Posted on December 9, 2018
Порошенко заявив, що звернувся до очільника УПЦ (МП) для звільнення українських моряків
Президент України Петро Порошенко звернувся до очільника Української православної церкви (Московського патріархату) Онуфрія для звільнення захоплених Росією українських моряків. Про це він заявив в інтерв’ю телеканалу «Перший західний», яке вийшло в ефір 8 грудня.
«Вчора і позавчора я мав розмову з предстоятелем Української православної церкви Московського патріархату блаженнійшим Онуфрієм. Звернувся до нього з проханням негайно зв’язатися з Москвою для того, щоб по лінії церкви вжити відповідних заходів для того, щоб повернути (наших моряків – ред.)», – сказав Порошенко.
Він додав, що Росія має бути притягнута до відповідальності, якщо не звільнить моряків.
25 листопада російські прикордонники ФСБ у Керченській протоці відкрили вогонь по українських кораблях, які йшли з Одеси до Маріуполя, і захопили три кораблі й 24 членів їхніх екіпажів. Троє українських військових при цьому були поранені.
Росія звинувачує захоплених українських моряків у «незаконному перетині державного кордону». Українська прокуратура визнала їх військовополоненими.
26 листопада, після подій у Керченській протоці Верховна Рада ухвалила запровадження воєнного стану у низці областей України.
НА ЦЮ Ж ТЕМУ:
(Радіоперехоплення переговорів російського командування з екіпажами кораблів Росії щодо атаки на човни ВМС України)
(Відео моменту, коли корабель Росії цілеспрямовано таранить український човен у Керченській протоці)
Порошенко про маршрут кораблів в Азов: везти суходолом – це «віддати Керченську протоку росіянам»
Керченська криза: 97 євродепутатів закликали запровадити санкції проти Росії
Країни «Групи семи» закликали Росію звільнити українських моряків
Полонений моряк ВМС у кримському «суді» попросив перекладача з російської – адвокат
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Posted on December 9, 2018
Paris Cleans Up After Latest Riot; Nearly 1,800 Arrested
Nearly 1,800 people were arrested Saturday across France in the latest round of “yellow vest” protests.
Nationwide, the Interior Ministry says some 136,000 people rallied against France’s high-cost of living. Protesters also expressed their dismay with the presidency of Emmanuel Macron.
Protests were mounted in a number of cities besides Paris, including Marseilles, Bordeaux, Lyon and Toulouse.
The ministry said Sunday 1,723 people were arrested nationwide, with 1,220 of them ordered held in custody.
Parisian police said they made 1,082 arrests Saturday, a sharp increase from last week’s 412 arrests.
Meanwhile, tourist destinations, including the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre Museum, reopened and workers cleaned up broken glass Sunday.
The man who unleashed the anger, President Emmanuel Macron, broke his silence to tweet his appreciation for the police overnight, but pressure mounted on him to propose new solutions to calm the anger dividing France.
On Saturday, French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said violent outbreaks in Paris were “under control” despite ongoing disorderly acts he declared “totally unacceptable.”
French police supported by armored vehicles fired tear gas at yellow-vested protesters on the Champs Elysees.
Castaner estimated 10,000 demonstrators had taken to Parisian streets.
He said 135 people had been injured, including 17 police officers.
France closed the Eiffel Tower and other tourist landmarks and mobilized tens of thousands of security forces for the fourth week of violent demonstrations.
Many shops in Paris were boarded up before Saturday’s protests to avoid being smashed or looted, and police cordoned off many of the city’s broad boulevards.
Despite what Castaner said were “exceptional” security measures, protesters still smashed store windows and clashed with police.
More than 89,000 police were deployed nationwide, an increase from 65,000 last weekend.
Police in central Paris removed any materials from the streets that could be used as weapons or projectiles during the demonstrations, including street furniture at outdoor cafes.
Macron made an unannounced visit Friday night to a group of anti-riot security officers outside Paris to thank them for their work.
The protests erupted in November over a fuel tax increase, which was part of Macron’s plan to combat global warming.
French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe called for new talks Saturday with representatives of the “yellow vest” movement. He vowed the government would address their concerns over rising living costs.
“The president will speak, and will propose measures that will feed this dialogue,” Philippe said in a televised statement.
WATCH: Clashes and Hundreds Detained in France in ‘Yellow Vest’ Protests
U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted Saturday that the Paris Agreement, a global effort to reduce global warming beginning in 2020, “isn’t working out so well for Paris” and that “People do not want to pay large sums of money … in order to protect the environment.”
Since the unrest began in November, four people have been killed in protest-related accidents.
While Macron has since abandoned the fuel tax hike, protesters have made new demands to address other economic issues hurting workers, retirees and students.
Government officials are concerned the repeated weekly violence could weaken the economy and raise doubts about the government’s survival.
Officials are also concerned about far-right, anarchist and anti-capitalist groups like Black Bloc that have attached themselves to the “yellow vest” movement.
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Posted on December 9, 2018
World Marks Anti-Corruption Day
Corruption costs the world economy $2.6 trillion each year, according to the United Nations, which is marking International Anti-Corruption Day on Sunday.
“Corruption is a serious crime that can undermine social and economic development in all societies. No country, region or community is immune,” the United Nations said.
The cost of $2.6 trillion represents more than 5 percent of global GDP.
The world body said that $1 trillion of the money stolen annually through corruption is in the form of bribes.
Patricia Moreira, the managing director of Transparency International, told VOA that about a quarter of the world’s population has paid a bribe when trying to access a public service over the past year, according to data from the Global Corruption Barometer.
Moreira said it is important to have such a day as International Anti-Corruption Day because it provides “a really tremendous opportunity to focus attention precisely on the challenge that is posed by corruption around the world.”
Anti-corruption commitments
To mark the day, the United States called on all countries to implement their international anti-corruption commitments including through the U.N. Convention against Corruption.
In a statement Friday, the U.S. State Department said that corruption facilitates crime and terrorism, as well as undermines economic growth, the rule of law and democracy.
“Ultimately, it endangers our national security. That is why, as we look ahead to International Anticorruption Day on Dec. 9, we pledge to continue working with our partners to prevent and combat corruption worldwide,” the statement said.
Moreira said that data about worldwide corruption can make the phenomena understandable but still not necessarily “close to our lives.” For that, we need to hear everyday stories about people impacted by corruption and understand that it “is about our daily lives,” she added.
She said those most impacted by corruption are “the most vulnerable people — so it’s usually women, it’s usually poor people, the most marginalized people in the world.”
The United Nations Development Program notes that in developing countries, funds lost to corruption are estimated at 10 times the amount of official development assistance.
What can be done to fight corruption?
The United Nations designated Dec. 9 as International Anti-Corruption Day in 2003, coinciding with the adoption of the United Nations Convention against Corruption by the U.N. General Assembly.
The purpose of the day is to raise awareness about corruption and put pressure on governments to take action against it.
Tackling the issue
Moreira said to fight corruption effectively it must be tackled from different angles. For example, she said that while it is important to have the right legislation in place to curb corruption, governments must also have mechanisms to enforce that legislation. She said those who engage in corruption must be held accountable.
“Fighting corruption is about providing people with a more sustainable world, with a world where social justice is something more of our reality than what it has been until today,” she said.
Moreira said change must come from a joint effort from governments, public institutions, the private sector and civil society.
The U.S. Statement Department said in its Friday statement that it pledges “to continue working with our partners to prevent and combat corruption worldwide.”
It noted that the United States, through the U.S. Department of State and U.S. Agency for International Development, helps partner nations “build transparent, accountable institutions and strengthen criminal justice systems that hold the corrupt accountable.”
Moreira said that it is important for the world to see that there are results to the fight against corruption.
“Then we are showing the world with specific examples that we can fight against corruption, [that] yes there are results. And if we work together, then it is something not just that we would wish for, but actually something that can be translated into specific results and changes to the world,” she said.
VOA’s Elizabeth Cherneff contributed to this report.
Posted on December 9, 2018
Armenia Holds Snap Election for Parliament
Armenians are casting their votes in early parliamentary elections Sunday.
Reformist leader Nikol Pashinian, 43, swept to power in May after weeks of anti-government protests that forced the sudden resignation of Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan, who was also a former president of Armenia.
Sargsyan’s ruling Republican Party, however, blocked Pashinian’s bid to become prime minister, resulting in more protests. The Republican Party then decided to back Pashinian for what it said was the good of the nation.
Pashinian became prime minister, but recently stepped down so parliament could be dissolved for the early election. He remains Armenia’s acting prime minister.
Analysts expect him to be re-instated in office, with his My Step alliance in control of parliament.
Pashinian, a former newspaper editor who had been imprisoned for his activism, has promised to maintain close ties with Russia and fight corruption. He has also pledged to “step up cooperation with the United States and European Union.”
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Posted on December 8, 2018
Clashes and Hundreds Detained in France Amid New "Yellow Vest’ Protests Saturday
In France, police clashed with protesters, as tens of thousands of ‘yellow vest’ demonstrators took to the streets Saturday for the fourth consecutive weekend. Reports say at least 135 people have been injured.
French authorities deployed nearly 90,000 police across the country, detained hundreds of people and closed major landmarks and museums out of precaution. Anti-government yellow vest rallies also took place in nearby Belgium and the Netherlands.
It’s becoming a familiar sound — and smell: teargas lobbed by riot police against so-called yellow vest protesters. Demonstrators sporting fluorescent yellow jackets were out in force again in Paris and across the country, protesting against a range of grievances, including low wages and high taxes.
Around the iconic Champs Elysees, demonstrators clashed with police, set fire to barricades and attacked stores. Armored vehicles rumbled through the streets.
Paris area janitor Jonathan Gonzales wore “Resistance Macron” scrawled on his yellow vest — referring to French President Emmanuel Macron, whose popularity has plunged to record lows.
Gonzales said France is one of the world’s richest nations, but the French people are poor because of decades of government mismanagement. He wants higher minimum wage and lower salaries for government leaders.
Other protesters brandished slogans like “Macron resign” … and “Listen to the anger of the people.” Many criticize a raft of tough reforms the government says are needed to make France more competitive. They claim the president only cares about the rich, not the poor.
The yellow vest protests began against a planned fuel tax hike, aimed to help fight climate change. But while the government has since scrapped the increase, the demonstrations continue, by a movement with no clear leadership or demands.
Protester Olivier Goldfarb says people can’t live on what they earn. The working and middle classes pay more taxes than the more affluent.”
Another protester, giving only his first name Hugo, had broader complaints.
“We’re protesting against a system that doesn’t work, but it’s not up to me to say we should do that or we should do that,” said Hugo. “It’s up to the professional politicians. We send a message that it doesn’t work anymore. Now do something, and do it quickly.”
Polls show public support for the yellow vests is still high, despite the violence. Senior citizen Eliane Daubigny and her husband watched the demonstrations unroll early Saturday.
Daubigny said she understood the concerns of protesters who have a hard time making ends meet. But she also knows how people live in Madagascar — and believes the French are pretty spoiled by comparison.
Many stores were shuttered around hot spots like the Champs Elysees. Others were still boarded up from last week’s rioting that cost Paris alone millions of dollars in damage. Restaurants, hotels and stores have lost business during this holiday season.
Meanwhile, thousands of other French joined a very different protest on Saturday — marching in the capital and other cities for more action to fight climate change. In some cases, yellow vests joined the demonstrations.
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Posted on December 8, 2018
Порошенко: закон про мову має бути узгоджений з європейськими моделями мовної політики
Законопроект «Про забезпечення функціонування української мови як державної» має бути узгоджений з європейськими моделями мовної політики «з огляду на майбутнє членство» України в Євросоюзі, і позбавлений кон’юнктури, заявляє президент України Петро Порошенко.
«Я не був прихильником того, щоб його розгляд проходив напередодні виборчої кампанії. Я не хочу, щоб хтось спекулював на цій темі, оскільки мова – це точно не тема для спекуляцій. Стратегічний для України закон повинен бути точно позбавлений будь-якої кон’юнктури. Закон про українську мову має бути на віки, на століття, на покоління українців», – сказав Порошенко, виступаючи 8 грудня у Львові на урочистостях з нагоди 150-річчя створення товариства «Просвіта».
Читайте також: Закон про мову: що саме ухвалила Верховна Рада після палких дебатів
Президент наголосив, що єдиною мовою в Україні буде українська, яка «зміцнює єдність української політичної нації», але при цьому буде широкий простір для використання інших мов.
4 жовтня Верховна Рада підтримала в першому читанні законопроект про забезпечення функціонування української мови як державної.
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Posted on December 8, 2018
Battle of Wills: Tiny Order of French Nuns Takes on Vatican
The Vatican has an unusual dilemma on its hands after nearly all the nuns in a tiny French religious order threatened to renounce their vows rather than accept the Holy See’s decision to remove their superior.
The sisters argue that the Vatican commissioners sent to replace their superior general, who is also the niece of the order’s founder, have no understanding of their way of life or spirituality. The church’s conclusion — contained in a summary of its investigation provided this week to The Associated Press — is that the Little Sisters of Marie, Mother of the Redeemer are living “under the tight grip” of an “authoritarian” superior and feel a “serious conflict of loyalty” toward her.
The standoff marks an extraordinary battle of wills between the Vatican hierarchy and the group of 39 nuns, most in their 60s and 70s, who run homes for the aged in rural western and southern France. Their threat to leave comes at a time when the Catholic Church can hardly spare them, with the number of sisters plummeting in Europe and the Americas.
The unlikely revolt had been brewing for years but erupted in 2017, when the Vatican suspended the Little Sisters’ government and ordered the superior, Mother Marie de Saint Michel, removed. The Vatican says it took action after local church investigations in 2010 and 2016 found an excessive authoritarianism in her rule and serious problems of governance.
Details of her alleged abuses of authority haven’t been revealed. But within two years of her election as superior in 2000, six sisters had left, church officials say.
“The grave acts posed by Mother Marie de Saint Michel are denounced and the sisters are called to religious and responsible behavior,” the prefect of the Vatican’s congregation for religious, Cardinal Joao Braz di Aviz, wrote the nuns in July.
By then, Braz had already appointed a commissioner and two deputies to run the order. But the Little Sisters refused to accept them and kept Saint Michel in place in the mother house.
As the standoff escalated, 34 of the 39 nuns issued an extraordinary public declaration last month saying they had no other choice but to ask to be relieved of their religious vows.
“We are not making this sacrifice lightly,” they wrote. “We wish to remain in total communion with the church but we cannot signify more clearly, or more painfully either, our incapacity in conscience to obey what we are commanded to do.”
Their plight has garnered sympathy. A French support group, the Support Association of the Little Sisters of Marie, claims to have gotten 3,900 signatures for an online petition demanding the immediate restoration of the central government of the order and removal of the commissioners.
“We are in a situation of blockage,” said Marcel Mignot, president of the support association.
The sisters downplay problems with their superior and say the real dispute is over their local bishop’s decision to split up management of their elder-care homes that had been merged in recent years. They say the bishop used his authority to impose an unjust decision on them without taking their views or the financial implications into account.
“This is about power,” Mignot said, referring to the bishop’s authority over diocesan orders.
The sisters have appealed his decision to the Vatican’s high court “so that the truth can be re-established, but Roman justice takes its time,” the sisters wrote their supporters earlier this year.
Their cherished community was founded in 1954 in Toulouse by Marie Nault, a woman who, according to legend, stopped her formal education at age 11 to work on the family farm but possessed such spirituality that she developed the stigmata — the bleeding wounds that imitate those of Christ on the cross.
Nault took the name Mere Marie de la Croix — Mother Mary of the Cross — and opened four communities in western and southern France which, in 1989, won approval from the bishop to become a diocesan institute of consecrated life.
Born in 1901, Mother Marie died in 1999 and her niece, the current ousted superior, took over a year later. She remains at the mother house in Saint-Aignan sur Roë, in western France. She had been due to step down after her term was up and a new superior was elected, but plans for the election are now in limbo, Mignot said.
The standoff with the Little Sisters comes amid a continuing free-fall in the number of nuns around the world, as elderly sisters die and fewer young ones take their place. The most recent Vatican statistics from 2016 show the number of sisters was down 10,885 from the previous year to 659,445 globally. Ten years prior, there were 753,400 nuns around the world, meaning the Catholic Church shed nearly 100,000 sisters in the span of a decade.
European nuns regularly fare the worst, seeing a decline of 8,370 sisters in 2016 on top of the previous year’s decline of 8,394, according to Vatican statistics.
The Vatican, in its conclusions about the case, said it believed that the majority of the Little Sisters “truly want to follow the Lord in a life of prayer and sacrifice.”
While lamenting the “tight grip” that the superior has over them, the Vatican’s congregation for religious orders told AP that most sisters had been kept in the dark about the management dispute over the elder-care homes — details that even the Vatican commissioners haven’t fully ascertained since they haven’t been able to access the institutes’ finances, the Vatican summary said.
In the past, the Vatican has not been afraid to impose martial law on religious orders, male or female, when they run into trouble, either for financial, disciplinary or other reasons.
St. John Paul II famously appointed his own superiors to run the Jesuits in 1981, some 200 years after Pope Clement XIV suppressed the order altogether. Pope Benedict XVI imposed a years-long process of reform on the Legion of Christ order and its lay branches after its founder was determined to be a pedophile. More recently, the Vatican named a commissioner to take over a traditionalist order of priests and nuns, the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate.
Nevertheless, the standoff with the Little Sisters is unusual, said Gabriella Zarri, retired professor of history and expert in women’s religious orders at the University of Florence.
“It’s serious, but it’s also serious that these nuns would do such a violent act as to threaten to leave religious life,” she said. “It’s difficult to understand, other than perhaps because of their attachment to the charism of the founder” and her niece.
Sabina Pavone, a professor of modern history at the University of Macerata, said Catholic archives — especially from Inquisition trials — are full of cases of the Vatican taking action when religious superiors assume “tyrannical” powers over their devoted followers.
While many of the cases date to the period of tremendous growth of religious orders for women in the 1800s, she added, “we shouldn’t be surprised that you find them today” as well.
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Posted on December 8, 2018
Телеканал «24» покаже спецпроект Радіо Свобода до дня боротьби з корупцією
9 грудня, в Міжнародний день боротьби із корупцією на телеканалі новин «24» о 19:30 відбудеться телевізійна прем’єра документального спецпроекту Радіо Свобода – «Війна з корупцією: початок».
Після Революції гідності українська влада оголосила війну корупції. Для цього з нуля почали створювати спеціалізований правоохоронний орган – Національне антикорупційне бюро. У його фокусі – корупційні злочини високопосадовців. НАБУ будували за новими для України правилами: керівництво обирали на відкритому конкурсі за участі громадськості, детективів тестували на детекторі брехні. Знімальна група Радіо Свобода задокументувала запуск роботи новоствореної інституції, перші розслідування Бюро щодо найвищих посадовців, спротив політичної еліти і саботаж суддів.
За словами автора спецпроекту Сергія Андрушка, знімальна група спостерігала за НАБУ, починаючи з 2015 року, коли там працювала лише одна людина – його очільник Артем Ситник, і до кінця 2017 року. З кожним новим викриттям і затриманням НАБУ слідувала «відповідь» влади, на кожну активну дію детективів – протидія політичної еліти.
«Зовні це виглядало як зустріч двох різних світів або планет. Мешканців однієї планети обрали за новими вимогами й під пильним контролем. Мешканців іншої планети зміни в суспільстві не торкнулися і вони намагалися жити так, як і до Революції. І от коли дві планети почали зустрічатися одна із одною – з’ясувалося, що у них різні погляди на те, як боротьба із корупцією має виглядати насправді».
Створення Бюро стало лише початком боротьби «нової України» з великою політичною корупцією. Разом зі знімальною групою за подіями навколо НАБУ спостерігала вся країна. Міжнародний день боротьби з корупцією – привід нагадати, як саме це починалося, вважає Сергій Андрушко.
Прем’єра відбудеться 9 грудня, у Міжнародний день боротьби з корупцією, на телеканалі новин «24» о 19:30.
Українська служба Радіо Свобода є підрозділом Радіо Вільна Європа/Радіо Свобода (РВЄ/РС), яке є незалежною медіакорпорацією, котру фінансує Конгрес США. Радіо Свобода поширює інформацію на різних платформах (інтернет, радіо, телебачення) для аудиторії в 23 країнах Східної та Південно-Східної Європи, Кавказу, Центральної Азії і Близького Сходу 25 мовами.
Автор спецпроекту Сергій Андрушко, журналіст, документаліст, працює на Радіо Свобода з липня 2015-го, лауреат премії «Телетріумф» у номінації «Репортер» (2010), переможець конкурсів «Честь професії-2017» у номінації «Найкраще подання резонансного матеріалу» та Асоціації польських журналістів (SDP). За участю Сергія Андрушка як режисера зняті документальний альманах «Відкритий доступ», документальні фільми «Пост Майдан» і «ПротиДія».
Posted on December 8, 2018
Порошенко: Європа та Америка мають закрити свої порти для російських кораблів
Порошенко нагадав, що прохід через Керченську протоку заблокований і для суден, які ходять під прапорами країн ЄС.
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Posted on December 8, 2018
Activists Gather for Climate March in Poland
Several thousand people gathered Saturday amid a heavy police presence in southern Poland for a “March for Climate” to encourage negotiators at climate talks to set ambitious goals.
Activists from around the world gathered in the main square of the city of Katowice where delegates from almost 200 countries are holding a two-week meeting on curbing climate change.
Some of them were dressed as polar bears, some as orangutans, animals that are facing extinction from man-made global warming and deforestation.
They joined in chants of “Wake up, it’s time to save our home,” and held banners including one reading “Defend our Rights to Food, Land, Water,” as large police units and mounted police looked on.
Earlier Saturday, campaign group Climate Action Network said that one of its employees has been allowed to enter Poland after earlier being stopped by border guards citing unspecified security threats.
The group, an alliance of hundreds of organizations from around the world, said Polish authorities gave Belgium-based activist Zanna Vanrenterghem permission to continue to the U.N. climate summit in Katowice.
The Belgian ambassador in Poland, Luc Jacobs, said Polish border guards had provided him with no details about the case but confirmed that Vanrenterghem was admitted into Poland overnight.
CAN had no immediate information about 12 other activists deported or denied entry to Poland in recent days. Poland introduced temporary random identity checks ahead of the conference, arguing they were needed for security.
Posted on December 8, 2018
Top Democrat: Moscow Has Closed Cyber Gap With US
The top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee warns the United States is being outgunned in cyberspace, already having lost its competitive advantage to Russia while China is rapidly closing in.
“When it comes to cyber, misinformation and disinformation, Russia is already our peer and in the areas of misinformation or disinformation, I believe is ahead of us,” Senator Mark Warner told an audience Friday in Washington.
“This is an effective methodology for Russia and it’s also remarkably cheap,” he added, calling for a realignment of U.S. defense spending.
Warner, calling Russia’s election meddling both an intelligence failure and a “failure of imagination,” strongly criticized the White House, key departments and fellow lawmakers for being too complacent in their responses.
As for China, Warner called Beijing’s cyber and censorship infrastructure “the envy of authoritarian regimes around the world” and warned when it comes to artificial intelligence, quantum computing and 5G mobile phone networks, China is “starting to outpace us on these investments by orders of magnitude.”
In contrast, the Democratic senator laid out a more aggressive approach in cyberspace, with the United States leading allies in an effort to establish clear rules and norms for behavior in cyberspace.
He also said it was imperative the U.S. articulate when and where it would respond to cyberattacks.
“Our adversaries continue to believe that there won’t be consequences for their actions,” Warner said. “For Russia and China, it’s pretty much been open season.”
Warner also delivered a stern message to social media companies.
“Major platform companies — like Twitter and Facebook, but also Reddit, YouTube and Tumblr — aren’t doing nearly enough to prevent their platforms from becoming petri dishes for Russian disinformation and propaganda,” he said. “If they don’t work with us, Congress will have to work on its own.”
The Trump administration unveiled a new National Cyber Strategy in September, calling for a more aggressive response to the growing online threat posed by other countries, terrorist groups and criminal organizations.
“We’re not just on defense,” National Security Adviser John Bolton told reporters at the time. “We’re going to do a lot of things offensively, and I think our adversaries need to know that.”
Top U.S. military officials have also said their cyber teams are engaging against other countries, terrorist groups and even criminal organizations on a daily basis.
Warner on Friday praised elements of the new strategy, particularly measures that have allowed the military to respond to attacks more quickly. But, he said, on the whole it is not enough, pointing to Trump’s willingness to “kowtow” to Russian President Vladimir Putin during their Helsinki Summit over Moscow’s election interference efforts.
“No one in the Trump administration in the intel [intelligence] or defense world doesn’t acknowledge what happened in 2016,” he said. “But the fact that the head of our government still [finds] it’s hard to get those words out of his mouth, is a real problem.”
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Posted on December 7, 2018
Former Armenian President Arrested for Deadly Crackdown
An Armenian court on Friday put the nation’s former president in custody on charges linked to a deadly police crackdown on a 2008 protest over alleged voting fraud.
Robert Kocharian, 64, spent two weeks in jail last summer on charges of violating the constitutional order by sending police to break up the protest in the Armenian capital of Yerevan. He was freed on appeal, but on Friday a higher court ordered that he should stay behind bars.
Kocharian’s lawyer said he walked to jail without waiting for police to escort him there.
Kocharian rejects the charges, calling them a political vendetta by incumbent Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, who helped stage the 2008 protest. The demonstration protested the results of an election two weeks earlier for Kocharian’s replacement. Eight demonstrators and two police died in the clash.
“The main organizer of the events … tries to clean himself of blood,” Kocharian said of Pashinian in a statement Friday.
In the 2008 election, Kocharian, who was president from 1998 to 2008, backed Serzh Sargsyan, who served as Armenia’s president for the following decade.
In April, due to term limits, Sargsyan shifted into the prime minister’s seat in what was seen as an attempt to cling to power. But he stepped down after just six days in office in the face of massive protests organized by Pashinian, who then took the prime minister’s post.
Wiretaps released earlier this week had Pashinian discussing Kocharian’s arrest with the nation’s top security official. Pashinian denounced the released recordings as a “declaration of war” by his political foes.
Pashinian has called an early parliamentary election for this Sunday in a bid to win control of parliament, which is still dominated by members of Sargsyan’s Republican Party. Pashinian’s party is expected to sweep the vote.
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Posted on December 7, 2018
Yemen Negotiations Face Numerous Stumbling Blocks on Day Two of Talks
Talks between the opposing sides in the Yemeni conflict are deadlocked on day two of indirect negotiations outside the Swedish capital Stockholm, according to Arab media reports.
U.N. envoy Martin Griffiths has been meeting separately with the Houthi delegation and that of the internationally recognized government.
The conflict in Yemen has been under way for nearly four years, and the second day of talks showed that many difficult issues remain to be resolved.
Media reports say the two sides agreed to release captives, though there is no timetable yet to actually begin releasing prisoners.
But Foreign Minister Khaled al Yamani, head of the delegation of the internationally-recognized government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, told journalists such confidence-building measures are a step forward.
He says that releasing prisoners and forcing the Houthis to allow aid into certain regions of the country that they control, in addition to getting them to withdraw from the (Red Sea port of) Hodeida, were the first steps on the road to peace.
However, Jamal Amr, who is a member of the Houthi delegation from Sanaa, told the BBC Arabic service the two sides remain far apart on who should control Hodeida, but the Houthis “would like to avoid any fighting that could potentially damage the port,” which is essential to bring food aid and other goods into the country.
The U.N. has offered to administer the port, but the Houthis refuse to hand it over.
Another dispute: re-opening Sanaa Airport to commercial air traffic.
The Houthis, who control the airport, say it should re-open to international flights, without forcing planes to be searched for weapons in Saudi-coalition controlled areas.
Hamza al Kamali, deputy minister of youth and sports, says the Hadi government and the Saudi-coalition are worried that without searches, weapons will be smuggled in from outside the country.
He says that the Houthis would like to use Sanaa Airport as a military airport, but that the government side considers that unacceptable and thinks traffic should be limited to food aid and commercial goods.
Other key issues include ending a blockade that has divided Taiz — Yemen’s second largest city — and put some of its population in dire straights.
There are also arguments over control of Yemen’s central bank and payment of government employees. The government of President Hadi insists that revenues be deposited at the central bank branch in Aden, which it controls. Houthis reject that demand.
Yemeni analyst Ezzet Mustapha told Saudi-owned al Arabiya TV that Griffiths “has not done a good job of organizing the talks,” and that he is afraid that they “may degenerate into a battle of rival agendas and irreconcilable demands.” The Houthis, he claims, “are insisting on achieving their political goals before making any concessions.”
Meanwhile, Houthi spokesman Mohammed al Bakhiti, told Arab media that “a new transitional government must be formed (in Sanaa) to replace the Hadi government as well as the Houthi-backed government.” “Then,” he argues, “all the parties inside the country must return to the bargaining table.”
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Posted on December 7, 2018
Порошенко розраховує на підтримку нової очільниці Християнсько-демократичного союзу
Президент України Петро Порошенко привітав Аннегрет Крамп-Карренбауер з обранням головою Християнсько-демократичного союзу Німеччини.
«Розраховую на особисту підтримку пані Аннегрет Крамп-Карренбауер України у впровадженні євроорієнтованих реформ та відсічі російської агресії і відновленні територіальної цілісності нашої держави задля зміцнення миру та безпеки на європейському континенті», – зазначив президент.
На з’їзді Християнсько-демократичного союзу 7 грудня новою главою партії обрали Аннегрет Крамп-Карренбауер. На чолі партії Крамп-Карренбауер змінить Ангелу Меркель, яка займала цю посаду протягом 18 років.
Крамп-Карренбауер відома своєю принциповістю в політиці. Вона, крім іншого, запропонувала в відповідь на дії Росії в Керченській протоці закрити порти західних країн для російських кораблів з Азовського моря, поки Росія «блокує» вхід в нього для українських кораблів.
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Posted on December 7, 2018
Єврокомісар закликав Росію відпустити Сенцова, щоб він зміг отримати премію Сахарова
Єврокомісар Йоганнес Ган закликав Росію відпустити українського режисера Олега Сенцова, щоб він зміг особисто отримати премію Сахарова.
«Наступного тижня український кінорежисер Олег Сенцов буде нагороджений премією Сахарова Європейського парламенту. Засуджений на 20 років в’язниці, він не зможе отримати премію особисто. Тому я повторюся: Дайте Сенцову отримати Сахарова», – написав Ган у Twitter.
Сенцову присудили премію 25 жовтня. Церемонія нагородження повинна відбутися в Страсбурзі 12 грудня.
Сенцов і кримський анархіст Олександр Кольченко були затримані представниками російських спецслужб в анексованому Криму в травні 2014 року за звинуваченням в організації терактів на півострові. У серпні 2015 року суд у російському Ростові-на-Дону засудив Сенцова до 20 років колонії суворого режиму. Кольченко отримав 10 років колонії. Обидва свою провину не визнали.
Правозахисний центр «Меморіал» вніс Сенцова і Кольченка в список політв’язнів.
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Posted on December 7, 2018
Омелян сподівається на угоду про спільний авіапростір з ЄС «на наступний день після Брекзиту»
Міністр інфраструктури України Володимир Омелян сподівається на те, що Україна отримає спільний авіаційний простір із Євросоюзом. Про це він сказав 7 грудня на зустрічі з французьким міністром транспорту Елізабет Борн в рамках свого робочого візиту до Франції, який тривав 6 і 7 грудня.
Під час переговорів Омелян заявив, що Україна зацікавлена в залученні досвіду Франції щодо розвитку авіації, автомобільного і залізничного транспорту.
«Перспективними напрямками є поглиблення партнерських відносин між французькою провідною машинобудівною компанією Alstom і Укрзалізницею. Ринок для Alstom величезний. Потреба України – це більше ніж 1500 локомотивів. Бо Укрзалізниця перевозить більше вантажу, ніж Deutsche Bahn всією Європою. 50% залізничних шляхів електрифіковано, тому у нас є нагальна потреба в електричних локомотивах. Ми приділяємо велику увагу внутрішньому транспорту, і якщо Alstom зайде на ринок, він буде мати можливість долучитися до оновлення муніципального транспорту», – наводить слова міністра прес-служба Мінінфраструктури.
Омелян також подякував Борн за «активну позицію Франції щодо спільного авіаційного простору.
«Фактично стримуючим елементом зараз є відсутність єдиного авіаційного простору між Україною і ЄС. Я дуже сподіваюсь, що наступного дня після Брекзиту ми зможемо підписати цю Угоду», − сказав голова міністерства.
Читайте також: Ні квитків, ні грошей: збій з купівлею квитків «Укрзалізниці» спровокував скандал
Згідно з повідомленням, Елізабет Борн висловила свою підтримку ідеї Угоди про спільний авіаційний простір та зазначила, що компанія Alstom зацікавлена в українському ринку.
Україна і Євросоюз парафували Угоду про спільний авіаційний простір ще в листопаді 2013 року. Але вона досі не підписана в повному обсязі і не набула чинності. Зокрема про підписання цього документу згадував посол України в Білорусі Ігор Кизим як про один із п’яти основних пріоритетів України в рамках програми ЄС «Східне партнерство».
Брекзит – вихід Великої Британії зі складу Європейського Союзу – запланований на 29 березня 2019 року. Процес Брекзиту почався після того, як на референдумі у червні 2016 року трохи більше половини учасників підтримали ідею виходу Великої Британії зі складу Євросоюзу.
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Posted on December 7, 2018
В окупованому Криму продовжать розглядати справу адвоката Курбедінова
У підконтрольному Росії Київському районному суді Сімферополя 7 грудня продовжиться розгляд справи кримського адвоката Еміля Курбедінова.
Початок засідання запланований на 8:30 за київським часом.
Курбедінов вважає, що його затримання російськими силовиками вранці 6 грудня відбувалося «на абсурдній підставі», і він не визнає звинувачень в екстремізмі. Адвокат зазначив, що причиною переслідувань є його правозахисна діяльність, допомога політв’язням і захист українського військового Богдана Небилиці.
Адвокату інкримінують статтю «пропаганда або публічна демонстрація атрибутики або символіки екстремістських організацій» російського кримінального кодексу. Йому загрожує адміністративний арешт за пост у соцмережі «Фейсбук» 2013 року. За словами колег Курбедінова, скаргу на нього написав колишній житель Криму, який переїхав у Дамаск.
За даними юристки Лілі Гемеджі, одним зі свідків у справі Курбедінова проходить співробітник ФСБ Росії Андрій Сушко, який, як вважають, брав участь у затриманні і катуванні кримчанина Рената Параламова.
Напередодні Сушко потрапив у список санкцій США через підозри в причетності до викрадення Параламова.
Управління МВС Росії в анексованому Криму поки що не коментувало цю інформацію.
Posted on December 7, 2018
Російський омбудсмен про поранених українських моряків: лікування дає позитивну динаміку
Уповноважена з прав людини в Росії Тетяна Москалькова заявляє, що відвідала в слідчому ізоляторі «Матроська тиша» трьох українських моряків, які були поранені під час захоплення російськими силовиками кораблів у Керченській протоці.
«Їм надається вся необхідна медична допомога, вони забезпечені необхідними медичними препаратами. Медики оцінюють отримані ними травми як поранення легкого ступеня тяжкості, лікування вже дає позитивну динаміку стану здоров’я. На умови утримання скарг не було», – написала Москалькова в своєму Instagram.
25 листопада російські прикордонники біля берегів анексованого Криму протаранили, обстріляли, а потім захопили три кораблі Військово-морських сил України і 24 членів їхніх екіпажів. Троє з них були поранені.
Російська влада утримує полонених українських моряків у московських СІЗО «Лефортово» і «Матроська тиша» і звинувачує в незаконному перетині кордону. Київ звинувачує російську владу в провокації і називає інцидент в Чорному морі актом агресії. Лідери західних країн вимагають від Росії негайного звільнення українських моряків.
Напередодні міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін повідомив, що українські консули відвідують поранених українських моряків у столиці Росії Москві, і «потім кожен день будуть зустрічатися з іншими – щоби до суботи консули переконалися, в якому вони стані». Про стан поранених у МЗС поки що не повідомляли.
Posted on December 7, 2018
Last Migrant Rescue Ship to End Operations in Mediterranean
The search-and-rescue ship Aquarius, which has helped about 30,000 migrants avoid death in the Mediterranean Sea, is suspending its operations.
The humanitarian groups Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and SOS Mediterranee said European governments were forcing them to end the rescue runs.
The Aquarius has been docked in Marseille, France, since early October after Panama revoked its registration at the behest of the right-wing, anti-immigration Italian government.
The ship has been rescuing migrants who were trying to make the dangerous crossing from Libya to Europe in inadequate rafts and dinghies.
“The end of Aquarius means more lives lost at sea; more avoidable deaths that will go unwitnessed and unrecorded. It really is a case of ‘out of sight, out of mind’ for UK and European leaders as men, women and children perish,” Vickie Hawkins, head of MSF UK, said in a statement.
15,000 deaths
The International Organization for Migration said that about 15,000 migrants have drowned in the central Mediterranean since 2013. An estimated 2,133 have died this year alone.
The Aquarius was the last rescue ship operating in the Mediterranean. Last year, five groups were running rescue ships.
At the height of the migrant influx in 2015 and 2016, NGO vessels worked alongside Italian coast guard ships.
The election of Italy’s coalition government this year on an anti-migrant platform rapidly ended the cooperation, and rescue boats have been prevented from docking in Italian ports. Migrant arrivals in Italy have since fallen to pre-crisis levels following a series of hard-line measures drafted by far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini.
Now rescue missions fall on national coast guard crews from Europe and North Africa, who tend to return the rescued migrants to the country they set off from, usually Libya.
NGO groups describe conditions for the migrants there as “inhuman,” with allegations of arbitrary detention, torture, rape and killings by human smugglers and security forces.
Henry Ridgwell contributed to this report.
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Posted on December 7, 2018
Rescue Efforts Begin for Lone Female Sailor in Arduous Race
A rescue operation began Thursday for a British woman who was sailing solo in an around-the-world race and was stranded in the Southern Ocean after a storm battered her boat.
Susie Goodall texted that she was “safe and secure” after being briefly knocked unconscious when the storm flipped her boat end over end and destroyed its mast.
On the race website, Golden Globe Race officials said they had been in regular radio contact with Goodall since she regained consciousness.
Goodall, 29, was the youngest skipper and the only woman participating in the 48,280-kilometer (30,000-mile) race.
On Wednesday, Goodall texted race officials, “Taking a hammering! Wondering what on earth I’m doing out here,” and sent her position.
Hours later, she tweeted, “Nasty head bang as boat pitchpoled [somersaulted].” She then tweeted that her rig had been “totally & utterly gutted!”
She also reported that she’d lost most of her equipment and was unable to make any makeshift repairs.
Goodall was about 3,200 kilometers (1,990 miles) west of Cape Horn, near the southern tip of South America. Chile diverted a ship to her location to rescue her, and it was expected to reach her Friday.
The race began on July 1 in Les Sables-d’Olonne, France, with 18 skippers from around the world. After Goodall’s exit, just seven remained in the hunt. The race will end at the same port.
The sailors are expected to sail alone, nonstop and without outside assistance. They are also not allowed to use most modern technology, including satellite navigation, and the yachts must have been designed before 1988.
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Posted on December 7, 2018
EU Nations Increasingly Divided over UN Migration Pact
Just days before scores of countries sign up to a landmark U.N. migration pact, a number of European Union nations have begun joining the list of those not willing to endorse the agreement.
The 34-page U.N. Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration is to be formally approved in Marrakech, Morocco, on Dec. 10-11.
The drafting process was launched after all 193 U.N. member states, including the United States under President Barack Obama, adopted in 2016 a declaration saying no country can manage international migration on its own and agreed to work on a global compact
But the United States, under President Donald Trump, pulled out a year ago, claiming that numerous provisions in the pact were “inconsistent with U.S. immigration and refugee policies.”
Despite its non-binding nature, Bulgaria signaled this week that it will not sign the pact, as did Slovakia, whose foreign minister resigned in protest at his government’s stance. Meanwhile, Belgium’s government was teetering on the brink of collapse, riven by coalition differences over the pact.
“It’s way too pro-migration. It doesn’t have the nuance that it needs to have to also comfort European citizens,” Belgium’s migration minister, Theo Francken, said Thursday.
“It’s not legally binding, but it’s not without legal risks,” he said, adding that rights laws are being interpreted widely in EU courts and those rulings are tying the hands of migration policy-makers.
Francken said his right-wing N-VA party wants “nothing to do with it.”
But Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel took the migration agreement to parliament Thursday, where it was approved against the wishes of the N-VA, the biggest party in his governing coalition.
The arrival in Europe in 2015 of well over 1 million migrants — most fleeing conflict in Syria or Iraq — plunged the EU into a deep political crisis over migration, as countries bickered over how to manage the challenge and how much help to provide those countries hardest hit by the influx. Their inability to agree helped fuel support for anti-migrant parties across Europe.
Experts say the pact is an easy target. Leaving it can play well with anti-migrant domestic audiences and pulling out has no obvious negative impacts on governments.
“The ones who opposed the global compact, have they read it? It is only a framework of cooperation with all countries,” EU Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos said Thursday. “It is not binding. It doesn’t put in question national sovereignty.”
Other EU countries to turn their back on the document are Hungary and Poland, which have opposed refugee quotas aimed at sharing the burden of Mediterranean countries like Italy, Greece and more recently Spain, where most migrants are arriving.
But the withdrawal of Austria — holder of the EU’s presidency until the end of the year — has been of high symbolic importance.
Conservative Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, in a coalition with the nationalist, anti-migration Freedom Party, announced Austria’s departure from the pact in October, highlighting “some points that we view critically and where we fear a danger to our national sovereignty.”
Francken said that never before had the head negotiator for the European states, Austria, “pulled out the plug. That gave a lot of political shock effect in all countries.”
It remains to be seen whether North African countries — and others like Turkey, which the EU has outsourced its migrant challenge to — see this as a new sign that migration management can only be done on Europe’s terms.
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Posted on December 6, 2018
Молдова передала Україні головування в ГУАМ
Молдова 6 грудня передала Україні головування у Організації за демократію та економічний розвиток (ГУАМ).
Про це повідомляє міністерство закордонних справ та європейської інтеграції Молдови за підсумками засідання глав зовнішньополітичних відомств країн ГУАМ, що відбулося на полях засідання Міністерської ради ОБСЄ у Мілані.
«Переконаний, що традиція, яка існує в рамках ГУАМ, працювати на основі консенсусу дась змогу державам-членам Організації продовжити плідну та взаємовигідну співпрацю, як на регіональному, так і на міжнародному рівні”, – цитує міністерство слова глави відомства Тудора Ульяновського.
Міністр побажав успіху українським колегам, висловивши впевненість, що ГУАМ буде зміцнювати співробітництво на користь країн-членів та їх громадян.
У 2017 році у Києві пройшов перший за дев’ять років саміт ГУАМ.
Організація за демократію та економічний розвиток ГУАМ із участю Грузії, України, Азербайджану і Молдови була заснована 1997 року. Із 1999 по 2005-й до організації також входив Узбекистан, і тоді вона звалася ГУУАМ. Але це об’єднання так і не стало постійно активною міжнародною організацією, переживши кілька сплесків активності і періодів застою.
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Posted on December 6, 2018
Нацрада оголосила попередження телеканалам NewsOne та «ПравдаТУТ»
Йдеться про порушення правил мовлення у День пам’яті – 100 років з дня початку «червоного терору»
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Posted on December 6, 2018
СБУ: лікарі брали хабар за підтвердження інвалідності військових, 130 тисяч доларів вилучили
За підтвердження законних груп інвалідності столичні лікарі брали хабарі у поранених на Донбасі українських військових, повідомляє Служба безпеки України.
За даними спецслужби, загальна сума вилученого під час обшуків складає 130 тисяч доларів.
«Лікар-експерт Центральної військово-лікарської комісії та голова столичного центру медико-соціальної експертизи налагодили злочинний бізнес на поранених атовцях. За підтвердження законних груп інвалідності вони брали з патріотів данину. Від одного з воїнів, який отримав на сході країни тяжке поранення ноги, ескулапи вимагали понад 40 тисяч гривень», – заявили в СБУ.
Згідно з повідомленням, під час обшуків правоохоронці виявили понад 20 папок із документами бійців української воєнної операції на Донбасі, до кожної з яких був прикріплений конверт із грошима.
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Posted on December 6, 2018
Моґеріні та Лавров обговорили керченську кризу
Верховний представник Євросоюзу з зовнішньої політики та політики безпеки Федеріка Моґеріні обговорила з міністром закордонних справ Росії Сергієм Лавровим затримання російськими військовими українських моряків у Чорному морі. Зустріч відбулася на полях засідання Ради міністрів закордонних справ ОБСЄ у Мілані 6 грудня, повідомила прес-служба російського МЗС.
«На зустрічі обговорювалися ключові питання відносин Росія-ЄС, а також ряд міжнародних тем… Сторони також приділили увагу можливих шляхів виходу з кризової ситуації в Раді Європи», – ідеться в повідомленні.
Москва називає події, що сталися 25 листопада в Чорному морі перед Керченською протокою, «провокаційними діями України».
Міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін наголосив у виступі на засіданні Ради міністрів ОБСЄ 6 грудня, що декларацій у зв’язку з агресією Росії у Керченській протоці недостатньо. «Необхідно терміново дати оперативну та консолідовану міжнародну відповідь на цей акт агресії», – заявив Клімкін.
25 листопада російські прикордонники в Керченській протоці відкрили вогонь по трьох українських кораблях і захопили їх і екіпажі. Підконтрольні Кремлю суди в Криму арештували 24 моряків на два місяці. Зараз вони перебувають у СІЗО в Москві. Українська влада визнає їх військовополоненими, як то визначає міжнародне право.
Країни Заходу засудили дії Росії. В Євросоюзі закликали до «стриманості і деескалації», а генеральний секретар НАТО Єнс Столтенберґ оприлюднив заяву з вимогою до Росії звільнити військовополонених і захоплені кораблі.
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Posted on December 6, 2018
Paris Riots Show Difficulty of Fighting Warming With Taxes
The “yellow vests” in France are worrying greens around the world.
The worst riots in Paris in decades were sparked by higher fuel taxes, and French President Emmanuel Macron responded by scrapping them Wednesday. But taxes on fossil fuels are just what international climate negotiators, meeting in Poland this week, say are desperately needed to help wean the world off of fossil fuels and slow climate change.
“The events of the last few days in Paris have made me regard the challenges as even greater than I thought earlier,” said Stanford University environmental economist Lawrence Goulder, author of the book “Confronting the Climate Challenge.”
Economists, policymakers and politicians have long said the best way to fight climate change is to put a higher price on the fuels that are causing it — gasoline, diesel, coal and natural gas. Taxing fuels and electricity could help pay for the damage they cause, encourage people to use less, and make it easier for cleaner alternatives and fuel-saving technologies to compete.
These so-called carbon taxes are expected to be a major part of pushing the world to reduce carbon dioxide emissions and try to prevent runaway climate change that economists say would be far more expensive over the long term than paying more for energy in the short term.
But it’s not so easy for people to think about long-term, global problems when they are struggling to get by.
Macron said the higher tax was his way of trying to prevent the end of the world. But the yellow vest protesters turned that around with the slogan: “it’s hard to talk about the end of the world while we are talking about the end of the month.”
The resistance to the fuel tax is a personal blow to Macron, who sees himself as the guarantor of the 2015 Paris climate accord, its strongest defender on the global stage. He has positioned himself as the anti-Trump when it comes to climate issues.
The French government quietly fears a Trump-led backlash against the accord could spread to other major economies whose commitment is essential to keeping the deal together.
The fuel tax was not originally Macron’s idea; it dates back to previous administrations. But he vigorously defended it and won the presidency in part on a promise to fight climate change.
So what went wrong?
Yale University economist William Nordhaus, who won this year’s Nobel prize for economics, said the tax was poorly designed and was delivered by the wrong person. “If you want to make energy taxes unpopular, step one is to be an unpopular leader,” he said. “Step two is to use gasoline taxes and call them carbon taxes. This is hard enough without adding poor design.”
Macron, like French presidents before him, made environmental and energy decisions without explaining to the public how important they are and how their lives will change. He’s also seen as the “president of the rich” — his first fiscal decision as president was scrapping a wealth tax. So hiking taxes on gasoline and diesel was seen as especially unfair to the working classes in the provinces who need cars to get to work and whose incomes have stagnated for years.
The French government already has programs in place to subsidize drivers who trade in older, dirtier cars for cleaner ones, and expanded them in an attempt to head off the protests last month. But for many French, it was too little, too late.
The French reaction to higher fuel prices is hardly unique, which highlights just how hard it can be to discourage fossil fuel consumption by making people pay more. In September, protests in India over high gasoline prices shut down schools and government offices. Protests erupted in Mexico in 2017 after government deregulation caused a spike in gasoline prices, and in Indonesia in 2013 when the government reduced fuel subsidies and prices rose.
In the United States, Washington state voters handily defeated a carbon tax in November.
“Higher taxes on fuel have always been a policy more popular among economists than among voters,” said Greg Mankiw, a Harvard economist and former adviser to President George W. Bush.
Even proponents of carbon taxes acknowledge that they can disproportionally hurt low-income people. Energy costs make up a larger portion of their overall expenses, so a fuel price increase eats up more of their paycheck and leaves them with less to spend. And because energy costs are almost impossible to avoid, they feel trapped.
It is also not lost on them that it is the rich, unbothered by fuel taxes, who are hardest on the environment because they travel and consume more.
“The mistake of the Macron government was not to marry the increase in fuel taxes with other sufficiently compelling initiatives promising to enhance the welfare and incomes of the ‘yellow vests,’ said Barry Eichengreen, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley.
Now the question is “How can we address the climate problem while also avoiding producing political upheaval,” Goulder said.
The key is giving a good chunk of money back to the people, Wesleyan University environmental economist Gary Yohe said.
Many economists back proposals that would tax carbon, but then use that money to offer tax rebates or credits that would benefit lower-income families.
The protests, while sparked by fuel prices, are also about income inequality, populism and anti-elitism, experts say, not just about carbon taxes.
“Is it a death knell for the carbon tax or pricing carbon? I don’t think so,” economist Yohe said. “It is just a call for being a little bit more careful about how you design the damn thing.”
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