У Києві на Банковій протестують проти переслідування Стерненка (трансляція)

Радіо Свобода веде трансляцію акції

У МЗС назвали «юридично нікчемним» указ Путіна про землі в окупованому Криму

Указ Путіна юридично нікчемний і не матиме правових наслідків для України. Після відновлення суверенітету нашої держави в Криму порушені права законних власників на земельні ділянки будуть відновлені, заявили у МЗС

Указ Путіна про заборону «іноземним громадянам» володіти землею в окупованому Криму вступив в силу

З точки зору російського законодавства громадяни України на окупованому півострові також потрапляють у категорію «іноземних громадян»

Long-Dormant Volcano Erupts Near Iceland’s Capital

A volcano erupted Friday night on Iceland’s southwestern Reykjanes peninsula, following small daily earthquakes in recent weeks.The eruption lit the night sky and could easily be seen from the outskirts of the capital, Reykjavík, about 30 kilometers away.Aerial footage, posted on Facebook by the Icelandic Meteorological Office, showed a small eruption spewing red lava down in two directions.The eruption began at Fagradalsfjall in Geldingadalur at about 8:45 p.m. GMT Friday, according to a statement by meteorological office, which monitors seismic activity.“The eruption is considered a small one and the eruption fissure is about 500-700 meters long. The lava is less than 1 square kilometer in size,” the statement said.In this still image captured from a handout video filmed by the Icelandic Coast Guard, lava flows from the erupting Fagradalsfjall volcano some 50 kilometers west of the Icelandic capital, Reykjavik, on March 19, 2021.Iceland’s Emergency Management Department said the area is uninhabited and the eruption was not expected to present any danger. However, authorities urged the public not to go near the active volcano.Reykjavik’s Keflavik International Airport, which is a few kilometers away from the volcano, was not closed and flights were not suspended.Friday’s volcanic activity was the first in that area in about 800 years.

Volcano Erupts Near Iceland’s Capital

A volcano erupted near Iceland’s capital, Reykjavik, on Friday, shooting lava high into the night sky after thousands of small earthquakes in recent weeks.The eruption occurred near Fagradalsfjall, a mountain on the Reykjanes Peninsula, around 30 kilometers southwest of the capital.Some four hours after the initial eruption at 2045 GMT — the first on the peninsula since the 12th century — lava covered about 1 square kilometer or nearly 200 football fields.”I can see the glowing red sky from my window,” said Rannveig Gudmundsdottir, resident in the town of Grindavik, only 8 kilometers from the eruption.”Everyone here is getting into their cars to drive up there,” she said.More than 40,000 earthquakes have occurred on the peninsula in the past four weeks, a huge jump from the 1,000-3,000 earthquakes registered each year since 2014.The eruption posed no immediate danger to people in Grindavik or to critical infrastructure, according to the Icelandic Meteorological Office (IMO), which classified the eruption as small.In this still image captured from a handout video filmed by the Icelandic Coast Guard, lava flows from the erupting Fagradalsfjall volcano some 50 kilometers west of the Icelandic capital, Reykjavik, on March 19, 2021.A fissure 500 to 750 meters long opened at the eruption site, spewing lava fountains up to 100 meters high, Bjarki Friis of the meteorological office said.Residents in the town of Thorlakshofn, east of the eruption site, were told to stay indoors to avoid exposure to volcanic gases, Iceland’s Department of Civil Protection and Emergency Management said. The wind was blowing from the west.Unlike the eruption in 2010 of the Eyjafjallajokull volcano, which halted approximately 900,000 flights and forced hundreds of Icelanders from their homes, this eruption is not expected to spew much ash or smoke into the atmosphere.Located between the Eurasian and the North American tectonic plates, among the largest on the planet, Iceland is a seismic and volcanic hot spot as the two plates move in opposite directions.The source of the eruption is a large body of molten rock, known as magma, which has pushed its way to the surface over the past weeks, instigating the earthquakes.The number of quakes had slowed down in recent days, however, leading geologists to say that an eruption would be less likely.Reykjavik’s international Keflavik airport was not closed following the eruption, but each airline had to decide if it wanted to fly or not, IMO said.Arrivals and departures on the airport’s website showed no disruptions.

Turkey’s Erdogan Quits European Treaty on Violence Against Women

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pulled Turkey out of an international accord designed to protect women, the country’s official gazette said Saturday, despite calls from advocates who see the pact as key to combating rising domestic violence.The Council of Europe accord, forged in Istanbul, pledged to prevent, prosecute and eliminate domestic violence and promote equality. Turkey, which signed the accord in 2011, saw a rise in femicides last year.No reason was provided for the withdrawal, but officials in Erdogan’s ruling AK Party had said last year the government was considering pulling out amid a disagreement over how to curb growing violence against women.”The guarantee of women’s rights are the current regulations in our bylaws, primarily our Constitution. Our judicial system is dynamic and strong enough to implement new regulations as needed,” Family, Labour and Social Policies Minister Zehra Zumrut said on Twitter, without providing a reason for the move.Many conservatives in Turkey say the pact undermines family structures, encouraging violence. They are also hostile to the principle of gender equality in the Istanbul Convention and see it as promoting homosexuality, given its principle of non-discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation.Critics of the withdrawal from the pact have said it would put Turkey further out of step with the values of the European Union, which it remains a candidate to join. They argue the deal, and legislation approved in its wake, need to be implemented more stringently.Other countries have moved toward ditching the accord. Poland’s highest court scrutinized the pact after a cabinet member said Warsaw should quit the treaty, which the nationalist government considers too liberal.Erdogan has condemned violence against women, including saying this month that his government would work to eradicate violence against women. But critics say his government has not done enough to prevent femicides and domestic violence.Turkey does not keep official statistics on femicide. World Health Organization data has shown 38% of women in Turkey are subject to violence from a partner in their lifetime, compared with about 25% in the rest of Europe.Ankara has taken measures such as tagging individuals known to resort to violence and creating a smartphone app for women to alert police, which has been downloaded hundreds of thousands of times.Erdogan’s decision comes after he unveiled judicial reforms this month that he said would improve rights and freedoms and help meet EU standards. Turkey has been a candidate to join the bloc since 2005, but access talks have been halted over policy differences and Ankara’s record on human rights.

Media Freedom in Slovenia Under EU Scrutiny

Members of the European Parliament have warned of a “chilling” environment for Slovenia’s media, with verbal assaults from senior officials and attempts to cut funding for the state-owned news agency.The session on media freedom came amid heightened concerns by the European Parliament that declining conditions in Slovenia, Hungary and Poland represent a threat to democracy and could lead to authoritarianism. Slovenia is due to take over the six-month European Union presidency in July.An increase in pressure on Slovenia’s media, including its public broadcasters, has been reported since the center-right government of Prime Minister Janez Jansa took power last year.The prime minister and his supporters FILE – Franc Bogovic of the Slovenian People’s Party takes part in a televised debate ahead of elections in Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 26, 2014.“It is clear that about 80% of internal policy editorial offices of the Slovenian media, including the public RTV [radio and television channel], favors center-left political parties,” said Franc Bogovic, a Slovenian politician and EPP member.Ahead of the debate, the Slovenian state-run news agency STA published what it said were extracts from an internal document prepared by the European Parliament’s Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs.STA reported that the document included a table of attacks on media from Jansa and other government officials, and highlighted apparent political influence in Slovenia through media ownership and financing by Hungarian companies affiliated with Prime Minister Viktor Orban and his Fidesz Party.When asked for comment on the debate, Slovenia’s Ministry of Culture referred VOA to an earlier statement in which it said the country’s media “are predominantly left wing and fiercely anti-government.”In the same statement, the ministry said Hungarian investments accounted for less than 1 percent of the Slovenian media landscape.The ministry added that an earlier European Parliament hearing included “factually inaccurate information,” which it responded to in its statement.Media biasThe state-funded STA and RTV have found themselves at the center of allegations of government interference and left-wing bias since Jansa returned to power.STA, which gets about half of its income from the government, was established when Slovenia declared independence. It is bound by legislation to be “independent and unbiased” and to produce accurate and objective news.The government alleges that the STA supports leftist political views, a claim the agency has denied.The government stopped financing the STA earlier this year, saying the news agency had failed to supply documents required for its government contract. And Jansa called on its director, Bojan Veselinovic, to resign, calling him “a political tool of the far left” and saying the STA often “sells lies for the truth.”Veselinovic refused, saying there was no basis for the accusations. He has said the government wants to financially drain the independent agency.RTV Slovenia and STA can sometimes appear biased, Siol journalist Jancic said, citing coverage of anti-government protests this month that, he said, appeared to tone down threats.The pressure on the STA led 15 academics from Ljubljana University’s Faculty of Social Sciences to issue a public letter in support of the news outlet.The letter said the “the hostile destruction of such an important” organization “borders on insanity.”The government also attempted to replace Igor Kadunc, head of RTV, in October.Jancic said that when a left-wing government coalition was in power in 2018, it also tried unsuccessfully to oust the head of RTV.    

UN Warns Disasters Wreak Havoc With Food Production

The U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization warns of growing hunger and loss of lives and livelihoods if nations do not find ways to reduce the impact of natural disasters on global food production.A new FAO report said the world’s food production is facing unprecedented threats. They include fires, droughts, floods, unusually large desert locust swarms and emerging biological threats such as the COVID-19 pandemic.An aerial view shows dead spruce trees suffering from drought stress in a forest near Iserlohn, western Germany, on April 28, 2020.The report notes the annual occurrence of natural disasters is now three times greater than it was in the 1970s and ’80s. FAO Chief Economist Maximo Torero says this surge of natural disasters is having a devastating impact on agriculture and livelihoods and inflicting severe economic damage.“We found that drought turns out to be the most destructive force for agriculture,” Torero said. “Drought caused an estimated $37 billion in crop and livestock production loss [from 2008 to 2018] in the least-developed countries and low-and-middle-income countries. … Floods and storms are the next most relevant loss in agriculture.”During this same period, Torero said, the impact of disasters cost the agricultural sectors of developing countries more than $108 billion in lost crop and livestock production. He said Asia was hardest hit, followed by Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean.The FAO said 2.5 billion people, about 60% in developing countries, depend on agriculture for their daily food, their income and their survival. It warned that fragile societies would experience greater food insecurity and increased destitution if they failed to invest in disaster prevention measures.The director of the FAO Liaison Office in Geneva, Dominique Burgeon, said early warning systems and risk reduction strategies can prevent a threat from turning into a disaster. For example, he said, U.N. agencies acted early to control a swarm of locusts that was threatening to destroy crops in East Africa.As a result, 4 million tons of crops were saved, Burgeon said. “This is enough to feed about 34 million people in the Horn of Africa and Yemen, with a value of about $1.5 billion.”Burgeon said smart investments would pay great dividends. He said investing $1 in good practices would save $3.70 in crop losses.

Президент увів у дію рішення РНБО про заходи для підвищення рівня хімічної безпеки в Україні

Своїм рішенням РНБО визнала недостатньо ефективною діяльність уряду щодо забезпечення проведення державної політики у сфері управління хімічною безпекою

Данілов пообіцяв «найближчим часом» поінформувати, як «Мотор Січ» передаватимуть державі

11 березня секретар Ради національної безпеки і оборони України заявив, що підприємство «Мотор Січ» найближчим часом повернуть у власність держави

РНБО запроваджує «максимальні санкції» проти 19 компаній, які займаються надрами

Рада національної безпеки та оборони України запроваджує «максимальні санкції» проти 19 компаній, які займаються надрами, повідомив секретар РНБО Олексій Данілов за підсумками засідання.

За його словами, одним з питань засідання був стан справ у сфері надракористування.

«Рішення стосувалося того, що ми маємо привести у відповідність до чинного законодавства, до Конституції користування нашими надрами. Ви знаєте, що згідно з нашою Конституцією, надра належать українському народу. На превеликий жаль, при першому навіть приблизному аудиті з’ясувалося, що українського народу там не дуже багато. Переважно це народ, який мешкає чи то на Віргінських островах, чи то на інших острівних державах», – сказав Данілов.

Він заявив, що ухвалене рішення протягом короткого проміжку часу провести аудит всіх без винятку дозволів, які видавалися з 1994 року.

«Якщо будуть виявлені порушення під час виконання ліцензійних умов цих дозволів, такі дозволи будуть у законний спосіб повертатися народу України», – зазначив Данілов.

Санкції застосовуватимуть проти компаній: «Гео конект», «Глобал гео інвест», «Транс сет гео», «Гео пост», «Гео вертикаль», «Гео таргет», «Надра прайд», «Гео форс», «Гео стенс», «Надра Вест Груп», «Бест віл компані», «Надра простір», «Інфо гео тренд», «Ейджин марка», «Еко газ альянс», «Епівал енерджи», «Юноліт оіл», «Профі нафт», «Бест гео тек».

«Стосовно цих 19 компаній застосований максимальний вид санкцій, які може застосувати наша країна, які може застосувати РНБО», – наголосив секретар Ради нацбезпеки.

Новина доповнюється…

СБУ рекомендувала РНБО запровадити санкції проти Януковича, Азарова та колишніх посадовців

Служба безпеки України рекомендувала Раді національної безпеки та оборони запровадити санкції проти колишнього президента України Віктора Януковича, колишнього прем’єра Миколи Азарова та інших колишніх високопосадовців, повідомили Радіо Свобода в СБУ.

Під час засідання РНБО Служба безпеки рекомендувала запровадити економічні санкції до низки колишніх високопосадовців та осіб, які сприяють зміцненню окупаційного режиму в Криму та на Донбасі.

«У 2014-му велика відповідальність покладалася на керівників держави, але вони дозволили статися найгіршому – вторгненню РФ на нашу територію. Тож мають за це відповісти. І не має значення, що вони робили у той момент: тікали до Ростова чи кликали РФ для «порятунку» російськомовного населення», – повідомив голова СБУ Іван Баканов.

У Службі безпеки заявили, що, крім Януковича та Азарова, під санкції можуть потрапити міністр оборони Павло Лебедєв, міністр освіти Дмитро Табачник, генеральний прокурор Віктор Пшонка та низки інших чиновників, у тому числі міністрів і правоохоронців Криму.

Голова СБУ підкреслив, що у 2014 році ці посадовці сприяли спецслужбам РФ в окупації українських територій, координували злочинну діяльність силових структур, перешкоджали правам і свободам громадян, зокрема на «референдумі» в Криму. За даними Служби безпеки, деякі з посадовців були причетні до фінансування тероризму, проросійських акцій протесту та антиукраїнської пропаганди.

«Окремі епізоди їхньої діяльності за період 2014 року досі розглядаються у судах. Деякі з цих чиновників причетні до підписання «Харківських угод». А частина – і досі працює на зміцнення окупаційного режиму в Криму і на Донбасі», – резюмував Іван Баканов.

Окрім того, Служба безпеки запропонувала застосувати санкції до юридичних осіб, які є власниками ПАТ «Донецькоблгаз».

«Адже вони своїми діями, які призвели до відключення 58 котелень на території операції Об’єднаних сил, поставили під загрозу життя і здоров’я громадян», – зазначили в СБУ.

6 березня підприємство «Донецьктеплокомуненерго», яке постачає тепло в Донецькій області, залишилося без газу через борги перед НАК «Нафтогаз України». Згодом опалення увімкнули.

В «Донецькоблгазі» заявили, що вимушені припинити газопостачання, щоб не допустити заподіяння збитків державі від несанкціонованого споживання природного газу – на суму в 150 мільйонів гривень на місяць.

Новина доповнюється…

Turkey’s Political Crackdown Draws More International Concern

A crackdown on Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish political party appears to be broadening following Friday’s detention of a leading member of the country’s human rights movement. The arrest comes in the face of growing concern from Turkey’s western allies.Ozturk Turkdogan, co-chair of Turkey’s Human Rights Association (IHD), was arrested in an early morning raid by anti-terror police. The detention drew swift condemnation nationally and internationally.”Outrageous.  This is an attack on Turkey’s oldest human rights group,” said Emma Sinclair-Webb, senior Turkey researcher at New York-based Human Rights Watch.   “He [Turkdogan] is a very respected figure in the human rights movement and an old friend, a lawyer. It is an outrageous attack on all of Turkish civil society to arrest Turkdogan,” added Sinclair-Webb.No details have been released on why Turkdogan was detained, other than that he was being held under Turkey’s wide-ranging anti-terror legislation. Under the law, Turkdogan is denied access to a lawyer for the first 24 hours of detention.This month, the Turkish interior minister, Suleyman Soylu, accused Turkdogan’s Human Rights Association of being linked to terrorism.Meanwhile, Turkish security forces are carrying out a crackdown on Turkey’s second largest opposition party, the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party [HDP].  On Friday, at least three HDP senior members were detained in dawn raids as part of a sweep targeting 35 people. On Wednesday, prosecutors opened a case against the HDP.The HDP is accused of having links to the Kurdish separatist group the PKK, which is fighting the Turkish state. The United States and the European Union designate the PKK as a terrorist organization.Wednesday also saw lawmakers vote to strip prominent HDP deputy Omer Faruk Gergerlioglu of his parliamentary immunity after he was convicted of spreading terrorist propaganda for a tweet.Since 2019, 48 of the 65 elected HDP mayors in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish regions have been removed from office by the Interior Ministry, citing “terror” investigations.Omer Faruk Gergerlioglu, a human rights advocate and lawmaker from the People’s Democratic Party, or HDP, center, reacts after the parliament stripped his parliamentary seat, in Ankara, Turkey, March 17, 2021.Western allies concerned at crackdownBut Turkey’s western allies are pushing back over the latest escalation in the crackdown on the HDP.”We are also monitoring the initiation of efforts to dissolve the People’s Democratic Party, a decision that would unduly subvert the will of Turkish voters, further undermine democracy in Turkey, and deny millions of Turkish citizens their chosen representation,” said U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Smith on Thursday.In a statement, the European Union said it was “deeply concerned,” adding Turkey “needs to respect its core democratic obligations, including respect for democracy, human rights and the rule of law.”The HDP closure case and the latest waves of arrests come weeks after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pledged a new era in human rights while unveiling his human rights action plan.”It seems the human rights action plan is a code word for human rights violation plan,” said Sinclair-Webb, “because everything that has happened since then has been worse and worse and the attacks on democracy.”People protest in support of pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democracy Party in Istanbul, March 18, 2021. The EU criticized Turkish authorities’ moves to shut down the party, saying the steps add to concerns over the “backsliding of rights” in Turkey.Turkey has a long history of closing political parties, in particular those deemed pro-Kurdish. But the government rejects criticism over the current crackdown, insisting it’s fighting terrorism.”It is an indisputable fact that HDP has organic ties to PKK,” tweeted Wednesday Fahrettin Altun, Turkey’s presidential communication director. The HDP denies any links to the PKK.The German government appears receptive to Ankara’s stance while calling for “Turkey to comply with the most stringent democratic rule-of-law.” In a statement released Thursday it added, “We call on the HDP to clearly distance itself from the PKK, which is listed as a terrorist organization also in the EU.”Observers and human rights activists have accused European leaders and the EU of softening its criticism of Turkey’s deteriorating human rights record.Turkey and the EU are currently discussing the renewal of a refugee deal that sees Ankara act as Europe’s gatekeeper in controlling migrants and refugees in exchange for billions of dollars in aid.”It’s the biggest leverage Turkey has,” said Sezin Oney, a columnist for Turkey’s Duvar news portal. “Because of the refugee deal, European countries, in a way, lack any kind of pressure or any kind of leverage they might have over Ankara.”Next week European leaders are due to discuss Turkey at an EU summit, but it’s predicted calls for a tough stance against Ankara by some members will be ignored.With Turkey’s EU membership bid is frozen, Sinan Ulgen, head of the Istanbul-based Centre for Economics & Foreign Policy Studies, says any inaction by Brussels is mostly because it has little political influence. “The refugee deal is a factor that lowers the level of criticism in the EU about Turkey’s track record in democratic and fundamental rights. But the other factor is that the EU now has very little leverage on Turkey, given that there are very few avenues of positive engagement,” said Ulgen.

3 Killed in Moscow Area Apartment Blast

Emergency officials in the Moscow suburb of Khimki Friday say a gas leak caused an explosion and fire that killed at least three people and injured four others in a residential building.The Moscow Region Emergency Ministry Directorate told Russian news agencies the explosion occurred early Friday on the eighth floor of a nine-story building and the resulting fire swept through five apartments. Officials say the victims include two adults and a child.  They said four others, including one person in serious condition, have been hospitalized.The news agencies say residents of the building were evacuated, and the gas supply was cut off in 36 apartments. Officials will continue to investigate the incident.

НБУ прокоментував ймовірне розслідування щодо Рожкової через націоналізацію «Приватбанку»

Нацбанк стверджує, що сприяє розслідуванням правоохоронних органів про зловживання щодо «Приватбанку»

Рожкова про справу держзради і «Приватбанку»: НБУ веде внутрішні розслідування щодо співпраці з Kroll

Нацбанк стверджує, що сприяє розслідуванням правоохоронних органів про зловживання щодо «Приватбанку»

Moscow Hosts Talks Aimed at Ending Fighting in Afghanistan

Russia Thursday hosted rival Afghani factions in Moscow for talks aimed at kickstarting a power-sharing agreement between the Taliban and the government in Kabul. And as Charles Maynes reports from Moscow, the negotiations mark a rare moment of U.S.-Russian cooperation in an era of recrimination.
Camera: Ricardo Marquina

Зміни в РНБО: Зеленський ввів до складу очільника Мінцифри Федорова

Федоров тепер є членом цього координаційного органу з питань нацбезпеки і оборони при президентові

Медведчук програв апеляцію щодо книжки Кіпіані «Справа Василя Стуса»

Київський апеляційний суд скасував заборону на поширення книжки та вживання імені Віктора Медведчука

One Year Into the COVID Pandemic: Europe Bears the Scars

A year ago on March 11, the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus outbreak a global pandemic. As Henry Ridgwell reports for VOA from London, European countries hoped their well-funded health systems would offer some protection, but the continent was hit hard early on and continues to face high infection rates. 

Шапран про ймовірне звинувачення Рожкової в держзраді: «Рада НБУ не може бути ініціатором розслідувань»

Kyiv Post: СБУ та ДБР розслідують ймовірне розкрадання та передачу закритих даних Рожковою міжнародним компаніям під час аналізу нею націоналізації «Приватбанку»

«Олімпійська надія» Януковича: детективи зацікавились Льовочкіними – «Схеми»

НАБУ перевіряє нардепів від ОПЗЖ Льовочкіних на причетність до кримінальних правопорушень у межах справи щодо розкрадання коштів, призначених на реалізацію проєкту «Олімпійська надія» Януковича

European Medicines Agency Again Approves AstraZeneca Vaccine

The European Medicines Agency has approved the continued use of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in the battle to contain the pandemic. The European regulator’s seal of approval comes after several European countries, including France, Germany, Italy and Spain, stopped using the vaccine following reports that the shots caused blood clots in some vaccine recipients.The agency said in a statement Thursday “the benefits of the vaccine in combating the still widespread threat of COVID-19 (which itself results in clotting problems and may be fatal) continue to outweigh the risk of side effects.”The agency added, “A causal link with the vaccine is not proven but is possible and deserves further analysis.”Meanwhile, the White House announced Thursday that it is sending millions of stockpiled doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine to Mexico and Canada.The vaccine has not yet been approved for use by U.S. regulators, but it has been approved for use by Mexico and Canada.The announcement comes as the Biden administration wants Mexico’s help in stemming the tide of migrants who are attempting to come into the U.S.Mexico is slated to receive 2.5 million vaccines from the U.S., with Canada receiving 1.5 million.White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the vaccines would be loans to the two U.S. neighbors, with the U.S. eventually being reimbursed with vaccines from the bordering countries.Beginning Friday, several French regions, including Paris, will be under new lockdown orders to contain increasing coronavirus cases.France had 40,000 new cases Wednesday.Prime Minister Jean Castex said Thursday the outbreak in France is “worsening,” adding, “Our responsibility now is that it not get out of control.”On Friday, India’s Union Health Ministry reported an increase in coronavirus infections for a ninth day in a row, with 40,000 new cases in the previous 24-hour period. India has 11.5 million COVID-19 cases.Only two countries have more infections than India — the U.S., with 29.6 million cases, and Brazil, with 11.7 million, according to Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.Johns Hopkins reports there are 121.7 million global coronavirus infections.

Росія має негайно звільнити журналіста Владислава Єсипенка – Комітет захисту журналістів

16 березня в Центрі громадських зв’язків ФСБ Росії заявили, що 10 березня затримали в Криму Владислава Єсипенка за збір інформації «в інтересах спецслужб України»

US, Regional Powers Call on Taliban to Forego Spring Offensive at Moscow Conference

The United States, Russia, China, and Pakistan have called on all parties in Afghanistan to reduce violence and the Taliban to forego their Spring offensive, the yearly renewal in attacks after a winter lull, in order to facilitate peace negotiations.
 
The demand was part of a joint statement after a conference on Afghanistan hosted by Russia in Moscow Thursday.
 
The one-day gathering was part of an intense diplomatic push to jumpstart a stalled peace process amid a looming deadline for withdrawal of foreign forces from the country. Some fear Afghanistan will descend into chaos if international forces depart without a negotiated political settlement in place.
 
Negotiations between a sanctioned Afghan government team and the Taliban started in Doha in September 2020 but have so far not yielded results.
 
An Afghan delegation led by the chair of Afghanistan’s High Council for National Reconciliation (HCNR) Abdullah Abdullah, and a Taliban delegation led by the group’s political deputy Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, were also present.   
 
The statement called on both sides to conclude their peace negotiations and supported the formation of “an independent, sovereign, unified, peaceful, democratic, and self-sufficient Afghanistan,” free of terrorism and drugs. It also called for the protection of the rights of women, children, minorities, and others.
    
“[W]e do not support the restoration of the Islamic Emirate,” the statement said, using the Taliban’s name for their own government.
 
“It is only through diplomatic peace negotiations and compromise that peace can be achieved,” said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in his opening remarks. “And the agreements that are to be reached have to include the interests of all parties.”
 
Russia’s top diplomat also said his country was ready to facilitate but Afghans had to take the lead.
 
“Outside parties like Russia should create the conditions for forces inside Afghanistan to negotiate and move forward,” Lavrov said.
 
The newly elected administration of President Joe Biden had been pushing to involve regional powers and other countries to try and bring the warring Afghan sides to negotiate. As part of its efforts, the U.S. has also floated the idea, supported by Russia, of a transitional government that includes the Taliban.Former Afghan President Hamid Karzai, left, and chair of Afghanistan’s High Council for National Reconciliation Abdullah Abdullah leave the site of an Afghan peace conference in Moscow, Russia, March 18, 2021.That idea is strongly opposed by Afghan President Ashraf Ghani who said elections are the only way to choose a government.
 
The push comes as the U.S. is reviewing an agreement the administration of former President Donald Trump made with the Taliban—a deal Biden called “not a very solidly negotiated deal,” in a recent interview with U.S. broadcast network ABC.
 
Under the deal, the U.S. is supposed to withdraw all forces from Afghanistan by May 1. However, an increase in violence, lack of progress in peace negotiations between Taliban and Afghan government, and a wave of targeted assassinations of human rights activists, journalists, and government officials have forced the U.S. to reevaluate its decision.
 
The Taliban, who have not directly attacked the U.S. or NATO forces since the February 2020 agreement, have warned that failure to stick to the withdrawal deadline would lead to a bloody response.
 
Some regional experts have suggested the U.S. negotiate a one-time extension in the deadline with the Taliban to salvage the deal.
 
Under this diplomatic push, two more international conferences are expected as early as next month, one hosted by the United Nations and the other by Turkey.
 
Moscow was also the venue for a February 2019 dialogue between senior Afghan opposition politicians and former top government officials, including former president Hamid Karzai, and the Taliban. That conference, which Ghani’s government criticized as “little more than a political drama,” paved the way for formal negotiations to start between Taliban and an Afghan government sanctioned delegation.
The idea for Thursday’s conference was first floated by Russian envoy to Afghanistan Zamir Kabulov in an interview with the country’s state-run Sputnik news agency last month.Russia’s special representative on Afghanistan Zamir Kabulov, right, and U.S. special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad attend a news briefing following an Afghan peace conference in Moscow, Russia, March 18, 2021.Kabulov said the U.S. supported the idea of gathering a small group of countries with the most influence on the Afghan peace process. The format, called an “expanded troika,” included Russia, the U.S., China, Pakistan, and Iran—although Iran was hesitant to sit at the table with the U.S.
 
Kabulov said he hopes Iran will change its mind once tensions with the U.S. decrease.
 
In a Sunday meeting with Mohammad Sadiq, Pakistan’s special envoy on Afghanistan, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif “stressed the need to promote regional cooperation to help establish peace in Afghanistan and preserve achievements gained by Afghan people,” according to the official Iranian news agency IRNA.   
 
Meanwhile, the United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres appointed a new personal envoy on Afghanistan and the region Wednesday.
 
Announcing the appointment, the U.N. said Jean Arnault of France was tasked with helping find a political solution to the Afghan conflict.
 
“The responsibilities of the Personal Envoy include to liaise, on behalf of the Secretary-General, with regional countries with the aim of supporting the negotiations between the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and the Taliban and implementation of any agreements which are reached,” U.N. spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said.
 
The appointment comes at a time when the U.S. is expected to ask the U.N to invite the foreign ministers of the U.S., Russia, China, Pakistan, Iran, and India for a conference on Afghanistan.
 
“It is my belief that these countries share an abiding common interest in a stable Afghanistan and must work together if we are to succeed,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said to President Ghani in a letter leaked to the media earlier this month.
 
Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told a weekly press briefing on March 8 that his country had “not yet received any invitation for any session on Afghan Peace Talks at the United Nations,” adding that “Iran will review the invitation whenever it receives any.” His remarks were printed in Iran’s official Islamic Republic News Agency. 

Курорт у Боржаві: у Зеленського продовжують обговорювати будівництво, попри кримінальну справу – «Схеми»

Офіс президента продовжує обговорювати будівництво курорту «Боржава» на Закарпатті, попри те, що землі, на яких планують його звести, арештовані в рамках кримінального провадження НАБУ, а офіційного інвестора Ляйтнера перевіряють детективи «на причетність до кримінальних правопорушень»