще на рік програм журналістських розслідувань «Схеми» та «Наші гроші з Денисом Бігусом». На день раніше автори обох проектів Наталія Седлецька та Денис Бігус заявили про ймовірність того, що на засіданні ради буде розглядатися припинення їхньої трансляції.

 

Експерти розповіли про вартість послуг ботів для українських політиків

Послуги ботів для відбілювання репутації та спотворення громадської думки можуть коштувати українським політикам до 20 тисяч доларів у місяць. Про це йдеться у розслідуванні програми «Схеми: корупція в деталях» (спільного проекту Радіо Свобода та телеканалу «UA: Перший») «Ілюзіоністи».

​«Усе залежить від того, якої якості створюється акаунт. Є достатньо сервісів, які пропонують створення від 20 центів до 20 доларів. Це – неякісні боти, які можуть бути забанені, виключені, видалені. Якісна підтримка – рахується в тисячах доларів. Підтримка мережі може коштувати 3-4 тисячі доларів на місяць, 10 тисяч доларів на місяць в залежності від того, скільки ми хочемо охопити цими ботами», – пояснив журналістам «Схем» медіа-консультант Олександр Клімашевський.

У розпорядженні редакції також опинився документ, який виявився пропозицією від однієї з фірм потенційному політичному клієнту. Серед послуг – «формування інформаційного поля та керування ним в українському сегменті фейсбуку в передвиборчий період». Наприклад, за допомогою «ботоферми» пропонують «вкидати» інформацію, розповсюджувати її та «тролити» опонентів.

​Ціни – станом на осінь 2018-го року. Так, згідно з документом, робота з офіційною сторінкою клієнта у соцмережі обійдеться замовнику у п’ять тисяч доларів на місяць. Ще плюс півтори тисячі – моніторинг згадок про нього (зокрема, у ЗМІ). За доплату обіцяють розганяти публікації для цільової аудиторії та запускати потрібні меседжі. Загалом вартість послуг таких спеціалістів – сягає щонайменше 16-20 тисяч доларів на місяць.

​Подібні «ботоферми» мають прес-служби багатьох українських політиків – розповів Дмитро Раімов – політтехнолог, піар-фахівець, який має власну піар-агенцію. Його компанія, твердить, також наймає співробітників, які вели б несправжні акаунти. Раімов підкреслює, що вони працюють виключно на захист репутації. Натомість політики нерідко наймають агенції, які б «інформаційно атакували».

«Зазвичай їхні мішені – чиновники і журналісти. Тобто, коли виходить журналістське розслідування – починається трешняк. – пояснює Раімов. – Атакувати легше. Вкинув інформацію – і далі вона вже розповсюджується сама».

За його словами, підтримка в соцмережах (написання коментарів і постів на захист, відбивання словесних атак користувачів) мінімально обійдеться політику у 2-5 тисяч доларів на місяць.

Він також пояснив, що сторінки ботів, які імітують профілі живих людей, зазвичай веде одна людина, і таких сторінок у неї може бути до 20. А фотографії беруться із соцмереж, які станом на зараз в Україні є заблокованими.

Зазвичай для такої роботи, говорить Раімов, наймають студентів старших курсів.

​«Я наймаю студентів або за фахом політологів, або за фахом соціологів, психологів. Цікаво працювати з психологами, тому що вони розуміють ритм ведення дискусій. Вони вміють витягнути людину на емоцію, – ділиться своїм досвідом політтехнолог. – Умовно кажучи, про що ви можете говорити, якщо тільки що фонтан емоцій був», – розповідає експерт.

За його словами, залежно від посад, вони отримують «непогані кошти по ринку».

«Якщо це людина просто веде коментарі, оці сторінки, то менеджер сторінок – його завдання вести до 20 сторінок неіснуючих людей (…) він отримує в місяць від 700 до 1500 доларів. (…) Керівники проектів мають трохи більше, тому що вони координують ще з десяток таких людей. Це така піраміда управління», – говорить Раімов.

Раніше «Схеми» оприлюднили доказ спотворення ботами громадської думки в інтересах Яценюка та Мартиненка.

 

«Деполітизація новин» і «відсторонення від влади» – Аласанія оприлюднив фрагмент проекту рішення про звільнення

Зураб Аласанія опублікував у Facebook фрагмент проекту рішення наглядової ради «Суспільного мовлення» про його звільнення з посади голови правління НСТУ. У викладеному фрагменті вказано, що за час керівництва Аласанія «не організував мовлення телеканалу «UA: Перший» ні як «суспільно-політичного каналу» (відповідно до вимог закону), ні як каналу «інформаційного і суспільно-політичного мовлення з елементами просвітництва».

«Не рішення, але частина проекту такого рішення НР, на якому НР базує відсторонення. Хоч би не палилися так відкрито…», – написав Аласанія.

У документі, зокрема, вказано, що телеканал не висвітлив або частково висвітлив «такі важливі події», як хресна хода за помісну церкву влітку 2018 року, засідання Генеральної асамблеї ООН у вересні 2018 року «з вкрай важливих для України питань (включно з виступом президента України).

Також у документі вказано, що за керівництва Зураба Аласанії «компанія впродовж 2018 року впроваджувала хибно зрозумілий принцип «відсторонення від влади», аж до повної деполітизації новин, що прямо суперечить вимозі ПАТ «НСТУ» – «Надавати суспільству достовірну і збалансовану інформацію про Україну і світ».

Читайте також: «Шок» чи «нарешті»? Реакції на звільнення Зураба Аласанії

Наглядова рада «Суспільного» 31 січня більшістю голосів проголосувала за дострокове розірвання контракту з головою правління ПАТ НСТУ Зурабом Аласанією, повідомила у Facebook представниця ради Світлана Остапа. Причини розірвання контракту не повідомляли.

Після цього він заявив про порушення з боку членів Наглядової ради НСТУ під час цього голосування. 

Зураб Аласанія є головою правління Національної суспільної телерадіокомпанії України з квітня 2017-го. Згідно з контрактом, він мав працювати на цій посаді до 14 травня 2021 року.

20 грудня минулого року Наглядова рада ухвалила рішення про продовження мовлення ще на рік програм журналістських розслідувань «Схеми» та «Наші гроші з Денисом Бігусом». На день раніше автори обох проектів Наталія Седлецька та Денис Бігус заявили про ймовірність, що на засіданні ради буде розглядатися припинення їхньої трансляції.

 

 

US to Announce Its Exit From Cold War Nuclear Arms Treaty

The Trump administration is poised to announce Friday that it is withdrawing from a treaty that has been a centerpiece of superpower arms control since the Cold War and whose demise some analysts worry could fuel a new arms race.

An American withdrawal, which has been expected for months, would follow years of unresolved dispute over Russian compliance with the pact, known as the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces, or INF, treaty. It was the first arms control measure to ban an entire class of weapons: ground-launched cruise missiles with a range between 500 kilometers (310 miles) and 5,000 kilometers (3,100 miles). Russia denies that it has been in violation.

U.S. officials also have expressed worry that China, which is not party to the 1987 treaty, is gaining a significant military advantage in Asia by deploying large numbers of missiles with ranges beyond the treaty’s limit. Leaving the INF treaty would allow the Trump administration to counter the Chinese, but it’s unclear how it would do that.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in early December that Washington would give Moscow 60 days to return to compliance before it gave formal notice of withdrawal, with actual withdrawal taking place six months later. The 60-day deadline expires Saturday, and the administration is expected to say as early as Friday that efforts to work out a compliance deal have failed and that it would suspend its compliance with the treaty’s terms.

The State Department said Pompeo would make a public statement Friday morning, but it did not mention the topic.

In a tweet Thursday, the chief spokeswoman for NATO, Oana Lungescu, said there are no signs of getting a compliance deal with Russia.

“So we must prepare for a world without the Treaty,” she wrote.

Withdrawal takes six months

Technically, a U.S. withdrawal would take effect six months after this week’s notification, leaving a small window for saving the treaty. However, in talks this week in Beijing, the U.S. and Russia reported no breakthrough in their dispute, leaving little reason to think either side would change its stance on whether a Russian cruise missile violates the pact.

A Russian deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, was quoted by the Russian state news agency Tass as saying after the Beijing talks Thursday, “Unfortunately, there is no progress. The position of the American side is very tough and like an ultimatum.” He said he expects Washington now to suspend its obligations under the treaty, although he added that Moscow remains ready to “search for solutions” that could keep the treaty in force.

U.S. withdrawal raises the prospect of further deterioration in U.S.-Russian relations, which already are arguably at the lowest point in decades, and debate among U.S. allies in Europe over whether Russia’s alleged violations warrant a countermeasure such as deployment of an equivalent American missile in Europe. The U.S. has no nuclear-capable missiles based in Europe; the last of that type and range were withdrawn in line with the INF treaty.

​Global concern

The prospect of U.S. withdrawal from the INF pact has stirred concern globally. The mayor of Des Moines, Iowa, Frank Cownie, is among dozens of local officials and lawmakers in the U.S., Canada, Europe and elsewhere who signed a letter this week to President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin expressing worry at the “unraveling” of the INF treaty and other arms constraints.

“Withdrawing from treaties takes a step in the wrong direction,” Cownie said in a telephone interview. “It’s wasn’t just Des Moines, Iowa. It’s people from all around this country that are concerned about the future of our cities, of our country, of this planet.”

Unleashing new arms race

The American ambassador to NATO, Kay Bailey Hutchison, set the rhetorical stage for Washington’s withdrawal announcement by asserting Thursday that Russia has been in violation for years, including in Ukraine. She said in a tweet and a video message about the INF treaty that Russia is to blame for its demise.

“Russia consistently refuses to acknowledge its violation and continues to push disinformation and false narratives regarding its illegal missile,” she said. “When only one party respects an arms control treaty while the other side flaunts it, it leaves one side vulnerable, no one is safer, and (it) discredits the very idea of arms control.”

Nuclear weapons experts at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said in a statement this week that while Russia’s violation of the INF treaty is a serious problem, U.S. withdrawal under current circumstances would be counterproductive.

“Leaving the INF treaty will unleash a new missile competition between the United States and Russia,” they said.

Kingston Reif, director for disarmament at the Arms Control Association, said Thursday the Trump administration has failed to exhaust diplomatic options to save the treaty. What’s more, “it has no strategy to prevent Russia from building and fielding even more intermediate-range missiles in the absence of the agreement.”

Reif said the period between now and August, when the U.S. withdrawal would take effect, offers a last chance to save the treaty, but he sees little prospect of that happening. He argues that Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, is “unlikely to miss the opportunity to kill an agreement he has long despised.”

Lack of Wind Slows Frenchman Crossing Atlantic In Barrel

French adventurer Jean-Jacques Savin is 36 days into his attempt to cross the Atlantic in a specially built orange barrel.

With no engine, sails or paddles, the unusual craft relies on trade winds and currents to push him 4,800 kilometers from the Canary Islands to Caribbean in about three months.

On Wednesday, he reported awaking to an early spring morning and clear sky with a beautiful crescent moon. However, he said there was not a lot of wind, which was slowing his travels.

He described his journey as a “crossing during which man isn’t captain of his ship, but a passenger of the ocean.”

Savin spent months building his bright orange, barrel-shaped capsule of resin-coated plywood that is strong enough to withstand battering waves and other stresses.

The barrel is 3 meters long and 2.10 meters across. It has a small galley and a mattress with straps to keep him from being tossed out of his bunk by rough seas.

Portholes on either side of the barrel and another looking into the water provide sunlight and a bit of entertainment. The unique craft also has a solar panel that generates energy for communications and GPS positioning.

As he drifts along, Savin is dropping markers in the ocean to help oceanographers study ocean currents. At the end of the journey, Savin will be studied by doctors for effects of solitude in close confinement.

He also posts regular updates, including GPS coordinates tracking the journey, on a Facebook page. 

Savin’s adventure, which will cost a little more than $65,000, was funded by French barrel makers and crowdfunding.

Savin hopes to end his journey on a French island, such as Martinique or Guadeloupe. “That would be easier for the paperwork and for bringing the barrel back,” he told AFP.

Росія не дозволяє розпочати миротворчий процес на Донбасі – Волкер

Росія не дозволяє розпочати миротворчий процес під егідою ООН на Донбасі, заявив 31 січня на телефонному брифінгу з Брюсселя спеціальний представник США з питань України Курт Волкер.

Відповідаючи на запитання про те, наскільки реалістичним є мирний план, який днями запропоновав посередник на переговорах від ОБСЄ Мартін Сайдік, Волкер наголосив: «Фундаментальним питанням є те, чи Росія готова погодитися з тим, щоб міжнародна миротворча місія замінила російські війська і створила справжній мир та безпеку на Донбасі. Якщо Росія готова на це погодитися, то це би відбувалося під мандатом ООН, і ООН могла б створити справжнє середовище безпеки, яке б дозволило виконати Мінські угоди і закінчити конфлікт», – вважає Курт Волкер.

«Головною проблемою є те, що Росія не погоджується з тим, що потрібні миротворчі сили, Росія заперечує той факт, що вона окупувала території», – додав американський дипломат. 

Посередник на переговорах від ОБСЄ Мартін Сайдік запропонував замінити Мінські угоди новим мирним планом. В інтерв’ю австрійській газеті Kleine Zeitung він заявив, що йдеться про залучення ООН до проведення місцевих виборів і гарантування безпеки.

 

Сайдік сказав, що потрібний інший документ, який матиме «справжню політичну і правову вагу», оскільки Мінські угоди так і не були ратифіковані російським і українським парламентами. Сайдік також зауважив, що в новій угоді мають брати участь представники «окремих районів Донецької та Луганської областей».

 

Віце-спікер українського парламенту Ірина Геращенко, яка представляє Україну в гуманітарній підгрупі на мінських переговорах, в інтерв’ю Радіо Свобода перед переговорами в Мінську назвала пропозиції посла Сайдіка «нереалістичними».

 

За її словами, поява нового мирного плану означала фактично, що «потрібно пробачити Москві за порушення Мінських угод в гуманітарній сфері і сфері безпеки». На переконання Геращенко, Росія має бути покарана за невиконання Мінських угод.

НСТУ розірвала контракт з Зурабом Аласанією

Наглядова рада «Суспільного» більшістю голосів проголосувала за дострокове розірвання контракту з головою правління ПАТ НСТУ Зурабом Аласанією, повідомила у Facebook представниця ради Світлана Остапа.

За її словами, за таке рішення проголосували 9 членів ради, проти було троє.

Сам Аласанія ситуацію наразі не коментує.

Повідомити про причини такого рішення до оприлюднення протоколів засідання відмовилася і голова наглядової ради Тетяна Лебедєва. За її словами, це відбудеться приблизно за тиждень.

На запитання Радіо Свобода, чи може бути причиною висловлення недовіри продовження на рік в ефірі «Суспільного» трансляції програм журналістських розслідувань, Лебедєва запевнила, що це питання під час засідання не обговорювалося.

«Це взагалі абсолютно штучна історія, яку я не знаю, для чого вигадали. І ніхто не вибачився минулого разу за цю історію і цей наклеп на нас», – сказала вона Радіо Свобода.

Зураб Аласанія був головою правління Національної суспільної телерадіокомпанії України з квітня 2017-го. Згідно з контрактом, він мав працювати на цій посаді до 14 травня 2021 року.

20 грудня минулого року Наглядова рада ухвалила рішення про продовження мовлення ще на рік програм журналістських розслідувань «Схеми» та «Наші гроші з Денисом Бігусом». На день раніше автори обох проектів Наталія Седлецька та Денис Бігус заявили про ймовірність, що на засіданні ради буде розглядатися припинення їхньої трансляції.  

Україна має багато зробити для членства в НАТО – Волкер

Двері в НАТО залишаються відкритими для України, але їй потрібно ще багато зробити для членства, заявив 31 січня на телефонному брифінгу з Брюсселя спеціальний представник США з питань України Курт Волкер.

 

«Позиція США залишається незмінною: ми підтримуємо майбутнє членство України в НАТО, як про це було вирішено під час саміту в Бухаресті у 2008 році. Ми твердо стоїмо на цих позиціях», – наголосив Волкер.

 

Він додав, що США продовжують допомагати Україні у зміцненні її оборонної спроможності. «Як ви знаєте, було уповільнення цього процесу протягом кількох років з 2008 року, прискорення відбулося після 2014 року, але потрібно здолати ще довгу дорогу», – зауважив американський посланець.

 

Він нагадав, що для членства в НАТО потрібно здійснити не лише військову реформу, але і мати сильну демократію та економіку, добрі відносини з сусідами і виконати багато інших критеріїв.

 

«Україні ще багато потрібно зробити для того, щоб стати членом НАТО. І в НАТО зараз немає консенсусу для того, щоб надіслати Україні запрошення. Але двері для майбутнього членства України в НАТО залишаються відкритими», – наголосив Курт Волкер. 

 

Оголошуючи свої плани вдруге стати президентом України, Петро Порошенко сказав, що Україна до 2024 року отримає план дій щодо членства в НАТО.

 

Парламент України попередньо підтримав внесення змін до Конституції щодо наміру вступити в Євросоюз і НАТО. За це проголосували 311 депутатів. Очікується, що фінальне рішення Рада ухвалить у лютому 2019 року, і для цього буде потрібно щонайменше 300 голосів.

Greece to Ratify Macedonia’s NATO Accession in ‘Coming Days’

Greece will bring Macedonia’s NATO accession agreement to parliament for ratification “in the coming days,” the government spokesman said Thursday, which will bring into effect the change of the country’s name to North Macedonia.

Once parliament ratifies the NATO protocol, Greece’s Foreign Ministry will inform Macedonia’s Foreign Ministry of the result, a move which will automatically bring into effect the name change, government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopoulos said. He didn’t give a specific date.

 

The name change deal, dubbed the Prespa Agreement after the border lake where it was signed last year, ends a 27-year dispute between the two neighbors that had kept the former Yugoslav republic out of NATO and the European Union. Greece argued that the use of the name “Macedonia” implied territorial claims on its own northern province of the same name and usurped Greek history and culture, and had blocked its neighbor’s efforts to join NATO over the issue.

 

Tzanakopoulos said the nearly three-decade dispute had given rise to “the monster of lies, nationalism and extreme historic revisionism” in Greece. Greek lawmakers’ Jan. 25 ratification of the deal was “a historic milestone for peace, cooperation and stability in the Balkans,” he said during a media briefing, adding that the agreement restores Greece’s “leading role in the Balkans.”

 

The agreement’s ratification “symbolizes the victory of political courage and respect of the country’s history, over opportunism, nationalism, the taking advantage of patriotism and the commerce of hate,” he added.

 

The deal has been met with vociferous opposition by many in both countries, with critics accusing their respective governments of making too many concessions to the other side.

 

Once the deal comes into effect, Macedonia will have a five-year period to implement many of the practical changes it must make, including changing vehicle license plates and issuing new passports.

 

 

Diverse, International Flock Awaits Pope Francis’ UAE Trip

At St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Dubai, an effort to transcribe the Bible in the native tongue of its flock saw the holy book presented in 52 languages — a sign of the cosmopolitan welcome awaiting Pope Francis’ upcoming visit to the United Arab Emirates.

The diversity among its parishioners can be seen in its pews and heard in the sermons of St. Mary’s priests, who celebrate Mass and offer prayers in Arabic, English, French, Tagalog, Tamil, Urdu and other languages.

The church, they say, offers an anchor for the Roman Catholics among the UAE’s vast foreign labor force, many of whom live in this federation of seven sheikhdoms alone while their families stay home.

“The whole world meets here in a way,” said the Rev. Lennie Connully, the parish priest of St. Mary’s. “We have people from all over.”

Pope Francis’ visit from Feb. 3 through Feb. 5 marks the first papal visit to the Arabian Peninsula, the birthplace of Islam. The pontiff will visit Abu Dhabi, the headquarters of the Catholic Church’s Apostolic Vicariate of Southern Arabia, which covers the UAE, Oman and Yemen.

There are nine Catholic churches in this federation of seven sheikhdoms governed by hereditary rulers; four other Catholic churches are in Oman. The Catholic flock’s rapid growth followed the discovery of oil in what was previously known as the Trucial States. Officials consecrated the first Catholic church in Abu Dhabi in 1965.

As Abu Dhabi became a major oil exporter and Dubai grew into the skyscraper-studded city it is today, the Emirates’ rapid economic expansion drew millions of foreigners to everything from white-collar office jobs to hard-hat construction work. Of the over 9 million people now living in the UAE, around 1 million are Emirati while the rest are foreign-born.

In 2010, there were an estimated 940,000 Christians living in the UAE, according to a 2015 Pew Research Center report, including 750,000 Catholics. The report suggests the number of Christians in the UAE would rise to about 1.1 million by 2020, with Catholics making up the lion’s share. The Catholic Church itself believes there are some 1 million Catholics in the UAE today.

The backbone of that population is Filipino and Indian. Life for them and others can be incredibly difficult as many move to the UAE often leaving their families and loved ones back home.

“The church is a base for them. They are far away from their homes,” Connully said. “They don’t have an extended family to support them. That family atmosphere is created here.”

Rulers in the UAE, which has described 2019 as the nation’s “Year of Tolerance,” have supported the Catholic community in the past by donating land for their churches. However, there are limits in this Muslim nation.

Proselytizing by non-Muslims remains illegal. Islam is enshrined as the UAE’s official religion in the country’s constitution, with government websites even offering online applications to convert. Conversion from Islam to another religion, however, is illegal, the U.S. State Department has warned. Blasphemy and apostasy laws also carry a possible death sentence.

At St. Mary’s and other churches, crosses are for the most part carefully concealed behind compound fences. There are no bells that toll to mark the start of services, though loudspeakers on minarets proclaim the call to prayers, like at the mosque across the street from St. Mary’s.

Despite facing restrictions, Christians in the UAE have never faced the violence that has targeted those in Syria and Iraq during the rise of the Islamic State group and other militants. Coptic Christians, a minority in Egypt that has faced extremist attacks in their homeland, also can safely worship.

In recent years, militant attacks have only exacerbated a “long, slow decline” of Christianity in the wider Middle East that began with mass migrations of the 19th Century, said Robin Darling Young, a professor studying church history at the Washington-based Catholic University of America.

The growth of ultraconservative Islamic beliefs, like Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia, coupled with the creation of independent states, further fueled that, she said. America’s 2003 war in Iraq and the chaos that followed made it even worse, she said.

“Particularly in areas where Wahhabi Islam is strong, like the Arabian Peninsula, Christians have been subject to more restrictions,” Young said. “The UAE is trying to make itself look better to the West by permitting, under certain restrictions, public Christian worship.”

Catholics in the UAE, however, make a point to thank the UAE’s ruling sheikhs for being able to worship freely. During a recent Mass at St. Mary’s, the Father Andre Francisco Fernandes led worshippers in a prayer asking for God’s blessings upon “the rulers of the UAE,” specifically naming UAE President and Abu Dhabi ruler Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.

Fernandes’ sermon that day focused on the parable of the loaves and the fishes, the story of Jesus Christ feeding a crowd of 5,000 with just five loaves of bread and two fish. The priest urged those listening to keep their faith and view the world with an open heart.

“Every day, miracles are happening,” he told parishioners. “We need to believe.”

Banks, Businesses React With Mounting Alarm Over Brexit

British banking giant Barclays has drawn up plans to shift more than $200 billion worth of assets from London to Dublin amid mounting business alarm that Britain is more likely now to leave the European Union without an exit deal.

With Prime Minister Theresa May’s ruling Conservative government now backing away from a contentious withdrawal agreement negotiated in November and locked in a standoff with Brussels, Britain is heading for a scheduled March 29 departure without any kind of negotiated exit agreement. That means tariffs would have to be imposed on goods moving back and forth across the English Channel. It would also block market access to the EU for banks based in Britain.

British and international firms with European headquarters in London have become increasingly angry with the Brexit crisis. Earlier in January, in at times a testy conference call, 331 business leaders, including from U.S. banking giants and major companies like Amazon and Apple, were assured by senior government ministers that a no-deal exit would be taken off the table and that Britain wouldn’t part company with its largest trading bloc until a deal had been struck.

Since then, though, there has been no resolution to the major differences between Britain and the other 27 EU member states – if anything, frustrations have deepened with EU officials maintaining Monday that they are not prepared to reopen negotiations on the withdrawal agreement, which a deeply divided British House of Commons refused to endorse in January.

The transfer by Barclays of assets belonging to 5,000 clients emerged Monday, when the bank won the court approval required. The judge, Richard Snowden, noted that the transfer was “huge” as it represents nearly a quarter of the assets Barclays holds. “The design of the scheme has been based upon an assumption that there will be no favorable outcome of the current political negotiations between the UK and the EU,” he said.

The bank said in a statement, “Barclays will use our existing licensed EU-based bank subsidiary to continue to serve our clients within the EU beyond 29 March 2019, regardless of the outcome of Brexit. Our preparations are well-advanced and we expect to be fully operational by 29 March 2019.”

Without a deal, British banks and international financial service institutions based in London would have no access to the EU market. Some market analysts estimate that London will lose at least a trillion dollars, and possibly much more, to financial rivals in Europe, including Frankfurt, Dublin and Paris by the end of March as banks flee ahead of Brexit.

Spreading operations

At least 30 banks and financial firms are planning to move their EU headquarters to Germany. Other banks are set to spread their operations across different European cities. At least 10,000 banking jobs are likely to move to Frankfurt, Germany’s fifth biggest city, over the next eight years, industry observers say. Paris is angling for business, too, offering tax incentives for banks to relocate to the French capital, a determined rival to London.

Lloyds, Standard Chartered and Credit Suisse are among the banks that are planning to open offices in Frankfurt because of Brexit. While mainstream banks voice their frustration, hedge funds, many of which donated to anti-EU campaigns during the 2016 Brexit referendum, welcome a no-deal departure, hoping it will open the way for the dismantling of a swathe of regulations on financial services.

Aside from banks, other British businesses are becoming increasingly alarmed at what they might face in the event of a no-deal Brexit. On Monday, British officials acknowledged that businesses will face higher trade tariffs and barriers in dozens of countries because there’s not enough time between now and March 29 to replicate 40 EU trade deals with non-EU countries in Asia, Latin America and Africa.

Leading British Brexiters, including International Trade Minister Liam Fox, have been saying for months that trade deal replications would be easy. Fox once vowed that the agreements would be all complete “one second after midnight” on Brexit day.

On Monday, a British official acknowledged to a parliamentary panel that will not be the case and that hundreds of British firms will lose preferential access, reducing the price competitiveness of their goods. The official declined to provide an “absolute figure” on how many trade deals would lapse because of technical, legal or political problems.

As business fears mount, Prime Minister May has announced a change in her negotiating team with her de facto deputy, David Lidington, a former long-serving Europe minister, taking the lead position in British efforts to persuade Brussels to open up the withdrawal agreement, itself the product of ill-tempered haggling between the EU and London.

But EU leaders have firmly shut the door, so far, to amending or changing the agreement, which would see Britain locked in a customs union with the bloc for several years while it negotiates a vaguely defined free trade settlement.

In the temporary customs union, Britain would be unable to influence EU laws, regulations and product standards it would have to observe. The transition was reached to avoid customs checks on the border separating Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic, but British lawmakers fear Britain could be trapped indefinitely in the transition.

Leading Brexiters say if May can get a sunset clause written into the deal to allow Britain to escape the transition agreement, if it wished later, or if the transition were time limited, they might reverse their opposition and back the deal. But that still might not give May the majority she needs to secure parliamentary approval.

The leaders of the 27 other EU member states made clear Monday that they are not prepared to revisit the deal. “A renegotiation is not on the table,” said Ireland’s prime minister, Leo Varadkar. “There’s no plan to discuss any changes. The withdrawal agreement is not up for renegotiation and is not going to be reopened,” he added. Both the president of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, and Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, echoed the Irish leader.

 

Climate Has Become Europe’s Green Revolution

Marie Toussaint has launched a climate petition in France that has attracted skyrocketing support. Ludovic Bayle splits his days between working at a restaurant and moonlighting as a climate activist. And in Sweden, Switzerland and Belgium, students are skipping school, demanding more action against what many Europeans consider one of the biggest threats to their future: climate change.

“Climate is one of the main concerns” in Europe, said Neil Makaroff, European Union policy adviser for the NGO Climate Action Network France. “Citizens are more and more mobilized today. They are taking different actions like marches, petition, litigation.”

Several hundred thousand Europeans took to the streets this past week alone. Students marched in Brussels where the European Union is headquartered, and climate activists briefly occupied the Scottish parliament. At the yearly Davos gathering in Switzerland, Swedish teenage activist Greta Thunberg, who is behind the growing school strikes, told the rich and powerful they were to blame for the climate crisis. And in France, dozens of towns held climate marches last weekend, bringing young and old to the streets in sometimes pounding rain.

Climate change, some analysts believe, is also shaping up to be one of the most important issues in upcoming European parliament elections in May.

“People really, really need to wake up,” said Parisian Veronique Weil, who braved whipping rain to join a climate rally at the city’s iconic Place de la Republic. “The seas are rising, countries are going to disappear. … It’s crazy.”

In some ways, Europe seems an unlikely place for a climate revolt. The region is considered among the world’s green leaders, and the EU says it is on track to meet 2030 emissions reduction targets.

French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to “make the planet great again,” launching a “One Planet summit” — now heading for its third edition — and urging American scientists to move to France after the U.S. announced it was pulling out of the Paris climate pact.

But climate activists have criticized Macron, saying France and Europe haven’t done enough. It’s a message echoed by popular French environment minister Nicolas Hulot, who quit Macron’s cabinet last year.

“Besides the nice sentences like ‘make our planet great again,’ our government is really not taking climate very seriously,” said Makaroff of Climate Action Network. “Because no climate action has been really strong in France to curb emissions.”

Now, citizens are taking matters into their own hands.

French environmentalist Marie Toussaint quit her government job two years ago to create a green NGO. In December, she launched a petition with three other groups, threatening to sue the French government for climate inaction. So far, the petition has gathered a record 2 million signatures, and counting.

“We really want to save the climate, to save the planet, but also to save solidarity, to save the people — to be part of the solution,” Toussaint said.

The grassroots uprising is being seen in ways big and small. In the Netherlands, activists sponsoring a similar climate petition won a landmark court ruling last year, ordering the Dutch government to accelerate emissions cuts.  And in Germany, the Greens Party is surging, ranked second in polls behind the ruling Christian Democrats.

In Versailles, just outside Paris, 34-year-old Ludovic Bayle spends most waking hours either waiting tables or working at his unpaid job as a member of Citizens for Climate France, one of the grassroots groups that organized last weekend’s French protests. Launched in September, the chapter has nearly 70,000 members on its Facebook page.

“Of course I’m scared” about climate change, Bayle said. “That’s why it’s so important to act. We need to mobilize to put pressure on decision-makers.”

Last weekend’s climate protests intersected with another citizen’s uprising in France — the yellow vest movement, in its third month. Now embracing broader demands for greater social justice, the yellow vest protests began over a fuel tax hike intended partly to fund climate measures.

As a result, some analysts suggest the yellow vests show that people ultimately are not willing to make sacrifices to curb emissions. But climate activists like Toussaint dismiss that view.

“What we see now is people who are polluting the least are being asked to pay the most,” said Toussaint, who said both movements share similar demands for greater social justice.

The European parliament elections may be an early test of whether climate uprisings can translate into political power. Green parties are gaining strength, but not everywhere. In France, a recent poll placed the Greens a distant fifth in voter intentions, behind a fledging yellow vest party.

Meanwhile, the far-right National Rally Party, with a minimalist green agenda, is surging in second place, and hopes to capture votes from yellow vests, who are a highly disparate group.

Still, Makaroff believes politicians have gotten the message from the streets.

“It would be suicide for political parties not to take up climate issues in the European elections,” he said. 

Patriotic War Film Draws 8 Million Russians as Ties With West Fray

A state-funded Russian film that lionizes a Soviet World War II tank and its crew has become the second highest grossing home-grown production since the collapse of the Soviet Union, part of a Kremlin-backed drive to instill patriotism in young people.

The Kremlin has long put the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany at the heart of a patriotic push to accompany what it casts as the country’s return to greatness under Vladimir Putin who has portrayed Russia as a fortress besieged by the West.

The new film, “T-34,” has been praised by the defense ministry which has shown it to its troops. Its release coincides with heightened tensions with the West, with President Putin warning of a new arms race. An opinion poll by Levada published on Wednesday showed more than half of Russians believe their country faces a foreign military threat.

It also comes as Kremlin critics warn of a growing militarization of society in the wake of Russia’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea, its continued backing for pro-Russian separatists in east Ukraine, and deployment in Syria.

“T-34” tells the story of a group of Soviet soldiers who escape a Nazi concentration camp inside a T-34 tank. It is loosely based on real events.

Released on Jan. 1, it has already taken more than 2.1 billion rubles ($31.86 million) at the box office and has been watched by more than 8.3 million people, making it the second most successful domestically produced film in ruble terms since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

The highest-grossing film, released last year, told the story of a Soviet Cold War sports victory over the United States.

Raising the flag

Vladimir Medinsky, Russia’s culture minister, has suggested people take their children to see “T-34.”

Medinsky, a Putin ally, has angrily likened critics of the film who have questioned its historical accuracy to Soviet wartime traitors.

“It seems to me that here we need to raise and hold the flag,” the TASS news agency cited Medinsky as saying this month, calling for people to feel pride in their country’s wartime achievements.

Some critics have said the film romanticizes war and have likened it to a computer game, suggesting it does too little to bring home the human cost of warfare.

But its director, Alexei Sidorov, said he had tried to make a film that was not too gloomy.

“Yes, it’s war. Yes, it’s death. Every family lost someone.

But we won this war and that’s important,” he said.

Russia estimates that nearly 27 million Soviet citizens – including both soldiers and civilians – perished during World War II. In Russia it has long been known as the Great Patriotic War.

 

Athens Aims to Deliver Goods,Services Free of Forced Labor

Athens is aiming to ensure that all the goods and services the local government provides to its residents are free of forced labor, under a pilot project launched on Wednesday that officials and activists hope will set an example across Greece. 

 

The Athens municipality plans to create a level playing field for its suppliers by working solely with companies that monitor their supply chains and take action to prevent modern slavery, several officials told an anti-trafficking conference. 

 

As the world strives to meet a U.N. goal of ending slavery and forced labor by 2030, major companies face growing scrutiny and consumer pressure to guarantee their goods are slave-free. 

 

Yet governments have unparalleled bargaining power to change the business practices of their suppliers and contractors, not just at home but worldwide because of the increasingly global and complex nature of supply chains, experts said at the conference.

“By using the financial power of a city like Athens … there is pressure and leverage in order to change the situation in the labor market, and make the public procurement process fairer,” said Lefteris Papagiannakis, a vice mayor of Athens. 

 

While public procurement often focuses on environmental issues, the pilot project is an opportunity to bring human trafficking in government supply chains to the fore, he added. 

 

The scheme will first research and map Athens’ supply chains, then look to design due diligence tools and monitoring systems, according to Fiori Zafeiropoulou, who is leading the project. 

Companies in the dark

 

Many Greek companies interviewed by officials recently were unaware of how child or forced labor could be part of their supply chains, and would need help to monitor their operations and act if they were to find such cases, Zafeiropoulou said. 

 

“We want to create a zero-tolerance environment … and a level playing field to ensure all businesses play by the same rules with no unfair advantage for those exploiting victims of trafficking,” Zafeiropoulou said after announcing the plan. 

 

However, Athens has no dedicated funding for the project and will need to raise cash soon to go beyond just research and mapping, she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. 

 

If successful, the plan could be extended to other cities in Greece, government ministries and the private sector, and influence other European governments, said Korina Hatzinikolaou, an expert adviser at the national anti-human trafficking office. 

 

Every year, authorities across the European Union spend about 14 percent of their gross domestic product — at least 1.9 trillion euros ($2.2 trillion) —  on public procurement, according to data from the European Commission. 

 

In Greece, an estimated 89,000 people are modern-day slaves — about one in 125 of its 11 million population — according to the 2018 Global Slavery Index by the Walk Free Foundation. 

 

Greece was a front-line country for refugees fleeing war and poverty in Syria and elsewhere until 2016, and thousands of adult and child migrants are at risk of exploitation by traffickers for sex and labor, experts say.

Україна має право на власне майбутнє – голова МЗС Чехії

Міністр закордонних справ Чехії Томаш Петршичек заявив, що Україна повинна мати право сама вирішувати своє майбутнє, незалежно від бажань Росії.

 

«Україна є важливим партнером Європейського союзу та Чехії, і ми б хотіли, щоб вона мала право на те, щоб обрати своє власне майбутнє. Я переконаний, що питання «сфер впливу» є справою минулого, і ми б не хотіли, щоб воно поверталося до міжнародних стосунків», – сказав в ексклюзивному інтерв’ю Радіо Свобода міністр закордонних справ Чехії Томаш Петршичек після закінчення дводенного візиту до України.

 

Він наголосив, що для Чехії є важливим дотримання міжнародного права. «А якщо це не так, то ми б мали піднести свій голос та чітко назвати речі своїми іменами», – сказав міністр після своєї поїздки на Донбас, де він побував на лінії зіткнення та в Маріуполі. 

 

Міністр також пообіцяв на зустрічі представників влади наступного тижня поінформувати їх про те, що він «дізнався і побачив тут в Україні, в Маріуполі». За словами Томаша Петршичека, це буде важливий аргумент до дискусії щодо скасування санкцій щодо Росії, що розпочалася серед керівників Чехії ще у вересні минулого року.

 

«Немає поступу у виконанні Мінських угод, конфлікт заморожується, а ми не повинні допустити, щоб у Європі створився ще один заморожений конфлікт», – наголосив Томаш Петршичек.

 

У рамках свого візиту до України 28–29 січня міністр закордонних справ Чехії Томаш Петршичек побував у Києві та на Донбасі. Він провів зустрічі з українськими урядовцями, відвідав лінію зіткнення та Маріупольський порт. Керівники цього підприємства, а також очільники приазовського міста ознайомили його з втратами людськими та економічними, яких зазнав регіон унаслідок російської агресії, що триває з 2014 року.

 

Ірина Луценко заявила про позов до суду проти Гриценка – через сина

«Від імені всіх матерів наших захисників Вітчизни подам на Гриценка до суду. І всі гроші віддам на потреби армії»

ЦВК: понад шість тисяч виборців скористалися тимчасовою зміною місця голосування

Понад 6 300 виборців скористалися тимчасовою зміною місця голосування, свідчить інформація на сайті Державного реєстру виборців Центральної виборчої комісії.

Найбільше тимчасово перереєстрованих виборців – 3 359 – з Донецької області.

У вересні 2018-го ЦВК спростила процедуру голосування для жителів непідконтрольної Україні території.

Українці, які мають прописку в ОРДЛО чи в Криму, можуть не додавати до заяви документи, які підтверджують необхідність тимчасової зміни місця їх голосування.

Їм потрібно буде звернутися до відділу державного реєстру виборців за місцем проживання і написати заяву про тимчасову зміну місця голосування, для цього необхідно мати при собі паспорт.

Вибори президента України відбудуться 31 березня 2019 року.

EU Rules Out Renegotiating Brexit Deal with Britain 

European Union leaders have ruled out British Prime Minister Theresa May’s attempt to renegotiate the terms of Britain’s exit from the bloc in March.

The British parliament Tuesday approved May’s request to the EU to re-work the Irish border provision of the current Brexit deal.

But the spokesman for European Council President Donald Tusk immediately ruled out any re-negotiation.

“The Withdrawal Agreement is and remains the best and only way to ensure an orderly withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union,” the spokesman said. “We continue to urge the UK government to clarify its intentions with respect to the next steps as soon as possible.”

Britain’s House of Commons rejected May’s Brexit plans two weeks ago, primarily because of the Irish border provision, known as the backstop. 

The backstop would keep Britain in a customs union with the EU in order to keep a free flow of goods between Ireland — an EU member —  and Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK.

Backstop opponents who still support the idea of Brexit say it means Britain would still be subjected to EU rules, which is the reason they want Britain to leave the EU in the first place. 

Without an agreement in place, Britain faces a “no-deal” Brexit departure.

U.S. Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats told a congressional panel in Washington Tuesday that such an outcome “would cause economic disruptions that could substantially weaken the [United Kingdom] and Europe.”

Business leaders are worried that a no-deal Brexit would lead to economic chaos.

British opposition Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn said he believes the British government would have to delay its Brexit departure for three months to allow for more negotiations.

The pact defeated two weeks ago took British and EU negotiators 18 months to reach. Since then, May has pledged to go forward with the agreement and seek some changes to earn the necessary support.

May’s Conservative Party is now supporting what it calls “alternative arrangements” to overcome the concerns about tying Britain’s policies to EU rules.

What is not certain is whether those changes would be enough to win over a majority of parliament. There also is the question of whether the European Union would agree to alter the agreement, something its leaders have repeatedly said throughout the debate in Britain they have no intention of doing.

Maria Butina: Naive Idealist or Dangerous Conspirator?

Even in the densely packed Soviet-era apartment blocks at the edge of this faded Siberian industrial hub, little redheaded Masha always seemed to stand out.

“She was quite an unusual kid to some extent — physically quite tall in comparison with her peers, and she was in fact much more physically developed,” says her father, Valeriy Butin, a retired 55-year-old manufacturing engineer.

“Since childhood she had the strongly marked characteristics of a leader,” he says. “She enjoyed giving commands, organizing her peers, her brother and her sister. She has always tried to carry herself as a leader. That was just natural for her.”

Soft-spoken with a patient disposition, Valeriy is also unfailingly polite. Even upon declining initial interview requests, he would nonetheless thank us for asking and apologize for needing time to consider.

Meeting my videographer and me at the cafe beside our hotel, he seems oblivious to patrons who appear to recognize him immediately, even if they don’t dare say so.

After agreeing to the interview, he waits for us out in the car where, through the cafe window, he seems adrift in an aimless stare, his thoughts likely turning to a Virginia jail cell where his daughter, Maria Valeriyevna Butina, has been held in solitary confinement since U.S. officials brought espionage-related charges against her in July.

Despite a December plea bargain, Valeriy, just like his friends and family, still cannot square the foreign media depiction of a confessed foreign agent with his precocious daughter who, until weeks of incarceration, mailed home report cards and research papers — cherished tokens of the myriad academic accomplishments the family has scrapbooked since primary school.

“She was always gifted with a good memory and inquisitive mind, a willingness to research and really grasp something new,” he says, his vocal pitch beginning to tremble. “I have no doubt it was — it is — natural for her.”

The world that shaped Masha

Touching down on the chemically treated Tarmac at Barnaul International Airport in southwestern Siberia, the pilot stops the plane at the end of the runway and pivots the nose onto a massive five-centimeter-thick expanse of plow-scarred ice and snowpack.

Descending the airplane stairs to board a bus idling in the deep freeze of early dawn, passengers trudge through the glare of a single floodlight as four policemen in matching black Ushankas look on in silence. The only sound is an engine and the rhythmic crunching of snow under boots.

Nestled between the northern borders of Kazakhstan and Mongolia, Barnaul lies 228 kilometers due south of Novosibirsk, part of what Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn described as the “Gulag Archipelago.”  Like nearly all of its centrally planned neighboring municipalities, the city, which is the administrative seat of the Altai Krai region, immediately evokes memories of its Soviet past. Once known for manufacturing tanks, ammunition and tractors, Barnaul — also like nearly all of its neighbors — has long since seen most of those jobs disappear.

A half-hour from the airport in a flat grid of city blocks where Maria Butina spent her first 20 years, camouflage-clad hunters tote bagged rifles alongside morning commuters with briefcases. For many youth, it’s the kind of place where one aspires to nothing more than one day residing anyplace else.

“The official statistics brought me into a state of dismay,” Maria wrote of regional brain drain in a 2008 essay for a local paper. “Last year the number of people leaving the region was 9,383 more than those who came to my native Altai.”

As an 18-year-old college junior, Maria was a Rotary Club member who had recently been elected to a civic organization comprising “prominent citizens of Russia, representatives of national, regional and interregional NGOs” that aimed to be a conduit between citizens and lawmakers.

“When first elected, I wondered if it would be possible to transform the region into a place with lifelong professional prospects for my peers,” wrote Butina. “Now I’m pretty confident [that]… if someone doesn’t ‘rejuvenate’ the regional elite, programs will neither succeed nor stop the young from leaving.”

Political aspirations

Adjacent to the Krai Administration building in Barnaul’s Soviets Square, the School of Real Politics (SRP) was architecturally designed to contrast with the stodgy edifice beside it that, until just years ago, still hosted regional legislative sessions.

“Maria came to the Real Politics faculty in 2005, where she instantly showed herself as an active leader,” said Konstantin Emeshin, SRP’s founder and, as Valeriy tells it, the personal mentor who perhaps more than any other individual has shaped Maria’s worldview.

Although not affiliated Altai State University, where Maria was concurrently enrolled, Emeshin’s “faculty,” as he called it, appears to be a government subsidized private organization aligned with the pro-Kremlin United Russia Party that mentors and develops aspiring politicians. Altai State University administrators did not respond to multiple inquiries about its relationship with SRP, and Emeshin declined follow-up interview requests to learn more about the organization.

The concept behind SRP, he said, is that “‘real policy’ doesn’t come from the TV set.”

“Television channels as a rule broadcast information as well as propaganda, whereas real politics is always made by [actual] deputies, officials.”

In “real politics,” he said, students are immersed in day-to-day parliamentary life, in government life, communicating directly with officials, even at the highest levels.

After her first year with the political organization, Butina’s SRP peers elected her school coordinator,a coveted position in which the student reports on legislation and wrangles VIPs for on-site events.

Smitten by her boundless energy and networking savvy, Emeshin nominated her for the prestigious Seliger forum for young leaders. The annual lakeside gathering — once dubbed “Russia’s nationalist summer camp” and sometimes attended by President Vladimir Putin — invites participants to give presentations of their work.

Having solicited the sponsorship of local businessmen, Butina would be expected to champion a regional cause.

At the time, Emeshin said, short-barrel arms legalization was strongly supported by Altai regional Governor Alexander Bogdanovich Karlin.

For the daughter of an avid hunter, a personal history of gun ownership suddenly dovetailed with a politically practical regional cause.

The gun rights cause

In Russia, private citizens can be licensed to own long-barreled shotguns, stun guns and gas pistols, but handguns and assault rifles are banned for the broader public.

Like a handful of provincial Russian politicians, Karlin had long framed pistol ownership as a civilian rights issue, but in his economically struggling region it meant more than that: Altai Krai is also home to one the few small-arms bullet manufacturers in Russia.

At Seliger, Butina connected with politically like-minded activists and expanded the pistol rights debate to the federal level, hosting roundtables throughout the country.

“It was no secret that Senator [Aleksandr] Torshin,” long an avid gun rights supporter, “was now in touch with Maria.”

“She knew everybody: [Alexei] Kudrin, [Andrey] Nechayev, she was at the top of public activities of Russia,” said Emeshin, referring to a close Putin ally and a former economic minister respectively.

Emeshin then encouraged Maria to pursue graduate work abroad.

“Having mastered real politics at the city, regional and federal level,” he told her in 2014 Facebook message, “you should certainly master the real politics at the international level.”

For personal friends of Maria, the rapid career developments came as no surprise.

“At the time, she seemed to be quite the young idealist, a person who awakes with an idea of changing the world,” said Lev Sekerzhinsky, a Barnaul-based photographer who was close to Butina before she departed for Moscow. “But unlike most people, she woke up not just with an idea but with some real energy … just a willful determination to implement all the plans to do something good.

“Every day she had to be doing something,” he recalled. “I’ve never met anyone else like her in all my life.”

Asked whether she could have turned that energy against the interests of a foreign nation, he was unconvinced.

“I’ve read trial documents saying she was doing or planning things against the United States, but I’m pretty confident she wanted to improve ties,” he said. “It’s quite a pity if she violated some laws on the way.”

Charges against her

On December 13, Butina pleaded guilty to conspiracy, engaging in unofficial diplomacy and lobbying after building relationships in American conservative circles — including the National Rifle Association — not unlike what she did on behalf of Altai officials at Seliger. She also admitted to working at the behest of her ex-employer, former Senator Torshin, to create back-channel communications between NRA contacts and Russian officials.

“She was playing a role familiar to professional intelligence officers…using her natural network of contacts to spot, meet, and assess potential targets for the Russian espionage apparatus,” writes Atlantic Monthly contributor John Sipher, a 28-year veteran of the CIA’s clandestine service and an authority on espionage at the Brookings Institution.

Describing modern Russia as “the world’s first intelligence state” and Putin’s actions as “those of a superpowered spy chief,” any Russian national living abroad — especially politically connected former State Duma aides such as Butina — can be tapped to act informally as the “overt face of covert operations.”

Ambitious young professionals who wish to maintain professional options at home, said longtime Russian affairs reporter Danila Galperovich, often have little choice but to accommodate the intelligence inquiries, which, for many, inevitably blurs boundaries between networking, lobbying and espionage.

“Can they be approached at any time? Yeah, absolutely, the same way, if we’re perfectly honest, a congressional aide in Washington can be approached by the CIA,” said Mark Galeotti, a globally renowned expert on Russian intelligence.

“But is there any evidence of her being a spy in the sense of someone who actually works for the Russian intelligence apparatus? For me, the answer is absolutely not,” said Galeotti. “I think what this all simply reflects is the way modern Russia works. That you have all kinds of different individuals and agencies who are pushing their own agendas, but also with an eye on whether their actions are likely to fit the kind of interests that we think the Kremlin has. Because, if you can pull off something that is a value to the Kremlin, then you will be rewarded.”

As Galeotti tells it, Russia’s president sets broad policy directives, “and then all these scurrying little entrepreneurs will use whatever leverage or interest they themselves have — and it may be totally different if you’re an ambassador compared to if you’re a journalist compared to if you’re whatever else” — to further those Kremlin interests.

“If they fail? Well, the Kremlin’s no worse off; it can deny anything and it hasn’t spent a penny,” he said. “But if they succeed, then sometimes the Kremlin will actually reach in and, in effect, takeover an operation, or simply reward them for a job well done.”

Calling Butina “ambitious in a perfectly normal way,” Galeotti said her long history of advocating gun rights made the NRA a logical place to network.

“She has a personal and passionate commitment to this issue of the right to bear arms, and therefore she obviously wants to have connections, she wants to have some sense of meaning,” he said. “Because of the extent to which the NRA and the Republican Party are incestuously intertwined, you can’t really network in one without the other.

For Galeotti, the best way to detect the presence of formal intelligence directives is by identifying a given suspect’s behavioral anomalies.

“Look at friendships pursued that, otherwise, just don’t seem to make sense or seem to fit a pattern,” he said. “Quite frankly, if one looks at what Butina was doing, it all seems pretty consistent with someone who’s just trying to see where she can get, see what she can do.”

Galeotti also said that former Senator Torshin, who declined multiple phone and email requests for interview, has long operated in this gray area between personal ambition and political favor.

“If you operate in Russia, you know this,” said Galeotti. “Everyone is constantly looking for what kind of blat, what kind of connections, what kind of leverage they can find. That’s just the nature of this environment.”

However, Yuri Shvets, a former KGB major who worked in the Washington office of the Soviet First Chief Directorate, the intelligence organization responsible for foreign operations, said the NRA has been a target of Soviet infiltration since at least the 1980s.

“She is certainly an ‘agent’ [of the Russian government], whether an active duty one or just an ‘agent of influence’ that I don’t know,” added Shvets, who defected to the West in the early 1990s. “But after the Anna Chapman story, I wouldn’t be surprised by anything.”

In June, American prosecutors said Butina possessed materials indicating direct communication with a Russian intelligence service, although a December Department of Justice affidavit summarizing charges against Butina cites none.

American parallels

Driving to the Butin family home, Valeriy’s gray late-model Nissan shoots down a snowy stretch of canopied coniferous byway about 32 kilometers west of Barnaul. I tell him that I can see why Solzhenitsyn chose voluntary exile in the U.S. state of Vermont, and that the surrounding pines could pass for a postcard from there.

“I’ve heard it’s lovely,” he said. “But we’ve got more bears.”

Does the lifelong hunter advocate the pistol legalization his daughter championed?

“I’m not as political as my daughter is,” he said after some hesitation. “But I think it’s important that one should at least have the right, if only for personal protection.

“Look at this guy in Kerch,” he said, referring to an October shooting at a polytechnic college in Russian-occupied Crimea that claimed 20 victims.

“This young man bought a gun absolutely legally and goes on rampage, but nobody could do anything because of gun restrictions. What if just one other person there had had a gun?

“Guns are deadly, but someone could be attacked with a frying pan or beaten to death by fists. To me legalization just means you can have an opportunity to protect yourself against these insane people, and they’re everywhere. They’re here and in America, too.”

As the road crests, we bear left down a snow-rutted unpaved access lane leading into a sprawling warren of scattered structures that betray a range of income levels. Some homes are new, some are old or restored, and a handful were abandoned mid-construction, the skeletal rebar-and-cement casualties of Russia’s chronic boom-and-bust economic cycles.

Waiting for Maria

Entering the Butin family drive, an automated steel gate slides open, revealing a low-slung structure all but buried in snow. On setting foot in the entryway, Maria’s younger sister, Marina, crosses the house to greet us and insists on taking our coats.

“You’re from Washington,” she sighs in almost unaccented English. “Such a cool city.”

Placing an arm around a sprightly older woman who emerges from the kitchen, Marina introduces her grandmother.

“This is the American?” she asks Marina, who nods.

“Welcome,” says the older woman, offering a hand and holding tight with a lengthy penetrating stare.”I’ll put on some tea.”

Arrayed on a table are family albums that chronicle the achievements of each Butin child. The photos and clippings show just how much academic engagement and school-based events were an organizing principle in the Butin household, which, until Maria left for university, had been located within a half-block of a primary school.

At only 24, Maria’s younger sister holds multiple degrees from one of Russia’s elite polytechnic universities in St. Petersburg, where she has since joined an electronics manufacturing firm.

Like both of her parents, she is an engineer. Also like both of her parents, she learned of Maria’s incarceration via news reports.

“I was in the car, going to work and I didn’t know what had happened,” says Marina, who says she spoke with her older sister at least once weekly until the arrest.

“I was confused and then heard her name and just pulled over and fell silent,” she recalls. “I thought it was fake news, and then I thought maybe after two days everything would be okay, that this was all a big misunderstanding.”

Since hearing the news on television that same morning, Valeriy says his impression of the accusations is unchanged.

“I can only imagine it must have been Maria’s legal ignorance about the details of these [lobbying] laws that her absolutely friendly activities resulted in such an accusation,” he says, insisting that his daughter was fond of the United States and wanted to see relations improved.”Maria couldn’t possibly wish any harm to the country where she was studying, that she treats with great respect.”

Maria’s mother, Irina, says Maria had often spoken taking “part in some global decisions that are being undertaken for (her) country and to be a public figure.”

“Masha did these things without any deliberate intentions,” she says. “I am confident that any illegal activity resulted from her legal ignorance, her young years, her drive, persistence, and of course some naïveté.”

Although the U.S. indictment refutes that opinion, the family remains hopeful that their daughter will be deported immediately after her mid-February hearing, and that U.S.-Russian ties can be salvaged.

“Our two countries are simply obliged to exist peacefully, at a minimum,” says Valeriy. “But even better, we can have absolutely friendly, good relations.”

Asked what he would say directly to President Donald Trump and other top U.S. officials, Valeriy appeared to have tears welling in his eyes.

“It is difficult to say what one could say to the U.S. president, as well as to the Secretary of State,” he says. “But if something will depend on them, I would ask them to release her as soon as possible.”

Asked if Russian officials have been adequately supportive, he exhales in mild exasperation. Although Russian officials have amplified the case via state-media news interviews, the family says they remain dependent upon crowdfunding to deal with more than $500,000 in legal fees.

Characteristically polite, Valeriy asks us to convey a message to Maria’s defense lawyers.

“I am tremendously grateful for their diligence and impartiality, their faith in the fact that Maria should not be punished,” he said before drawing a parallel to a positive memory from the Cold War.

“There was a situation between our countries, quite a tough one dating back to the presidency of Ronald Reagan and General Secretary Yuri Andropov,” he says. “A young American girl named Samantha Smith wrote a letter to Andropov in very human and straightforward tone that ultimately fostered a kind of détente in Cold War tensions. It seems to me there is now some similarity to that situation.”

Regardless of whether her upcoming court ruling can help mend relations, Maria’s younger sister sees the good that is resulting from her sister’s incarceration.

“I want her to stand firm and know that, despite the conditions of solitary confinement, the large distance separating us, she is actually the one keeping us all in the right mind set,” she says. “She reminds us that everything will be tackled, that everything will be okay, that truth and justice will prevail.”

“These are the basics we laid from childhood,” says Irina, calling their family bonds the “thread” to which her daughter holds tight in a Virginia jail.

Even for professor Emeshin, the weighty darkness of a naïve, high-energy extrovert stuck in solitary confinement may yet have one silver lining.

“She is unusually talented, an incredibly clever girl, you can’t deny that,” he said earlier that day. “That’s why she chose the path of public life, why she took charge of the school’s information center, joined our public chamber and quickly leaped to federal-level work.”

For better or worse, he said, she’s found herself in the high-profile international role she always sought.

“Quite a complicated one, yes, but still a real experience,” he said. “She’s now well-known and, like any decent and honest person from this country, she’ll come to occupy a worthy spot in Russia’s political sphere.”

Olga Pavlova in Moscow, Ricardo Marquina in Barnaul, Igor Tsikhanenka in Washington contributed to this report.

Europe’s Right-Wing Populists Unite, but Face Rivalry on the Street

From Sweden to southern Spain, and the Netherlands to Hungary, populist forces have gained seats in recent elections and they now see a chance at power in Brussels itself.

Europe is gearing up for EU parliament elections in May, a vote where the balance of power could shift decisively.

The campaigns are getting under way amid the fevered atmosphere of street protests in France and many other EU states, alongside growing brinkmanship in the negotiations on Britain’s imminent withdrawal from the bloc.

The 751 members of the European Parliament (or MEPs) are directly elected every five years, and they form the legislative body of the bloc which has the power to pass EU laws and approve the appointment of EU commissioners.

Populist forces, backed by the power of street protests, look set to make the coming vote unlike any other in the bloc’s history, according to analyst Michael Cottakis of the London School of Economics. He is also director of the ’89 Initiative,’ which seeks to engage younger generations in European decision-making.

“It’s an opportunity to hit the piñata when the establishment presents it to you and get your policy opinions across,” Cottakis told VOA. “Generally we’ve seen that the European elections have been a sort of locus in which angry, disaffected citizens essentially voice their concerns – the height of a delayed populist political backlash against a long period of economic hardship.”

In France, far-right leader Marine Le Pen is seeking to align her National Rally party with the yellow vest protesters.

Coordinated May assault

Across Europe, populist forces are attempting a coordinated assault on the May elections. Italy’s far-right interior minister recently weighed in on the French protests, posting a video on social media in which he said he hoped “that the French can free themselves from a terrible president, and the opportunity will come on May 26.”

The minister, Matteo Salvini, is trying to form alliances with governments in Hungary and Poland. Their common foe is immigration — but there are major contradictions, says analyst Luigi Scazzieri of the Center for European Reform.

“With Italy wanting other countries to take migrants but Hungary, for example, having absolutely no intention of doing so. So the real question is, will they be able to work together to form an effective group?'”

That’s unlikely, says Michael Cottakis, citing other significant policy differences among Europe’s populist governments.

“Italy is a member of the eurozone, Poland is not. And then in terms of foreign policy, very importantly, Poland is a great believer in the NATO alliance, terrified of Russia, greatly mistrusting of Vladimir Putin; whereas Salvini has openly expressed support.”

Street fights back

Political battle lines are being drawn, colors nailed to the mast. Several hundred self-styled red scarf’ protesters staged counter-demonstrations in Paris Sunday, waving EU flags and voicing support for pro-EU President Emmanuel Macron of France.

In Hungary, the EU flag has been at the forefront of growing anti-government demonstrations. In Germany meanwhile, the Green party has overtaken the far right Alternative for Germany’ party in the polls.

Populists are fast discovering they do not have a monopoly on the street. The real test of strength will come at the ballot box on May 26, a vote that could change the balance of power in Europe.

Медведчук закликав створити «автономний регіон Донбас» і записати це в Конституцію

Голова політради партії «Опозиційна платформа – за життя» Віктор Медведчук заявив 29 січня про необхідність створення «автономного регіону Донбас» і закріплення цього статусу в Конституції України. У виступі на партійному з’їзді Медведчук заявив, що його політична сила має план встановлення миру на Донбасі.

«План… передбачає створення автономного регіону Донбас у складі України – зі своїм парламентом, урядом і іншими органами влади», – вказав політик.

Медведчук вважає, що домовленості можуть бути досягнуті у чотирикутнику Київ – Донецьк –Луганськ – Москва.

Медведчук на з’їзді партії «Опозиційна платформа – за життя» висловив підтримку кандидату в президенти України Юрію Бойку. З’їзд ухвалив висунути цю кандидатуру на виборах.

Представниця президента України у Верховній Раді Ірина Луценко заявила в ефірі «5 каналу», коментуючи висловлювання Медведчука, що його позиція є віддзеркаленням поглядів президента Росії Володимира Путіна.

«Вважайте, Путін словами Медведчука сказав «хочу Донбас» так, як він захотів Крим… Медведчук на замовлення Путіна чітко розуміє, що їм треба вкинути ту автономію, через яку, можливо, він зможе управляти політичними процесами всередині України», – сказала Ірина Луценко.

Станом на 29 січня Центральна виборча комісія зареєструвала 23 кандидати в президенти України. Чинний президент Петро Порошенко 29 січня заявив про висунення своєї кандидатури на другий термін на посаді.

Слідчі ДБР розслідують 3 417 кримінальних проваджень – Труба

150 обвинувальних актів вже скеровано до суду – директор Державного бюро розслідувань України

У Запоріжжі на честь Героїв Крут запалили смолоскипи

У Запоріжжі День пам’яті Героїв Крут відзначили смолоскипною ходою. Її учасники пройшли центральним проспектом Запоріжжя від міськради до майдану Героїв революції, де відбувся мітинг. 

«Між 2019 роком і 1918 ром можна провести паралель, адже з початком російсько-української війни саме молодь 17–18 років, добровольці, молоді хлопці пішли захищати свою державу. Так само, як і крутянці, вони не мали належної підготовки військової. Так само, як і крутянці, які всього тиждень готувались до бою, так само наші хлопці зараз. І досі ми втрачаємо молодих героїв. Дуже шкода, але ми обов’язково йдемо до перемоги», – розповіла організаторка акції Ярина Геращенко. 

Смолоскипна хода на знак вшанування пам’яті Героїв Крут відбувається в Запоріжжі п’ятий рік поспіль. 

Бій під Крутами відбувся 29 січня 1918 року на залізничній станції в сучасній Чернігівській області за 130 кілометрів на північний схід від Києва. Цей бій між 4-тисячною більшовицькою армією Михайла Муравйова та загоном із київських студентів і бійців вільного козацтва, що загалом нараховував близько 400 людей, тривав 5 годин. 27 юнаків потрапили після бою в полон до більшовиків та були страчені. 

У березні 1918 року, після підписання більшовиками Брестської мирної угоди та з поверненням уряду УНР до Києва, Центральна Рада вирішила урочисто перепоховати полеглих студентів на Аскольдовій могилі у Києві. Щороку в Україні урочисто вшановують пам’ять Героїв Крут.

Понад 129 тисяч українців отримали безоплатну правову допомогу адвокатів у 2018 році – Мін’юст

Понад 129 тисяч українців отримали безоплатну правову допомогу адвокатів у кримінальних, цивільних та адміністративних справах у 2018 році, повідомив міністр юстиції України Павло Петренко.

За його словами, інтереси ще майже 35 тисяч українців у суді захистили працівники центрів безоплатної правової допомоги. Ще понад 550 тисяч українців отримали консультації та роз’яснення від співробітників БПД.

«Лише минулого року нашим захисникам вдалося домогтися виправдувальних вироків у 280 кримінальних провадженнях. Це значить, що ще 280 невинуватих українців було врятовано від тюрми. Якби не було наших адвокатів, всі ці люди, за часто сфабрикованими для забезпечення гарної статистики справами, потрапили б за грати, а їхнє життя назавжди було б зруйноване тавром злочинця», – сказав Петренко.

Він стверджує, що 64,9% від усіх, хто звернувся за допомогою, становили малозабезпечені особи, 13,6% – особи з інвалідністю, 9,3% – внутрішньо переміщені особи, 8,9% – учасники бойових дій, 1,5% – діти.

Порошенко йде на вибори президента

Президент України Петро Порошенко заявив про наміри взяти участь у виборах президента в березні 2019 року.

«Почуття глибокої відповідальності перед країною, перед сучасниками, перед минулими і прийдешніми поколіннями спонукало мене ухвалити рішення кандидувати ще раз на посаду президента України», – сказав Порошенко на форумі «Від Крут до Брюсселя. Ми йдемо своїм шляхом».

Він обраний президентом України на позачергових виборах у травні 2014 року.

Наступні вибори призначені на 31 березня 2019 року. До 9 лютого 2019 року буде оголошений остаточний список претендентів на посаду глави держави.