Порошенко розпочав візит до Німеччини

Президент України Петро Порошенко розпочав робочий візит до Німеччини, повідомив його речник Святослав Цеголко у Twitter.

«Президент прибув до Берліна з робочим візитом. Це перший візит іноземного лідера до Німеччини після формування коаліції в цій країні», – написав Цеголко.

В анонсі події на сайті Адміністрації президента йдеться, що Порошенко планує двосторонні переговори з президентом Німеччини Франком-Вальтером Штайнмайєром, канцлером Ангелою Меркель та міністром закордонних справ Гайко Маасом. 

1 квітня в АП повідомляли, що Порошенко планує обговорити з Меркель питання запровадження миротворчої місії ООН на Донбасі.

Україну вперше запросили на зустріч голів МЗС «Групи семи» – посол

Україну вперше запросили на зустріч міністрів закордонних справ країн «Групи семи», яка розпочнеться 22 квітня в канадському Торонто, повідомив посол України в Канаді Андрій Шевченко в коментарі виданню «Європейська правда».

За його словами, Україна вперше в історії буде присутня на повноцінному, плановому заході країн «Групи семи».

Він зазначив, що міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін отримав запрошення на зустріч від своєї колеги, канадського міністра Христі Фріланд.

«Настав час серйозних, стратегічних рішень щодо України, Росії і щодо того, як розвернути світ до миру і міжнародного порядку. Ми раді, що Україна зможе приєднатися до цієї важкої, але критично необхідної розмови, і розраховуємо зробити цінний внесок у майбутні спільні рішення», – розповів посол.

До складу «Групи семи» входять США, Японія, Німеччина, Канада, Італія, Франція та Велика Британія. У 2018 році у клубі головує Канада.

Україну вперше запросили на зустріч голів МЗС «Групи семи» – посол

Україну вперше запросили на зустріч міністрів закордонних справ країн «Групи семи», яка розпочнеться 22 квітня в канадському Торонто, повідомив посол України в Канаді Андрій Шевченко в коментарі виданню «Європейська правда».

За його словами, Україна вперше в історії буде присутня на повноцінному, плановому заході країн «Групи семи».

Він зазначив, що міністр закордонних справ України Павло Клімкін отримав запрошення на зустріч від своєї колеги, канадського міністра Христі Фріланд.

«Настав час серйозних, стратегічних рішень щодо України, Росії і щодо того, як розвернути світ до миру і міжнародного порядку. Ми раді, що Україна зможе приєднатися до цієї важкої, але критично необхідної розмови, і розраховуємо зробити цінний внесок у майбутні спільні рішення», – розповів посол.

До складу «Групи семи» входять США, Японія, Німеччина, Канада, Італія, Франція та Велика Британія. У 2018 році у клубі головує Канада.

China: US Trade Talks Currently ‘Impossible’

China’s Foreign Ministry said Monday that trade talks with the United States are impossible under current conditions.

The comment from spokesman Geng Shuang during a briefing with reporters came a day after U.S. President Donald Trump predicted there would be a resolution of the U.S.-China standoff on tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of goods the world’s two biggest economies are threatening to impose on each other.

“China will take down its Trade Barriers because it is the right thing to do,” Trump said, without offering any direct information. “Taxes will become Reciprocal & a deal will be made on Intellectual Property. Great future for both countries!”

Regardless, Trump said that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping “will always be friends, no matter what happens with our dispute on trade.”

The threats Washington and Beijing have lobbed at each other in recent days have rattled world stock markets, with wide swings of hundreds of points in stock indexes.

U.S. stocks plunged more than 2 percent Friday after Trump threatened to impose tariffs on an additional $100 billion worth of Chinese goods beyond the $50 billion worth of products he had already said would be affected.

Beijing responded in kind, saying it would impose tariffs on U.S. goods “until the end at any cost.”

Both countries have published lists of goods they intend to tax, with the U.S. hitting steel and aluminum imports from China, along with aerospace, tech and machinery goods. Other levies would target medical equipment, medicine and educational materials.

China said it would impose tariffs on more than 100 U.S. products, including soybeans, wheat, corn, beef, tobacco, vehicles, plastic products and an array of other items.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CBS News that the threat of higher tariffs posed the risk of a trade war but that he does not expect one to materialize.

“Our expectation is that we don’t think there will be a trade war. Our objective is to continue to have discussions with China. I don’t expect there will be a trade war. It could be, but I don’t expect it at all,” he said.

Mnuchin said that Trump and Xi have a “very close relationship” and that the two countries would continue to discuss trade issues.

A key U.S. lawmaker, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, told ABC News, that U.S. businesses and consumers could inevitably be hurt if China imposes tariffs on U.S. products.

“There is no way for us to address China without absorbing some pain here,” Graham said. “To those who believe that China is cheating, what idea do you have better than Trump?”

Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics, told VOA that Trump and his top administration officials recognize that the tariffs from both sides would be “very damaging to both economies.”

“The short-term impact would be highly adverse,” he said. “Both sides have a lot to gain by negotiations rather than actually implementing a tariff war.”

China: US Trade Talks Currently ‘Impossible’

China’s Foreign Ministry said Monday that trade talks with the United States are impossible under current conditions.

The comment from spokesman Geng Shuang during a briefing with reporters came a day after U.S. President Donald Trump predicted there would be a resolution of the U.S.-China standoff on tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of goods the world’s two biggest economies are threatening to impose on each other.

“China will take down its Trade Barriers because it is the right thing to do,” Trump said, without offering any direct information. “Taxes will become Reciprocal & a deal will be made on Intellectual Property. Great future for both countries!”

Regardless, Trump said that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping “will always be friends, no matter what happens with our dispute on trade.”

The threats Washington and Beijing have lobbed at each other in recent days have rattled world stock markets, with wide swings of hundreds of points in stock indexes.

U.S. stocks plunged more than 2 percent Friday after Trump threatened to impose tariffs on an additional $100 billion worth of Chinese goods beyond the $50 billion worth of products he had already said would be affected.

Beijing responded in kind, saying it would impose tariffs on U.S. goods “until the end at any cost.”

Both countries have published lists of goods they intend to tax, with the U.S. hitting steel and aluminum imports from China, along with aerospace, tech and machinery goods. Other levies would target medical equipment, medicine and educational materials.

China said it would impose tariffs on more than 100 U.S. products, including soybeans, wheat, corn, beef, tobacco, vehicles, plastic products and an array of other items.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CBS News that the threat of higher tariffs posed the risk of a trade war but that he does not expect one to materialize.

“Our expectation is that we don’t think there will be a trade war. Our objective is to continue to have discussions with China. I don’t expect there will be a trade war. It could be, but I don’t expect it at all,” he said.

Mnuchin said that Trump and Xi have a “very close relationship” and that the two countries would continue to discuss trade issues.

A key U.S. lawmaker, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, told ABC News, that U.S. businesses and consumers could inevitably be hurt if China imposes tariffs on U.S. products.

“There is no way for us to address China without absorbing some pain here,” Graham said. “To those who believe that China is cheating, what idea do you have better than Trump?”

Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics, told VOA that Trump and his top administration officials recognize that the tariffs from both sides would be “very damaging to both economies.”

“The short-term impact would be highly adverse,” he said. “Both sides have a lot to gain by negotiations rather than actually implementing a tariff war.”

Russia to Support Companies Hit by US Sanctions

Russia said Monday it will support companies hit by fresh U.S. sanctions as Russian stocks dropped and shares in aluminum producer Rusal plummeted.

 

Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich said in comments reported by state news agencies that Russia is prepared to back the companies if their positions worsen.

“We have a very attentive approach to our leading companies. They mean thousands of employees and very important jobs for our country,” he was quoted as saying by the TASS agency.

 

Shares in Rusal, which is controlled by billionaire businessman Oleg Deripaska, plunged just over 50 percent on the Hong Kong stock exchange Monday.

 

Rusal said the sanctions “may result in technical defaults in relation to certain credit obligations.”

 

“The company’s initial assessment is that it is highly likely that the impact may be materially adverse to the business and prospects of the group,” Rusal said in a statement.

Deripaska controls a business empire with assets in aluminum, energy and construction. He has figured in Russian election-meddling investigations in the U.S. due to his ties to former Donald Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, who once worked as his consultant. The 55-year-old Deripaska is worth $5.3 billion, according to Forbes magazine.

 

On the Moscow stock exchange, the flagship MOEX index traded down over 6.5 percent as of early Monday afternoon, having partially recovered from a steeper slump which took the index down almost 10 percent. Metals companies were among the main losers.

 

The euro traded above 73 rubles for the first time since September 2016, while the dollar neared the 60-ruble mark.

 

The U.S. Treasury Department on Friday announced sanctions against seven leading Russian businessmen, 17 officials and a dozen Russian companies.

 

Besides Deripaska, targets included Alexei Miller, the head of state natural gas giant Gazprom, and Andrey Kostin, the head of the state-controlled VTB Bank, which is Russia’s second-largest.

 

There was also a place on the list for Kirill Shamalov, who is reportedly Putin’s son-in-law, married to his daughter Katerina Tikhonova, although neither Putin nor the Kremlin have acknowledged that she is his daughter. In 2014, Shamalov acquired a large share of Russian petrochemical company Sibur, later selling most of his stake for an undisclosed sum.

 

Russia to Support Companies Hit by US Sanctions

Russia said Monday it will support companies hit by fresh U.S. sanctions as Russian stocks dropped and shares in aluminum producer Rusal plummeted.

 

Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich said in comments reported by state news agencies that Russia is prepared to back the companies if their positions worsen.

“We have a very attentive approach to our leading companies. They mean thousands of employees and very important jobs for our country,” he was quoted as saying by the TASS agency.

 

Shares in Rusal, which is controlled by billionaire businessman Oleg Deripaska, plunged just over 50 percent on the Hong Kong stock exchange Monday.

 

Rusal said the sanctions “may result in technical defaults in relation to certain credit obligations.”

 

“The company’s initial assessment is that it is highly likely that the impact may be materially adverse to the business and prospects of the group,” Rusal said in a statement.

Deripaska controls a business empire with assets in aluminum, energy and construction. He has figured in Russian election-meddling investigations in the U.S. due to his ties to former Donald Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, who once worked as his consultant. The 55-year-old Deripaska is worth $5.3 billion, according to Forbes magazine.

 

On the Moscow stock exchange, the flagship MOEX index traded down over 6.5 percent as of early Monday afternoon, having partially recovered from a steeper slump which took the index down almost 10 percent. Metals companies were among the main losers.

 

The euro traded above 73 rubles for the first time since September 2016, while the dollar neared the 60-ruble mark.

 

The U.S. Treasury Department on Friday announced sanctions against seven leading Russian businessmen, 17 officials and a dozen Russian companies.

 

Besides Deripaska, targets included Alexei Miller, the head of state natural gas giant Gazprom, and Andrey Kostin, the head of the state-controlled VTB Bank, which is Russia’s second-largest.

 

There was also a place on the list for Kirill Shamalov, who is reportedly Putin’s son-in-law, married to his daughter Katerina Tikhonova, although neither Putin nor the Kremlin have acknowledged that she is his daughter. In 2014, Shamalov acquired a large share of Russian petrochemical company Sibur, later selling most of his stake for an undisclosed sum.

 

Syria, Russia Say Israel Struck Central Syrian Air Base

Syria and Russia say two Israeli war planes operating in Lebanese air space carried out an attack early Monday on an air base in central Syria.

Israel’s military did not comment on the strikes against the T4 base in Homs province. 

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 14 people were killed, including Iranian forces.

In February, Israel accused Iranian forces of using the same site to send a drone to Israeli territory. It responded by attacking Syrian air defense and Iranian military targets within Syria, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to “continue to harm anyone who tries to harm us.”

Initial Syrian state media reports Monday blamed the United States, which along with France denied responsibility.

“However, we continue to closely watch the situation and support the ongoing diplomatic efforts to hold those who use chemical weapons, in Syria and otherwise, accountable,” Pentagon spokesman Christopher Sherwood said in a statement.

Syria has repeatedly denied using chemical weapons throughout the conflict that began in 2011, including the most recent suspected chemical attack Saturday in a rebel-held suburb of Damascus that killed at least 40 people.

Late Sunday, the White House said President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron strongly condemned chemical attacks in Syria and agreed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government “must be held accountable for its continued human rights abuses.”

“They agreed to exchange information on the nature of the attacks and coordinate a strong, joint response,” the White House said about a phone call between the two leaders.

Macron’s office added that the two sides “exchanged information and analysis confirming the use of chemical weapons.”

Trump used Twitter earlier Sunday to say there would be a “big price to pay” for what he called the “mindless chemical attack” Saturday.

In a rare direct condemnation of Russia’s leader, Trump declared, “President Putin, Russia and Iran are responsible” for their support of “Animal Assad.”

He further called for Syria to open the area of the alleged chemical attack to allow in verification and medical teams.

The Russian foreign ministry rejected claims of a chemical attack, saying, “The spread of bogus stories about the use of chlorine and other poisonous substances by (Syrian) government forces continues.

“We have warned several times recently against such dangerous provocations,” the Moscow statement said. “The aim of such deceitful speculation, lacking any kind of grounding, is to shield terrorists and to attempt to justify possible external uses of force.”

Iran said U.S. claims about the attack were aimed at justifying new American military action. A year ago, after an earlier chemical weapons attack by Syria, Trump launched 59 Tomahawk missiles into Syria, targeting the military base that was home to the warplanes that carried out the attack. 

Trump did not say how the U.S. might respond to Saturday’s suspected chemical attack. But Homeland Security and counterterrorism adviser Thomas Bossert told ABC News, “I wouldn’t take anything off the table.”

The United Nations Security Council will meet Monday about the alleged attack, after nine countries demanded an urgent session. The European Union said “evidence points toward yet another chemical attack” by the Syrian regime.

Trump also said that if his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, “had crossed his stated Red Line In The Sand,” to hold Assad accountable for previous chemical attacks, “the Syrian disaster would have ended long ago! Animal Assad would have been history!”

 

Trump’s rebuke of Putin was unusual. 

The U.S. leader has been reluctant during his nearly 15-month presidency to accept the conclusion of the U.S. intelligence community that Putin directed a 2016 campaign to meddle in the U.S. presidential election to help Trump win. U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has been conducting a wide-ranging criminal investigation of the Trump campaign’s links to Russia, but Trump has repeatedly rejected the notion there was any collusion with Russia.

The alleged chemical attack occurred late Saturday amid new attacks on the last rebel enclave in eastern Ghouta.

First responders said they discovered families suffocated in their homes and shelters with foam on their mouths. Relief workers said more than 500 people, mostly women and children, were brought to medical centers with difficulty breathing, foaming at the mouth and their eyes burning.

The Civil Defense and Syrian American Medical Society said patients gave off a chlorine-like smell, and some had blue skin, an indication of oxygen deprivation.

“Dropping poison gas in a way that attacks women and children down in the shelters is a way to try to panic the civilians into leaving and cut the ground underneath the rebels,” University of Pennsylvania political science professor Ian Lustick told VOA.

Trump’s rebuff of Putin and Iran, which has forces in Syria, came as Syrian state television said Sunday an agreement has been reached for rebels to leave Douma, their last stronghold near Damascus.

The accord calls for the Jaish al-Islam fighters to release all prisoners they were holding in exchange for passage within 48 hours to the opposition-held town of Jarablus in northern Syria near the Turkish border. Russia said last week that Jaish al-Islam accepted a deal to leave Ghouta, which houses tens of thousands of people. However, the evacuations stalled over reports that the rebel group remained divided over the withdrawal. 

The pact was reached just hours after the suspected chemical attack.

Syria, Russia Say Israel Struck Central Syrian Air Base

Syria and Russia say two Israeli war planes operating in Lebanese air space carried out an attack early Monday on an air base in central Syria.

Israel’s military did not comment on the strikes against the T4 base in Homs province. 

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 14 people were killed, including Iranian forces.

In February, Israel accused Iranian forces of using the same site to send a drone to Israeli territory. It responded by attacking Syrian air defense and Iranian military targets within Syria, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to “continue to harm anyone who tries to harm us.”

Initial Syrian state media reports Monday blamed the United States, which along with France denied responsibility.

“However, we continue to closely watch the situation and support the ongoing diplomatic efforts to hold those who use chemical weapons, in Syria and otherwise, accountable,” Pentagon spokesman Christopher Sherwood said in a statement.

Syria has repeatedly denied using chemical weapons throughout the conflict that began in 2011, including the most recent suspected chemical attack Saturday in a rebel-held suburb of Damascus that killed at least 40 people.

Late Sunday, the White House said President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron strongly condemned chemical attacks in Syria and agreed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government “must be held accountable for its continued human rights abuses.”

“They agreed to exchange information on the nature of the attacks and coordinate a strong, joint response,” the White House said about a phone call between the two leaders.

Macron’s office added that the two sides “exchanged information and analysis confirming the use of chemical weapons.”

Trump used Twitter earlier Sunday to say there would be a “big price to pay” for what he called the “mindless chemical attack” Saturday.

In a rare direct condemnation of Russia’s leader, Trump declared, “President Putin, Russia and Iran are responsible” for their support of “Animal Assad.”

He further called for Syria to open the area of the alleged chemical attack to allow in verification and medical teams.

The Russian foreign ministry rejected claims of a chemical attack, saying, “The spread of bogus stories about the use of chlorine and other poisonous substances by (Syrian) government forces continues.

“We have warned several times recently against such dangerous provocations,” the Moscow statement said. “The aim of such deceitful speculation, lacking any kind of grounding, is to shield terrorists and to attempt to justify possible external uses of force.”

Iran said U.S. claims about the attack were aimed at justifying new American military action. A year ago, after an earlier chemical weapons attack by Syria, Trump launched 59 Tomahawk missiles into Syria, targeting the military base that was home to the warplanes that carried out the attack. 

Trump did not say how the U.S. might respond to Saturday’s suspected chemical attack. But Homeland Security and counterterrorism adviser Thomas Bossert told ABC News, “I wouldn’t take anything off the table.”

The United Nations Security Council will meet Monday about the alleged attack, after nine countries demanded an urgent session. The European Union said “evidence points toward yet another chemical attack” by the Syrian regime.

Trump also said that if his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, “had crossed his stated Red Line In The Sand,” to hold Assad accountable for previous chemical attacks, “the Syrian disaster would have ended long ago! Animal Assad would have been history!”

 

Trump’s rebuke of Putin was unusual. 

The U.S. leader has been reluctant during his nearly 15-month presidency to accept the conclusion of the U.S. intelligence community that Putin directed a 2016 campaign to meddle in the U.S. presidential election to help Trump win. U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has been conducting a wide-ranging criminal investigation of the Trump campaign’s links to Russia, but Trump has repeatedly rejected the notion there was any collusion with Russia.

The alleged chemical attack occurred late Saturday amid new attacks on the last rebel enclave in eastern Ghouta.

First responders said they discovered families suffocated in their homes and shelters with foam on their mouths. Relief workers said more than 500 people, mostly women and children, were brought to medical centers with difficulty breathing, foaming at the mouth and their eyes burning.

The Civil Defense and Syrian American Medical Society said patients gave off a chlorine-like smell, and some had blue skin, an indication of oxygen deprivation.

“Dropping poison gas in a way that attacks women and children down in the shelters is a way to try to panic the civilians into leaving and cut the ground underneath the rebels,” University of Pennsylvania political science professor Ian Lustick told VOA.

Trump’s rebuff of Putin and Iran, which has forces in Syria, came as Syrian state television said Sunday an agreement has been reached for rebels to leave Douma, their last stronghold near Damascus.

The accord calls for the Jaish al-Islam fighters to release all prisoners they were holding in exchange for passage within 48 hours to the opposition-held town of Jarablus in northern Syria near the Turkish border. Russia said last week that Jaish al-Islam accepted a deal to leave Ghouta, which houses tens of thousands of people. However, the evacuations stalled over reports that the rebel group remained divided over the withdrawal. 

The pact was reached just hours after the suspected chemical attack.

Trump Predicts Resolution of Trade Dispute with China

U.S. President Donald Trump predicted Sunday there would be a resolution of the U.S.-China standoff on tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of goods the world’s two biggest economies are threatening to impose on each other.

The U.S. leader said, without offering any direct information, that “China will take down its Trade Barriers because it is the right thing to do.”

Trump said that “taxes will become Reciprocal & a deal will be made on Intellectual Property. Great future for both countries!”

Regardless, Trump said that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping “will always be friends, no matter what happens with our dispute on trade.”

The threats Washington and Beijing have lobbed at each other in recent days have rattled world stock markets, with wide swings of hundreds of points in stock indexes.

U.S. stocks plunged more than 2 percent Friday after Trump threatened to impose tariffs on an additional $100 billion worth of Chinese goods beyond the $50 billion worth of products he had already said would be affected.

Beijing responded in kind, saying it would impose tariffs on U.S. goods “until the end at any cost.”

Both countries have published lists of goods they intend to tax, with the U.S. hitting steel and aluminum imports from China, along with aerospace, tech and machinery goods. Other levies would target medical equipment, medicine and educational materials.

China said it would impose tariffs on more than 100 U.S. products, including soybeans, wheat, corn, beef, tobacco, vehicles, plastic products and an array of other items.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CBS News that the threat of higher tariffs posed the risk of a trade war but that he does not expect one to materialize.

“Our expectation is that we don’t think there will be a trade war. Our objective is to continue to have discussions with China. I don’t expect there will be a trade war. It could be, but I don’t expect it at all,” he said.

Mnuchin said that Trump and Xi have a “very close relationship” and that the two countries would continue to discuss trade issues.

A key U.S. lawmaker, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, told ABC News, that U.S. businesses and consumers could inevitably be hurt if China imposes tariffs on U.S. products.

“There is no way for us to address China without absorbing some pain here,” Graham said. “To those who believe that China is cheating, what idea do you have better than Trump?”

Trump Predicts Resolution of Trade Dispute with China

U.S. President Donald Trump predicted Sunday there would be a resolution of the U.S.-China standoff on tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of goods the world’s two biggest economies are threatening to impose on each other.

The U.S. leader said, without offering any direct information, that “China will take down its Trade Barriers because it is the right thing to do.”

Trump said that “taxes will become Reciprocal & a deal will be made on Intellectual Property. Great future for both countries!”

Regardless, Trump said that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping “will always be friends, no matter what happens with our dispute on trade.”

The threats Washington and Beijing have lobbed at each other in recent days have rattled world stock markets, with wide swings of hundreds of points in stock indexes.

U.S. stocks plunged more than 2 percent Friday after Trump threatened to impose tariffs on an additional $100 billion worth of Chinese goods beyond the $50 billion worth of products he had already said would be affected.

Beijing responded in kind, saying it would impose tariffs on U.S. goods “until the end at any cost.”

Both countries have published lists of goods they intend to tax, with the U.S. hitting steel and aluminum imports from China, along with aerospace, tech and machinery goods. Other levies would target medical equipment, medicine and educational materials.

China said it would impose tariffs on more than 100 U.S. products, including soybeans, wheat, corn, beef, tobacco, vehicles, plastic products and an array of other items.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CBS News that the threat of higher tariffs posed the risk of a trade war but that he does not expect one to materialize.

“Our expectation is that we don’t think there will be a trade war. Our objective is to continue to have discussions with China. I don’t expect there will be a trade war. It could be, but I don’t expect it at all,” he said.

Mnuchin said that Trump and Xi have a “very close relationship” and that the two countries would continue to discuss trade issues.

A key U.S. lawmaker, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, told ABC News, that U.S. businesses and consumers could inevitably be hurt if China imposes tariffs on U.S. products.

“There is no way for us to address China without absorbing some pain here,” Graham said. “To those who believe that China is cheating, what idea do you have better than Trump?”

Дві українські авіакомпанії можуть позбавити сертифікатів через використання їхніх літаків у Сирії – ЗМІ

Міністр інфраструктури України Володимир Омелян доручив Державіаслужбі здійснити перевірку фактів, викладених в публікації агентства Reuters, щодо перевезення сирійською авіакомпанією Cham Wings російських найманців між Дамаском (Сирія) і Ростовом-на-Дону (Росія) і використання для цього літаків українських авіакомпаній «Хорс» (Khors Aircompany) і «Дарт» (Dart Airlines).

Про це повідомляють українські агенції новин, посилаючись на прес-службу Міністерства інфраструктури.

«Якщо за підсумками перевірки Державіаслужби інформація підтвердиться, Міністерство інфраструктури буде рекомендувати уряду і РНБО внести зазначені компанії і їхніх власників у санкційний список. Їх сертифікати будуть анульовані», – цитують агенції новин заяву пресслужби міністерства.

«За 14 місяців з 5 січня 2017 року авіакомпанія здійснила 51 політ з Дамаска й Латакії в Ростов і назад. Щоразу для цього використовувалися лайнери Airbus A320, які можуть перевозити до 180 пасажирів. Cham Wings з 2016 року перебуває під санкціями США. Компанію обвинуватили в доставці в Сирію бойовиків – союзників президента Башара Асада, зброї й спорядження для сирійської розвідки», – сказано в повідомленні міністерства з посиланням на розслідування агентства Reuters.

«За інформацією агентства, раніше літаки Аirbus належали європейським і американським авіакомпаніям, але пізніше вони опинилися у парках близькосхідних компаній через мережу посередників та офшорів. Зокрема, 84 вживаних літаків виробництва Airbus і Boeing змогли придбати або орендувати компанії «Хорс» і «Дарт» (зареєстровані в Україні). З цих 84 літаків як мінімум 40 опинилися в Іраку, Ірані та Сирії», – йдеться в повідомленні.

У 2017 році ці дві українські авіакомпанії потрапили під санкції США проти Ірану. Тоді Міністерство фінансів США заявило, що «Хорс» і «Дарт» винаймали свої літаки авіакомпаніям із Ірану, що перебувають під американськими санкціями, і тому зазнали покарання й самі.

 

 

Дві українські авіакомпанії можуть позбавити сертифікатів через використання їхніх літаків у Сирії – ЗМІ

Міністр інфраструктури України Володимир Омелян доручив Державіаслужбі здійснити перевірку фактів, викладених в публікації агентства Reuters, щодо перевезення сирійською авіакомпанією Cham Wings російських найманців між Дамаском (Сирія) і Ростовом-на-Дону (Росія) і використання для цього літаків українських авіакомпаній «Хорс» (Khors Aircompany) і «Дарт» (Dart Airlines).

Про це повідомляють українські агенції новин, посилаючись на прес-службу Міністерства інфраструктури.

«Якщо за підсумками перевірки Державіаслужби інформація підтвердиться, Міністерство інфраструктури буде рекомендувати уряду і РНБО внести зазначені компанії і їхніх власників у санкційний список. Їх сертифікати будуть анульовані», – цитують агенції новин заяву пресслужби міністерства.

«За 14 місяців з 5 січня 2017 року авіакомпанія здійснила 51 політ з Дамаска й Латакії в Ростов і назад. Щоразу для цього використовувалися лайнери Airbus A320, які можуть перевозити до 180 пасажирів. Cham Wings з 2016 року перебуває під санкціями США. Компанію обвинуватили в доставці в Сирію бойовиків – союзників президента Башара Асада, зброї й спорядження для сирійської розвідки», – сказано в повідомленні міністерства з посиланням на розслідування агентства Reuters.

«За інформацією агентства, раніше літаки Аirbus належали європейським і американським авіакомпаніям, але пізніше вони опинилися у парках близькосхідних компаній через мережу посередників та офшорів. Зокрема, 84 вживаних літаків виробництва Airbus і Boeing змогли придбати або орендувати компанії «Хорс» і «Дарт» (зареєстровані в Україні). З цих 84 літаків як мінімум 40 опинилися в Іраку, Ірані та Сирії», – йдеться в повідомленні.

У 2017 році ці дві українські авіакомпанії потрапили під санкції США проти Ірану. Тоді Міністерство фінансів США заявило, що «Хорс» і «Дарт» винаймали свої літаки авіакомпаніям із Ірану, що перебувають під американськими санкціями, і тому зазнали покарання й самі.

 

 

Trump Blames Putin, Iran for Syrian Chemical Attack, Vowing ‘Big Price to Pay’

U.S. President Donald Trump blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iran on Sunday for a “mindless chemical attack” in Syria that killed at least 40 people, vowing there would be a “big price to pay.”

In a rare direct condemnation of the Russian leader, Trump declared, “President Putin, Russia and Iran are responsible” for their support of “Animal Assad,” Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

“Big price to pay,” Trump said in one of a string of Twitter comments. “Open area immediately for medical help and verification. Another humanitarian disaster for no reason whatsoever. SICK!”

Trump did not say how the U.S. might respond. But Homeland Security and counterterrorism adviser Thomas Bossert told ABC News, “I wouldn’t take anything off the table,” leaving open the possibility of a new missile strike like the one Trump ordered a year ago after another Syrian chemical weapons attack.

Diplomats said the United Nations Security Council is likely to meet Monday about the alleged attack, after nine countries demanded an urgent session. The European Union said “evidence points toward yet another chemical attack” by the Syrian regime.

Trump described the area where the “atrocity” occurred in Douma near the Syrian capital, Damascus, as “in lockdown and encircled by Syrian Army, making it completely inaccessible to outside world.”

But Trump also said that if his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, “had crossed his stated Red Line In The Sand,” to hold Assad accountable for previous chemical attacks, “the Syrian disaster would have ended long ago! Animal Assad would have been history!”

Trump’s rebuke of Putin was unusual.

The U.S. leader has been reluctant during his nearly 15-month presidency to accept the conclusion of the U.S. intelligence community that Putin directed a 2016 campaign to meddle in the U.S. presidential election to help Trump win. U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has been conducting a wide-ranging criminal investigation of the Trump campaign’s links to Russia, but Trump has repeatedly rejected the notion there was any collusion with Russia.

The alleged chemical attack, denied by both the Syrian government and Russia, occurred late Saturday amid new attacks on the last rebel enclave in eastern Ghouta.

Trump’s rebuke of Putin was unusual.

The U.S. leader has been reluctant during his nearly 15-month presidency to accept the conclusion of the U.S. intelligence community that Putin directed a 2016 campaign to meddle in the U.S. presidential election to help Trump win. U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has been conducting a wide-ranging criminal investigation of the Trump campaign’s links to Russia, but Trump has repeatedly rejected the notion there was any collusion with Russia.

The alleged chemical attack, denied by both the Syrian government and Russia, occurred late Saturday amid new attacks on the last rebel enclave in eastern Ghouta.

First responders said they discovered families suffocated in their homes and shelters with foam on their mouths. Relief workers said more than 500 people, mostly women and children, were brought to medical centers with difficulty breathing, foaming at the mouth and their eyes burning.

The Civil Defense and Syrian American Medical Society said patients gave off a chlorine-like smell, and some had blue skin, an indication of oxygen deprivation.

The Russian Foreign Ministry rejected claims of a chemical attack, saying, “The spread of bogus stories about the use of chlorine and other poisonous substances by [Syrian] government forces continues.

“We have warned several times recently against such dangerous provocations,” the Moscow statement said. “The aim of such deceitful speculation, lacking any kind of grounding, is to shield terrorists and to attempt to justify possible external uses of force.”

Iran said U.S. claims about the attack were aimed at justifying new American military action. A year ago, after an earlier chemical weapons attack by Syria, Trump launched 59 Tomahawk missiles into Syria, targeting the military base that was home to the warplanes that carried out the attack.

Trump’s rebuff of Putin and Iran, which has forces in Syria, came as Syrian state television said Sunday an agreement has been reached for rebels to leave Douma, their last stronghold near Damascus.

The accord calls for the Jaish al-Islam fighters to release all prisoners they were holding in exchange for passage within 48 hours to the opposition-held town of Jarablus in northern Syria near the Turkish border. Russia said last week that Jaish al-Islam accepted a deal to leave Ghouta, which houses tens of thousands of people. However, the evacuations stalled over reports that the rebel group remained divided over the withdrawal.

The pact was reached just hours after the suspected chemical attack.

In Rome, Pope Francis condemned the use of chemical weapons in Syria, “There is not a good war and a bad one, and nothing, nothing can justify the use of such devices of extermination against defenseless people and populations.”

Even before Trump responded to the suspected chemical attack to blame Putin, the U.S. State Department had said, “Russia, with its unwavering support for the regime, ultimately bears responsibility for these brutal attacks, targeting of countless civilians, and the suffocation of Syria’s most vulnerable communities with chemical weapons.”

Trump Blames Putin, Iran for Syrian Chemical Attack, Vowing ‘Big Price to Pay’

U.S. President Donald Trump blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iran on Sunday for a “mindless chemical attack” in Syria that killed at least 40 people, vowing there would be a “big price to pay.”

In a rare direct condemnation of the Russian leader, Trump declared, “President Putin, Russia and Iran are responsible” for their support of “Animal Assad,” Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

“Big price to pay,” Trump said in one of a string of Twitter comments. “Open area immediately for medical help and verification. Another humanitarian disaster for no reason whatsoever. SICK!”

Trump did not say how the U.S. might respond. But Homeland Security and counterterrorism adviser Thomas Bossert told ABC News, “I wouldn’t take anything off the table,” leaving open the possibility of a new missile strike like the one Trump ordered a year ago after another Syrian chemical weapons attack.

Diplomats said the United Nations Security Council is likely to meet Monday about the alleged attack, after nine countries demanded an urgent session. The European Union said “evidence points toward yet another chemical attack” by the Syrian regime.

Trump described the area where the “atrocity” occurred in Douma near the Syrian capital, Damascus, as “in lockdown and encircled by Syrian Army, making it completely inaccessible to outside world.”

But Trump also said that if his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, “had crossed his stated Red Line In The Sand,” to hold Assad accountable for previous chemical attacks, “the Syrian disaster would have ended long ago! Animal Assad would have been history!”

Trump’s rebuke of Putin was unusual.

The U.S. leader has been reluctant during his nearly 15-month presidency to accept the conclusion of the U.S. intelligence community that Putin directed a 2016 campaign to meddle in the U.S. presidential election to help Trump win. U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has been conducting a wide-ranging criminal investigation of the Trump campaign’s links to Russia, but Trump has repeatedly rejected the notion there was any collusion with Russia.

The alleged chemical attack, denied by both the Syrian government and Russia, occurred late Saturday amid new attacks on the last rebel enclave in eastern Ghouta.

Trump’s rebuke of Putin was unusual.

The U.S. leader has been reluctant during his nearly 15-month presidency to accept the conclusion of the U.S. intelligence community that Putin directed a 2016 campaign to meddle in the U.S. presidential election to help Trump win. U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has been conducting a wide-ranging criminal investigation of the Trump campaign’s links to Russia, but Trump has repeatedly rejected the notion there was any collusion with Russia.

The alleged chemical attack, denied by both the Syrian government and Russia, occurred late Saturday amid new attacks on the last rebel enclave in eastern Ghouta.

First responders said they discovered families suffocated in their homes and shelters with foam on their mouths. Relief workers said more than 500 people, mostly women and children, were brought to medical centers with difficulty breathing, foaming at the mouth and their eyes burning.

The Civil Defense and Syrian American Medical Society said patients gave off a chlorine-like smell, and some had blue skin, an indication of oxygen deprivation.

The Russian Foreign Ministry rejected claims of a chemical attack, saying, “The spread of bogus stories about the use of chlorine and other poisonous substances by [Syrian] government forces continues.

“We have warned several times recently against such dangerous provocations,” the Moscow statement said. “The aim of such deceitful speculation, lacking any kind of grounding, is to shield terrorists and to attempt to justify possible external uses of force.”

Iran said U.S. claims about the attack were aimed at justifying new American military action. A year ago, after an earlier chemical weapons attack by Syria, Trump launched 59 Tomahawk missiles into Syria, targeting the military base that was home to the warplanes that carried out the attack.

Trump’s rebuff of Putin and Iran, which has forces in Syria, came as Syrian state television said Sunday an agreement has been reached for rebels to leave Douma, their last stronghold near Damascus.

The accord calls for the Jaish al-Islam fighters to release all prisoners they were holding in exchange for passage within 48 hours to the opposition-held town of Jarablus in northern Syria near the Turkish border. Russia said last week that Jaish al-Islam accepted a deal to leave Ghouta, which houses tens of thousands of people. However, the evacuations stalled over reports that the rebel group remained divided over the withdrawal.

The pact was reached just hours after the suspected chemical attack.

In Rome, Pope Francis condemned the use of chemical weapons in Syria, “There is not a good war and a bad one, and nothing, nothing can justify the use of such devices of extermination against defenseless people and populations.”

Even before Trump responded to the suspected chemical attack to blame Putin, the U.S. State Department had said, “Russia, with its unwavering support for the regime, ultimately bears responsibility for these brutal attacks, targeting of countless civilians, and the suffocation of Syria’s most vulnerable communities with chemical weapons.”

UN, Singapore Concerned about Rising Trade Tensions

The U.N. secretary-general and the Singaporean foreign minister voiced concerns about global trade tensions and rising protectionism during back-to-back meetings in Beijing on Sunday.

Following remarks from his Chinese counterpart, Singaporean Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan vowed to “double-down” on free trade and economic liberalization in tandem with China.

 

“This is a time in the world where the temptation to embark on unilateralism and protectionism is unfortunately rising,” Balakrishnan said.

 

In a separate meeting, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called China “absolutely crucial” in the international system.

 

“You mentioned reform and opening up — it’s so important in a moment when some others have a policy of closing up,” Guterres told Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

 

“The solutions for these problems are not to put globalization to question, but to improve globalization. Not isolation or protectionism, but more international cooperation,” Guterres said.

 

The comments came as China and the U.S. exchanged escalating tariff threats in what is already shaping up to be the biggest trade battle for more than a half century.

 

Beijing vowed Friday to “counterattack with great strength” if President Donald Trump follows through on threats to impose tariffs on an additional $100 billion in Chinese goods.

 

Trump’s announcement followed China’s decision to tax $50 billion in American products, including soybeans and small aircraft, in response to a U.S. move this week to impose tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods.

 

The U.S. bought more than $500 billion in goods from China last year and now is planning or considering penalties on some $150 billion of those imports. The U.S. sold about $130 billion in goods to China in 2017 and faces a potentially devastating hit to its market there if China responds in kind.

 

In the meetings, Wang attacked what he called “protectionism and unilateralism,” though he didn’t single out the U.S. by name.

 

“China will safeguard the principles of free trade and oppose protectionism,” Wang said. “We should push forward with economic globalization.”

 

Wang was welcoming both officials ahead of their planned appearances at the annual Boao Forum for Asia, a Chinese-sponsored annual gathering for political and economic elites on tropical Hainan Island.

 

Guterres will meet President Xi Jinping later Sunday and also plans to visit the China Peacekeeping Police Training Center.

 

Balakrishnan is traveling with Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on the first of a five-day visit to China.

This story was written by the Associated Press

 

 

UN, Singapore Concerned about Rising Trade Tensions

The U.N. secretary-general and the Singaporean foreign minister voiced concerns about global trade tensions and rising protectionism during back-to-back meetings in Beijing on Sunday.

Following remarks from his Chinese counterpart, Singaporean Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan vowed to “double-down” on free trade and economic liberalization in tandem with China.

 

“This is a time in the world where the temptation to embark on unilateralism and protectionism is unfortunately rising,” Balakrishnan said.

 

In a separate meeting, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called China “absolutely crucial” in the international system.

 

“You mentioned reform and opening up — it’s so important in a moment when some others have a policy of closing up,” Guterres told Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

 

“The solutions for these problems are not to put globalization to question, but to improve globalization. Not isolation or protectionism, but more international cooperation,” Guterres said.

 

The comments came as China and the U.S. exchanged escalating tariff threats in what is already shaping up to be the biggest trade battle for more than a half century.

 

Beijing vowed Friday to “counterattack with great strength” if President Donald Trump follows through on threats to impose tariffs on an additional $100 billion in Chinese goods.

 

Trump’s announcement followed China’s decision to tax $50 billion in American products, including soybeans and small aircraft, in response to a U.S. move this week to impose tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods.

 

The U.S. bought more than $500 billion in goods from China last year and now is planning or considering penalties on some $150 billion of those imports. The U.S. sold about $130 billion in goods to China in 2017 and faces a potentially devastating hit to its market there if China responds in kind.

 

In the meetings, Wang attacked what he called “protectionism and unilateralism,” though he didn’t single out the U.S. by name.

 

“China will safeguard the principles of free trade and oppose protectionism,” Wang said. “We should push forward with economic globalization.”

 

Wang was welcoming both officials ahead of their planned appearances at the annual Boao Forum for Asia, a Chinese-sponsored annual gathering for political and economic elites on tropical Hainan Island.

 

Guterres will meet President Xi Jinping later Sunday and also plans to visit the China Peacekeeping Police Training Center.

 

Balakrishnan is traveling with Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on the first of a five-day visit to China.

This story was written by the Associated Press

 

 

В МЗС Росії виступили з заявою щодо зустрічі «нормандської четвірки»

У Міністерстві закордонних справ Росії виступили з заявою щодо можливих зустрічей «нормандської четвірки» щодо врегулювання на окупованій частині Донбасу.

Як заявив директор департаменту загальноєвропейської співпраці МЗС Росії Андрій Келін російському агентству «ТАСС», наразі таких зустрічей не заплановано ні на якому рівні – ні міністрів, ні політдиректорів МЗС.

«Тим більше в нинішній значно зіпсованій атмосфері я не дуже уявляю, про що могли б говорити учасники «нормандського формату», – додав він.

Але при цьому Келін сказав, що «на робочому рівні, на рівні помічників президентів, робота триває», бо «необхідно узгодити дорожню карту виконання мінських домовленостей».

Келін також наголосив, що «нормандського формату» без Росії не може бути «за визначенням», коментуючи повідомлення, що у травні може відбутися саміт керівників трьох країн цього формату – України, Німеччини і Франції – в німецькому місті Аахені без участі президента Росії.

За його словами, «автором чуток про якусь тристоронню зустріч» є президент України Петро Порошенко, а «нам про це нічого не відомо».

Про можливість такої зустрічі керівників трьох держав із посиланням на «інформовані джерела в Києві», наближені до адміністрації президента і до МЗС України, повідомило 2 квітня російське видання «Коммерсант».

Зустріч у «нормандському форматі» на рівні міністрів закордонних справ чотирьох країн попередньо планувалася під час безпекової конференції в Мюнхені в лютому, але вона зірвалася через зміни планів кількох учасників.

В МЗС Росії виступили з заявою щодо зустрічі «нормандської четвірки»

У Міністерстві закордонних справ Росії виступили з заявою щодо можливих зустрічей «нормандської четвірки» щодо врегулювання на окупованій частині Донбасу.

Як заявив директор департаменту загальноєвропейської співпраці МЗС Росії Андрій Келін російському агентству «ТАСС», наразі таких зустрічей не заплановано ні на якому рівні – ні міністрів, ні політдиректорів МЗС.

«Тим більше в нинішній значно зіпсованій атмосфері я не дуже уявляю, про що могли б говорити учасники «нормандського формату», – додав він.

Але при цьому Келін сказав, що «на робочому рівні, на рівні помічників президентів, робота триває», бо «необхідно узгодити дорожню карту виконання мінських домовленостей».

Келін також наголосив, що «нормандського формату» без Росії не може бути «за визначенням», коментуючи повідомлення, що у травні може відбутися саміт керівників трьох країн цього формату – України, Німеччини і Франції – в німецькому місті Аахені без участі президента Росії.

За його словами, «автором чуток про якусь тристоронню зустріч» є президент України Петро Порошенко, а «нам про це нічого не відомо».

Про можливість такої зустрічі керівників трьох держав із посиланням на «інформовані джерела в Києві», наближені до адміністрації президента і до МЗС України, повідомило 2 квітня російське видання «Коммерсант».

Зустріч у «нормандському форматі» на рівні міністрів закордонних справ чотирьох країн попередньо планувалася під час безпекової конференції в Мюнхені в лютому, але вона зірвалася через зміни планів кількох учасників.

Sharpton, Florida School Shooting Survivor Announce Rally Against Gun Violence

A survivor of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting joined the Reverend Al Sharpton on Saturday to announce a June rally in front of President Donald Trump’s Manhattan apartment to protest gun violence facilitated by access to assault weapons.

Aalayah Eastmond, a junior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, was at Sharpton’s National Action Network in Harlem for the minister’s weekly meetings. 

Eastmond, 16, was in class February 14 when a gunman attacked, eventually killing 17 people.

The June 2 rally — at the beginning of New York state’s Gun Violence Awareness Month — is to start at Trump International Tower on Columbus Circle and proceed toward Fifth Avenue and Trump Tower, where Trump has an apartment that has been his longtime home.

For Eastmond, New York City is more than a prominent media staging ground. One of her family members was fatally shot here.

Fifteen years ago, “I actually lost my uncle to gun violence in Brooklyn,” she said. “So for it to happen to me, in my face, that just shows that change has to happen now.”

Sharpton said that young people leading recent activism across the country have produced what he called “a necessary marriage of dealing with gun violence as an American issue that jumps over the boundaries of any community and deals with America from every city.”

Another Sharpton concern is how police handle interactions with the mentally ill. On Thursday, police fatally shot a Brooklyn man, Saheed Vassell, as he brandished what turned out to be a welding torch mistaken for a gun.

Among the June rally organizers is Ramon Contreras, 19, a senior at one of 11 NYC College Prep charter schools who lost a classmate to gun violence last October.

“He was only 17 years old,” Contreras said. “The way it affected me, I was lost.”

He said everybody wanted to do something but felt “we didn’t have the resources.”

Last month, “the nationwide walkout gave us the courage, and pretty much the strength, to say, ‘Hey, enough is enough.’ ”

One Killed in Apartment Fire at Trump Tower in New York

One person was killed and four firefighters received minor injuries in an apartment fire on the 50th floor of Trump Tower in New York on Saturday, in a blaze that was quickly extinguished, fire officials said.

The victim, a male resident, died at the hospital and has not yet been identified, they said.

President Donald Trump, who has an office and a private residence in the midtown Manhattan structure, was not in the building at the time.

“Fire at Trump Tower is out. Very confined (well built building). Firemen (and women) did a great job. THANK YOU!” Trump tweeted.

Fire officials have not yet released a suspected cause of the blaze, adding no member of the Trump family was in the building at the time.

“This was a very difficult fire. As you can imagine, the apartment is quite large, we are 50 stories up. The rest of the building had a considerable amount of smoke,” Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro said on Twitter.

About 200 fire personnel responded to the incident, which the department said was a four-alarm fire.

Video on social media showed flames outside of a few windows and black smoke billowing up from the high-rise.

In January, three people were injured in an early-morning fire at the top of Trump Tower. One firefighter was hospitalized while two people received minor injuries that were treated at the scene, the New York Fire Department said.

In addition to the president’s 66th-floor penthouse, Trump Tower houses the headquarters of the Trump Organization as well as other residences, offices and stores.

2020 Census Test Has Critics Counting Concerns, Not People

The success of the 2020 census, which will be the first to include an online survey, could hinge on a single “dress rehearsal” underway right now in Rhode Island. So far, many locals aren’t impressed.

Providence County, the state’s most populous, is the only place where the Census Bureau is running a full test, after plans to test two other sites this year were canceled because of a lack of funding from Congress. A planned question about citizenship that has states suing the federal government isn’t on the test.

Several elected officials and leaders of advocacy and community groups this week held an “emergency press conference” to raise concerns, which include a shortage of publicity around the test and its limited language outreach in an immigrant-heavy county, with large communities from countries including the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Portugal and Cape Verde.

“If we don’t get it right here, then the country’s not going to get it right,” Democratic Lieutenant Governor Dan McKee warned.

States, cities sue

The concerns in Rhode Island are the latest evidence of mounting apprehension over the 2020 census. Seventeen states and six cities, including Rhode Island and its largest city, Providence, sued the federal government on Tuesday to block a question the administration of Republican President Donald Trump announced last month it would ask about citizenship.

The 2020 census will be the first to give respondents the option of answering online. Census Bureau officials say that the Rhode Island test is on track, and that they’re focused on ensuring new technology works, including a smartphone app being used by canvassers and cloud computing.

“There’s things that aren’t exactly the way they need to be. But we’re learning that; we’re making the changes on the fly,” said Jeff Behler, a regional Census Bureau director who is overseeing the test. “We’re getting some very critical information about changes that we need to make. And we have time to do that.”

In the test, which began March 16, 280,000 homes in Providence County are receiving letters through the U.S. mail that direct residents to a survey website or toll-free phone number. There, they can complete the survey, which includes questions including about age, race and ethnicity.

People may also call to get a paper version of the census sent to them, but census officials hope most will do it online because it is less expensive.

A response is legally required. Those who don’t respond on their own will get a personal visit, with door-knocking scheduled through July, Behler said. Census workers who visit homes will use a new smartphone app, instead of paper forms, to enter information they collect in person.

Nothing on citizenship

The test survey does not include any question on citizenship, having begun several days before the Trump administration’s announcement that it was adding that question.

Entities that use census data worry about including a question on the census without testing it first.

“Adding a question at this late stage of the Census process does not allow time for adequate testing to incorporate new questions, particularly if the testing reveals substantial problems,” the American Statistical Association wrote in a January letter to the federal government.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said he added the citizenship question at the request of the Justice Department to provide a more accurate tally of the number of voting-eligible residents in each neighborhood. Many Democratic officials and advocacy groups fear the question will scare people away from participating because they view the Trump administration as hostile to immigrants, diminishing the survey’s overall accuracy.

Many Republican officials have downplayed such concerns, instead echoing the Trump administration’s assertion that there is no empirical evidence pointing to a steep participation decline. The Rhode Island test would have to be repeated — the second time with a citizenship question at the end — to gauge whether there is a decrease in participation, but there are no plans to do that.

Even aside from the citizenship question, critics say they worry residents will ignore the test requests because they don’t know what they are or because they fear how the government will use the information. And they worry a test with a lot of problems will ripple into the nationwide census two years from now.

Funding shortages mean the testing has been scaled back significantly from original plans, including two canceled 2018 tests in West Virginia and Washington state, as well as two field tests that were canceled in 2017. Plans for the census bureau to run an ad campaign and other outreach for the Rhode Island test were also canceled for lack of funding.

“At this time 10 years ago, there were five fully funded, end-to-end tests around the country,” said Gabriela Domenzain, director of the Latino Policy Institute at Providence’s Roger Williams University. “Today there is one underfunded. The census will fail. The pilot is failing.”

Letter in English only

Community leaders point out that the region has a large immigrant population but that the official-looking, two-page government letter came only in English, along with a short flier that offered help completing it, with one sentence each in eight other languages.

“The confusion around the census and the fear around it, we’re afraid, is going to dissuade people from filling it out,” said Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza. “I don’t know what’s in their minds, but it sure seems that if you’re trying to be strategic and sandbag this process, that you would do exactly what they’re doing.”

As of Monday, more than 43,000 households in the county of about 630,000 residents had responded to the test, a 15 percent response rate, Census Bureau spokeswoman Kristina Barrett said. That figure is in line with expectations at this point in the test, she said. Eighty-seven percent of respondents had done so online.

At the bustling Carolina Family Restaurant in Providence on Friday, which serves up Dominican fare, one patron said she received the letter and completed it online; another said she got it and planned to do it. But five other county residents said they knew nothing about it.

“I don’t really watch the news,” said Anthony Gomez, 29, of Providence. “It’s depressing.”

This story was written by the Associated Press.

Air France Strike Sees 30 Percent of Flights Cancelled

Some 30 percent of Air France flights were cancelled Saturday as strikes over pay rises appear to be intensifying.

And that’s just part of France’s travel troubles this month. Most French trains will screech to a halt as a strike over President Emmanuel Macron’s economic reforms resumes Saturday night – a strike that is set to last through Monday.

Screens at Paris’ Charles de Gaulle Airport showed red “cancelled” notes next to multiple flights Saturday, as families around France and Europe headed off on spring vacations.

The one-day Air France walkout is affecting international and domestic travel, notably a quarter of flights at Paris’ Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports. Air France is urging passengers to check the status of their flights before coming to the airport and offering to change tickets for free.

It’s the fifth Air France strike since February, and the number of cancelled flights is rising. Unions this week announced more strikes this month to coincide with national rail walkouts.

Air France unions want 6 percent pay raises after years of salary freezes. Air France is offering 1 percent raises, saying anything higher will hurt its turnaround efforts.

The strikes have been costing Air France some 20 million euros ($24.6 million) a day and have hurt its share price.

Meanwhile, the SNCF national railway announced that 80 percent of high speed trains and two-thirds of regional trains will be canceled starting Saturday night as unions stage another two-day walkout.

About a quarter of Eurostar trains to London will be cancelled, and no trains were expected to run at all to Switzerland, Spain or Italy.

It’s part of three months of rolling train strikes seen as the biggest challenge to Macron since he took office last year. Rail unions are angry at plans by Macron’s government to abolish a generous benefits system that gives train workers jobs for life.

Both the government and unions are holding firm despite continuing negotiations. France prides itself on its railways, seen as a pillar of public service.

Macron argues that the special status for train workers is no longer tenable in a globalized and increasingly automated economy. It’s part of his broader plans to overhaul the French economy to make it more competitive.

Чільний представник Єврокомісії заявив про ставлення до «Північного потоку-2»

Чільний представник Європейської комісії на зустрічі з міністром енергетики і вугільної промисловості України в Києві заявив про ставлення до планованого Росією газопроводу в обхід України «Північний потік-2», повідомив прес-центр українського уряду.

За цим повідомленням, генеральний директор Генерального директорату з питань енергетики Європейської комісії Домінік Рісторі на зустрічі з міністром Ігорем Насаликом заявив, що підтримує позицію України щодо газопроводу «Північний потік-2».

«Наша позиція чітка: ми вважаємо, що «Північний потік-2» не сприяє диверсифікації джерел і маршрутів постачання газу. Він не буде підтриманий фінансово з боку ЄС», – наводить прес-служба слова Рісторі.

За повідомленням, представник європейської сторони звернув увагу на значний прогрес у просуванні реформ та відзначив результати, які продемонструвала українська сторона, особливо щодо трансформації енергетичного ринку, назвавши їх разючими.

«Ми продовжимо підтримувати Україну у реформуванні газової та електроенергетичної сфер, нарощуванні потенціалу незалежного регулятора та в русі України щодо анбандлінгу (передачу функцій видобування газу, його транспортування і розподілу незалежним компаніям – ред.). Це однозначно дозволить залучити інвесторів та побудувати партнерські зв’язки з компаніями у Європі», – заявив також Домінік Рісторі.

Коли відбулася ця зустріч, у повідомленні не уточнено.

Проект «Північний потік-2» має постачати газ із родовищ на півночі Росії безпосередньо до Німеччини дном Балтійського моря, оминаючи традиційні транзитні маршрути через Україну і Словаччину. Проект має розширити здатності вже збудованого першого «Північного потоку». Компанія Nord Stream 2 AG («Північний потік-2»), що займається плануванням будівництва, належить російському «Газпромові» на 100 відсотків через його філію в Нідерландах.

Критики вважають, що, на відміну від першої черги, вже наявного газогону «Північний потік», планована друга не має економічного обґрунтування і є суто політичним проектом Кремля, що має на меті збільшити залежність Європи від російського газу.

Серед таких критиків – не тільки Україна, а й США, а в Євросоюзі Європейська комісія, виконавчий орган ЄС, і Європейський парламент, а також низка країн, у першу чергу зі Східної Європи. У Єврокомісії, зокрема, заявляли, що в разі побудови газопроводу «Північний потік-2» (Nord Stream-2) будуть порушені принципи прозорості, недискримінаційності і рівного доступу. У США неодноразово заявляли, що «Північний потік-2» є об’єктом політизації енергетики й «інструментом російської агресії» і підриває спроби Європи стати менш залежною від російських ресурсів.

Але інша низка європейських країн, у першу чергу Німеччина, продовжують підтримувати цей проект, який там натомість називають «суто комерційним».

На Великодні свята спрощений режим перетину лінії розмежування на Донбасі – штаб

На Великодні свята для мешканців жителів населених пунктів, розташованих на лінії зіткнення на Донбасі, спрощений режим перетину лінії розмежування, повідомив штаб української воєнної операції на Донбасі.

Спрощені процедури діють від 8:00 7 квітня і триватимуть 72 години, зазначили військові.

«Таким чином, жителі прифронтових селищ можуть у спрощеному режимі перетинати умовну лінію розмежування, аби потрапити до рідних чи близьких, які проживають на непідконтрольній Україні території», – заявили в штабі.

На лінії розмежування діє лише один КПВВ у Луганській області – «Станиця Луганська», і він є винятково пішохідним. Чотири автомобільні пункти пропуску працюють у Донецькій області – «Майорськ», «Мар’їнка», «Новотроїцьке» та «Гнутове». 

Від квітня 2014 року на частині Донбасу триває збройний конфлікт. Україна і Захід звинувачують Москву в підтримці сепаратистів. Росія ці звинувачення відкидає і заявляє, що на Донбасі можуть бути лише російські «добровольці».

Понад 266 тисяч людей підписали декларації з лікарями з часу запуску системи – уряд

Понад 266 тисяч людей підписали декларації з лікарями з часу запуску електронної системи охорони здоров’я, повідомила прес-служба Кабінету міністрів України.

Водночас в уряді зазначили, що з 2 квітня своїх лікарів обрали понад 150 тисяч українців.

Згідно з повідомленням станом на 4 квітня до системи «Електронне здоров’я» підключили 63% комунальних закладів, які надають первинну медичну допомогу.

2 квітня в Україні стартувала кампанія з вибору лікаря, який надає первинну допомогу. Лікаря можна обрати в будь-якому медзакладі, незалежно від місця прописки чи проживання, проте цей медзаклад має бути підключеним до системи «Електронне здоров’я».

МОЗ у своїх рекомендаціях зауважувало, що один лікар може обслуговувати максимум 2 тисячі пацієнтів, але можуть бути і виняткові ситуації.

4 квітня Супрун заявляла, що декларації з лікарями вже підписали 170 тисяч українців.