Парламент також передав Кабінету міністрів свої пропозиції до бюджету до другого читання
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Germany has extradited the suspect in the killing of Bulgarian television journalist Viktoria Marinova to Bulgaria, an Interior Ministry official said Wednesday.
Bulgarian Severin Krasimirov is to be charged in person with the rape and murder of 30-year-old Marinova, whose body was found in a park in her Danube hometown of Ruse on Oct 6. Police said she was beaten and raped and died of suffocation.
Prosecutors have said evidence did not indicate Marinova’s death was related to her work and pointed to a random sexual crime although they are still investigating all possibilities.
Krasimirov was arrested in Germany last week where he admitted partial guilt to a German court.
“German authorities have handed over … the 21-year-old citizen of Ruse,” the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
A German prosecutor confirmed Krasimirov has been extradited via a flight from Frankfurt.
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Прокуратура Автономної Республіки Крим вимагатиме екстрадиції з Росії колишнього депутата Верховної Ради Криму Віталія Нахлупіна, повідомив 17 жовтня речник Генпрокуратури України Андрій Лисенко. В Україні цю особу обвинувачують у державній зраді, уточнюють у прокуратурі.
29 грудня 2016 року прокуратура АР Крим направила в суд обвинувальний акт щодо Нахлупіна. Під час розслідування кримінального провадження отримано беззаперечні докази того, що цей депутат надав допомогу і сприяння окупації Криму Росією.
Зокрема, за його безпосередньої участю незаконно прийнята так звана «Конституція Республіки Крим» та інші документи. Нахлупін у березні 2014 року через офіційний інтернет-сайт Верховної Ради Криму відкрито звернувся до жителів автономії про необхідність взяти активну участь в так званому «референдумі».
Російські ЗМІ 17 жовтня повідомили, що співробітники правоохоронних органів затримали в Москві «заступника голови Ради міністрів Криму» Віталія Нахлупіна за підозрою в отриманні хабара.
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Leaders from the European Union and Britain shrugged off a weekend negotiating debacle and previous deadlines Wednesday, giving themselves several more weeks to clinch a friendly divorce deal ahead of their separation.
After the EU insisted for months that the Wednesday summit was a key meeting to get a deal, its Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier said “we need much time, much more time and we continue to work in the next weeks” with his British counterpart.
British Prime Minister Theresa May also spoke about “working intensively over the next days and weeks” to achieve agreement that avoids a no-deal departure from the bloc on March 29 that could create chaos at the borders and in the economy. A deal must be sealed soon so parliaments have time to give their verdict on it.
Underscoring the newfound sense of non-urgency, Prime Minister Sebastian Kurz of Austria, which holds the rotating EU presidency, even spoke of the “coming weeks and months” to get a deal and sought to impose a soothing calm.
“There’s no need to dramatize matters. It’s always the case with negotiations, that in the end there are challenges,” he said.
May was preparing to address other EU leaders one day after European Council President Donald Tusk implored her to present new ideas for resolving the tricky problem of how to keep the land border between the Republic of Ireland and the U.K.’s Northern Ireland friction-free once Britain no longer is an EU member.
Tusk advised May that “creative” thinking from Britain was required to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland, the issue that has brought divorce negotiations to a standstill. EU leaders dismissed May’s most recent proposal as unworkable.
But when the prime minister was asked in the House of Commons earlier Wednesday whether her government’s blueprint for an amicable divorce was dead, May replied: “The answer is no.”
The summit in Brussels had long been seen as the “moment of truth” in the two-year Brexit process. But after urgent talks on the Irish border ended Sunday without producing a breakthrough, Wednesday’s gathering looked more like a therapeutic bonding session than an occasion to celebrate.
The timeline for a deal has slipped into November, or even December, when another EU summit is scheduled.
“Today there will be no breakthrough,” said Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite. She said 2 1/2 years after Britain’s Brexit referendum, the country had still not explained clearly how it wants to leave the EU.
“Today, we do not know what they want,” she said. “They do not know themselves what they really want. That is the problem.”
At present the two sides are proposing that Britain remains inside the EU single market and is still bound by its rules from the time it leaves the bloc in March until December 2020, to give time for new trade relations to be set up.
Many suspect that will not be enough time, which has led the EU to demand a “backstop” to ensure there are no customs posts or other controls along the currently invisible border between Northern Ireland and Ireland.
And there is talk that a transition period for the U.K. to adapt to its new status as a third country could be extended by a year.
Britain says it has not asked for an extension, but May has not yet come up with proposals for unblocking the Irish border logjam. She is hemmed in by pro-Brexit members of her Conservative Party, who oppose any more compromises with the bloc, and by her parliamentary allies in Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, who insist a solution can’t include customs checks between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K.
Read MoreПредставництво Європейського союзу в Україні закликає українську владу притягнути до відповідальності винних у замаху на одеського активіста Олега Михайлика, який дістав 22 вересня тяжке вогнепальне поранення. Про це представництво повідомляє в мережі Facebook.
«Під час свого візиту до Одеси я мала нагоду поспілкуватися з Олегом. Мене вразила його самовідданість у боротьбі за верховенство права, законність, прозорість та демократичний розвиток свого рідного міста. На жаль, у цій боротьбі він ризикує життям», – заявила заступник голови представництва Анніка Вайдеманн.
«Я сподіваюсь, що правоохоронні органи України швидко проведуть ретельне розслідування. Винні у скоєнні замаху на Олега повинні буті притягнуті до відповідальності», – вказала дипломат.
Також на цю тему: На одязі підозрюваного в нападі на одеського активіста знайшли сліди пороху – прокуратура
27 вересня Київський районний суд Одеси відправив до слідчого ізолятора усіх трьох підозрюваних у нападі на одеського активіста Олега Михайлика – Торніке Герасіна (Нагладзе), Лашу Герасіна і Манучара Варшанідзе.
Усіх трьох затримали ще 24 вересня, коли вони добровільно прийшли до Приморського райвідділу надати пояснення, чому їхні телефони були поблизу місця нападу на Олега Михайлика. 22 вересня в Одесі із вогнепальним пораненням у груди госпіталізували громадського активіста, представника партії «Сила людей» Олега Михайлика. Сам він заявляв, що не бачив нападників.
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Newly released Ecuadorian government documents have laid bare an unorthodox attempt to extricate WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange from his embassy hideaway in London by naming him as a political counselor to the country’s embassy in Moscow.
But the 47-year-old Australian’s new career in international affairs was nipped in the bud when British authorities vetoed his diplomatic status, effectively blocking him from taking up the post in Russia.
The files were made public late Tuesday by Ecuadorian opposition lawmaker Paola Vintimilla, who opposes her government’s decision to grant Assange nationality. They largely corroborate a recent Guardian newspaper report that Ecuador attempted the elaborate maneuver to get Assange to Moscow just before Christmas last year.
Russian diplomats called the Guardian story “fake news,” but the government files show Assange briefly was made “political counselor” to the Ecuadorian Embassy in Moscow and eligible for a monthly salary pegged at $2,000.
Ecuador also applied for a diplomatic ID card, the documents show, but the plan appears to have fallen apart with the British veto.
A letter dated Dec. 21, 2017, from Britain’s Foreign Office said U.K. officials “do not consider Mr. Julian Assange to be an acceptable member of the mission.”
An eight-page memo to Vintimilla summing up the episode noted that Assange’s position as counselor was scrapped a few days later.
WikiLeaks did not return messages. The British Foreign Office and the Russian Embassy in London declined to comment.
Assange’s relationship with Russian authorities has been the subject of intense scrutiny following the 2016 U.S. election, when Russian spies are alleged to have handed WikiLeaks leaked emails from presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s campaign in a bid to help elect her rival, Donald Trump.
Assange has denied receiving the files from the Russian government or backing the Trump campaign, despite a growing body of evidence suggesting he received material directly from Russia’s military intelligence agency and coordinated media strategy with Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr.
Last month, the AP published internal WikiLeaks files showing Assange tried to move to Russia as early as 2010.
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Російська влада має намір 18 жовтня етапувати українського активіста Володимира Балуха до Керченської колонії, повідомив проекту Радіо Свобода Крим.Реалії заступник голови Меджлісу кримськотатарського народу Ахтем Чийгоз.
Офіційного підтвердження цього від російської влади поки немає.
Також на цю тему: Засудженого в Криму Балуха скоро етапують у російську колонію – Денісова
На час етапування Балух вирішив тимчасово припинити голодування. За даними адвоката Дмитра Дінзе, у Балуха після понад 200 днів голодування є підозра на виразку або панкреатит.
Перед цим підконтрольний Кремлю Верховний суд Криму частково пом’якшив вирок засудженому до 5 років колонії Володимиру Балуху, засудивши його до 4 років і 11 місяців колонії і штрафу в розмірі 10 тисяч рублів (це близько 4 тисяч гривень). Активіста засудили до такого тюремного терміну за сукупністю двох кримінальних справ.
Балух оголосив безстрокове голодування 19 березня 2018 року. Після місяця повної відмови від прийому їжі кримський архієпископ УПЦ КП Климент переконав Балуха вживати мінімальний набір продуктів (дві склянки вівсяного киселю, 50-70 грамів сухарів з чорного хліба і чай з медом), який підтримував «балансування на нульовій позначці».
ФСБ Росії затримала Володимира Балуха 8 грудня 2016 року. Співробітники ФСБ стверджували, що знайшли на горищі будинку, де живе Балух, 90 патронів і кілька тротилових шашок. Захист Балуха і правозахисники стверджують, що він став жертвою репресій за свою проукраїнську позицію – через прапор України, який знаходився на подвір’ї його будинку.
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The White House has announced plans to negotiate separate trade deals with Britain, the European Union and Japan.
“We are committed to concluding these negotiations with timely and substantive results for American workers, farmers, ranchers and businesses,” U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said Tuesday.
He added that the White House wanted to “address both tariff and non-tariff barriers and to achieve fairer and more balanced trade.”
As required by law, Lighthizer sent three separate letters to Congress announcing the intention to open trade talks.
He wrote that the negotiations with Britain would begin “as soon as it’s ready” after Britain’s expected exit from the European Union on March 29.
Lighthizer called the economic partnership between the U.S. and EU the “largest and most complex”in the world, noting the U.S. has a $151 billion trade deficit with the EU
Writing about Japan, Lighthizer said it is “an important but still often underperforming market for U.S. exporters of goods,” noting that Washington also has a large trade deficit with Tokyo.
The top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, Oregon’s Ron Wyden, cautioned the administration against making what he called “quick, partial deals.”
“The administration must take the time to tackle trade barriers comprehensively, including using this opportunity to set a high bar in areas like labor rights, environmental protection and digital trade,” he said.
President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on European steel and aluminum exports earlier this year and has threatened more tariffs on cars as a reaction to what he said were unfair deals that put the U.S. at a disadvantage.
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Russian cosmonaut Aleksey Ovchinin says the force he felt during a Soyuz emergency landing last week was like having a concrete block on his chest.
Ovchinin and U.S. astronaut Nick Hague spoke separately Tuesday about their frightening experience when an unknown mishap caused their Russian Soyuz to abort its mission 60 kilometers (37 miles) above Kazakhstan.
The spacecraft was on its way to the International Space Station when the emergency lights flashed in the cabin just minutes into the flight.
“There was no time to be nervous because we had to work,” Ovchinin told Russian television. “We had to go through the steps that the crew has to take and prepare for emergency landing … so that the crew is still functioning after landing.”
Ovchinin recalled being violently shaken from side by side as the crew cabin separated from the rocket, followed by a force seven times stronger then gravity as the cabin plunged through the atmosphere, followed by the shock of the parachutes yanking open.
Back home in Houston, Hague told the Associated Press, “We knew that if we wanted to be successful, we needed to stay calm and we needed to execute the procedures in front of us smoothly and efficiently as we could.”
Hague said he and Ovchinin were hanging upside down when the cabin landed back on Earth. They shook hands and cracked jokes.
Neither man was hurt, and an investigation is under way to find out why the rocket failed.
Hague said he is disappointed to be back home instead of walking in space, but he’s happy to be reunited with his wife and their two young sons, and is ready to fly again as soon as NASA gives him the word.
“What can you do? Sometimes you don’t get a vote,” Hague told the Associated Press. “You just try to celebrate the little gifts that you get, like walking the boys to school this morning.”
This was the first aborted Soyuz launch in more than 30 years.
The Russian spacecraft has been the only way to send replacement crews to the International Space Station since NASA retired the space shuttle fleet in 2011.
Two private U.S. companies — Boeing and SpaceX — are working on a new generation of shuttles.
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Egypt’s president urged Russia on Tuesday to resume direct flights to Egyptian resorts as he discussed ways to bolster ties with Russian officials and lawmakers.
Moscow suspended the flights after a bomb planted by the Islamic State group brought a Russian passenger plane down over Sinai in October 2015, killing all 224 people on board.
Flights between Moscow and Cairo resumed in April after Egyptian officials beefed up airport security. Talks about restoring direct air travel to Egypt’s Red Sea resorts have dragged on.
Addressing the Russian parliament’s upper house, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi emphasized that restoring the flights was essential for Egypt’s tourism industry.
Following meetings in Moscow with top Russian lawmakers and Cabinet ministers, el-Sissi met over dinner with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Black Sea resort of Sochi later in the day.
The two leaders have developed a close personal rapport and sought to expand bilateral ties, which have strengthened considerably over the past few years.
El-Sissi is on his fourth trip to Russia since taking office in 2014, and Putin visited Egypt in 2015 and 2017.
Egypt has signed deals to buy billions of dollars’ worth of Russian weapons, including fighter jets and assault helicopters. When Putin visited Cairo last December, officials signed a deal for Russia to build a nuclear power plant in Dabaa.
Putin’s foreign affairs adviser, Yuri Ushakov, told reporters that the two presidents will discuss the implementation of the nuclear plant contract, as well as prospects for the resumption of flights to the Red Sea resorts and other issues.
He said that el-Sissi will be offered a presentation of Russian weapons, including those which Egypt has expressed interest in buying.
Ushakov noted that bilateral trade rose by 62 percent last year reaching $6.7 billion and continued to expand at a swift pace this year.
Russian grain exports currently account for about 70 percent of Egypt’s needs, he said
Ushakov added that Putin and el-Sissi will discuss international issues, focusing on the situation in Syria, Libya, Yemen and the Palestinian-Israeli settlement.
Following broader talks Wednesday, the two presidents are set to sign a comprehensive strategic partnership treaty that would further boost Russian-Egyptian ties.
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Прокуратура Києва підготувала матеріали для екстрадиції громадянина України, про затримання якого у Франції повідомив Європол, повідомляє прес-служба відомства. Запит до відповідних французьких органів надіслала Генеральна прокуратура України
За даними прокуратури, затриманий може бути причетний до правопорушень в Україні.
«Досудовим розслідуванням, яке проводить столична прокуратура, встановлено, що вказаний чоловік у березні-квітні 2015 року під виглядом укладання контракту на поставку мінеральних добрив виробництва ПАТ «Одеський припортовий завод» заволодів грошовими коштами приватної компанії у сумі понад 12 мільйонів євро, які були перераховані як передплата за товар», – йдеться в заяві.
Також чоловіка підозрюють у тому, що він підробив свідоцтво про власну смерть.
Згідно з повідомленням, столична прокуратура оголосила затриманого в міжнародний розшук 1 серпня 2018 року.
Раніше Радіо Свобода не отримало від речника ГПУ Андрія Лисенка підтвердження, що затриманий – одесит Дмитро Малиновський, якого розшукують за підозрою в шахрайстві та підробці документів. Таку інформацію оприлюднили в ЗМІ.
16 жовтня Європол повідомив про затримання у французькому Діжоні неназваного громадянина України, якого підозрюють у міжнародному шахрайстві.
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Представниця України в гуманітарній підгрупі Тристоронньої контактної групи Ірина Геращенко повідомила про безрезультатність переговорів, які відбулися в Мінську 16 жовтня.
«Ключова тема гуманітарної групи, де сьогодні працювали представники СБУ і Міністерства з питань тимчасово окупованих територій – звільнення заручників. Тут немає жодного прогресу. Москва не визнає своїх росіян в українських тюрмах. ОРДЛО займає деструктивну позицію», – вказала Геращенко у Facebook.
«Ми також нагадали координатору ОБСЄ Фрішу, що його не допустили до всіх ув‘язнених в ОРЛО, яких катують. Вчергове підняли питання підлітків, незаконно затриманих бандитами в окупованому Донецьку ще у вересні 2016 року. Представники ОРДО обіцяли ОБСЄ відпустити дітей… до грудня 2016, натомість зараз засудили їх до тюремних термінів за шпигунство. Очікуємо від ОБСЄ жорсткішої позиції щодо дітей і підлітків», – додала представниця України.
Представники бойовиків натомість заявляють, що «президент України Петро Порошенко має розблокувати процес обміну полоненими, який саботує українська сторона». Таке висловлювання представниці угруповання «ЛНР» Ольги Кобцевої цитує сепаратистський ресурс «Луганский информационный центр». Кобцева також стверджує, що представники України в гуманітарній підгрупі Віктор Медведчук та Ірина Геращенко проігнорували роботу підгрупи.
Наступне засідання Тристоронньої контактної групи в Мінську заплановане на 6 листопада. На ній буде відсутній заступник Спеціальної моніторингової місії ОБСЄ в Україні Александр Гуґ, мандат якого завершується наприкінці жовтня. Українська сторона подякувала дипломату зі Швейцарії за його чотирирічну роботу на Донбасі, повідомила Геращенко.
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За час голодування у українського режисера Олега Сенцова, який знаходиться в російській колонії, «постраждали практично всі внутрішні органи» і ніхто не може сказати, чи виживе він. Про це 16 жовтня на прес-конференції в Києві розповіла сестра Сенцова Наталія Каплан, повідомляє кореспондент проекту Радіо Свобода Крим.Реалії.
«Пішов (з голодування – ред.) з дуже підірваним здоров’ям. У нього постраждали, досить серйозно, практично всі внутрішні органи. Печінка почала розкладатись, ускладнення на мозок, з’явилася ішемія, аритмія до інших неприємностей. Там повний набір», – сказала Каплан.
За її словами, вихід з голодування досить серйозна процедура і «ніхто не може сказати, чи виживе Олег».
Читайте також: «Чому Сенцов вирішив припинити голодування і що буде далі?»
Олег Сенцов засуджений у Росії на 20 років ув’язнення за звинуваченням у підготовці терактів в анексованому Криму. Режисер відкидає звинувачення. Він голодував від 14 травня з вимогою звільнити всіх українців, яких Росія утримує за політичними мотивами.
Сенцов припинив голодування 6 жовтня. Він назвав це «вимушеним заходомчерез загрозу насильницького годування».
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Facebook says that anyone who takes out a British political ad on the social media platform will now be forced to reveal their identity, in a bid to increase transparency and curb misinformation.
The company said Tuesday that it will also require disclaimers for any British political advertisements. All the data on the ad buyers will be archived for seven years in a publicly accessible database.
Facebook is already applying a similar system in the United States, which is holding midterm elections this year.
British lawmakers have called for greater oversight of social media companies and election campaigns to protect democracy in the digital age.
A House of Commons report this year said democracy is facing a crisis because data analysis and social media allow campaigns to target voters with messages of hate without their consent.
“While the vast majority of ads on Facebook are run by legitimate organizations, we know that there are bad actors that try to misuse our platform,” Facebook said in a statement. “By having people verify who they are, we believe it will help prevent abuse.”
Facebook said it’s up against “smart and well-funded adversaries who change their tactics as we spot abuse,” but it believes that increased transparency is good for democracy and the electoral process.
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За останні 4 роки Україна ставала об’єктом кібернападів Росії близько 6 тисяч разів. Про це міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін заявив у Брюсселі на конференції з питань виборчої безпеки.
За словами міністра, 6 тисяч випадків – це масштабні кібернапади, про які урядові відомо.
«Не йдеться лише про виборчу інфраструктуру, чи критичну, чи банківську. Наприклад, в середньому раз на тиждень інфраструктура нашого міністерства зазнає масштабного кібернападу. Напади можуть бути різними, але вони стаються з певною регулярністю», – розповів Павло Клімкін.
За період, відколи розпочалася агресія Росії у Криму і на сході України, Київ неодноразово звинувачував Росію у кібернападах на об’єкти інфраструктури. Зокрема, раніше цього місяця Служба безпеки України повідомила, що має докази причетності російських спецслужб до кібератак на об’єкти критичної інфраструктури.
У тому, що Росія здійснює організовані кібернапади, заявляють і деякі країни Заходу. Зокрема, США розслідують імовірне втручання Росії у вибори президента у 2017 році. Російська влада ймовірну причетність до таких кібератак відкидає.
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Секретар Ради національної безпеки і оборони України Олександр Турчинов 16 жовтня обговорив з президентом Парламентської асамблеї НАТО Расою Юкнявічєне ситуацію на сході України та в Криму . Про це повідомили Радіо Свобода у прес-службі секретаря РНБО.
Як зазначив Турчинов, Росія посилює військову присутність в Азово-Чорноморському регіоні, окрім того, на кордоні з Україною РФ продовжує розгортати військову інфраструктуру та посилювати військові підрозділи збройних сил.
«Росія використовує весь арсенал гібридної агресії проти України, розглядаючи нашу державу як випробувальний майданчик для технологій, які потім використовуються проти Європи та США», – зазначив секретар РНБО.
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Турчинов додав, що йому «не зовсім зрозуміла позиція Європи, яка, продовжуючи санкції, дозволяє Росії будувати Північний потік-2, таким чином підтримуючи стратегічні економічні інтереси Росії.
Юкнявічєнє наголосила, що всі держави НАТО мають розуміння «агресивної ролі Росії», додавши, що сильна Україна – важливий елемент європейської системи безпеки.
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У Брюсселі 17 жовтня відбудеться чергове засідання комісії Україна-НАТО. На зустрічі за участю генерального секретаря Альянсу Єнса Столтенберга “гуманітарну ситуацію на Донбасі, поточну ситуацію з відновлення критично-важливої інфраструктури та наслідки агресії Російської Федерації на сході України”.
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Germany has deported an accomplice of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States to his home country of Morocco.
Mounir al-Motassadeq had spent almost 15 years in prison in Germany before he was deported Monday to Morocco.
German media published photographs of Motassadeq wearing a blindfold and being led by two armed policemen to a helicopter. German officials confirmed he was flown out by plane from Frankfurt airport on Monday evening.
Motassadeq was convicted of helping Mohamed Atta, the alleged pilot of one of the hijacked 9/11 planes, and other suicide pilots to help plot the attacks on New York and Washington. The suicide pilots were part of an al-Qaida cell based in Hamburg, Germany, where Motassadeq also lived.
Motassadeq was found guilty in 2003 of being a member of a terrorist organization and an accessory to the murder of the passengers aboard the four airliners used in the September 11 attacks. His five years of trials in Germany involved multiple appeals, overturned convictions, and reinstated verdicts. In the end, he received the maximum sentence the German court could hand down for the crimes — 15 years in prison.
Motassadeq denied being involved in the 9/11 plot, but admitted to being friends with those who did. He said his actions to send money to the suicide pilots were merely favors for his friends.
Motassadeq was released shortly before completing his 15-year sentence on the condition that he agreed to be deported to Morocco. Germany says it will re-arrest him if he ever returns.
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One of the first steps taken by Spain’s prime minister after assuming office in June was to order the exhumation of the remains of right-wing military dictator Francisco Franco from a mausoleum in the capital’s outskirts, where they have rested since he died in power a half century ago.
“Democracy cannot dignify a dictator,” Pedro Sanchez, leader of the Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE), said in justifying the order.
The decision was hailed by leftists, but critics warned that polarizing struggles between traditional conservatives and a new breed of left-wing populists could end five decades of bipartisan continuity since Franco’s death.
Sanchez maintains a razor-thin edge in parliament’s lower chamber through an alliance with hard-left groups and Catalan nationalists. His priorities, he said in an address to last month’s U.N. General Assembly, include raising social spending, fighting climate change and promoting women’s rights.
Elsewhere in Europe, populism has come to be identified with far-right movements whose rhetoric is often associated with the xenophobia and racism that characterized the fascist movements that brought Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini to power.
But today’s Spanish populism, says influential opinion columnist Mario Saavedra, is “leftist” and appears rooted in memories of a 1930’s republic that was overthrown by Franco in a bloody civil war.
The republic established after King Alfonso XIII stepped aside in 1931 captured the imagination of European and American intellectuals such as Ernest Hemingway, who based his novel For Whom the Bell Tolls on his experiences there. It brought together the world’s most fashionable utopian ideologies at the time, including communism and anarchist syndicalism. Democratic socialists occupied its presidency.
Historian Javier Arjona draws parallels between the coalition of leftist parties which maneuvered Sanchez into the prime minister’s seat and the radical “Popular Front” that came to power through a disputed election victory in 1936. Government supporters scoff at the comparison and Sanchez accuses conservatives of appealing to the “extreme right” in a bid to regain power.
Regardless, a leftist brand of republicanism seems to be back in vogue. Its purple colors appear at social protests and adorn the jerseys of some soccer clubs. Catalan nationalists and the far-left United We Can party who prop up Sanchez’s government call for restoring a republic and holding a referendum on the future of the monarchy. Burning pictures of King Felipe has become a ritual at separatist rallies in Catalonia.
United We Can, or Unidos Podemos (UP) in Spanish, is led by Pablo Iglesias, a political science professor who merged a new generation of leftists with remnants of the old communist party. His movement harnessed a wave of social discontent that exploded into mass protests during the recent global recession, in which Spain’s unemployment rate topped 25 percent nationally and reached 50 percent among young people.
Disenchanted working-class supporters of Sanchez’s mainstream PSOE turned to UP, which promised to confront corruption on all sides.
While Spain has largely recovered from the darkest days of the crash, UP continues to win followers by denouncing abusive business practices such as the eviction of low-income tenants from housing estates when they are bought up by foreign “vulture funds.” It also champions an increase in old-age pensions for Spain’s growing senior population.
In unveiling its budget October 11, the Sanchez government announced an agreement between the PSOE and UP on a package that includes a massive increase in public spending, the expansion of public services, new regulations, and a substantial rise in the minimum wage.
Sanchez has also called for changing Spain’s constitution. His justice minister, Dolores Delgado, an outspoken proponent of women’s rights, has said that it needs to be rewritten to make it more gender neutral.
His vice president, Carmen Calvo, has called for curbing press freedoms to counter what she calls a “high volume of half-truths and lies” by conservative media. She has threatened to take legal action against the conservative, pro-monarchy, pro-Catholic newspaper ABC over its published allegations that Sanchez plagiarized his doctoral thesis.
Some business leaders say they are worried. John de Zulueta, chairman of the Circulo de Empresarios, the Spanish business association, said tax hikes proposed by Sanchez to cover a rise in social spending could depress the markets at a time when the economy is not fully out of recession. The IMF has also criticized Sanchez’s plans to finance deficit spending.
Government spokespersons defend their actions, saying their plan is adjusted to EU budget requirements.
Conservatives are also trying to block Sanchez from satisfying Catalan separatists by granting pardons to Catalan Vice president Oriol Junqueras and other officials who are in prison awaiting trial for plotting an independence bid.
“We have to find a political rather than a judicial solution to the Catalan crisis,” Sanchez said after recent violent protests in Barcelona.
Political analyst Ramon Peralta, a professor at Complutense University of Madrid, said Sanchez “tries to shield his government by wrapping it in popular causes.”
In his U.N. speech, Sanchez highlighted his feminist agenda, boasting that 60 percent of his cabinet are women and pledging “zero tolerance” of sexual harassment.
Feminist leaders, who see Spain’s traditional culture of machismo as toxic to women’s rights, are strongly backing Sanchez despite a scandal in which the justice minister was caught on tape speaking insultingly about the interior minister’s homosexuality.
Sanchez’ moves have been well received by liberals elsewhere in Europe. In a recent editorial, the British newspaper The Guardian said, “exhuming Franco is a necessary step in the final stages of Spain’s historic journey away from authoritarian violence towards enduring democracy.”
But others, including some of the prime minister’s allies, suggest that steps like the exhumation of Franco will simply fan the flames of the extreme right. Since Sanchez announced plans to open Franco’s crypt, visits to the mountaintop mausoleum have risen by 77 percent.
The visitors have included blue-shirted members of the Falange party, who raise their arms in the fascist salute while singing their battle hymn, “Cara al Sol,” or “Face to the Sun.” A new extreme-right party called VOX has threatened to stage mass protests to block the exhumation.
Spanish public opinion is about evenly split. According to a survey in July by polling institute Sigma Dos, about 41 percent support the decision while 39 percent are opposed.
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Міністр закордонних справ Угорщини Петер Сійярто заявив, що Будапешт зацікавлений у добрих стосунках із Києвом і готовий до консультацій.
Як сказав він після зустрічі зі своїм колегою з України Павлом Клімкіним у Люксембурзі, Будапешт бажає, щоб його східний сусід був сильною та демократичною державою, яка дотримується міжнародних зобов’язань та розглядає власні нацменшини як джерело сили, у тому числі й угорську меншину.
Сійярто наголосив, що його країна завжди готова до проведення консультацій. Угорщина очікує, що Україна не лише на словах, а й на ділі доведе, що прагне вирішити ситуацію, що склалася, а не загострювати її, заявив він.
Міністр нагадав, що його країна надала 27,5 мільярдів форинтів (майже 100 мільйонів доларів США) на підтримку розвитку української економіки за останні 4 роки. 2600 українських дітей, чиї батьки брали участь у боях на сході України, оздоровлювалися в Угорщині, також 36 бійців АТО пройшли тут лікування. Міністр додав, що Угорщина допомогла у проблемі з очищенням питної води на заході України, а також забезпечила можливість безкоштовного навчання сотні студентів із України в угорських вишах.
Петер Сійярто висловив сподівання, що, зі свого боку, Україна також ухвалить такі рішення, які сприятимуть просуванню справи у бік вирішення. Разом із тим, міністр висловив занепокоєння стосовно зміни закону про освіту в Україні, зокрема про внесені зміни та обіцянки Києва після тривалих міждержавних суперечок, яких, однак, українська сторона, за його твердженням, не дотримується.
Також Сійярто має застереження і до закону про мову. «Угорщина не може трактувати прийняття київським парламентом закону про мову у першому читанні як крок у бік вирішення суперечностей (між двома країнами – ред.). Якщо закон ухвалять у такій формі, це зробить неможливим використання угорської мови у ЗМІ та культурі», – сказав чільний угорський дипломат.
Угорщина так само занепокоєна фактом, що особисті дані громадян України, які отримали й угорське громадянство, і досі є доступними для всіх на сайті «Миротворець», заявив угорський міністр. У цьому зв’язку Сійярто звернувся до Клімкіна з проханням здійснити необхідні кроки у справі.
Він повідомив, що два міністри домовилися про надання дозволу на діяльність почесних консулів – по одному в Угорщині та Україні. Сійярто також заявив, що Угорщина готова змінити суперечливу назву посади міністерського уповноваженого (Іштвана Ґрежі – ред.), який відповідає за програми розвитку економіки на Закарпатті. Водночас відкриється можливість закрити справу щодо дозволу на діяльність нового посла Угорщини у Києві, зазначив Петер Сійярто.
Голова угорської дипломатії і його колега з України взяли участь у зустрічі міністрів закордонних справ у рамках програми «Східного партнерства» ЄС.
Позаминулого тижня міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін назвав неадекватним рішення Будапешта вислати українського консула у відповідь на проголошення Києвом персоною «нон-ґрата» угорського дипломата. Перед тим, 26 вересня, Клімкін під час переговорів у штаб-квартирі ООН з угорським міністром закордонних справ Петером Сійярто офіційно повідомив про вимогу відкликати консула Угорщини в українському Берегові, або він буде висланий із країни. У відповідь Угорщина вислала українського дипломата – цей крок у Києві назвали неадекватним.
У вересні поширене в соцмережах та ЗМІ відео, як в одному з консульств Угорщини в Україні масово видають угорські паспорти українським громадянам, а також інструктують приховувати цей факт від української влади, призвело до різких політичних заяв як в Україні, так і в Угорщині.
Крім того, ще один дипломатичний скандал викликало призначення угорського посадовця Іштвана Ґрежі на пост урядового уповноваженого з питань розвитку Закарпаття, а також відповідального за програму розвитку угорськомовних дитячих садків у Карпатському басейні (в українській термінології – басейні річок Тиси і Дунаю – ред.). У Києві зажадали пояснень від угорської сторони, бо до сфери компетенції цього уповноваженого віднесено частину суверенної території України.
Ці суперечки додалися до інших – навколо українського закону про освіту і законопроекту про державну мову, які, на думку Будапешта, обмежать права угорської меншини в Україні.
Через ці суперечності Угорщина, зокрема, блокує розвиток відносин між Україною і НАТО.
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The Lehman Brothers bankruptcy threw the United States into an epoch-defining financial storm. Imagine 300 of them going bust at once.
That, in relative terms, is what Iceland endured a decade ago during its banking crisis, which on this rugged island steeped in myths of gods and giants is now known as “hrunid” – the collapse.
The last in a series of prosecutions of those deemed responsible started this month and the hope is that it will give this country of 330,000 people some closure after years of reckoning and reconstruction. Icelanders have become more cynical about political and business leaders, to the point of drafting a new constitution. The top financial entrepreneurs of a generation have been thrown behind bars and the economy has had to be reinvented more profoundly than most countries affected by the crisis.
“Icelanders experienced the crash as a deep betrayal, not just as a serious economic loss,” says Jon Olafsson, a professor who advises the prime minister on ways to improve trust in the government. “Politicians, businessmen and the media told the public, over and over, that everything was fine and people believed them.”
Everything was not fine. Over the span of one week, 90 percent of the financial sector defaulted.
The collapse of Iceland’s three major commercial banks – which had grown 20-fold over the previous seven years through debt-fueled acquisitions abroad – amounted to the third-largest bankruptcy in modern financial history, according to the Icelandic financial regulator. For the United States, an economy 1,100 times bigger, it would be like if 300 Lehman Brothers defaulted simultaneously, it notes.
An economic depression followed that saw people line up for food aid, an unprecedented sight in this country with a progressive welfare state. Families stockpiled goods from supermarket shelves and thousands emigrated.
Johanna Thorvaldsdottir, a goat farmer, had a mortgage in a foreign currency – a common practice then because of the strength of the local currency and lower interest rates abroad – when the Icelandic krona lost nearly half of its value overnight. The cost of her debt soared.
“I worked every evening, sometimes until midnight,” she says. Had it not been for a crowdfunding campaign, raising $90,000 from donors worldwide, the family estate would have been seized by bank creditors.
“We were lucky,” she says. “Many people were not.”
As big as the shock of the financial crisis was, so was the country’s determination to put things right. It emerged from recession in 2011 as it refocused the economy on tourism and technology, and it has been more aggressive than most countries in going after the culprits of the crisis.
Altogether, 29 men and two women have been sentenced to a combined 99 years of prison, for crimes ranging from insider trading to market manipulation. Six cases are still in the appeals process. By comparison, no top Wall Street executives have been prosecuted in the U.S.
Last week, Hreidar Mar Sigurdsson, the former CEO of Kaupthing Bank, stood trial in the last criminal prosecution related to the financial crisis.
The 48-year old has been sentenced in four prior cases, to a total of seven years in prison. He now stands accused of rigging share prices in his bank two months before it crashed. He denies wrongdoing. While a guilty sentence is unlikely to send him back to prison, as he has already served the maximum time for such crimes, it would help draw a line under the cases, which have dragged on for years.
Sigurdsson began his career at a fish factory in a small town before entering finance, and was during the booming years hailed as a self-made genius.
In some ways, his story reflects that of the country, which in the 1990s embraced the flashy world of finance to attain the wealth that the traditional industries could not provide. The media frequently referred to aggressive entrepreneurs like Sigurdsson as modern-day Vikings raiding foreign shores for acquisitions. In the end, it led to disaster.
Iceland is bent on “learning every lesson from the crisis,” says Iosif Kovras, director of Accountability after Economic Crisis, a research project based in City University-London.
He contrasted Iceland’s approach with that of Ireland, where the crisis was also traumatic but took longer to unfold. The country received a bailout from fellow European nations that took years of reforms to complete.
“It did not prompt the same political urgency,” says Kovras. “Iceland’s apocalyptic crash cleared the way for gathering evidence and data.”
The University of Iceland this month marked the 10-year anniversary of the crash with a symposium hosting over 100 speakers. They ruminated on topics like the crisis’ impact on cardiovascular health, pop-song lyrics, patriarchy and popular protests.
“There is no formula for restoring a peaceful, democratic society,” former President Olafur Ragnar Grimsson said in an evening-long public broadcast reflecting on the events. “Amid the crisis, when the situation was revolution-like, I feared not for the economy but our recovery as a nation.”
Reforms of the financial sector have focused on making it less risky. Already there are those saying the rules should be relaxed to allow for faster growth, as the U.S. did this year. President Donald Trump’s administration eased a 2010 law that had sought to limit risk in the financial sector and protect taxpayers from bailing out banks. Critics including Trump saw it as red tape holding the economy back.
Others suggest that loosening the rules would merely increase the likelihood of a new crisis and that Icelanders already seem to be forgetting the lessons of the crash.
Thorhallur Thorhallsson, who works as a tour guide in the capital, notes the proliferation of building cranes rising from the skyline.
“We are so used to cranes occupying the sky that it was decided to make them our national bird,” he tells a half dozen tourists gathered by the statue of the Norse explorer who is said to have settled the island 1,100 years ago.
“In fact, today, Reykjavik has more building cranes than before the 2008 crash.”
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Days ahead of a summit once seen as the moment Britain and the European Union would have to reach a Brexit deal, both sides are still staring at each other over the question of the Irish border, refusing to blink.
A flurry of diplomatic meetings over the weekend had raised hopes for an agreement, only to be disappointed by the issue that has dogged the talks for months — how to ensure no hard border is created between the EU’s Ireland and Britain’s Northern Ireland once Brexit happens on March 29.
The EU has proposed keeping Northern Ireland in a customs union to avoid a hard border between it and Ireland. The fear is that such a border could revive tensions between Northern Ireland’s pro-Irish Catholic and pro-U.K. Protestant communities, in which over 3,700 people died over 30 years of “troubles” ending in 1998.
Britain says it will only accept that plan if it is temporary and does not hive Northern Ireland off permanently from the rest of the U.K. in terms of customs arrangements.
British Prime Minister Theresa May’s spokesman James Slack said Monday that negotiations are stuck because the EU “continues to insist on the possibility of a customs border down the Irish Sea,” a move it feels will effectively split up the U.K., which is made up of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The acrimony means it is almost impossible that EU leaders will reach a deal at their summit, which begins Wednesday and had long been pegged as the date an agreement should be reached by. The British and EU parliaments need to approve any deal, a process that could take months ahead of the official exit in March.
“Whether we do this week or not, who knows?” British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt told reporters in Luxembourg where EU foreign ministers are meeting.
If Britain leaves the EU without an agreement on future relations, there could be chaos — tariffs would go up on trade, airlines could no longer have permits to fly between the two sides, and freight could be lined up for miles at the borders as customs checks are restored overnight.
To avoid this, the prospect of an extra meeting in November was raised, but only if there was decisive progress this week.
Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney admitted to being “frustrated” by the delay, saying that apart from Britain, Ireland is the country with most to lose from Brexit.
Coveney suggested that May is reneging on part of its commitment to ensure that no hard border involving lengthy customs checks and controls emerges on the Irish island.
He said Britain agreed in December and again in March that an unpopular “backstop” guarantee would remain in place until a better solution is found, but now appears to only want it used for a limited time.
“A backstop cannot be time-limited. That’s new. It hasn’t been there before,” he said. “Nobody wants to ever trigger the backstop, but it needs to be there as an insurance mechanism to calm nerves that we’re not going to see physical border infrastructure re-emerging.”
Britain denied it is reneging on its December commitment to avoid a hard Irish border. “We don’t resile from the commitments we have made in relation to the backstop,” said May’s spokesman, James Slack.
Like Britain’s Hunt, Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Borrell said of a deal: “it seems that this week it will not be possible, but this week is not the end.”
He said that he foresees no problems between Britain and Spain over Gibraltar.
“It’s not a rock in the way,” Borrell said, referring to the nickname of the British territory bordering Spain. He added that the Irish border problem is “more difficult to solve than Gibraltar.”
Slovak Foreign Minister Miroslav Lajcak said: “There is no reason to panic. There is still time.”
May is under intense pressure from her Conservative Party and its parliamentary allies not to give any more ground in negotiations, especially on the border issue.
May’s political allies, the Democratic Unionist Party, stand ready to scuttle a Brexit deal over the Irish border issue. The party opposes any border customs checks but EU officials say that may be the only way to avoid a hard border.
DUP Brexit spokesman Sammy Wilson said “it is probably inevitable that we will end up with a no-deal scenario” because there was no agreement that would be accepted by Britain’s Parliament.
In Luxembourg, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said he hopes “that in the end good sense will win the upper hand.”
“Time is really pressing now,” Maas warned.
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Міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін повідомив, про що говорив із генеральним секретарем НАТО Єнсом Столтенберґом.
«Практична взаємодія на Чорному і Азовському морях, посилення безпеки сховищ боєприпасів, ефективніша діяльність наших трастових фондів та проектів. Як завжди – дружня і плідна зустріч з генеральним секретарем НАТО Єнсом Столтенберґом», – написав Клімкін у мережі Twitter.
У Брюсселі в штаб-квартирі НАТО 15 жовтня відбулася зустріч міністра закордонних справ України Павла Клімкіна і генерального секретаря Північноатлантичного альянсу Єнса Столтенберґа. Про це вдень повідомила місія України при НАТО у мікроблозі Twitter, не розкриваючи змісту зустрічі.
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Міністри закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін та Угорщини Петер Сійярто проводять зустріч у Люксембурзі, повідомляє 15 жовтня представництво України при Європейському союзі.
«На полях засідання «Східного партнерства» в Люксембурзі розпочалас зустріч міністрів закордонних справ України та Угорщини Павла Клімкіна і Петера Сійярто», – йдеться в повідомленні в мережі Twitter.
Це перша зустріч Клімкіна і Сійярто після висилки консула Угорщини із українського Мукачева та українського консула з Угорщини.
Свідомі українці повинні відмовитися від подвійного громадянства, але ніхто їх карати у будь-якому випадку чи ув’язнювати не буде. Про це на прес-конференції в Ужгороді заявив міністр закордонних справ Павло Клімкін, який 13 жовтня перебував на Закарпатті з робочою поїздкою та зустрічався з громадами національних меншин.
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Виступаючи 11 жовтня на прес-конференції в Будапешті, очільник МЗС Угорщини Петер Сійярто пообіцяв закарпатським угорцям, що вони і надалі можуть розраховувати на допомогу «материнської держави».
Раніше у жовтні міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін назвав неадекватним рішення Будапешта вислати українського консула у відповідь на проголошення Києвом персоною «нон-ґрата» угорського дипломата. Перед тим, 26 вересня, Клімкін під час переговорів у штаб-квартирі ООН з угорським міністром закордонних справ Петером Сійярто офіційно повідомив про вимогу відкликати консула Угорщини в українському Берегові або він буде висланий з країни.
У вересні поширене в соцмережах та ЗМІ відео, що в одному з консульств Угорщини в Україні масово видають угорські паспорти українським громадянам, призвело до різких політичних заяв як в Україні, так і в Угорщині.
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A Moroccan man convicted of helping Mohamed Atta and the other Hamburg-based Sept. 11 suicide pilots as they plotted their attacks on New York and Washington was deported Monday from Germany to his native country.
Mounir el-Motassadeq, who was convicted of membership in a terrorist organization and accessory to the murder of the 246 passengers and crew on the four jetliners used in the 2001 attacks, was flown by helicopter from a Hamburg prison on Monday morning.
Blindfolded and with his hands and ankles shackled, the 44-year-old was then led by two police officers to another helicopter while other heavily armed police in balaclavas patrolled the area and watched from rooftops.
Authorities wouldn’t comment on the operation for security reasons.
“Mr. Motassadeq will leave the country soon,” Hamburg Interior Ministry spokesman Frank Reschreiter told The Associated Press. “All the necessary procedural steps for this have been ticked off according to plan.”
El-Motassadeq was released shortly before completing his 15-year-sentence on the condition that he agree to be deported to Morocco. That would allow Germany to re-arrest him if he ever returned to the country.
It wasn’t immediately clear what awaited him in Morocco.
El-Motassadeq was convicted of being part of the so-called Hamburg cell, including Atta and fellow Sept. 11 pilots Marwan al-Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah.
German courts ruled that el-Motassadeq was aware the three planned to hijack and crash planes, even though he might not have known specifics of the plot. They said el-Motassadeq helped “watch the attackers’ backs and conceal them” by helping them keep up the appearance of being regular university students paying tuition and rent and transferring money.
El-Motassadeq acknowledged training at an al-Qaida camp in Afghanistan, but insisted he knew nothing of his friends’ plans to attack the U.S.
“I swear by God that I did know the attackers were in America,” he shouted in accented German at a sentencing hearing. “I swear by God that I did not know what they wanted to do.”
Originally arrested in Hamburg in November 2001, el- Motassadeq was convicted in 2003 of membership in a terrorist organization and thousands of counts of accessory to murder — taking into account victims on the ground — becoming the first person convicted anywhere on charges related to Sept. 11. He was sentenced to the maximum 15 years in prison.
However, a federal court overturned that verdict in 2004, largely because of a lack of evidence from al-Qaida suspects in U.S. custody, and sent the case back to Hamburg.
After a 2005 retrial, el-Motassadeq was again convicted of membership in a terrorist organization that included Atta, al-Shehhi and Jarrah. But he was acquitted of being an accessory to murder after the court ruled it didn’t have enough evidence that he knew of the hijackers’ plot.
El-Motassadeq was sentenced to seven years in prison at the time, but was freed in early 2006 until his appeal could be heard.
Later that year, the federal court reversed the Hamburg court’s acquittal of el-Motassadeq on the accessory to murder charges, ruling that the evidence knew the plotters planned to hijack and crash planes. It limited the number of counts, however, to the 246 people killed aboard the airplanes and the 15-year sentence was restored.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative allies lost their absolute majority in Bavaria’s state parliament by a wide margin Sunday, according to projections from a regional election that could cause more turbulence in the national government.
The Christian Social Union was on course to take just over 35 percent of the vote, down from 47.7 percent five years ago, projections for ARD and ZDF public television based on exit polls and a partial vote count indicated.
That would be the socially conservative party’s worst performance in Bavaria, which it has traditionally dominated, since 1950. Squabbling in Merkel’s national government and a power struggle at home have weighed in recent months on the CSU, which has taken a hard line on migration tradition.
There were gains for parties to its left and right. The Greens were expected to win up to 19 percent to secure second place, more than double their support in 2013. And the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, was set to enter the state legislature with around 11 percent of the vote.
The center-left Social Democrats, Merkel’s other coalition partner in Berlin, were on course for a disastrous result of 10 percent or less, half of what the party received in 2013 and its worst in the state since World War II.
The CSU has held an absolute majority in the Bavarian parliament for all but five of the past 56 years and governed the prosperous southeastern state for 61 years.
Needing coalition partners to govern would in itself be a major setback for the party, which only exists in Bavaria and has long leveraged its strength there to punch above its weight in national politics.
“Of course this isn’t an easy day for the CSU,” the state’s governor, Markus Soeder, told supporters in Munich, adding that the party accepted the “painful” result “with humility.”
Soeder pointed to goings-on in Berlin and said “it’s not so easy to uncouple yourself from the national trend completely.”
But he stressed that the CSU still emerged Sunday as the state’s strongest party and a mandate to form the next Bavarian government.
He said his preference was for a center-right coalition — which would see the CSU partner with the Free Voters, a local center-right party that was seen winning 11.5 percent, and possibly also the Free Democrats, who may or may not secure the 5 percent needed to win state parliament seats.
The Greens, traditionally bitter opponents, with a more liberal approach to migration and an emphasis on environmental issues, are another possibility.
Bavaria is home to some 13 million of Germany’s 82 million people.
In Berlin, the CSU is one of three parties in Merkel’s federal coalition government along with its conservative sister, Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, and the Social Democrats.
That government has been notable largely for internal squabbling since it took office in March. The CSU leader, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, has often played a starring role.
Back in Bavaria, a long-running CSU power struggle saw the 69-year-old Seehofer give up his job as state governor earlier this year to Soeder, a younger and sometimes bitter rival.
Seehofer has sparred with Merkel about migration on and off since 2015, when he assailed her decision to leave Germany’s borders open as refugees and others crossed the Balkans.
They argued in June over whether to turn back small numbers of asylum-seekers at the German-Austrian border, briefly threatening to bring down the national government.
Seehofer also starred in a coalition crisis last month over Germany’s domestic intelligence chief, who was accused of downplaying recent far-right violence against migrants.
Seehofer, who has faced widespread speculation lately that a poor Bavarian result would cost him his job, said he was “saddened” by Sunday’s outcome, but didn’t address his own future.
It remains to be seen whether and how the Bavarian result will affect the national government’s stability or Merkel’s long-term future.
Any aftershocks may be delayed, because another state election is coming Oct. 28 in neighboring Hesse, where conservative Volker Bouffier is defending the 19-year hold of Merkel’s CDU on the governor’s office. Bouffier has criticized the CSU for diminishing people’s trust in Germany’s conservatives.
“Clearly the choices of subjects and the debates of recent weeks led to our friends in the CSU being unable to put their successful regional record at the center of their election campaign,” said the CDU’s general secretary, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer.
Read MoreBritain’s former Brexit secretary is urging members of Prime Minister Theresa May’s cabinet to rebel against her proposed deal with the European Union over the terms of Britain’s departure from the bloc.
David Davis wrote in the Sunday Times that May’s plans for some continued ties with the EU under her Chequers plan is “completely unacceptable” and must be stopped. The fellow Conservative Party member said the time has come for ministers to shoot down May’s plan.
“It is time for the cabinet to exert their collective authority,” he said. “This week the authority of our constitution is on the line.”
May is struggling to build a consensus behind her Brexit plans ahead of a cabinet meeting Tuesday that will be followed by an EU summit Wednesday in Brussels.
If Davis’ call for a rebellion is effective, the cabinet meeting Tuesday would be a likely place for opposition to surface.
Davis and former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson resigned from the cabinet this summer to protest May’s Brexit blueprint. Both have become vocal opponents of her plan, calling it a betrayal of the Brexit vote that would leave Britain in a weakened position.
May also faces obstacles from the Democratic Unionist Party in Northern Ireland, which has played a crucial role in propping up her minority government in Parliament.
DUP leader Arlene Foster remains opposed to any Brexit plan that would require checks on goods traveling between Northern Ireland and Britain, as some EU leaders have suggested as part of a “backstop” plan.
The Chequers plan has also been questioned by some opposition Labour Party lawmakers, further complicating the prime minister’s hopes of winning parliamentary backing for any Brexit deal she reaches with EU officials.
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Saudi Arabia has rebuffed U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to punish it over the disappearance of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, saying Sunday it would retaliate with “greater” economic actions of its own if Trump were to sanction Riyadh.
The Saudi stock market plunged seven percent before recovering to a five percent loss for the day after Trump told CBS there would be “severe punishment” if it is determined, as Turkey believes, that Saudi agents killed Khashoggi inside Riyadh’s consulate in Istanbul two weeks ago.
The Saudis have said the allegation is “baseless,” but have provided no proof that Khashoggi left the diplomatic outpost alive after arriving to pick up documents for his impending marriage.
The official Saudi Press Agency quoted an unnamed government source as saying, “The Kingdom affirms its total rejection of any threats and attempts to undermine it, whether by threatening to impose economic sanctions, using political pressures, or repeating false accusations.”
The statement said the Saudi government “also affirms that if it receives any action, it will respond with greater action,” noting that its economy, as the world’s biggest oil exporter, “has an influential and vital role in the global economy.”
Trump, in excerpts released Saturday from an interview to be aired Sunday on CBS’s 60 Minutes show, warned there would be “severe punishment” for Saudi Arabia if it is determined that Khashoggi was murdered inside the Saudi consulate. Khashoggi was living in self-imposed exile in the United States and had criticized Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in columns written for The Washington Post.
Trump said “nobody knows yet” what happened inside the consulate, “but we’ll probably be able to find out” if Salman ordered Khashoggi’s murder. Trump added the United States “would be very upset and angry if that were the case.”
But Trump, who has frequently boasted about his business ties with the kingdom, suggested during the interview that ending U.S. arms sales to Saudi Arabia would not be an option, saying, “I don’t want to hurt jobs.”
A key U.S. lawmaker, Republican Senator Marco Rubio, told CNN on Sunday that if Saudi agents “went medieval” on Khashoggi, “that would be an outrage.”
He said any response to Khashoggi’s killing “needs to be strong, not symbolic,” including the possibility of cutting off U.S. weapons sales to Riyadh, or it would undermine the U.S.’s moral standing in the world.
In protest of Khashoggi’s disappearance, several U.S. businesses leaders have pulled out of next week’s Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh, dubbed “Davos in the Desert,” after the annual meeting of world economic interests in Switzerland. Rubio said U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin should also withdraw, but White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said the Treasury chief is still planning to go.
Media reports say Khashoggi may have recorded his own death on his Apple Watch.
Accounts say Khashoggi turned on the sound recording capability on his device as he entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2.
The watch is reported to have been connected to the iCloud and the cell phone that he left with his fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, before he entered the consulate. Cengiz said she waited for Khashoggi to come out of the consulate, but he never left.
The reports say the watch recorded not only Khashoggi’s interrogation and torture, but also his murder.
The Washington Post reported in recent days that the Turkish government informed U.S. officials it was in possession of video recordings that prove Khashoggi was killed inside the consulate, but have not made them public.
Saudi officials have denied any involvement in Khashoggi’s disappearance and said he departed the consulate shortly after entering. Saudi Interior Minister Prince Abdel Aziz bin Saud bin Nayef has called the reports the government ordered Khashoggi killed “lies and baseless allegations.”
A group of 15 Saudi men is reported to have flown into Istanbul the day that Khashoggi went to the consulate. Media reports say the men were in the consulate when Khashoggi was there. The men stayed at the consulate for a few hours and then took flights back to Saudi Arabia.
One of the members of the group, according to CNN, has been identified by Turkey’s official Anadolu news agency and the Sabah newspaper as Salah Muhammed al-Tubaiqi, whom the media outlets say is listed on an official Saudi health website as the head of the forensic medicine department at the Interior Ministry.
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