Facebook Shares Sink; Further Growth Drops Expected

Social media giant Facebook, which has weathered storms about privacy and data protection, is now looking at cooler growth following a years-long breakneck pace.

Shares in Facebook plummeted 19 percent to close at $176.26 Thursday, wiping out $100 billion. It was believed to be the worst ever single-day evaporation of market value for any company.

The plunge came one day after the firm missed revenue forecasts for the second quarter and warned that growth would be far weaker than previously estimated.

Chief Financial Officer David Wehner warned Wednesday in an earnings call with analysts that revenue growth had already “decelerated” in the second quarter and would drop “by high single-digit percentages” in coming quarters.

At one point during the call, Facebook shares were trading down as much as 24 percent, an unprecedented drop for a large firm.

On the call, Jefferies & Co. analyst Brent Thill said that “many investors are having a hard time reconciling that deceleration. … It just seems like the magnitude is beyond anything we’ve seen.”

Facebook said the slowdown would come in part from a new approach to privacy and security, but also appeared to acknowledge the limits of growth in advertising, which accounts for virtually all its revenue.

Brian Sheehan, a Syracuse University professor of communication and advertising, said the weak forecast “made investors nervous about more basic long-term issues” with the huge social network, notably its diminished appeal to younger users.

“With or without privacy issues, investors are scared that Facebook’s interactions, particularly with those under 25, are falling,” Sheehan said.

For the second quarter, profit was up 31 percent at $5.1 billion; revenues rose 42 percent to $13.2 billion, only slightly below most forecasts.

User base still growing

Facebook reported its user base was still growing but not as fast as some expected. Monthly active users rose 11 percent to 2.23 billion — below most estimates of 2.25 billion.

Richard Windsor, a technology analyst who writes the Radio Free Mobile blog, said the new outlook should not be surprising.

“This is a direct result of scale as it becomes increasingly difficult to grow at such high rates when a company hits this size,” Windsor wrote.

Windsor added that Facebook is forced to hire more people to handle tasks such as filtering inappropriate content after discovering the limits of artificial intelligence.

“Weaknesses in AI are forcing [Facebook] to keep hiring humans to do the jobs that the machines are incapable of,” he said.

Brian Wieser at Pivotal Research Group said the company appears to have hit a “wall” on growth in advertising.

In a research note, he said Facebook’s outlook “suggests that while the company is still growing at a fast clip, the days of 30 percent-plus growth are numbered.”

Until Wednesday, Facebook shares had been at record highs as investors seemed to shrug off fears about data protection and probes into the hijacking of private information by the political consultancy Cambridge Analytica.

Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said Facebook has invested heavily in “safety, security and privacy” after being rocked by concerns of manipulation of the platform to spread misinformation, warning of an “impact” on profitability.

Some analysts however said it was too soon to write off Facebook or its growth prospects, and that the company may have simply been warning of the worst-case scenario.

“The company has a track record of resetting revenue growth and expense expectations only to turn around and exceed those expectations the following quarter,” said Gene Munster of Loup Ventures. “We suspect Facebook is sticking with its historical playbook and will, in fact, beat these lower numbers.”

A positive view

Richard Greenfield of BTIG Research said he remained upbeat on Facebook despite the abrupt forecast shift.

“Facebook is actively choosing to make less money, deprioritizing near-term monetization to drive engagement to even higher levels,” Greenfield said in a note to clients.

Greenfield said he could “sense the fear/panic in investors’ voices” after the Facebook analyst call, but that he had maintained his outlook.

“Mobile is eating the world and Facebook is a core holding to benefit from that shift,” he said.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Mark Mahaney said the drop creates a rare buying opportunity for Facebook shares.

“Facebook stills owns two of the largest media assets in the world [Facebook and Instagram] and the two largest messaging assets in the world [Messenger and WhatsApp],” Mahaney said in a note to clients, adding that he sees “no material change in marketer views of the attractiveness” of Facebook platforms. 

Facebook Shares Sink; Further Growth Drops Expected

Social media giant Facebook, which has weathered storms about privacy and data protection, is now looking at cooler growth following a years-long breakneck pace.

Shares in Facebook plummeted 19 percent to close at $176.26 Thursday, wiping out $100 billion. It was believed to be the worst ever single-day evaporation of market value for any company.

The plunge came one day after the firm missed revenue forecasts for the second quarter and warned that growth would be far weaker than previously estimated.

Chief Financial Officer David Wehner warned Wednesday in an earnings call with analysts that revenue growth had already “decelerated” in the second quarter and would drop “by high single-digit percentages” in coming quarters.

At one point during the call, Facebook shares were trading down as much as 24 percent, an unprecedented drop for a large firm.

On the call, Jefferies & Co. analyst Brent Thill said that “many investors are having a hard time reconciling that deceleration. … It just seems like the magnitude is beyond anything we’ve seen.”

Facebook said the slowdown would come in part from a new approach to privacy and security, but also appeared to acknowledge the limits of growth in advertising, which accounts for virtually all its revenue.

Brian Sheehan, a Syracuse University professor of communication and advertising, said the weak forecast “made investors nervous about more basic long-term issues” with the huge social network, notably its diminished appeal to younger users.

“With or without privacy issues, investors are scared that Facebook’s interactions, particularly with those under 25, are falling,” Sheehan said.

For the second quarter, profit was up 31 percent at $5.1 billion; revenues rose 42 percent to $13.2 billion, only slightly below most forecasts.

User base still growing

Facebook reported its user base was still growing but not as fast as some expected. Monthly active users rose 11 percent to 2.23 billion — below most estimates of 2.25 billion.

Richard Windsor, a technology analyst who writes the Radio Free Mobile blog, said the new outlook should not be surprising.

“This is a direct result of scale as it becomes increasingly difficult to grow at such high rates when a company hits this size,” Windsor wrote.

Windsor added that Facebook is forced to hire more people to handle tasks such as filtering inappropriate content after discovering the limits of artificial intelligence.

“Weaknesses in AI are forcing [Facebook] to keep hiring humans to do the jobs that the machines are incapable of,” he said.

Brian Wieser at Pivotal Research Group said the company appears to have hit a “wall” on growth in advertising.

In a research note, he said Facebook’s outlook “suggests that while the company is still growing at a fast clip, the days of 30 percent-plus growth are numbered.”

Until Wednesday, Facebook shares had been at record highs as investors seemed to shrug off fears about data protection and probes into the hijacking of private information by the political consultancy Cambridge Analytica.

Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said Facebook has invested heavily in “safety, security and privacy” after being rocked by concerns of manipulation of the platform to spread misinformation, warning of an “impact” on profitability.

Some analysts however said it was too soon to write off Facebook or its growth prospects, and that the company may have simply been warning of the worst-case scenario.

“The company has a track record of resetting revenue growth and expense expectations only to turn around and exceed those expectations the following quarter,” said Gene Munster of Loup Ventures. “We suspect Facebook is sticking with its historical playbook and will, in fact, beat these lower numbers.”

A positive view

Richard Greenfield of BTIG Research said he remained upbeat on Facebook despite the abrupt forecast shift.

“Facebook is actively choosing to make less money, deprioritizing near-term monetization to drive engagement to even higher levels,” Greenfield said in a note to clients.

Greenfield said he could “sense the fear/panic in investors’ voices” after the Facebook analyst call, but that he had maintained his outlook.

“Mobile is eating the world and Facebook is a core holding to benefit from that shift,” he said.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Mark Mahaney said the drop creates a rare buying opportunity for Facebook shares.

“Facebook stills owns two of the largest media assets in the world [Facebook and Instagram] and the two largest messaging assets in the world [Messenger and WhatsApp],” Mahaney said in a note to clients, adding that he sees “no material change in marketer views of the attractiveness” of Facebook platforms. 

Палата представників Конгресу США підтримала виділення Україні 250 мільйонів доларів на безпеку

Палата представників Конгресу США підтримала виділення 250 мільйонів доларів США на безпекову допомогу Україні, повідомило посольство України в Сполучених Штатах на своїй сторінці у Facebook.

У дипломатичному представництві зазначили, що палата ухвалила проект закону про бюджет США на 2019 рік на потреби національної оборони.

«Сума коштів, яка виділяється Міністерству оборони США для надання безпекової допомоги Україні, визначена в обсязі 250 мільйонів доларів. Із зазначеної суми 50 мільйонів доларів має бути спрямовано на летальні види озброєнь», – заявили в посольстві.

Згідно з повідомленням, до документа включили основні положення проекту закону про співпрацю з Україною з питань кібербезпеки, який передбачає допомогу Україні в посиленні спроможностей щодо захисту від кібератак. Зокрема, Державному департаменту доручили подати до Конгресу доповідь про стан співробітництва з Україною у сфері кібербезпеки з метою пошуку нових напрямів взаємодії та підтримки.

Далі проект закону про бюджет США на 2019 рік на потреби національної оборони має бути схвалений Сенатом та переданий на підпис президента США Дональда Трампа.

Наприкінці 2017 року адміністрація президента США Дональда Трампа ухвалила рішення про продаж Україні летальної зброї, у тому числі протитанкових ракетних комплексів Javelin. 1 березня Державний департамент США схвалив продаж Україні 210 протиракетних комплексів Javelin і 37 пускових установок до них на загальну суму близько 47 мільйонів доларів.

210 джавелінів для України: один на три російські танки на Донбасі

«Джавелін» (Javelin) – американський переносний протитанковий ракетний комплекс (ППРК), призначений для ураження бронетехніки, танків, а також БПЛА, вертольотів і гвинтомоторних літаків, що заходять на посадку.

Trump Says He Has Opened Europe Markets for US Farmers 

U.S. President Donald Trump, a day after reaching a truce in the escalating trade dispute with Europe, characterized his talks with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker as a big economic victory and a historic agreement. But he provided few details.  

“We just opened up Europe for you farmers,” Trump said at a roundtable event in Iowa. “You have just gotten yourself one big market.”

Iowa is among the Midwestern farming states hit by retaliatory tariffs on soybeans and other products, imposed by China in response to tariffs imposed on Chinese goods by the U.S. president. 

Later in the afternoon, Trump addressed steelmakers in Granite City, Illinois, saying, “We’re not going to give China or any other country a veto on United States national security.” 

Europe has “agreed to purchase, almost immediately, large amounts of American soybeans because China tried to hurt the American farmer,” Trump said.

The president said his administration had taken the “toughest-ever actions in response to China’s very abusive trade practices,” accusing Beijing of massive theft of American intellectual property.

Trump also said that as a result of his tariffs imposed on trading partners, “idle factories throughout our nation are roaring back to life.”

Amid the vague commitments for European purchases of soybeans, and constructing terminals to store additional liquified natural gas from the United States, Trump and Juncker on Wednesday committed to holding off on additional tariffs while trans-Atlantic negotiations are held.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin describes it as “an agreement in principle,” while Trump told the Iowa audience he and Juncker “agreed to a letter of intent.”

French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday threw cold water on any sweeping agreement, arguing “the context doesn’t allow it.”

Macron explained he is against agricultural discussions in the trade talks, also adding that the Trump administration must make clear gestures over the “illegal” steel and aluminum tariffs still in place.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, speaking to reporters during the Air Force One flight to Iowa, credited Trump’s tariffs on the metals for the previous day’s breakthrough at the White House.

“To get there, we had to take a route of trying to make it more painful for the other parties to continue bad practices than to drop them,” Ross said. “This is a real vindication of the president’s trade policy.”

While no auto tariffs will be imposed on the EU while talks continue, Ross said, “We’ve been directed by the president to continue the investigation, get our material together but not actually implement anything, pending the outcome of the negotiation.”

He said they would submit their report on auto tariffs sometime in August. Imposing them “may not be necessary,” he added.

In the meantime, “steel and aluminum tariffs stay in place,” Ross said.

The comments by Trump and Ross indicate the administration could be willing to negotiate a pact akin to the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), on which negotiations have stopped.

A day before the Oval Office meeting between Trump and Juncker, the U.S. Agriculture Department announced it was making $12 billion available to American farmers harmed by tariffs.

Pressed whether the money was a bailout, Mnuchin on Thursday responded, “We’re not bailing out any farmers, that’s a ridiculous comment. It’s not a bailout.” He added that when “other countries unfairly and illegally target our farmers, we will stand up and fight for them.”

Appearing before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee for Commerce on Thursday, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer told lawmakers, “It is certainly not our plan to have small business or agriculture or anyone else in America feel the brunt of a change in trade policy which is designed to make the U.S. stronger and richer, help our exports, and help all American businesses and farmers and ranchers.”

The tariffs imposed by the Trump administration came under criticism during the hearing, including from members of Trump’s party.

Tennessee Republican Lamar Alexander said the “tariff taxes that the administration had placed began to look like, ‘I’ve got a problem, so I’ll shoot myself in one foot; I’ve got [another] problem, so I’ll shoot myself in the other foot.'”

Another Republican senator, Jerry Moran of Kansas, said, “Trade and exports are how we earn a living in Kansas, and farmers, ranchers, and our nation’s manufacturers cannot afford a prolonged trade war.”

Following a closed-door meeting of congressional Republicans, Representative Roger Williams, who owns a car dealership in Texas, said dealers are canceling orders with auto manufacturers because they are fearful of tariffs, as well as rising interest rates.

Twenty-two Republican members of the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Trade have sent a letter to Trump urging him to meet directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping to forge a trade agreement.

“Our shared objective is long-term and enduring reform in Chinese subsidies, tariffs, and other trade barriers,” the lawmakers say in their letter. “While tariffs cause short-term economic pain to China, they also boomerang on American companies, farmers, workers, and consumers — and we hear every day from Americans who are caught in a destructive cycle of escalation. A lasting solution can be established only through fundamental change to the Chinese system. Timely and astute negotiations under your leadership are essential to accomplishing this goal.”

Mike Bowman contributed to this report.

Trump Says He Has Opened Europe Markets for US Farmers 

U.S. President Donald Trump, a day after reaching a truce in the escalating trade dispute with Europe, characterized his talks with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker as a big economic victory and a historic agreement. But he provided few details.  

“We just opened up Europe for you farmers,” Trump said at a roundtable event in Iowa. “You have just gotten yourself one big market.”

Iowa is among the Midwestern farming states hit by retaliatory tariffs on soybeans and other products, imposed by China in response to tariffs imposed on Chinese goods by the U.S. president. 

Later in the afternoon, Trump addressed steelmakers in Granite City, Illinois, saying, “We’re not going to give China or any other country a veto on United States national security.” 

Europe has “agreed to purchase, almost immediately, large amounts of American soybeans because China tried to hurt the American farmer,” Trump said.

The president said his administration had taken the “toughest-ever actions in response to China’s very abusive trade practices,” accusing Beijing of massive theft of American intellectual property.

Trump also said that as a result of his tariffs imposed on trading partners, “idle factories throughout our nation are roaring back to life.”

Amid the vague commitments for European purchases of soybeans, and constructing terminals to store additional liquified natural gas from the United States, Trump and Juncker on Wednesday committed to holding off on additional tariffs while trans-Atlantic negotiations are held.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin describes it as “an agreement in principle,” while Trump told the Iowa audience he and Juncker “agreed to a letter of intent.”

French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday threw cold water on any sweeping agreement, arguing “the context doesn’t allow it.”

Macron explained he is against agricultural discussions in the trade talks, also adding that the Trump administration must make clear gestures over the “illegal” steel and aluminum tariffs still in place.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, speaking to reporters during the Air Force One flight to Iowa, credited Trump’s tariffs on the metals for the previous day’s breakthrough at the White House.

“To get there, we had to take a route of trying to make it more painful for the other parties to continue bad practices than to drop them,” Ross said. “This is a real vindication of the president’s trade policy.”

While no auto tariffs will be imposed on the EU while talks continue, Ross said, “We’ve been directed by the president to continue the investigation, get our material together but not actually implement anything, pending the outcome of the negotiation.”

He said they would submit their report on auto tariffs sometime in August. Imposing them “may not be necessary,” he added.

In the meantime, “steel and aluminum tariffs stay in place,” Ross said.

The comments by Trump and Ross indicate the administration could be willing to negotiate a pact akin to the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), on which negotiations have stopped.

A day before the Oval Office meeting between Trump and Juncker, the U.S. Agriculture Department announced it was making $12 billion available to American farmers harmed by tariffs.

Pressed whether the money was a bailout, Mnuchin on Thursday responded, “We’re not bailing out any farmers, that’s a ridiculous comment. It’s not a bailout.” He added that when “other countries unfairly and illegally target our farmers, we will stand up and fight for them.”

Appearing before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee for Commerce on Thursday, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer told lawmakers, “It is certainly not our plan to have small business or agriculture or anyone else in America feel the brunt of a change in trade policy which is designed to make the U.S. stronger and richer, help our exports, and help all American businesses and farmers and ranchers.”

The tariffs imposed by the Trump administration came under criticism during the hearing, including from members of Trump’s party.

Tennessee Republican Lamar Alexander said the “tariff taxes that the administration had placed began to look like, ‘I’ve got a problem, so I’ll shoot myself in one foot; I’ve got [another] problem, so I’ll shoot myself in the other foot.'”

Another Republican senator, Jerry Moran of Kansas, said, “Trade and exports are how we earn a living in Kansas, and farmers, ranchers, and our nation’s manufacturers cannot afford a prolonged trade war.”

Following a closed-door meeting of congressional Republicans, Representative Roger Williams, who owns a car dealership in Texas, said dealers are canceling orders with auto manufacturers because they are fearful of tariffs, as well as rising interest rates.

Twenty-two Republican members of the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Trade have sent a letter to Trump urging him to meet directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping to forge a trade agreement.

“Our shared objective is long-term and enduring reform in Chinese subsidies, tariffs, and other trade barriers,” the lawmakers say in their letter. “While tariffs cause short-term economic pain to China, they also boomerang on American companies, farmers, workers, and consumers — and we hear every day from Americans who are caught in a destructive cycle of escalation. A lasting solution can be established only through fundamental change to the Chinese system. Timely and astute negotiations under your leadership are essential to accomplishing this goal.”

Mike Bowman contributed to this report.

Україна звернеться до ЄСПЛ з новою заявою щодо захоплених у Криму політв’язнів – Мінюст

Україна наступного тижня звернеться до Європейського суду з прав людини (ЄСПЛ) щодо українських в’язнів, незаконно захоплених у Криму представниками окупаційної влади Російської Федерації, заявив заступник міністра юстиції України – уповноважений у справах Європейського суду з прав людини Іван Ліщина.

«Наразі готується нова заява, яка стосуватиметься українських політв’язнів, з яких більшість були захоплені в Криму. Йдеться і про кримськотатарських активістів, і про проукраїнських активістів, і просто людей, які опинилися в незручному місці в незручний час. Заяву буде подано протягом наступного тижня», – повідомив Ліщина на прес-конференції 26 липня у Києві.

Він нагадав, що з перших днів анексії Криму офіс секретаріату уповноваженого з питань Європейського суду з прав людини активно представляв Україну в ЄСПЛ у міждержавних справах проти РФ.

«Було подано дві заяви, що стосуються Криму. Першою було подано заяву з перших годин, коли розгорталася окупація в 2014 році. Наступну заяву було подано в 2015 році, а цього року ЄСПЛ передав розгляд заяв до Великої палати, яка об’єднала ці заяви в одну. Наразі Велика палата ЄСПЛ розглядає одну заяву, яка стосується Криму», – нагадав Іван Ліщина.

Він також зазначив, що в 2014, 2015 і 2017 роках Україна подавала до суду додаткову інформацію щодо обставин анексії Криму, яка демонструвала механізм захоплення півострова. Зокрема, інформацію 50 свідків, які описували процес захоплення півострова та порушення прав людини під час анексії.

«Насправді це була спецоперація, в якій було задіяно великі сили як спецслужб, так і армійські частини. Усю цю інформацію було зібрано, оформлено і передано до ЄСПЛ», – розповів заступник міністра юстиції.

Читайте також: Жертвами репресій у Криму все частіше стають жінки та діти ‒ Заїр Смедляєв

У березні 2014 року Росія анексувала український півострів Крим. Міжнародні організації визнали анексію Криму незаконною і засудили дії Росії, країни Заходу запровадили проти неї економічні санкції. Кремль заперечує анексію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості».

У Росії й анексованому Криму, за даними правозахисників, утримують близько 70 українських політв’язнів.

Україна звернеться до ЄСПЛ з новою заявою щодо захоплених у Криму політв’язнів – Мінюст

Україна наступного тижня звернеться до Європейського суду з прав людини (ЄСПЛ) щодо українських в’язнів, незаконно захоплених у Криму представниками окупаційної влади Російської Федерації, заявив заступник міністра юстиції України – уповноважений у справах Європейського суду з прав людини Іван Ліщина.

«Наразі готується нова заява, яка стосуватиметься українських політв’язнів, з яких більшість були захоплені в Криму. Йдеться і про кримськотатарських активістів, і про проукраїнських активістів, і просто людей, які опинилися в незручному місці в незручний час. Заяву буде подано протягом наступного тижня», – повідомив Ліщина на прес-конференції 26 липня у Києві.

Він нагадав, що з перших днів анексії Криму офіс секретаріату уповноваженого з питань Європейського суду з прав людини активно представляв Україну в ЄСПЛ у міждержавних справах проти РФ.

«Було подано дві заяви, що стосуються Криму. Першою було подано заяву з перших годин, коли розгорталася окупація в 2014 році. Наступну заяву було подано в 2015 році, а цього року ЄСПЛ передав розгляд заяв до Великої палати, яка об’єднала ці заяви в одну. Наразі Велика палата ЄСПЛ розглядає одну заяву, яка стосується Криму», – нагадав Іван Ліщина.

Він також зазначив, що в 2014, 2015 і 2017 роках Україна подавала до суду додаткову інформацію щодо обставин анексії Криму, яка демонструвала механізм захоплення півострова. Зокрема, інформацію 50 свідків, які описували процес захоплення півострова та порушення прав людини під час анексії.

«Насправді це була спецоперація, в якій було задіяно великі сили як спецслужб, так і армійські частини. Усю цю інформацію було зібрано, оформлено і передано до ЄСПЛ», – розповів заступник міністра юстиції.

Читайте також: Жертвами репресій у Криму все частіше стають жінки та діти ‒ Заїр Смедляєв

У березні 2014 року Росія анексувала український півострів Крим. Міжнародні організації визнали анексію Криму незаконною і засудили дії Росії, країни Заходу запровадили проти неї економічні санкції. Кремль заперечує анексію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості».

У Росії й анексованому Криму, за даними правозахисників, утримують близько 70 українських політв’язнів.

Уряд залишив незмінною ціну на газ для населення до вересня

Кабінет Міністрів залишив незмінними ціни на природний газ для населення до 1 вересня 2018 року, відповідне рішення уряд ухвалив на засіданні 26 липня.

Йдеться про продовження дії спеціальних зобов’язань із продажу природного газу для потреб населення і теплокомуненерго за зниженою ціною.

«Наразі тривають переговори з МВФ стосовно приведення ціни на природний газ до рівня імпортного паритету. Тому, з огляду на завершення терміну дії положення (про спецзобов’язання – ред.), виникає необхідність у його продовженні», – йдеться в пояснювальній записці до постанови.

Постанова Кабміну №187 від 22 березня 2017 року передбачала, що спецзобов’язання з продажу газу населенню і теплокомуненерго діятимуть до 1 квітня 2018 року, пізніше уряд продовжив їх до кінця травня, а ще пізніше – до кінця липня.

Спеціальні зобов’язання полягають в продажу палива для потреб побутових споживачів за ціною, розрахунок якої прив’язано до ринкових середньорічних цін на європейському хабі.

Читайте також: Україна може відмовитися від імпорту газу – Гройсман

В середині липня прем’єр-міністр Володимир Гройсман заявляв, що український уряд продовжує переговори з Міжнародним валютним фондом (МВФ) про ціну на природний газ для населення і розраховує на компромісний варіант. Гройсман неодноразово наголошував, що не хоче підвищувати ціну на газ для населення, він також ініціював консультації з головами парламентських фракцій з цього питання.

У квітні Міжнародний валютний фонд заявив, що Україні потрібно деполітизувати процес формування цін на енергоресурси.

У МВФ неодноразово заявляли, що Україні для отримання чергового траншу необхідно ухвалити закон про Антикорупційний суд і привести ціни на газ до рівня ринкових.

У березні 2015 року між МВФ і Україною була затверджена чотирирічна програма розширеного фінансування на суму близько 17,5 мільярда доларів США. Наразі МВФ надав Україні за цією програмою близько 8 мільярдів 380 мільйонів доларів.

Міністерство фінансів України очікувало на надходження нового траншу кредиту МВФ на початку 2018 року. У квітні в Нацбанку заявили, що очікують траншу від Міжнародного валютного фонду в третьому кварталі.

Уряд залишив незмінною ціну на газ для населення до вересня

Кабінет Міністрів залишив незмінними ціни на природний газ для населення до 1 вересня 2018 року, відповідне рішення уряд ухвалив на засіданні 26 липня.

Йдеться про продовження дії спеціальних зобов’язань із продажу природного газу для потреб населення і теплокомуненерго за зниженою ціною.

«Наразі тривають переговори з МВФ стосовно приведення ціни на природний газ до рівня імпортного паритету. Тому, з огляду на завершення терміну дії положення (про спецзобов’язання – ред.), виникає необхідність у його продовженні», – йдеться в пояснювальній записці до постанови.

Постанова Кабміну №187 від 22 березня 2017 року передбачала, що спецзобов’язання з продажу газу населенню і теплокомуненерго діятимуть до 1 квітня 2018 року, пізніше уряд продовжив їх до кінця травня, а ще пізніше – до кінця липня.

Спеціальні зобов’язання полягають в продажу палива для потреб побутових споживачів за ціною, розрахунок якої прив’язано до ринкових середньорічних цін на європейському хабі.

Читайте також: Україна може відмовитися від імпорту газу – Гройсман

В середині липня прем’єр-міністр Володимир Гройсман заявляв, що український уряд продовжує переговори з Міжнародним валютним фондом (МВФ) про ціну на природний газ для населення і розраховує на компромісний варіант. Гройсман неодноразово наголошував, що не хоче підвищувати ціну на газ для населення, він також ініціював консультації з головами парламентських фракцій з цього питання.

У квітні Міжнародний валютний фонд заявив, що Україні потрібно деполітизувати процес формування цін на енергоресурси.

У МВФ неодноразово заявляли, що Україні для отримання чергового траншу необхідно ухвалити закон про Антикорупційний суд і привести ціни на газ до рівня ринкових.

У березні 2015 року між МВФ і Україною була затверджена чотирирічна програма розширеного фінансування на суму близько 17,5 мільярда доларів США. Наразі МВФ надав Україні за цією програмою близько 8 мільярдів 380 мільйонів доларів.

Міністерство фінансів України очікувало на надходження нового траншу кредиту МВФ на початку 2018 року. У квітні в Нацбанку заявили, що очікують траншу від Міжнародного валютного фонду в третьому кварталі.

КДКП оголосила Холодницькому догану – рішення

Директор НАБУ Артем Ситник наполягав на звільненні Холодницького

КДКП оголосила Холодницькому догану – рішення

Директор НАБУ Артем Ситник наполягав на звільненні Холодницького

In First US Visit, Ethiopian Prime Minister Seeks Bridges to Diaspora

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed will make his first trip to the United States on Thursday when he visits the diaspora community in Washington.

The visit comes at a high point in Ahmed’s brief but eventful tenure as Ethiopia’s head of government.

Earlier this year, Ethiopia faced widespread unrest and violent protests against a government that appeared unresponsive and entrenched.

In less than four months in office, Ahmed has led a dramatic turnaround. Sweeping reforms have quelled dissent, boosted civil liberties and begun to heal wounds from decades of ethnic tension and marginalization.

Ahmed was elected by the ruling coalition’s executive council after his predecessor, Hailemariam Desalegn, abruptly resigned. Since assuming office, Ahmed has focused on improving human rights, reducing corruption, and introducing economic and political reforms that can potentially move Ethiopia toward a more democratic society.

Now, Ahmed is connecting with Ethiopians in the U.S. to promote his reforms and encourage diasporans to return home and add to the changes unfolding.

​‘Brain drain’

For a country that’s seen some of its most talented doctors, academics and engineers leave for better opportunities in Europe and the U.S., a return of diasporans could affect whether Ethiopia’s reforms stick.

NuNu Wako is a media spokesperson for the prime minister’s visit to Washington, organized by the Ethiopian Embassy.

She told VOA that Ahmed’s trip is designed to “bridge the gap” between the Ethiopian government and American diaspora communities in ways not seen in the past 27 years, since Ethiopia’s current government toppled the communist regime that preceded it.

In Washington, Ahmed plans to meet with representatives from academia, banking, medicine and other industries with prominent Ethiopians. He hopes some will return home.

“It’s really important that these powerful brains are returned to Ethiopia and assist in the sustainable development of Ethiopia,” Wako said.

​Reformist leader

In his first 100 days in office, Ahmed has introduced symbolic and substantive changes designed to reshape Ethiopia and the broader region.

He has closed prisons, released hundreds of political prisoners and admitted that the government has tortured its citizens.

He has also unblocked opposition media that was previously banned and taken steps to privatize key industries.

In June, Ahmed said Ethiopia would honor the terms of an international ruling and cede land back to its neighbor Eritrea, leading to a historic peace deal weeks later and the end of nearly two decades of cold war between the countries.

Ahmed’s push to open up Ethiopia’s political system reached a “critical turning point” earlier this week, Wako said, when he called for multiparty democracy.

Ethiopia’s politics are based on ethnic federalism. Its regions and accompanying political parties are largely defined along ethnic lines. Five parties make up the country’s ruling coalition, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front, and they have a virtual monopoly on political power.

But Ethiopia has more than 80 ethnic groups, and the current system has led to the consolidation of power into the hands of a few.

Stepping away from ethnic federalism could lead to more inclusive politics that benefit all of society, Wako said.

“I think that this is going to be a tangible, concrete step forward for Ethiopia that, peacefully, will bring everyone together and lead to the Ethiopia that we once knew about and our forefathers fought for.”

​Unresolved challenges

Not everyone is enthusiastic about Ahmed’s overseas trip.

Mesfin Woldemariam is a retired professor and the founder of the Ethiopian Human Rights Council. He told Ethiopian broadcaster LTV that Ahmed should address pressing domestic concerns before looking outward.

“While there is fire burning within the country from four different directions, the prime minister is going to a different country. I don’t know what he is going to find or what he is looking for there,” Woldemariam said.

Engaging with the diaspora may not bring the benefits Ahmed hopes to reap, he added, until the country becomes more stable over time.

“The diaspora can come back with their own will, and we shouldn’t placate them — especially when things haven’t firmed up within Ethiopia yet,” Woldemariam said.

Among the problems Ahmed faces at home is the displacement of nearly 1 million people in the southern Gedeo and West Guji zones because of ethnic violence.

The humanitarian crisis has escalated since Ahmed took office in April, and hundreds of thousands of people are in need of emergency aid.

Multicity visit

In the U.S., Ethiopians are the second-largest group of African immigrants, trailing only Nigerians.

In 2014, a quarter-million first- and second-generation Ethiopians lived in America, according to a report compiled by the Migration Policy Institute. Most Ethiopian immigrants arrived in the U.S. in the past two decades.

After meeting with prominent businesses, religious leaders and political groups in Washington, Ahmed will visit diaspora communities in Minneapolis and Los Angeles.

In First US Visit, Ethiopian Prime Minister Seeks Bridges to Diaspora

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed will make his first trip to the United States on Thursday when he visits the diaspora community in Washington.

The visit comes at a high point in Ahmed’s brief but eventful tenure as Ethiopia’s head of government.

Earlier this year, Ethiopia faced widespread unrest and violent protests against a government that appeared unresponsive and entrenched.

In less than four months in office, Ahmed has led a dramatic turnaround. Sweeping reforms have quelled dissent, boosted civil liberties and begun to heal wounds from decades of ethnic tension and marginalization.

Ahmed was elected by the ruling coalition’s executive council after his predecessor, Hailemariam Desalegn, abruptly resigned. Since assuming office, Ahmed has focused on improving human rights, reducing corruption, and introducing economic and political reforms that can potentially move Ethiopia toward a more democratic society.

Now, Ahmed is connecting with Ethiopians in the U.S. to promote his reforms and encourage diasporans to return home and add to the changes unfolding.

​‘Brain drain’

For a country that’s seen some of its most talented doctors, academics and engineers leave for better opportunities in Europe and the U.S., a return of diasporans could affect whether Ethiopia’s reforms stick.

NuNu Wako is a media spokesperson for the prime minister’s visit to Washington, organized by the Ethiopian Embassy.

She told VOA that Ahmed’s trip is designed to “bridge the gap” between the Ethiopian government and American diaspora communities in ways not seen in the past 27 years, since Ethiopia’s current government toppled the communist regime that preceded it.

In Washington, Ahmed plans to meet with representatives from academia, banking, medicine and other industries with prominent Ethiopians. He hopes some will return home.

“It’s really important that these powerful brains are returned to Ethiopia and assist in the sustainable development of Ethiopia,” Wako said.

​Reformist leader

In his first 100 days in office, Ahmed has introduced symbolic and substantive changes designed to reshape Ethiopia and the broader region.

He has closed prisons, released hundreds of political prisoners and admitted that the government has tortured its citizens.

He has also unblocked opposition media that was previously banned and taken steps to privatize key industries.

In June, Ahmed said Ethiopia would honor the terms of an international ruling and cede land back to its neighbor Eritrea, leading to a historic peace deal weeks later and the end of nearly two decades of cold war between the countries.

Ahmed’s push to open up Ethiopia’s political system reached a “critical turning point” earlier this week, Wako said, when he called for multiparty democracy.

Ethiopia’s politics are based on ethnic federalism. Its regions and accompanying political parties are largely defined along ethnic lines. Five parties make up the country’s ruling coalition, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front, and they have a virtual monopoly on political power.

But Ethiopia has more than 80 ethnic groups, and the current system has led to the consolidation of power into the hands of a few.

Stepping away from ethnic federalism could lead to more inclusive politics that benefit all of society, Wako said.

“I think that this is going to be a tangible, concrete step forward for Ethiopia that, peacefully, will bring everyone together and lead to the Ethiopia that we once knew about and our forefathers fought for.”

​Unresolved challenges

Not everyone is enthusiastic about Ahmed’s overseas trip.

Mesfin Woldemariam is a retired professor and the founder of the Ethiopian Human Rights Council. He told Ethiopian broadcaster LTV that Ahmed should address pressing domestic concerns before looking outward.

“While there is fire burning within the country from four different directions, the prime minister is going to a different country. I don’t know what he is going to find or what he is looking for there,” Woldemariam said.

Engaging with the diaspora may not bring the benefits Ahmed hopes to reap, he added, until the country becomes more stable over time.

“The diaspora can come back with their own will, and we shouldn’t placate them — especially when things haven’t firmed up within Ethiopia yet,” Woldemariam said.

Among the problems Ahmed faces at home is the displacement of nearly 1 million people in the southern Gedeo and West Guji zones because of ethnic violence.

The humanitarian crisis has escalated since Ahmed took office in April, and hundreds of thousands of people are in need of emergency aid.

Multicity visit

In the U.S., Ethiopians are the second-largest group of African immigrants, trailing only Nigerians.

In 2014, a quarter-million first- and second-generation Ethiopians lived in America, according to a report compiled by the Migration Policy Institute. Most Ethiopian immigrants arrived in the U.S. in the past two decades.

After meeting with prominent businesses, religious leaders and political groups in Washington, Ahmed will visit diaspora communities in Minneapolis and Los Angeles.

Pompeo Declines to Reveal What Trump and Putin Discussed

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo came under pressure from Republican and Democratic lawmakers to defend U.S. President Donald Trump’s foreign policy and disclose what happened during Trump’s one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Meanwhile, the White House announced the Trump-Putin summit would be next year, and Pompeo issued a Crimea Declaration, saying the U.S. would never accept Russia’s annexation of the peninsula. VOA’s Diplomatic Correspondent Cindy Saine reports.

Pompeo Declines to Reveal What Trump and Putin Discussed

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo came under pressure from Republican and Democratic lawmakers to defend U.S. President Donald Trump’s foreign policy and disclose what happened during Trump’s one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Meanwhile, the White House announced the Trump-Putin summit would be next year, and Pompeo issued a Crimea Declaration, saying the U.S. would never accept Russia’s annexation of the peninsula. VOA’s Diplomatic Correspondent Cindy Saine reports.

One Person Injured in Explosion Outside US Embassy in Beijing

A man was injured when a homemade bomb he was carrying exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in Beijing Thursday.

Beijing police have identified the bomber as a 26-year-old man from China’s Inner Mongolia region. The man’s hand was injured by the device, which police say was made from fireworks.

The incident occurred near the area where visa applicants line up to enter the embassy for interviews.

Photos posted on social media after the blast showed of a large cloud of smoke filling the air outside the diplomatic compound in the Chinese capital. The embassy is located in a section of Beijing that is home to numerous embassies, including those of India and Israel.

The state-run Global Times newspaper earlier Thursday said police had detained a woman near the U.S. embassy who had doused herself with gasoline in a suspected attempt at self-immolation.

One Person Injured in Explosion Outside US Embassy in Beijing

A man was injured when a homemade bomb he was carrying exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in Beijing Thursday.

Beijing police have identified the bomber as a 26-year-old man from China’s Inner Mongolia region. The man’s hand was injured by the device, which police say was made from fireworks.

The incident occurred near the area where visa applicants line up to enter the embassy for interviews.

Photos posted on social media after the blast showed of a large cloud of smoke filling the air outside the diplomatic compound in the Chinese capital. The embassy is located in a section of Beijing that is home to numerous embassies, including those of India and Israel.

The state-run Global Times newspaper earlier Thursday said police had detained a woman near the U.S. embassy who had doused herself with gasoline in a suspected attempt at self-immolation.

US Toymaker Mattel to Lay Off 2,200 Worldwide

Mattel, home of Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels, is cutting 2,200 jobs in order to save money after the closing of U.S. toy retail giant Toys R Us.

The toymaker said the cuts amount to 22 percent of its nonmanufacturing employees worldwide. Mattel has about 28,000 employees.

It also plans to sell factories in Mexico as part of a $650 million cost-saving plan.

Mattel’s stock fell nearly 9 percent to $14.85 in after-hours trading Wednesday, after dropping 1 percent during the regular trading day.

Mattel reported a loss of $240.9 million in the second quarter, bigger than the $56.1 million loss in the same period a year ago.

Revenues fell nearly 14 percent to $840.7 million, below the $863.1 million analysts had predicted.

Ynon Kreiz, who was named CEO in April, said Wednesday that he expects the negative impact of Toys R Us closing to subside by next year.

The toymaker has lagged behind its competitors in digital media, analysts say, and is trying to catch up with other brands that have spawned apps, movies and TV shows.

Kreiz said the company is working closely with other retailers and looking for more ways to sell its toys online.

US Toymaker Mattel to Lay Off 2,200 Worldwide

Mattel, home of Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels, is cutting 2,200 jobs in order to save money after the closing of U.S. toy retail giant Toys R Us.

The toymaker said the cuts amount to 22 percent of its nonmanufacturing employees worldwide. Mattel has about 28,000 employees.

It also plans to sell factories in Mexico as part of a $650 million cost-saving plan.

Mattel’s stock fell nearly 9 percent to $14.85 in after-hours trading Wednesday, after dropping 1 percent during the regular trading day.

Mattel reported a loss of $240.9 million in the second quarter, bigger than the $56.1 million loss in the same period a year ago.

Revenues fell nearly 14 percent to $840.7 million, below the $863.1 million analysts had predicted.

Ynon Kreiz, who was named CEO in April, said Wednesday that he expects the negative impact of Toys R Us closing to subside by next year.

The toymaker has lagged behind its competitors in digital media, analysts say, and is trying to catch up with other brands that have spawned apps, movies and TV shows.

Kreiz said the company is working closely with other retailers and looking for more ways to sell its toys online.

Mexico, Canada Stress Common Front in NAFTA Talks

Mexican and Canadian officials are stressing that talks on the North American Free Trade Agreement will remain a three-way negotiation, despite suggestions by U.S. President Donald Trump that he might pursue separate trade deals with both countries.

Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray says “Canada and Mexico not only share geography, history and friendship, but also principles and common goals, and we are a team and act as a team.”

Visiting Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland also stressed that NAFTA is a three-country agreement. She said that Canada also opposes a “sunset” clause proposed by Trump that would allow countries to opt out of the pact every five years.

Freeland also met Wednesday with Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who will take office on December 1.

Mexico, Canada Stress Common Front in NAFTA Talks

Mexican and Canadian officials are stressing that talks on the North American Free Trade Agreement will remain a three-way negotiation, despite suggestions by U.S. President Donald Trump that he might pursue separate trade deals with both countries.

Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray says “Canada and Mexico not only share geography, history and friendship, but also principles and common goals, and we are a team and act as a team.”

Visiting Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland also stressed that NAFTA is a three-country agreement. She said that Canada also opposes a “sunset” clause proposed by Trump that would allow countries to opt out of the pact every five years.

Freeland also met Wednesday with Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who will take office on December 1.

White House Delays Next Trump-Putin Summit Until 2019

The White House said Wednesday that President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin will not hold a second summit until next year.

National Security Adviser John Bolton said Trump wants to wait until after Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into the Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election is completed.

“The President believes that the next bilateral meeting with President Putin should take place after the Russia witch hunt is over, so we’ve agreed that it will be after the first of the year,” Bolton said.

The statement came as the U.S. announced that it has no intention of recognizing Russia’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula and will not drop its economic sanctions against Moscow until Crimea is returned to Kyiv’s control.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that with its invasion of Russian-speaking Crimea, Moscow “sought to undermine a bedrock international principle shared by democratic states: that no country can change the borders of another by force.”

The top U.S. diplomat added, “As democratic states seek to build a free, just, and prosperous world, we must uphold our commitment to the international principle of sovereign equality and respect the territorial integrity of other states. Through its actions, Russia has acted in a manner unworthy of a great nation and has chosen to isolate itself from the international community.”

Pompeo’s statement came shortly before he appeared before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to answer lawmakers’ questions about an array of global issues. At the top of the list were inquiries about last week’s Helsinki summit between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, particularly the two-hour private meeting the two leaders had, accompanied only by their translators. Trump has noted a range of topics he discussed with Putin, including Ukraine, but given no details of the talks.

In prepared remarks, Pompeo said the U.S. goal in dealing with Moscow is “to steadily raise the costs of aggression until Vladimir Putin chooses a less confrontational foreign policy, while keeping the door open for dialogue in our national interest. President Trump believes that two great nuclear powers should not have such a contentious relationship.”

There is no indication, however, that Putin has any intention of relinquishing control of Crimea, where 2.3 million people live.

North Korea

Pompeo said that Trump’s June summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un de-escalated the threat of Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons development program.

“We are engaged in patient diplomacy, but we will not let this drag out to no end,” Pompeo said of on-going talks with Pyongyang.

Ahead of the hearing, Trump’s congressional critics said they were particularly interested in questioning Pompeo about Trump’s apparent embrace of Putin’s denial that Russia had interfered in the 2016 U.S. election and equated Putin’s statement with the U.S. intelligence finding that it had meddled. Putin said at a news conference he wanted Trump to win.

Pompeo said Trump accepts the U.S. intelligence conclusion that Putin interfered, although Trump just days ago called the claims of Russian interference a “big hoax.”

Trump’s Helsinki comments drew sharp criticism in Washington, where he later said he supported his intelligence officials and their conclusion, often coupling it with his oft-repeated statement that his campaign did not collude with the Russians and that the Russian interference had no effect on the outcome of the election.

A new Quinnipiac University poll said Americans believe, by a 51 to 35 percent margin, “that the Russian government has compromising information about President Trump.” The survey said that U.S. voters, by a 52-27 percent margin, believe the summit was a failure for the United States, while those polled, by a 73-8 percent edge, believe it was a success for Russia.

Top U.S. intelligence officials say Russia is again attempting to interfere in the U.S. electoral process in the November voting, although Trump administration officials have vowed to try to stop it. The Quinnipiac poll said 63 percent of voters are “very concerned” or “somewhat concerned” about Russian interference in the upcoming vote.

Trump said Tuesday, without offering any evidence, that Russia “will be pushing very hard for the Democrats” in November’s congressional elections, against his favored Republican candidates.

The U.S. leader said on Twitter that he was “very concerned that Russia will be fighting very hard to have an impact on the upcoming Election.”

Trump claimed that “based on the fact that no President has been tougher on Russia than me, they will be pushing very hard for the Democrats. They definitely don’t want Trump!”

Trump’s contention that Moscow would favor Democrats in the November 6 congressional contests –when the entire 435-member House of Representatives and a third of the Senate is up for election — is at odds with the U.S. intelligence community’s conclusion that Russia meddled in the 2016 presidential election to help Trump win the White House.

Прокурори САП підтримали Холодницького в листі до голови Кваліфікаційно-дисциплінарної комісії

Прокурори Спеціалізованої антикорупційної прокуратури підписали лист на підтримку голови відомства Назара Холодницького. Звернення до голови Кваліфікаційно-дисциплінарної комісії прокурорів Віталія Грушковського оприлюднила прес-служба САП.

Прокурори нагадують, що 26 липня КДКП розглядатиме висновок свого члена за дисциплінарними скаргами генерального прокурора Юрія Луценка та директора Національного антикорупційного бюро України Артема Ситника про наявність дисциплінарного проступку в діях Холодницького.

«Фактично під згадане засідання окремі особи намагаються скомпілювати увесь перелік своїх претензій до САП, який накопичився в них за час діяльності Спеціалізованої прокуратури, незалежно від того, чи є ці претензії предметом розгляду Комісії, і використати його як привід переконати комісію ухвалити рішення про звільнення керівника прокуратури», – заявили в САП.

Автори звернення розцінюють це як тиск: «…не стільки на керівника САП, скільки на кожного з нас».

«За прийняттям кожного з цих «незручних» процесуальних рішень стоїть окремо взятий прокурор», – зазначили в САП.

Підписанти запевняють комісію у своїй готовності надати ґрунтовні пояснення і особисто на засіданні комісії підтвердити відсутність будь-якого незаконного тиску на них з боку Холодницького.

НАБУ і Генпрокуратура наприкінці березня звинуватили очільника Спеціалізованої антикорупційної прокуратури Назара Холодницького в дисциплінарних правопорушеннях після того, як оприлюднили записи, зроблені на «жучок» у його робочому кабінеті.

Читайте також: «Раніше здавалось, що Холодницький піде, тепер сумніваюсь – Лємєнов»

Генеральний прокурор Юрій Луценко уточнював, що про кримінальне переслідування Холодницького не йдеться: він та голова Антикорупційного бюро Артем Ситник просять кваліфікаційно-дисциплінарну комісію прокурорів про звільнення голови САП.

Пізніше стало відомо, що доповідач комісії рекомендує притягнути Холодницького до догани замість звільнення.

Директор Національного антикорупційного бюро України Артем Ситник направив до Кваліфікаційно-дисциплінарної комісії прокурорів заперечення цього висновку.

Trump’s Hollywood Walk of Fame Star Vandalized

A vandal has destroyed President Donald Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Los Angeles police Officer Ray Brown says the vandalism was reported around 3:30 a.m. Wednesday, and someone was subsequently taken into custody. Brown did not have any further information about the person.

Brown says a pickax was used in the vandalism.

The star placed on Hollywood Boulevard near Highland Avenue in 2007 recognizes Trump for his work on the reality show “The Apprentice.”

Trump’s star was previously vandalized by a man swinging a sledgehammer and pickax days before the November 2016 election.

Police: Arrest Made in Black Lives Matter Activist’s Death

New Orleans police have arrested a black man in the fatal shooting of a Black Lives Matter activist known for his leap through police tape to try to seize a Confederate battle flag during a demonstration last year in South Carolina.

A Crimestoppers tip helped them identify 26-year-old Roosevelt Iglus as a suspect in the death of 32-year-old Muhiyidin Elamin Moye, better known as Muhiyidin d’Baha, police said in a news release Wednesday.

Iglus, who was on probation after pleading guilty in 2016 to illegally carrying a weapon and possessing marijuana, was arrested Tuesday on a charge of second-degree murder. That carries an automatic life sentence if he is convicted on the charge.

Police don’t know a possible motive for the shooting, spokesman Aaron Looney said in an email Wednesday.

Moye was shot in the thigh early Feb. 6. A police officer answering a call about gunfire found him on the ground, asking for help near the Treme neighborhood and about eight blocks from the French Quarter.

He had taken a personal trip to the city, his niece Camille Weaver told the Post and Courier of Charleston.

His family told South Carolina news outlets that Muhiyidin Elamin Moye was his legal name.

Iglus’ bond was set at $505,000, according to an online court record which showed he also is accused of possessing amphetamines.

His case was assigned to the public defender’s office.

After the guilty plea April 29, 2016, Iglus was given a suspended 5-year sentence and put on probation for five years on the marijuana charge and given a suspended 6-month sentence and six months’ probation on the weapons charge.

Less than two weeks later, prosecutors filed a new drug charge against him. He pleaded guilty July 8, 2016, and was sentenced to 1-and-a-half years, according to online records.

ЄСПЛ закликав Сенцова припинити голодування

Європейський суд з прав людини закликав засудженого в Росії українського режисера Олега Сенцова припинити голодування й прийняти будь-яке лікування, яке покращить його стан.

Водночас суд вимагає від Росії невідкладно надати Сенцову необхідне лікування в медичній установі.

У ЄСПЛ зазначають, що мають право вказати будь-якій державі-підписанту Європейської конвенції про права людини на тимчасові заходи. Вони мають бути вжиті невідкладно.

Український режисер Олег Сенцов був засуджений в Росії в серпні 2015 року на 20 років колонії суворого режиму за звинуваченням у плануванні терактів в анексованому Криму. Він провину не визнає. 14 травня Сенцов оголосив безстрокове голодування, вимагаючи звільнення українських політв’язнів у Росії.

Увечері 19 липня Денісова заявила, що стан здоров’я утримуваного в Росії українського режисера Олега Сенцова значно погіршився, він погано орієнтується в датах.

Активісти в Україні і по всьому світу продовжують вимагати від Росії і її президента Володимира Путіна звільнити незаконно утримуваних українців. Акції проходять у різних країнах і на різних континентах під гаслами #FreeOlegSentsov і #SaveOlegSentsov.