Trump Takes His Tax Reform Plan to American Workers in Missouri

U.S. President Donald Trump has chosen the Midwestern U.S. state of Missouri to push for a major tax overhaul that he said would spur economic growth and help ordinary Americans. He appealed to lawmakers to shun partisanship and to act swiftly for the benefit of the country. Trump proposed to cut the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 15 percent and slash individual taxes, but offered few other details. VOA’s Zlatica Hoke reports.

Volunteers Flock to Houston to Help Hurricane Victims 

Days of torrential rain have ended in Houston, but many neighborhoods are still under water, especially those near overflowing dams and rivers. The catastrophic weather has brought out a host of volunteers — from across Texas and from other states — to lend a helping hand. Many came with their boats.

Vietnamese-American Peter Chau does not have a boat but decided to turn out to help. His home in the northwestern part of Houston was not flooded. His parents, who came to the United States from Vietnam, said he was doing “a good job” by volunteering for the search-and-rescue efforts.

“We went to downtown Houston and rescued some people that were stuck in their home ’cause the levee broke down there,” Chau said. “We’re trying to get them out as fast as we can.”

The volunteers may not have known each other before, he added, but they all feel like family now.

“No matter what color or race, everyone is out there on the boats. No matter what color, race, we’re there as Houstonians, Texans — helping each other out.”

Volunteers show up

Volunteers have converged on staging areas around Houston, where boat owners get their assignments — which neighborhoods to search for stranded flood victims and where to take them.

In northwest Houston, one of these staging areas is at 3P Offroad, an all-terrain vehicle shop. Through social media, volunteers with or without boats have been gathering here before heading to flooded neighborhoods. People have also been coming to donate household items that flood victims need, such as toilet paper, blankets, water and diapers.

Debbie Winters, who stopped by to pick up some supplies, lost everything when floodwater swept through her home.

“It was up to the second floor in our house … [then] went up to the third floor. … The family got out, but my boyfriend did stay to try to protect the house. He had to be rescued by boats,” Winters said.

Fear of burglars and looters prompted some homeowners to stay put, but then the water began rising. Because of the extraordinary depth of the floods in some areas, some of those Houstonians guarding their homesteads became stranded, surrounded by water far too deep, and often moving too rapidly, to attempt to reach higher ground.

Stranded, but not ready to leave

Justin Albert is one of the volunteers who has been cruising through flooded streets in his boat to see who needs help.

“We ran this river yesterday and found some people on their second-story balconies,” Albert said. “They weren’t willing” to board his boat, he continued, “so there’s nothing we can do about that.”

Steering his craft into a neighborhood that’s now a river, near Humble in north Houston, Albert and his friends heard dogs barking and found two dogs who needed to be rescued from the porch of an empty house.

From people with boats, to those who are donating food, water and household items, volunteers said this natural disaster shows the good in people — all people. Houston, the fourth largest metropolitan area in the United States, has a population of more than 6 million, and it is known as one of the nation’s most ethnically diverse areas, home to diaspora communities that can trace their roots to countries around the globe.

“After watching the news, seeing all the negativity going around the U.S.,” Albert continued, “this shows right here … that Americans can come together and help each other out and be one” — united.

“If the Democrats and the Republicans and the judicial branch and the executive branch can understand that a bunch of people who have nine-to-five jobs come together and rescue people in their greatest time of need,” said Matt Haynie, who commands the 3P search-and-rescue staging area, then “right now, when our country is in the greatest time of need for itself, [the top levels of government] need to get together, and they need to work together like we are.”

“Everyone here is family,” Chau said. “It’s Texas. We take care of our own.”

The volunteers said they will continue to help in anyway they can in the days to come.

Volunteers Flood to Houston to Help Hurricane Victims

Even though the rain in Houston has stopped, many neighborhoods near dams and rivers are still under water. From around Texas and beyond, volunteers, who connected through social media, are in their boats giving a helping hand. They say, what’s happening in Texas is a good model for lawmakers in Washington. VOA’s Elizabeth Lee spent the day with rescuers in Houston.

Trump’s Immigrant Crackdown Could Slow Houston Rebuilding

In the coming weeks, as Houston turns its attention to rebuilding areas devastated by Tropical Storm Harvey, people like Jay De Leon are likely to play an outsized role — if they stay around.

De Leon, 47, owns a small construction business in Houston, and he and his 10 employees do exactly the kind of demolition and refurbishing the city will need. But like a large number of construction workers in Texas, De Leon and most of his workers live in the United States illegally, and that could make things complicated.

The Pew Research Center estimated last year that 28 percent of Texas’s construction workforce is undocumented, while other studies have put the number as high as 50 percent. Construction employed 23 percent of working undocumented adults in Texas at the end of 2014, higher than any other sector, according to the Migration Policy Institute.

Undocumented immigrants nervous

However, undocumented immigrants are growing increasingly nervous in Texas because of an immigration crackdown by the Trump administration that has cast a wide net.

In addition, a new Texas law that would have taken effect later this week bars cities from embracing so-called sanctuary policies, where they offer safe harbor to illegal immigrants, and allows local police to inquire about a person’s immigration status. A federal judge Wednesday temporarily blocked most of the law from taking effect.

De Leon, who has lived in the country for 20 years and has two citizen children, says the changes have spooked the city’s migrant workforce. In recent weeks, he said, one of his employees left the state and another returned to Mexico. Both feared that if they stayed they risked arrest.

Departing workers, he says, pose a problem for Houston in the wake of Harvey, which has caused flood damage to commercial buildings, houses, roads and bridges expected to run into tens of billions of dollars.

“The situation that Houston is going through now with the hurricane is going to be the trial by fire for the Republicans and the governor that approved these radical laws,” De Leon said. “They will need our migrant labor to rebuild the city. I believe that without us it will be impossible.”

Undocumented workers perform a wide range of construction jobs, from framing and dry-walling to plumbing and wiring.

Shortage of U.S. trained workers

Stan Marek, chief executive of Marek Construction in Texas, said his company doesn’t hire undocumented immigrants and has long had difficulty finding enough trained U.S. workers.

“It’s a crisis,” Marek said. “We are looking at several thousand homes that have flood damage. There is no way the existing (legal) workforce can make a dent in it.”

Marek would like to see the federal government grant emergency work authorization for undocumented workers in the rebuilding effort, he said. Otherwise, those immigrants are likely to be hired by firms that do not pay payroll taxes or provide benefits like workers’ compensation and legally mandated overtime.

It isn’t yet possible to estimate how many construction jobs will be added in Texas as it rebuilds, but in the 12 months after Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, Louisiana added 14,800 jobs in the sector, U.S. government data shows.

About 25 percent of the construction workers involved in the cleanup of New Orleans were undocumented, according to a study by researchers at Tulane and UC Berkeley universities. Those without papers were “especially at risk of exploitation,” the study found.

Worker exodus

The labor shortages are likely to grow worse, many builders warn. Earlier this year, a group of Hispanic contractors sent a letter to Texas Governor Greg Abbott warning that the pending ban on sanctuary city policies would make it “difficult to find and retain experienced workers.”

Javier Arrias, chairman of the Hispanic Contractors Association de Tejas and one of the letter’s signers, told Reuters that “many construction workers are already moving to other states.”

Abbott’s office did not respond to a request for comment about the role undocumented workers might play in the recovery.

Elizabeth Theiss, president of Houston-based anti-immigration group Stop the Magnet, sees another option besides looking to workers in the country illegally. She says the rebuilding effort should be used to help train U.S. veterans and other citizens who need jobs.

Theiss acknowledged that reconstruction might proceed more slowly, at least initially, if immigrants without work documents are not part of the effort, but she noted that rebuilding would be slow under any scenario.

Personal hardships

Whatever role undocumented people play in rebuilding Houston, they could face hardships rebuilding their own lives.

While the Federal Emergency Management Agency provides emergency food, water and medicine to anyone, regardless of immigration status, cash assistance and other longer term aid is only available to citizens and immigrants in households where at least one family member has legal status.

Immigrant advocates are launching private fundraising drives to help fill the void.

“It is deeply tragic and un-American that so many of those working men and women who will be rebuilding Houston and the rest of the state will be doing so while facing tragedy in their own lives,” said Jose Garza, executive director of the Workers Defense Project.

De Leon said his family was lucky and did not suffer flood damage. He is now busy rounding up supplies for immigrant families stuck at shelters who are afraid to seek out more help from authorities.

In the end, he says, President Donald Trump has to know “it’s going to be impossible to rebuild Houston without the labor force of immigrants. It is illogical, what he says with his words and what really has to happen.”

Michigan, North Dakota Among States Likely to be Hurt by NAFTA Changes

Michigan is likely to be the state most hurt by changes to the NAFTA trade agreement, according to a Fitch Ratings report released Wednesday, as U.S. President Donald Trump renewed threats to scrap the deal.

Trump has threatened three times in the past week to abandon the North American Free Trade Agreement, revisiting his view that the United States would probably have to start the process of exiting the accord to reach a fair deal for his country.

A second round of talks starts Friday in Mexico City to renegotiate the 1994 accord binding the United States, Mexico and Canada.

Business groups have largely praised NAFTA and hope to persuade all three governments to make minimal changes to the pact. U.S.-Canada-Mexico trade has quadrupled since NAFTA took effect in 1994, surpassing $1 trillion in 2015.

Michigan’s auto sector

While several other states export a significant amount of products to Canada and Mexico, Michigan is an outlier in Fitch’s analysis because of the state’s global role in the automotive sector and proximity to Canada, the report said.

Sixty-five percent of the Michigan’s exports went to Canada and Mexico in 2016, totaling 7.4 percent of its gross state product, it said.

“Any state that is particularly export dependent or exposed to trade, if there’s a falloff in trade it’s going to hit income and sales taxes and that’s going to weaken state revenues,” said Michael D’Arcy, a director of U.S. public finance at Fitch. “Cuts would have to be made.”

Anna Heaton, a spokeswoman for Republican Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, said in a statement to Reuters that Canada, Michigan’s No.1 trading partner, has been important to the state’s economic recovery but he understands that sometimes policies need to change.

11 states trade heavily with Canada

According to the report, 11 U.S. states send at least 30 percent of their exports to Canada. By merchandise value, 82 percent of North Dakota’s exports went to Canada in 2016. Forty-three percent of New Mexico’s exports were sent to Mexico.

Several states also import a substantial amount of Canadian goods.

“A unilateral U.S. withdrawal from NAFTA would sharply increase import tariffs overnight, entailing potentially substantial costs for U.S. importers and consumers,” the report said.

Major metropolitan areas could also be affected by U.S. trade policy changes, with Texas’s El Paso MSA, or metropolitan statistical area, left vulnerable to NAFTA changes, the report said. Exports to Canada and Mexico accounted for 91 percent of the MSA’s exports.

Їздити до Росії стало вкрай небезпечно – ранковий ефір Радіо Свобода

Їздити до Росії стало вкрай небезпечно; Хабарники чи антикорупціонери: хто кого дотисне цієї осені?; Чи готові українці поступитися свободою заради безпеки?

На ці теми ведучий Ранкової Свободи Юрій Матвійчук говоритиме з гостями студії. Відповідатимуть на запитання: член громадської ради Державної прикордонної служби України Ігор Гриб та аналітик Українського інституту майбутнього Ігор Тишкевич і колишній заступник голови СБУ Віктор Ягун; екс-директор Департаменту з питань люстрації Міністерства юстиції України Тетяна Козаченко і народний депутат Юрій Дерев’янко та політичний консультант Андрій Вальчишин; екс-керівник Головного слідчого управління СБУ Василь Вовк і радник міністра внутрішніх справ Зорян Шкіряк.

US-funded Ethiopian Abattoir Hopes to Help Herders During Drought

An abattoir located among herding communities in Ethiopia’s eastern Somali region, known more for droughts and famine than business opportunities, is an unusual stop for a U.S. aid administrator.

But USAID chief Mark Green stopped at the Jijiga Export Slaughter House (JESH) during a visit to the town of Jijiga on Wednesday to see the effects of a crippling drought that has pushed some areas to the south to the brink of famine.

The abattoir buys goats, sheep, cows and camels for slaughter from herders for export to the Middle East, giving families cash to buy food during the drought.

A $1.5-million loan from Feed the Future, a $1 billion-a-year agricultural program launched during U.S. President Barack Obama’s presidency in 2010, helped purchase refrigerators and trucks for the facility, which employs 100 people from local villages.

To Green, the slaughterhouse represents what USAID can do to help attract private-sector money into investments that boost the productivity of small farmers in developing countries.

While at the abattoir, Green announced 12 countries that will benefit from Feed The Future investments in 2017, signaling that the program will survive proposed deep cuts to USAID’s budget this year.

The 12 countries are Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, Honduras, Kenya, Mali, Nepal, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Uganda.

Green said investments like the Jijinga slaughterhouse not only created markets for American businesses but helped communities out of poverty. Herders can earn as much as $80 per goat when they sell to the slaughterhouse.

“I’m under no illusions; the development journey in many places in the world is a long one, but I want us to always be thinking what we can do that nudges something towards a day when people get to take care of themselves,” he said.

“This is a place where we see some of the benefits and the potential for Feed the Future,” Green added.

JESH Chief Executive Faisal Guhad said the abattoir had been open for a year but was forced to close for three months last year because of the drought.

The facility currently processes about 10,000 animals a month. Guhad said he hoped to quadruple that in the second year of operation.

Demand for Ethiopian goat meat was currently high because of the annual haj pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca, said Guhad.

“We opened at the wrong time. El Nino happened to us and we started again after it rained,” said Guhad. “We’re now in the second month of starting again.”

The facility employs about 108 people from the community and plans to increase hiring to 200, said Guhad.

In the Jijinga area, planting for the March to May rains, known as the belg, is already delayed, and aid workers say they have seen a growing number of women and children at food distribution centers. The hunger crisis is predicted to worsen until the harvest begins in September.

Many parts of the Ethiopian highlands are still recovering from the 2016 drought, which was attributed to the El Niño weather phenomenon in the Pacific Ocean.

Крим: на суді у справі Умерова свідки не підтвердили в його виступі закликів до будь-чого

В окупованому Криму на процесі в підконтрольному Москві Сімферопольському районному суді у справі заступника голови Меджлісу кримськотатарського народу Ільмі Умерова чотири свідки заявили, що в його виступі, через який його судять за «заклики до порушення територіальної цілісності Росії», взагалі ніяких закликів не було.

Як заявили свідки Шевкет Меметов, журналіст і викладач Бекір Мамутов, активіст кримськотатарського руху Заїр Смедляєв і викладач кримськотатарської мови Ленуре Яґ’яєва, виступаючи в суді кримськотатарською через перекладача, замовлений російськими силовиками переклад виступу Ільмі Умерова, який він теж виголошував кримськотатарською, неточний. За їхніми словами, звинувачення ґрунтується на словах перекладача, а не самого Умерова, повідомила у фейсбуці дочка підсудного Айше.

Його адвокат Едем Семедляєв, зі свого боку, додав в інтерв’ю проектові Радіо Свобода, сайтові Крим.Реалії, що свідки також спростували один із аргументів слідства, ніби Ільмі Умеров «звертався до невизначеного кола осіб із закликом до відокремлення Криму від Росії». За словами свідків, коло адресатів виступу чітко визначене – це люди, що володіють кримськотатарською мовою, бо ті, хто її не знає, не зрозуміє виступу.

Крім того, додав адвокат, свідки заявили, що у виступі Умерова вони не виявили ніяких закликів, тим більше до «порушення територіальної цілісності Росії».

Сам Умеров, коментуючи засідання суду, теж звернув увагу, що всі свідки підтвердили найголовніше: «у словах, які як промовив, закликів до порушення територіальної цілісності Росії немає».

При цьому Умеров наголосив: «Я дійсно не робив ніяких закликів, але я щоразу зазначаю, що не визнаю юрисдикції Росії у Криму, не визнаю «референдуму» і його наслідків».

Іще один захисник Ільмі Умерова, російський правозахисник Олександр Подрабінек, підтвердив головну тезу слів свідків: у виступі, про який ідеться, «не лунали заклики до відокремлення Криму від Росії чи заклики до посилення санкційної політики з боку Заходу щодо Криму».

Наступне засідання суду призначене на наступну середу.

Сам Ільмі Умеров вважає цей суд над ним замовним, а його результат вирішеним заздалегідь. Він наголошує, що слідство здійснило підміну понять, коли подало лінгвістичну експертизу не самого його виступу, а його перекладу російською, який у документах суду назвали «стенограмою». При цьому перекладач додавав слова, яких Умеров не вимовляв, – навіть назви міст і прізвища, яких не було в первісному тексті його виступу на кримськотатарському телеканалі ATR 19 березня 2016 року, через який його судять. Такий неточний переклад, зокрема, дав можливість звинуваченню трактувати промову Умерова як заклик, а не як висловлення його думки.

2016 року в окупованому Криму слідчі ФСБ Росії порушили проти Ільмі Умерова кримінальну справу за статтею про екстремізм. Йому загрожує покарання у виді позбавлення волі на строк від 12 до 15 років. Затримання, обшук і порушення кримінальної справи, тримання у психіатричній лікарні для проведення примусової судово-психіатричної експертизи відомого учасника національно-визвольного руху кримських татар, заступника голови Меджлісу Ільмі Умерова викликало громадський і міжнародний резонанс.

Сам Умеров не приховує, що не визнає заявленого Москвою «російського статусу» окупованого Криму, який, попри окупацію, є частиною України. Ця позиція, каже він, не є «закликом до порушення територіальної цілісності Росії», бо до російської території Крим не належить, і так само не йдеться ні про яке «відокремлення» від Росії півострова, що й так не є її частиною.

Суд віддав Шуфрича молодшого на поруки батькові

Шевченківський районний суд Києва вирішив віддати на поруки батька Нестора Шуфрича, сина народного депутата з «Опозиційного блоку», якого звинувачують у тому, що він збив людину на пішохідному переході в центрі Києва. Такий запобіжний захід суд обрав на засіданні 30 серпня.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, прокуратура просила про цілодобовий домашній арешт для Нестора Шуфрича молодшого.

Адвокати Шуфрича наполягали, що підстав для домашнього арешту немає, заявляючи, що їхній підзахисний не збирається втікати і здав закордонний паспорт.

Батько підозрюваного, народний депутат Нестор Шуфрича попросив суд дозволити йому взяти сина на поруки.

Напередодні Шуфричу молодшому оголосили підозру за статтею «порушення правил безпеки дорожнього руху, що спричинило потерпілому тяжке тілесне ушкодження».

За даними поліції, ДТП сталася ввечері 26 серпня: автомобіль «Бентлі», за кермом якого перебував син депутата, на пішохідному переході збив чоловіка. Потерпілого з травмами «швидка» доставила в лікарню, в нього діагностували закриту черепно-мозкову травму, переломи передпліччя і гомілки.

У поліції Києва додали, що водій співпрацює зі слідством, його закордонний паспорт долучений до матеріалів кримінального провадження.

 

US Successfully Shoots down Medium-Range Test Missile near Hawaii

The U.S. Navy successfully shot down a medium-range ballistic missile off the coast of Hawaii as part of a test of defense systems Wednesday, following the most recent North Korea ballistic missile test, officials said.

A navy statement said sailors aboard a U.S. vessel “successfully conducted a complex defense flight test.”

The director of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency Lieutenant General Sam Greaves said, “We will continue developing ballistic missile defense technologies to stay ahead of the threat as it evolves.”

Tuesday, North Korea fired a ballistic missile over Japan.  It was the most recent in a series of missiles launched from North Korea toward Japan, with most missiles falling in the Sea of Japan.

U.S. President Donald Trump responded to the missile launch by saying again that “all options are on the table” when dealing with the North Korea threat.

“The world has received North Korea’s latest message loud and clear, this regime has signaled its contempt for its neighbors, for all members of the United Nations, and for minimum standard of acceptable international behavior,” Trump said in a statement.  “Threatening and destabilizing actions only increase the North Korean regime’s isolation in the region and among all nations of the world.”

The U.S. and South Korea have been conducting war games in recent days, as rhetoric between North Korea and the United States has heated up.

North Korea acknowledged the missile launch Wednesday, saying it was to counter the joint exercises.

The official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) quoted leader Kim Jong Un saying the drill for the launch of the Hwasong-12 intermediate-range ballistic missile was “like a real war” and the first step by North Korea’s military for operations in the Pacific and “a meaningful prelude to containing Guam.”

 

Western Louisiana in Crosshairs as Harvey Moves Back to Land

Western Louisiana residents braced for more wind and water early Wednesday as Tropical Storm Harvey made its second landfall after dumping record rainfall on Texas.

 

The storm came ashore just west of Cameron, Louisiana, bringing maximum sustained winds near 45 mph (72 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. Harvey had lingered over Texas for days before meandering back into the Gulf of Mexico.

 

Forecasters said there was a risk of tornadoes across a large part of the South as Harvey trudged northeast toward northern Louisiana. The national Storm Prediction Center said a few tornadoes were expected to develop Wednesday in northeast Louisiana and across southern and central portions of Mississippi. Tornadoes would also be possible across parts of southern and central Alabama, near the eastern edge of Harvey’s rain bands.

 

Another 5 to 10 inches (13 to 25 centimeters) of rain could fall in western Louisiana, forecasters said.

 

“We are starting to get down to the end of the tunnel of all this rain,” Meteorologist Roger Erickson said.

Erickson warns that some coastal rivers won’t be able to drain effectively because Harvey’s winds are pushing in storm surge, aggravating flooding in areas already drenched by more than 20 inches (51 centimeters) of rain. Gusts up to 50 mph (80 kph) are predicted for coastal areas and up to 40 mph (65 kph) in Lake Charles and along the Interstate 10 corridor.

 

Cameron Parish’s Office of Emergency Preparedness said a curfew was in effect until the threat had passed and checkpoints have been set up at entry points into evacuated areas.

 

State offices in 28 parishes and most Baton Rouge area schools won’t open Wednesday in anticipation of possible severe weather. Gov. John Bel Edwards urged people to remain alert but said the state is responding well to less severe conditions in its own borders.

 

“You never know what Mother Nature is going to throw at us, but with the people in this room, I’m confident we can handle it,” he told local and state officials during a visit Tuesday to Lake Charles, which is near the Texas border.

Edwards said Louisiana also has offered to shelter storm victims from Texas. He said he expects Texas officials to decide within 48 hours whether to accept the offer.

 

Harvey’s devastating flooding brought back tough memories in New Orleans as Tuesday marked the 12th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Mayor Mitch Landrieu opened his Tuesday news conference with a moment of silence for Katrina victims and words of support for Harvey’s victims in Texas and southwest Louisiana.

 

“We’ve got to save our house,” New Orleans resident Israel Freeman said as he loaded sandbags for his mother’s home into his Cadillac. “She already went through Katrina. She built her house back up. We just had a flood about two, three weeks ago. She just recovered from that.”

 

Bradley Morris lives in a ground-level house in New Orleans and was “preparing for the worst.”

 

“There’s plenty of puddling and stuff already,” he said, “so I just assume that we’re probably going to get a taste of what we had a couple weeks ago.”

 

Landrieu urged residents to stay home Tuesday because of the threat of potential high water. Some New Orleans neighborhoods flooded earlier this month during a deluge that exposed problems with the city’s pump and drainage system. On Tuesday, rains flooded a few of the city’s streets, but not to the same extent.

 

New Orleans officials planned to reopen government buildings and public schools Wednesday, a day after they were shut down amid fears of flooding rain from Harvey.

 

“The weather outlook got a little bit better for us,” Mayor Mitch Landrieu said. He cautioned however, that a change in the forecast could mean a change in plans.

 

About 500 people were evacuated in southwest Louisiana’s most populous parish early Tuesday, as a heavy band of rain pushed waterways out of their banks, Calcasieu Parish spokesman Tom Hoefer said. He said as many as 5,000 parish residents were affected by the flooding, but not all of those people have flooded homes. Some are just cut off by flooded roads.

 

Evacuations continued Tuesday in some rural areas outside Lake Charles, with authorities working to empty a flood-prone subdivision near the town of Iowa. Officials in Acadia Parish advised residents near the Mermentau River and Bayou Nezpique to leave.

 

Family members and authorities in Texas have reported at least 18 deaths from the storm. No Harvey-related deaths were immediately reported in Louisiana, according to a spokesman for Edwards.

Top UN Official Says Trump May be Inciting Violence Against News

The highest-ranking U.N. human rights official is warning U.S. President Donald Trump’s repeated criticisms of the news media could incite violence against journalists.

Trump has regularly attacked major news organizations like The New York Times, The Washington Post and CNN, including earlier this month when he criticized news organizations for their coverage of a violent rally organized by white supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia, calling the journalists “truly dishonest people.”

 

U.N. Higher Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said Wednesday in Geneva, “To call these news organizations fake does tremendous damage, and to refer to individual journalists in this way, I have to ask the question, is this not an incitement for others to attack journalists?”

“And lets assume a journalist is harmed from one of these organizations,” al-Hussein said. “Does the president then not bear responsibility for this?”

Al-Hussein’s remarks also called the violence at the rally in Charlottesville earlier this month, during which counter-protestor was killed, an “abomination.”

He also expressed concern over Trump’s pardoning Friday of controversial sheriff Joe Arpaio, who had been convicted of intentionally disobeying a federal judge’s 2011 order to halt his traffic controls that targeted immigrants.

 

 

Trump to Promote Tax Reform

U.S. President Donald Trump is traveling to the state of Missouri to try to build support for his goal of reforming the country’s tax code.

Administration officials say the president will focus on explaining the need for tax reform, but not the specifics of a plan to do so, during a speech Wednesday in the city of Springfield.  They say he will promote tax cuts as a way to help American workers.

Trump has in the past proposed cutting the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 15 percent.

The U.S. tax code has not undergone a significant overhaul since 1986.

Trump’s Republican Party controls both houses of the U.S. Congress, but failed in its earlier efforts to overhaul another major program as leaders were unable to get enough votes to change the health care system.

Суд обирає запобіжний захід синові Шуфрича

Шевченківський райсуд Києва 30 серпня обирає запобіжний захід синові народного депутата з «Опозиційного блоку» Нестора Шуфрича, який у центрі Києва на пішохідному переході збив людину.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, прокуратура просить про цілодобовий домашній арешт для Нестора Шуфрича-молодшого.

Захист сина Шуфрича надав суду документи, які характеризують його з позитивного боку, а також довідку про вагітність дружини. Адвокати Шуфрича наполягають, що немає підстав для домашнього арешту, заявляючи, що їхній підзахисний не збирається втікати і здав закордонний паспорт. У разі ж обрання домашнього арешту захист просить дозволити Шуфричу пересування за межами дому у денний період.

Батько підозрюваного, народний депутат Нестор Шуфрич попросив суд дозволити йому взяти сина на поруки.

Напередодні Шуфричу-молодшому оголосили підозру за статтею «порушення правил безпеки дорожнього руху, що спричинило потерпілому тяжке тілесне ушкодження».

За даними поліції, ДТП сталася ввечері 26 серпня: автомобіль «Бентлі», за кермом якого перебував син депутата, на пішохідному переході збив чоловіка. Потерпілого з травмами «швидка» доставила в лікарню, в нього діагностували закриту черепно-мозкову травму, переломи передпліччя і гомілки.

У поліції Києва додали, що водій співпрацює зі слідством, його закордонний паспорт долучений до матеріалів кримінального провадження.

Турчинов: оборонний бюджет 2018 року становитиме не менше ніж 5% ВВП

Оборонний бюджет України у 2018 році становитиме не менше ніж 5% валового внутрішнього продукту, а загальне фінансування повинне бути на рівні щонайменше 162,7 мільярда гривень, заявив секретар Ради національної безпеки й оборони. Як повідомляє прес-служба РНБО, під керівництвом Турчинова відбулось обговорення оборонного бюджету на 2018 рік.

«Окрім того, відмінністю цього бюджету буде те, що основне його фінансування відбуватиметься із загального фонду, який складатиме близько 156,4 мільярда гривень. Спеціальний фонд формуватиметься виключно на підставі пропозицій силових міністерств та відомств і складатиме близько 6,3 мільярдів гривень, тобто загальне фінансування повинне бути не менше ніж 162,7 мільярда гривень», – сказав Турчинов.

За словами секретаря РНБО, при плануванні бюджету необхідно чітко врахувати питання збільшення грошового забезпечення українських військовослужбовців. «У першу чергу, це стосується значного підвищення посадових окладів і окладів за військове звання», – додав він.

Крім Турчинова, в обговоренні взяли участь перший віце-прем’єр України Степан Кубів, міністр внутрішніх справ Арсен Аваков, міністр фінансів Олександр Данилюк, міністр оборони Степан Полторак, керівник СБУ Василь Грицак, керівники Національної гвардії, Нацполіції, розвідувальних органів й інших силових структур країни.

Турчинов додав, що після уточнення показників оборонного бюджету вони будуть затверджені на засіданні РНБО, яке має відбутися на початку вересня.

За даними Міністерства оборони, у 2010–2013 роках за станом витрат на оборону Україна посідала передостаннє місце серед країн Європи, ці витрати складали близько 1% ВВП. У 2017 році на безпеку й оборону в бюджеті було передбачено 5% від ВВП.

 

Post-Harvey Rebuilding Expected to Cost More, Take Longer Because of Nationwide Construction Labor Shortage

In Texas, rebuilding efforts in areas devastated by Hurricane Harvey’s winds and floods face higher costs and some delays because the construction industry has a critical shortage of skilled workers. VOA’s Jim Randle reports.

Peru Opposition Leader Investigated in Connection With Odebrecht

The Peruvian attorney general’s office has opened a criminal probe into opposition leader Keiko Fujimori for allegedly laundering money for scandal-plagued Brazilian builder Odebrecht, Fujimori’s attorney said on Tuesday.

The twice-defeated right-wing presidential candidate and eldest daughter of Peru’s imprisoned former leader Alberto Fujimori denied that she or her political party ever took money from Odebrecht.

“I’m certain the investigation will confirm that Odebrecht did not give us any money,” Fujimori said on Twitter. “I’ve always collaborated with all investigations and this will not be an exception.”

Fujimori’s lawyer, Edward Garcia, told Reuters the preliminary probe was opened in connection with notes that mention Fujimori by name that were taken by Odebrecht’s jailed former chief executive, Marcelo Odebrecht.

The attorney general’s office, which declined to comment, said on Monday it had received the contents of notes made on the cellphone of Odebrecht, but did not detail them.

Fujimori is already the subject of a money-laundering investigation related to 2016 campaign donations, but a probe in connection with Odebrecht might do more to hurt support for her and her Popular Force party, which controls a majority of seats in Congress.

Odebrecht is at the center of Latin America’s biggest corruption scandal and is reviled by many in Peru since admitting late last year to having bribed local officials over a decade-long period.

News website IDL Reporteros has published what it says are  notes taken by Odebrecht and confiscated by Brazilian authorities that include the phrase: “Raise Keiko to 500 and pay her a visit.”

Prosecutor German Juarez will lead the investigation into Fujimori, Garcia said.

Juarez recently persuaded local courts to jail former President Ollanta Humala for up to 18 months before trial while he is investigated for accusations of taking undeclared campaign donations from Odebrecht.

Humala narrowly defeated Fujimori during her first presidential bid in 2011. He is now sharing a prison with her father, who is serving a 25-year sentence for human rights violations and graft.

Harvey’s Floods Scatter Cattle in Texas, Swamp Cotton Fields

South Texas ranchers are scrambling to relocate cattle from massive flooding spawned by Tropical Storm Harvey, with many hauling livestock up to the north of the state while others rush to move the animals to higher ground nearby.

About 1.2 million cattle are located in a 54-county disaster area drenched by Harvey, which made landfall as a hurricane last weekend. With more torrential rain in the forecast, ranchers are expressing worry that some animals could perish despite efforts to save them.

State is top producer of cattle, cotton   

Texas leads U.S. states in cattle and cotton production. An estimated $150 million worth of cotton has been lost as the storms ripped the bolls off plants and left white fiber strewn across fields.

Texas Gulf Coast export terminals that handle about a quarter of U.S. wheat exports also remained shuttered.

Of immediate concern to ranchers were cattle stranded by high water infested with venomous snakes, fire ants and alligators, said Hollis “Peanut” Gilfillian, a cattle rancher in Winnie, Texas, about 60 miles (96 km) east of hard-hit Houston.

“We’re in gator country … period,” said Gilfillian, adding that nearly every pond on the ranches in his area contain alligators.

“It’s not unusual to see an alligator in my backyard or road ditch,” he said, but added, “There’s plenty other animals that they (alligators) would much rather eat, such as fish, as opposed to trying to go after cattle.”

Ranchers had tried to prepare for the storm last week by moving cattle to the nearest hills or trucking them to safety in the north of the state, cattle industry groups said.

Chuck Kiker, who raises cattle on his farm near Beaumont, about 60 miles (96 km) northeast of Houston, opted to leave his animals in place but was caught off guard by the storm’s severity.

“You can’t move animals at this point, so you’re kind of stuck because of high water everywhere. There’s really no place to move them,” he said.

Disaster area declared

Texas Governor Greg Abbott has declared 54 counties a disaster area. About 27 percent of the state’s 4.46 million-head beef cow herd is in those 54 counties, according to Texas A&M University livestock economist David Anderson.

“Given that it’s August, I’m not sure that we would’ve seen a lot of the calves already sold. So you’ve a lot of young calves out there too that are in that disaster area,” Anderson said.

Grain terminals closed

Longer-term concerns for the cattle include foot rot from standing in water or muddy fields for long periods and the risk of disease from mosquitoes.

Heavy rains and flooding closed bulk grain terminals along the Texas Gulf Coast owned by major exporters including Archer Daniels Midland and Cargill, although the companies say the facilities were not severely damaged.

BNSF Railway and Union Pacific suspended service to the flood-ravaged region, depriving exporters of a fresh supply of grain. The U.S. Coast Guard closed Texas Gulf ports including Houston, Galveston and Corpus Christi.

“With additional flooding likely during the next few days, normal train flows in the area may not resume for an extended period,” BNSF said in a customer service advisory.

Cotton blown away

On cotton farms, more than 300,000 bales have likely been lost, between cotton yet to be harvested and bales sitting on fields awaiting ginning, according to John Robinson, an agricultural economist at Texas A&M University.

The loss, though a small part of the total U.S. cotton crop of about 20 million bales a year, was devastating for individual farmers.

“The cotton that was where the hurricane hit was affected by the winds, it was blown right off the plant. Some of those fields are obliterated,” Robinson said.

“Some of the cotton will still be on the plant but strung out like someone papered your field with toilet paper,” he said.

Record crop lost

South Texas and Coastal Bend cotton farmers were expecting a record crop this year. Thirteen of the counties in the disaster area are major cotton producers.

“The South Texas Cotton and Grain Association has preliminary crop losses projected at $150 million. That’s just devastating to all of farmers down there,” Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller said in a statement.

Monday’s Intercontinental Commodity Exchange benchmark cotton price spiked 2.5 percent as a portion of the unharvested crop in Texas was destroyed or damaged by rain and high winds, traders said.

“The cooperative’s growers still have a lot of cotton in the field, maybe like 50 percent still out there. A lot of that will be lost because of the wind and rain,” said Jimmy Roppolo, general manager of United Agricultural Cooperative Inc in El Campo, Texas.

“It was the best cotton crop we ever raised. We really needed it this year to make up for other years,” Roppolo said.

 

US Attorney General: Opioid Crisis Is America’s ‘Top Lethal Issue’

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions called the opioid crisis America’s “top lethal issue” Tuesday, saying that a “comprehensive antidote” was needed to address the crisis.

Speaking from the National Alliance for Drug Endangered Children national conference in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Sessions thanked the audience for their work in making the crisis’ effects on children known.

“Our country, despite the record deaths, I don’t think has fully recognized the damage this addiction nightmare is doing to us,” he said. “And as you understand this epidemic is taking a heavy toll on the most innocent and vulnerable — our children. And yet, in the national conversation about drug abuse, these children are too often forgotten.”

Sessions said that the solution has “three-pillars” — prevention, enforcement, and treatment. Sessions added that the prevention step in particular had been discussed at a meeting with top officials, including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and White House Chief of Staff John Kelly the day before.

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump vowed that the U.S. would “win” the battle against the heroin and opioid plague, but he stopped short of declaring a national emergency as his handpicked commission had recommended.

Joel Osteen’s Houston Megachurch Opens Doors as Shelter

The Houston megachurch led by televangelist Joel Osteen says it’s opened its doors to people seeking shelter as Harvey swamps the city.

Osteen had faced criticism for not using the massive Lakewood Church as a storm shelter. In a statement Monday to ABC News, Osteen said the church “never” closed its doors and was serving as a relief supply distribution center. He said it would “house people once shelters reach capacity.”

The church announced on Twitter it was receiving people who needed shelter late Tuesday morning.

The 16,000-seat former arena was the longtime home of the NBA’s Houston Rockets.

Osteen’s comment stands in contrast to a church Facebook post and a since-deleted Instagram remark by Lakewood associate pastor John Gray, who said flooded highways had made the church inaccessible.

Kardashian Women Give $500,000 to Help Harvey Victims

Kim Kardashian West and her famous siblings are donating $500,000 to help Harvey victims.

A spokeswoman for the reality star says she and her mother and sisters have given $250,000 to the Red Cross and $250,000 to the Salvation Army.

Kardashian West announced the donation on Twitter on Tuesday, saying, “Houston we are praying for you.” She used the hashtag #HoustonStrong.

They are among several stars who’ve said publicly they are helping hurricane victims. Kevin Hart on Monday announced a $25,000 donation to the Red Cross for storm victims and called on other celebrities to do the same.

Канцлер Німеччини підтвердила необхідність зберігати санкції щодо Росії

«Я працюю разом із президентом Франції, а також із допомогою США, над пошуком вирішення (кризи на сході України) в «нормандському форматі»

Голова Єврокомісії виступає за поліпшення відносин із Росією, але не будь-якою ціною

Президент Європейської комісії Жан-Клод Юнкер заявляє, що Європейський союз має прагнути до кращих відносин із Росією, але при цьому не відходити від своїх цінностей.

«Без Росії немає європейської безпеки у майбутніх століттях… ЄС має площу 5,5 мільйона квадратних кілометрів, Росія сама має 17,5. Ще питання є?» – додав він.

Юнкер також заявив, що ЄС має «знайти з Росією дискурс, який більше підходить для майбутнього». Але він наполягає на тому, щоб це було зроблено «без відмови від цінностей і принципів, зокрема щодо анексії Криму й інших питань».

Президент Єврокомісії вже неодноразово закликав до поліпшення відносин із Москвою, напружених через незаконну анексію Росією українського Криму і підтримку, яку Росія надає бойовикам на сході України, але без поступок Євросоюзу щодо України.

У відповідь на агресію Росії в Україні ЄС запровадив економічні санкції проти Москви, які в червні були продовжені на чергові півроку.

ЄС також заморозив активи і запровадив заборону на отримання віз для 153 осіб і 40 організацій, яких вважає відповідальними за порушення українського суверенітету. Ці санкції, на думку дипломатів Євросоюзу, у вересні продовжать ще на шість місяців.

Cambodian Indigenous Minorities Fighting Tide of Development

In Cambodia, the issue of land rights is a constant source of tension. The country’s biggest dam to date is set to go online in just weeks, adding 400 megawatts of power to the country’s critically overstretched grid. But the social and environmental costs of the project are huge, especially for minority villagers facing displacement. In rural Stung Treng province, some members of an indigenous group are taking a stand. David Boyle has this report.

Міноборони Білорусі: після навчань російські військові повернуться на свою територію

Начальник Генерального штабу Збройних сил Білорусі генерал-майор Олег Бєлоконєв відкидає заяви про те, що спільні білорусько-російські військові навчання «Захід-2017» можуть бути використані для нападу на Україну. Він сказав про це 29 серпня в Мінську.

«Це тенденційний і несерйозний висновок… Чотири тисячі вагонів, якими прибудуть російські війська, – це півтори мотострілецькі дивізії, такими силами зробити агресію і окупацію не можна. На такі речі здатний тільки параноїк і ненормальний авантюрист», – сказав Бєлоконєв.

Генерал запевнив, що до 30 вересня особовий склад, озброєння, військова і спеціальна техніка Збройних сил Білорусі повернуться в місця постійної дислокації, а угруповання військ Росії повернуться на свою територію.

Він додав, що маневри, які триватимуть від 14 по 20 серпня, – це навчання оборонного характеру, які підтверджують курс Білорусі на союзницькі відносини з Росією.

Білорусь при цьому, за словами Бєлоконєва, виконує всі зобов’язання в рамках міжнародних договорів у рамках ООН та ОБСЄ і запросила міжнародних спостерігачів – загалом понад 80 осіб.

«Але навколо російсько-білоруських навчань «Захід-2017» створено ажіотаж, неадекватне реагування на навчання наших військ», – сказав генерал, назвавши ажіотаж навколо маневрів «штучним».

Генерал-майор Бєлоконєв заявив, що країни НАТО проводять свої навчання, до яких Білорусь не висловлює претензій.

Він додав, що на домисли, які не відповідають дійсності, Білорусь реагує спокійно.

Країни-сусіди Білорусі, серед них держави Балтії і Україна, непокояться, що Росія може використати навчання «Захід-2017» для агресивної розбудови своєї військової присутності в регіоні, на східному фланзі НАТО, і перетворити Білорусь на плацдарм для можливого наступу на Україну. Росія відкидає такі побоювання.

From Hotel to Beer Factory, Robots Increasingly Used in Japan

Japan leads the world in the number of robots per person that are used in the workplace. Instead of being wary, people apparently like them. VOA’s Deborah Block takes us to a hotel and a beer factory where droids are doing just about everything.