Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Thousands demonstrate against Georgia’s ‘foreign agent’ bill

Georgia
  • Parliament approved a contentious draught bill that opponents believe limits press freedom.
  • Riot police dispersed the crowds outside the parliament building with water cannons and pepper spray.
  • Several police officers were injured and police equipment was damaged.

Protesters battled with police in Tbilisi, Georgia’s capital, after parliament approved a contentious draught bill that opponents believe limits press freedom and suppress civil society.

Riot police dispersed the crowds outside the parliament building with water cannons and pepper spray.

Several demonstrators were spotted coughing and falling to the ground, while others waved EU and Georgian flags.

According to the administration, several police officers were injured and police equipment was damaged.

There has been strong international disapproval of the law, which would require non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and independent media who receive more than 20% of their money from overseas to register themselves as foreign agents.

The opposition characterized it as a Russian-style measure that would stigmatize and restrict Georgia’s robust civil society and independent media.

‘A terrible setback’

The planned law would be “a terrible setback,” according to US State Department spokesman Ned Price.

Mr. Price stated that the law “would strike at some of the core rights that are central to the aspirations of the people of Georgia,” and that the US was extremely concerned and troubled by it.

The new legislation is “incompatible with EU values and standards,” according to EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell.

Georgia’s application for EU candidate status is now being considered by Brussels.

In 2012, Russia established its own version of a “foreign agents” law, which has since been expanded to target and restrict Western-funded Organizations and media.

“The law is Russian as we all know… We don’t want to be a part of the ex-Soviet Union, we want to be a part of the European Union, we want to be pro-West,” one protester told.

Speaking via video during a visit to New York, Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili voiced her support for the protesters: “I am by your side. Today you represent free Georgia. Georgia, which sees its future in Europe, will not allow anyone to take away this future.”

Inside the parliament building, however, 76 legislators from the ruling Georgian Dream party first supported the new “transparency of foreign interference” draught bill.

A committee hearing into the proposed law ended in a parliamentary brawl on Monday.

If the measure is passed, Georgia will join a litany of undemocratic and authoritarian post-Soviet governments that have replicated Russian legislation restricting the activities of non-governmental organizations (NGOs).

A dark day for Georgia’s democracy

In Russia and Georgia, the term “agent” has historically meant “spy” or “traitor,” lending a negative connotation to the activity of civil society. It implies that they are operating in the interests of foreign powers rather than in the interests of the country and community.

The US embassy issued a statement describing Tuesday’s vote as a “dark day for Georgia’s democracy”.

It added that parliament’s advancing “of these Kremlin-inspired laws was incompatible with the people of Georgia’s clear desire for European integration and its democratic development”.

The overtly anti-Western People’s Power movement, a close partner of the ruling Georgian Dream party, introduced the two proposals on “transparency of foreign agents” and “registration of foreign agents” in parliament.

The group has argued that the second bill was an exact analog of the US Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).

Georgian Dream backed the draughts, claiming that such legislation was needed to increase openness.

At a conference on Tuesday evening, the head of the governing party, Irakli Kobakhidze, struck out the United States embassy’s statement, saying it was “a dark day for the radical opposition and its supporters”.

Most demonstrators and the country’s opposition worry that the law’s passage will put an end to Georgia’s long-held aspiration to join the EU.

More than 80% of Georgians favor the country’s European orientation, which is also inscribed in its constitution.

[embedpost slug=”/man-15-year-old-arrested-in-shooting-at-georgia-gas-station/”]

Read more

EU imposes sanctions for violence against women

EU
  • Sanctions have been imposed on nine individuals and three official organizations.
  • The names are likely to be formally added to the EU sanctions list later today.
  • Member states had approved them.

BRUSSELS – The European Union sanctioned officials from six countries, including Russia and Afghanistan, on Tuesday ahead of International Women’s Day for violence and human rights violations against women.

Sanctions have been imposed on nine individuals and three official organizations, subjecting them to travel bans and the freezing of any assets held in the EU.

Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Fedorov and his deputy Ivan Ryabov are accused of ordering the arrest and torture of female anti-war protestors.

Russian special forces commander Major General Nikolai Kuznetsov and tank commander Colonel Ramil Ibatullin have also been named, as have units accused of systematic rape and sexual abuse in Ukraine.

The Taliban minister for higher education, Neda Mohammad Nadeem, and the minister for virtue propagation and vice repression, Muhammad Khalid Hanafi, are also named from Afghanistan.

The former is accused of depriving women of education, while the latter is accused of “restricting their freedom of expression and inflicting harsh punishments and brutality on those who do not obey the Taliban’s edicts.”

In South Sudan, Gatluak Nyang Hoth, the commissioner of Mayiandit county, and Gordon Koang Biel, the commissioner of Koch county, are accused of making “widespread and systematic use of sexual violence as a war tactic and instrumentalized it as a reward and entitlement for men participating in the conflict.”

Myanmar’s deputy minister of home affairs Toe Ui is said to have allowed military security agents to “use forced nudity, rape, electro-shocks, burning of genitalia and excessive violence during the arbitrary detention and interrogation of men, women.

Ui is a former head of the Office of the Chief of Military Security Affairs (OCMSA), which is listed separately as an agency responsible “for systematic and widespread sexual and gender-based violence.”

Iran’s Qarchak jail in Tehran province is identified as a place where guards sexually abuse women and threaten them with rape in order to elicit false confessions.

In Syria, the government is claimed to have ordered the Republican Guard to “employ sexual and gender-based violence to suppress and intimidate the Syrian people, particularly women, and girls.”

The names are likely to be formally added to the EU sanctions list later today, but diplomatic sources told that member states had approved them.

“By imposing these sanctions, we’re sending a clear message to perpetrators that they won’t get away with their crimes,” the Netherlands’ foreign minister Wopke Hoekstra said in a news release.

“This is also a message to the victims: the EU will support you, wherever you are in the world. Sanctions are a powerful way for us to stand up for universal values and force international change,” he said.

“We will not hesitate to expand the list to include other perpetrators of sexual violence.”

[embedpost slug=”/top-diplomat-for-eu-appeals-to-nations-to-provide-more-tanks-to-ukraine/”]

Read more

Rishi Sunak reaches post-Brexit Northern Ireland agreement with the EU

Rishi Sunak
  • Sunak and von der Leyen reach an agreement on the parameters of the transaction.
  • Sunak praises the ‘Stormont brake.’
  • The DUP Factions have stated that they will analyze the details first.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak struck a deal with the European Union on post-Brexit trade rules for Northern Ireland on Monday, saying it would pave the way for a new chapter in London’s relationship with the bloc.

Sunak, speaking alongside European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at a news conference in Windsor, claimed the two sides had agreed to remove “any sense of a border” between Britain and its province, a scenario that had enraged lawmakers on both sides.

He received quick praise from business groups who praised the relaxation of trade barriers, as well as an EU vow to allow British scientists to join its enormous research program provided Sunak’s party adopts the arrangement.

Sunak has embarked on a high-risk plan only four months after becoming an office. He wants to strengthen relations with Brussels – and the US – without upsetting the Brexit-supporting portion of his party.

The pact aims to alleviate tensions generated by the Northern Ireland protocol, a complex arrangement that established trading regulations for the British-ruled territory that London agreed to before leaving the EU but now claims is unworkable.

Its success is likely to be determined by whether it can persuade the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to abandon its boycott of Northern Ireland’s power-sharing arrangements. They were crucial to the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, which ended three decades of sectarianism and political bloodshed in Northern Ireland.

“I’m pleased to report that we have now made a decisive breakthrough,” Sunak said of his new “Windsor Framework”. “This is the beginning of a new chapter in our relationship.”

Northern Ireland has been one of the most controversial issues surrounding Britain’s departure from the European Union in 2020. A return to a hard border between the province and Ireland, which is a member of the EU, may have jeopardized the peace agreement.

But, it remains to be seen whether the new parameters will go far enough to break the political gridlock in Northern Ireland, where many unionist areas have been upset by views that the protocol reduced connections with Britain.

Sunak is sure to speak up about the fact he has won a so-called “Stormont brake”, which he said would allow Stormont – the regional assembly – to stop any “changes to EU goods rules that would have significant and lasting effects on everyday lives”. He claimed that this would give London a veto over new regulations.

The European Research Group, which includes pro-Brexit Tory legislators, will consult with attorneys to analyze the specifics before reaching a decision, which may take up to a week.

Former Brexit minister David Davis claimed Sunak had achieved a “formidable negotiation success,” albeit there has been speculation in the Commons that Boris Johnson may veto the arrangement. According to a source close to the former prime minister, he is examining and considering the suggestion.

If the contract is approved, the new adjustments will be implemented gradually over the next few years. After all, parties have had time to analyze it, a parliamentary vote will be held.

Winning would strengthen Sunak’s grip on his Conservative Party and allow him to move on from the most difficult subject on his agenda as he tries to catch up with the opposition Labour Party, which is presently well ahead in opinion polls, ahead of a national election in 2024.

If he fails, he would almost certainly face a rebellion from his party’s eurosceptic side, renewing the deep ideological differences that have at times paralyzed the government since the Brexit vote in 2016.

Sunak could have left the standoff unsolved, but officials in London and Belfast claim he was motivated to move ahead of the Good Friday Agreement’s 25th anniversary, which might include a visit from US President Joe Biden.

Biden, who frequently expresses pride in his Irish heritage, applauded the agreement on Monday, calling it an “important step” in preserving the peace established by the Good Friday Agreement.

US officials had previously cautioned that any action that jeopardized the peace treaty could jeopardize the prospects for a US-UK trade deal.

“I appreciate the efforts of the leaders and officials on all sides who worked tirelessly to find a way forward that protects Northern Ireland’s place within the UK’s internal market as well as the EU’s single market, to the benefit of all communities in Northern Ireland,” Biden said in a statement.

Sunak hopes that a favorable resolution will increase collaboration with the EU in areas other than Northern Ireland, such as financial services regulation and assisting in stemming an influx of migrants in tiny boats across the Channel.

Raoul Ruparel, a former senior assistant on Europe to former Prime Minister Theresa May, said the new terms were far superior to his expectations.

“It is worth saying the EU has moved massively,” he said on Twitter. “Credit where it’s due. They look to have listened and taken on board concerns of UK, businesses, and unionists in NI.”

[embedpost slug=”/rishi-sunak-looking-forward-to-von-der-leyen-meeting/”]

Read more

EU sets March 30 deadline for Orange and MasMovil merger

Orange and MasMovil

The merger of Orange and MasMovil will be decided on March 20. EU will approve the deal after preliminary evaluation. The carriers may as Commission for closer inspection. According to a European Commission filing on Tuesday, EU antitrust officials will decide by March 20 whether to approve the $19 billion merger of French telecom carrier … Read more

Sandu, Moldova’s pro-EU president, accused Russia of plotting a coup

Moldova
  • Russia’s war in neighboring Ukraine has put pressure on Moldova.
  • Moldova’s president accused Russia of planning to use foreign “saboteurs.”
  • Moldova, a former Soviet republic, relies on Russia for natural gas.

Moldova‘s president has accused Russia of planning to use foreign “saboteurs” to destabilize her pro-EU government.

On Friday, Maia Sandu named a new prime minister, Dorin Recean, who, like his predecessor, is pro-EU.

President Sandu stated the “plot” will involve “protests by the so-called opposition”, trying to “overthrow the constitutional order”.

Russia’s war in neighboring Ukraine has put pressure on Moldova, one of Europe’s poorest countries.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky declared last week that Kyiv’s intelligence service had discovered a Russian plot to destroy Moldova.

Moldova, which is sandwiched between Romania and Ukraine, applied for EU membership last summer. The country of 2.6 million people has suffered from an influx of refugees from Ukraine as well as tensions with Transnistria, a breakaway pro-Moscow territory occupied by 1,500 Russian troops.

Moldova, a former Soviet republic, relies on Russia for natural gas. It has been without power for over a year, coinciding with Russia’s strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.

President Sandu alleged Russia was planning to use “saboteurs with a military background, camouflaged in civilian clothes, to undertake violent actions, attacks on state institutions and taking hostages”.

The plot would involve citizens of Russia, Montenegro, Belarus, and Serbia entering Moldova, she told a news conference.

She urged Moldova’s parliament to adopt laws to give the country’s Intelligence and Security Service (SIS) and prosecutors “the necessary means to fight more efficiently against national security threats”. She added that “the Kremlin’s attempts to bring violence to our country will fail”.

Moldova’s main opposition Socialist and Communist alliance maintains strong ties to Moscow. Igor Dodon, President Sandu’s predecessor from 2016 to 2020, maintained close ties with Russia.

However, following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Moldova has developed a closer relationship with Romania, an EU member.

[embedpost slug=”/following-numerous-crises-government-of-moldova-resigns/”]

Read more

EU envoy to Syria: ‘absolutely unfair’ to be accused of shirking earthquake aid

EU
  • EU member countries have raised more than 50 million euros to give aid and support rescue missions.
  • EU was encouraging member states to provide help and that sanctions “do not impede the delivery of humanitarian aid.”
  • European Union’s envoy said it was unfair to criticise the group for failing to provide adequate assistance.

The European Union’s envoy to Syria said early Sunday that it was unfair to criticise the group for failing to provide adequate assistance to Syrians in the aftermath of last week’s earthquake that destroyed significant portions of Syria and Turkey.

According to Dan Stoenescu, the EU and its member countries have raised more than 50 million euros to give aid and support rescue missions and first aid in areas of Syria.

“It is absolutely unfair to be accused of not providing aid when actually we have constantly been doing exactly that for over a decade and we are doing so much more even during the earthquake crisis,” Stoenescu said in written comments.

More than 3,500 people were killed in Syria’s earthquake, where a 12-year conflict had already killed hundreds of thousands and prompted millions to flee within and beyond the country’s borders.

Even before Monday’s 7.8 magnitude earthquake, the country has been divided between multiple competing zones of control, making assistance provision problematic.

The Syrian government, which is sanctioned by the West, has asked for UN assistance but has stressed that any assistance must be coordinated with Damascus and supplied from within Syria, not across the Turkish border into opposition territories.

Some analysts have accused Damascus of targeting loyalist areas with supplies. On Sunday, Syrian authorities did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Sanctions do not impede the delivery of humanitarian aid

A 30-tonne convoy of humanitarian goods from Italy, comprising four ambulances and 13 pallets of medical equipment, arrived in Beirut on Saturday its route to Damascus, marking the first European earthquake relief shipment to Syria.

Stoenescu said the EU was encouraging member states to provide help and that sanctions “do not impede the delivery of humanitarian aid.”

But he said the EU had foreseen that humanitarian partners may request exemptions “for humanitarian purposes and is willing to clarify further these possibilities.”

“The more the sanctions narrative is perpetrated, the more honest actors that want to help are inhibited and afraid to get involved in the international humanitarian efforts,” he said.

The EU was seeking “sufficient safeguards” to ensure that help provided would reach vulnerable people, Stoenescu said, adding the Syrian government had a “record of aid diversion.”

“We call the authorities in Damascus not to politicize the humanitarian aid delivery, and to engage in good faith with all humanitarian partners and UN agencies to help people,” he said.

[embedpost slug=”/turkey-syria-quake-deaths-to-top-50000-un-relief-chief//”]

Read more

Sanctions and conflict divisions have hampered aid to earthquake-ravaged Syria

  • Damage roads and other infrastructure in southern Turkey have slowed the delivery of supplies to northern Syria.
  • The northeast of Syria is largely controlled by US-backed Kurdish-led militias.
  • Syrian Arab Red Crescent head called for the European Union to lift its sanctions on Syria.

BEIRUT, — Even before Monday’s deadly earthquake, delivering relief to all sections of war-torn Syria had formidable political and logistical obstacles.

These obstacles have only grown in the aftermath of the calamity that has killed hundreds in Turkey and Syria and destroyed thousands of structures.

Damage to roads and other infrastructure in southern Turkey has slowed the delivery of supplies to northern Syria, which has already been decimated by 12 years of conflict.

The “conflict and the way the humanitarian response is split between rebel areas and Damascus” complicate aid distribution, according to Aron Lund, a Syria researcher at the New York-based think tank Century International.

While the government in Damascus controls the bulk of Syria, the majority of the north is controlled by several — and sometimes opposing — organizations. The northwest is divided between territory de facto controlled by Turkey and territory controlled by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, an al-Qaida-linked rebel force. The northeast of Syria is largely controlled by US-backed Kurdish-led militias.

Because of the difficulty of passing via Damascus, foreign aid has been delivered to northwestern Idlib province via Turkey for many years. However, the area of southern Turkey that has traditionally been used as a staging area has been severely damaged by the earthquake.

Aid delivery into northwestern Syria was “temporarily interrupted” Tuesday, according to a United Nations spokesperson, due to infrastructure damage and challenges with road access.

Damage to the Hatay airport and the road to the aid crossing, Bab al-Hawa, were particularly slowing shipments, according to Emma Beals, a nonresident fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington.

Enormous needs in Turkey itself

“There is also the fact that there are enormous needs in Turkey itself,” she said.

One cause for hold-ups is that the U.N. mandate for delivering aid to the territory only allows it to enter through the Bab al-Hawa crossing, Beals said. Also, international search teams may be reluctant to enter earthquake-affected areas controlled by HTS, which is designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S.

The group’s “presence limits the kinds of aid many donors are prepared to supply to the area,” she said.

The Damascus regime and its Russian allies have seized the opportunity to revive their demand for northern aid to be funneled through Damascus. Countries opposed to Assad do not trust Syrian authorities to provide help to opposition areas and are concerned that it may be redirected to benefit people and institutions associated with the government.

According to Natasha Hall, a senior scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, transporting aid via Damascus to the north is not feasible in practice, especially during a moment of crisis.

“It is extremely logistically and administratively difficult to get the approvals (from Damascus),” she said. Coordination of aid is also hampered “because the government of Syria doesn’t recognize the non-governmental organizations working in northwest Syria.”

At a press conference Tuesday in Damascus, Syrian Arab Red Crescent head Khaled Hboubati said his group is “ready to deliver relief aid to all regions of Syria, including areas not under government control.” He called for the European Union to lift its sanctions on Syria in light of the massive destruction caused by the earthquake.

Aid convoys and rescuers from several countries, notably key ally Russia, as well as the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Iran, and Algeria, have landed in airports in government-held Syria.

Difficult humanitarian situation

Still, the sanctions exacerbate the “difficult humanitarian situation,” Hboubati said.

“There is no fuel even to send (aid and rescue) convoys, and this is because of the blockade and sanctions,” he said.

Rescue teams search through the wreckage of collapsed buildings in Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2023. Rescuers raced Tuesday to find survivors in the rubble of thousands of buildings brought down by a powerful earthquake and multiple aftershocks that struck eastern Turkey and neighboring Syria. (AP Photo/Omar Sanadiki)

So far, the U.S. and its allies have resisted attempts at creating a political opening by way of the disaster response. U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters Monday that it would be “ironic, if not even counterproductive, for us to reach out to a government that has brutalized its people over the course of a dozen years now.”

Price said the U.S. would continue to provide aid through “humanitarian partners on the ground.”

Similarly, a spokesperson for the United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office said the “sanctions regime was put in place in response to human rights violations and other abuses by the regime and their cronies.”

According to a US State Department official, humanitarian assistance in government-held areas is provided by partner organisations rather than the government.

“Our partners in regime-controlled areas directly deliver assistance to beneficiaries without control or direction from the Assad regime,” they told sources. “This is to ensure that our assistance is not diverted by malign actors or the Assad regime and reaches the intended beneficiaries.”

One of the main groups supported by the United States and Britain is a civil defense organization in opposition-held areas known as the White Helmets; USAID Administrator Samantha Power spoke with the group’s head Tuesday and “discussed how USAID can provide the most urgently needed assistance in response to the earthquake,” her office said in a statement.

European Commission

According to European Commission spokeswoman Balazs Ujvari, the European Union has supplied relief in all areas of Syria through UN and NGO partners and is attempting to expand funds for humanitarian assistance. According to him, the Syrian government has not yet formally requested that Europe deploy rescue and medical personnel.

In theory, sanctions should not impede assistance operations in government territories because both the US and the EU have exemptions for humanitarian relief.

However, the reality on the ground can vary. Banks, for example, may restrict transactions to pay suppliers or local workers for humanitarian organizations, despite the exclusions, according to Lund.

In addition, US sanctions, and to a lesser extent EU sanctions, seek to hinder the restoration of damaged infrastructure and property in government-held areas in the absence of a political solution, which could impede post-earthquake rehabilitation, according to Lund.

Meanwhile, local emergency workers in both sections of Syria report that only limited relief is reaching them.

“There are promises that aid will get to us but nothing has gotten here yet,” said the White Helmets’ head Raed Saleh.

[embedpost slug=”/earthquake-in-turkey-syria-newborn-baby-pulled-out-from-rubble/”]

Read more

Zelensky says Ukraine “deserves” to begin EU accession negotiations in 2023

Volodymyr Zelenskyy
  • Ukraine deserves to start negotiations on EU membership already this year.
  • Zelenskyy was reassured by Ursula von der Leyen that the European Union still supports Ukraine.
  • This is the first summit between the EU and Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared that his nation’s war-torn nation deserved to begin EU admission negotiations “this year.”

The Ukrainian president said in his evening address on Thursday that Zelensky had fruitful discussions with the commission’s head and members of the college of the European Commission, and this demonstrated that all parties understood “the fact that Ukraine needs constant and full support in defence against Russia.”

“And about the fact that our further integration should give energy and motivation to our people to fight despite any obstacles and threats. I believe that Ukraine deserves to start negotiations on EU membership already this year,” he quoted.

Zelensky congratulated the EU Chief and her colleagues in the EU for helping Ukraine “on the path to integration” with military, financial, and social support.

Since the beginning of Russian aggression and after the European Council gave Ukraine candidate status, this is the first summit between the EU and Ukraine. The leaders will talk about the EU’s response to Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, Ukraine’s initiatives for a just peace and accountability, collaboration on issues of rebuilding and relief as well as in the fields of energy and connectivity, as well as international food security.

Wouldn’t underestimate Xi Jinping’s ambitions for Taiwan, he urged the army, according to the CIA director

At the conclusion of the conference, the leaders are anticipated to release a joint statement, according to report.

According to Zelenskyy, Ukraine will get the first round of macrofinance aid in January. He tweeted: “Glad to start the year talking to @vonderleyen. Thanked for the EU support. Waiting for the 1st tranche of macro-fin aid in Jan, the 1st batch of LED lamps, school buses, generators & modular houses. Coordinated steps on Ukraine European Union Summit. We feel supported & will win together.”

Volodymyr Zelenskyy was reassured by Ursula von der Leyen that the European Union still supports Ukraine. She declared that the European Union will aid Ukraine in its “heroic struggle” and defence of independence against the offensive. Leyen said in a tweet that the EU is providing generators, light bulbs, shelters, and school buses for Ukraine.

Tweeted Ursula von der Leyen, “In the 1st call of the new year with President @ZelenskyyUa, I conveyed my wholehearted support and best wishes for 2023 to the Ukrainian people. The EU stands by you, for as long as it takes. We support your heroic struggle. A fight for freedom and against brutal aggression.”

[embedpost slug=”ukraine-war-russian-athletes-cannot-be-allowed-at-olympics-zelensky-says/”]

Read more

France, Netherlands agree with ways EU could deal with US state aid, says Dutch PM

France Netherlands

The EU may deal with the “unintended consequences” of the US Inflation Reduction Act. This is in line with France and the Netherlands, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said. Rutte added it could also make sense for the EU to loosen state aid rules for targeted industries. The European Union (EU) may deal with the … Read more

Ukraine summons Hungary’s envoy in response to Orban’s ‘unacceptable’ remarks

Ukraine
  • The new low point in relations between the two neighbors.
  • Orban told reporters that Ukraine was a no-land man and compared it to Afghanistan.
  • Hungary has repeatedly criticized European Union sanctions.

According to Kyiv, the Ukrainian foreign ministry will summon Hungary‘s ambassador to complain about “completely unacceptable” remarks made by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban about Ukraine.

The announcement represents a new low point in relations between the two neighbors. Hungary has repeatedly criticized European Union sanctions against Russia, claiming that they have failed to significantly weaken Moscow while endangering the European economy.

According to a Facebook post by Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Oleg Nikolenko, Orban told reporters that Ukraine was a no-land man and compared it to Afghanistan.

“Such statements are categorically unacceptable. Budapest is pursuing a deliberate policy of destroying Hungarian-Ukrainian relations “He stated.

“The Hungarian ambassador will be summoned to the Ukrainian foreign ministry for a frank discussion. We reserve the right to take other measures in response.”

Orban previously stated on Friday that Hungary would veto any EU sanctions affecting nuclear energy against Russia. Hungary has a Russian-built nuclear power plant that it intends to expand.

[embedpost slug=”/a-total-of-321-heavy-tanks-have-been-promised-to-ukraine-by-several-countries/”]

Read more

Iran slaps new sanctions on EU, UK in tit-for-tat move

Iran
  • Tehran’s response to months-long protests.
  • EU and Britain imposed new sanctions on Iran two days ago.
  • The sanctions include financial measures.

TEHRAN: Iran imposed sanctions on 34 European Union and British individuals and entities on Wednesday in response to similar measures taken in response to Tehran’s response to months-long protests.

The measures come just two days after the EU and Britain imposed new sanctions on Iran, which has been rocked by protests since the death of Mahsa Amini on September 16.

The sanctions include financial measures, such as the freezing of accounts and transactions in Tehran’s banking systems, as well as the “prohibition of visa issuance and entry” to Iran, according to a statement from the foreign ministry.

Tehran accuses the people and organizations of “supporting terrorism and terrorist groups, instigating and encouragement to terrorist acts and violence against Iranian people”.

It also accuses them of “interfering in the domestic affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran” as well as fomenting violence and unrest.

Sanctioned names include 25 from the EU and nine from the United Kingdom.

Those targeted include France’s Radio J, the group European Friends of Israel (EFI), and 22 individuals, including six members of the European Parliament.

Rasmus Paludan, a Swedish-Danish right-wing extremist who burned a copy of the Koran in Sweden on Saturday, sparked outrage from the Muslim world.

On Tuesday, Iran threatened retaliatory action after the EU imposed its fourth round of sanctions against the country since the protests began, placing 37 more officials and entities on an asset freeze and visa ban blacklist.

On the same day, Britain sanctioned five more Iranian officials, bringing the total number of individuals and organizations on its blacklist to 50.

[embedpost slug=”/eu-imposes-new-sanctions-on-iran-as-a-result-of-the-protest-crackdown/”]

Read more

EU imposes new sanctions on Iran as a result of the protest crackdown

EU
  • At least 37 Iranian officials were blacklisted on Monday.
  • This is the fourth round of sanctions against Tehran.
  • The complete list of names was to be published in the EU’s official journal later that day.

BRUSSELS: According to officials, the European Union (EU) placed 37 more Iranian officials and entities on an asset freeze and visa ban blacklist on Monday in response to Tehran’s bloody crackdown on protesters.

The EU’s foreign ministers met in Brussels and approved the fourth round of sanctions against Tehran for its repression of demonstrators.

The complete list of names was to be published in the EU’s official journal later that day.

Over the crackdown on protesters, the EU has already sanctioned more than 60 Iranian officials and entities, including Tehran’s “morality police,” Revolutionary Guard Corps commanders, and state media.

Despite calls from Germany and the Netherlands, the EU’s 27-nation bloc has so far refrained from designating the Revolutionary Guards as a terror organization.

Iran has warned the EU against taking such a step, and EU officials are concerned that it will derail efforts to restart the 2015 nuclear deal mediated by Brussels.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell insisted that a legal ruling in an EU member state be obtained first before the bloc could act.

“You cannot say, ‘I consider you a terrorist because I dislike you,'” said Borrell.

“It must be done when one member state’s court issues a legal statement, a concrete condemnation.”

Demonstrations

Demonstrations have swept Iran since the death in custody on September 16 of Iranian Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini, 22, following her arrest in Tehran for allegedly failing to follow the Islamic republic’s strict dress rules.

According to the UN, at least 14,000 people have been arrested in Iran as a result of the wave of protests.

Iranian authorities have executed four people and sentenced 18 others to death for their roles in the unrest, causing widespread international outrage.

France and Belgium’s foreign ministers urged the EU to address the issue of Iran’s detention of EU citizens, which is seen as “hostage-taking” by rights groups and families of those detained.

“I think it is time that we Europeans think about how to respond to this policy of state hostage-taking that Iran is now practicing,” French minister Catherine Colonna said.

“This must be taken into account in our thinking and in the decisions we will have to take in the future.”

Brussels is pushing for the release of Belgian aid worker Olivier Vandecasteele, who was sentenced to more than 12 years in prison on “espionage” charges that UN experts have condemned.

France said last week that it is “extremely concerned” about the health of Bernard Phelan, a French-Irish citizen who has been detained in Iran since October.

In Iran, approximately two dozen foreigners and dual nationals are detained.

[embedpost slug=”/china-traveler-screening-is-unjustified-says-european-union/”]

Read more

Volodymyr Zelenskiy vow to swiftly confront Ukraine corruption

Volodymyr Zelenskiy
  • Zelenskiy vowed significant decisions on weeding it out this week.
  • Corruption will not be tolerated.
  • Zelenskiy’s commitment came amid suspicions of senior-level corruption.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy warned on Sunday that corruption, the country’s chronic problem pushed to the margins by the war against Russia, will not be tolerated and vowed significant decisions on weeding it out this week.

Zelenskiy’s commitment came amid suspicions of senior-level corruption, including a revelation of questionable procedures in military procurement, despite leaders espousing national unity in the face of the invasion.

“I want this to be clear: there will be no return to what used to be in the past, to the way various people close to state institutions or those who spent their entire lives chasing a chair used to live,” Zelenskiy said in his nightly video address.

Ukraine has had a long history of rampant corruption and shaky governance, with Transparency International ranking the country’s corruption at 122 of 180 countries, not much better than Russia in 2021.

After awarding Kyiv candidate status last year, the EU made anti-corruption reforms one of the primary prerequisites for Ukraine’s membership.

“This week will be for suitable decisions,” Zelenskiy stated. “Decisions have already been made. I don’t want to make them public at the moment, but everything will be fair.”

Zelenskiy, who was elected by a landslide in 2019 on promises to reform the ex-Soviet state’s governance, said his government had accepted the resignation of a deputy minister following an investigation into claims he received a bribe.

[embedpost slug=”/volodymyr-zelenskiy-responds-with-his-own-poll-to-elon-musks-poll-about-russias-war-in-ukraine/”]

Read more

Iran’s currency falls to a new low amid isolation and sanctions

Iran's
  • Iran’s troubled currency fell to a record low against the US dollar.
  • The EU-Tehran relationship has deteriorated in recent months.
  • The EU is debating a fourth round of sanctions against Iran.

Tehran: Iran‘s troubled currency fell to a record low against the US dollar on Saturday, as the country’s isolation grew and Europe Union sanctions against Tehran’s Revolutionary Guards or some of its members were considered.

The EU-Tehran relationship has deteriorated in recent months as efforts to restart nuclear talks have stalled. Iran has detained several European nationals, and the EU has grown increasingly critical of the country’s violent treatment of protesters, including the use of executions.

The EU is debating a fourth round of sanctions against Iran, and diplomatic sources say Revolutionary Guards members will be added to the bloc’s sanctions list next week. However, some EU member states want to go even further and label the Guards as a terrorist organization as a whole.

According to the foreign exchange site Bonbast.com, the dollar was selling for as much as 447,000 rials on Iran’s unofficial market on Saturday, up from 430,500 the previous day.

Since the death in police custody of a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman, Mahsa Amini, on Sept. 16, the rial has lost 29% of its value.

The unrest has posed one of the most serious challenges to Iran’s theocratic rule since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The economic Ecoiran website blamed the rials continued decline on a “global consensus” against Iran.

“Increasing political pressures, such as listing the Revolutionary Guards as terrorist organizations and imposing restrictions on Iran-linked ships and oil tankers… are indicators of a global consensus against Iran, (which may affect) the dollar’s rate in Tehran,” Ecoiran said.

[embedpost slug=”/irans-minister-orders-an-investigation-into-teen-footballers/”]

Read more

Qatar should not be drawn into the EU corruption scandal, says foreign minister

scandal
  • Qatar’s foreign minister rejects allegations of Doha’s involvement as having “no basis”.
  • There’s an ongoing investigation from Belgian authorities.
  • It is better for them to look at their own institution, the foreign minister said.

Qatar’s foreign minister said his country should not be dragged into a cash-for-influence corruption scandal at the European Parliament with investigations still ongoing, rejecting allegations of Doha’s involvement as having “no basis”.

The scandal, the biggest to rock EU politics in decades, is based on allegations that Qatar and Morocco bribed politicians, parliamentary assistants, and non-governmental organizations to influence EU assembly decisions.

“As (the) State of Qatar, we are 100% sure that this premise has no basis. We didn’t see anything (from Belgian authorities). There’s an ongoing investigation. We have to see; we have to wait until the investigation is over,” Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said.

“This problem is a problem that is happening in Europe for a European institution. It is better for them to look at their own institution and do all the steps required for them and not to drag our country’s name in such a situation,” he added.

“The engagement with the European Union and European Union institutions have been ongoing on geopolitical issues, on energy issues, on a lot of other issues, and this kind of resolutions … it’s going to affect the conversation,” he said.

He emphasized that Qatar, a major producer of liquefied natural gas, would not politicize energy supplies to Europe through commercial agreements with the state-owned QatarEnergy.

“We have a track record that we have never missed any shipment, we have never politicized our energy or weaponized our energy as a tool for threatening any other country,” the minister said.

[embedpost slug=”/gold-rate-in-qar-todays-gold-price-in-qatar-19-jan-2023/”]

Read more

Former EU Member Pier Antonio Panzeri Agrees To ‘tell All’

EU
  • The former European Parliament member is one of four suspects being arrested in Belgium.
  • They are suspected of accepting bribes from Qatar and Morocco
  • A criminal network implicated in an EU corruption scandal has volunteered to expose it.

An alleged leader of a criminal network implicated in an EU corruption scandal has volunteered to expose the countries involved and how the network operates.

Pier Antonio Panzeri’s lawyer said his client promised to “tell all” after reaching an agreement with prosecutors.

The former European Parliament member is one of four suspects being arrested in Belgium.

They are suspected of accepting bribes from Qatar and Morocco in exchange for influencing the Brussels Parliament.

Qatar has categorically denied using gifts and money to gain influence, while Morocco has categorically denied using gifts and money to gain influence on issues such as fishing rights and the disputed status of the Western Sahara.

The four suspects were charged last month after police confiscated approximately €1.5 million (£1.3 million) in cash during raids on a flat, a house, and a hotel. Police shared images of stashes of €200, €50, €20, and €10-denomination notes, as well as a suitcase recovered in the hotel that was loaded with cash.

Prosecutors said Mr. Panzeri accepted the plea offer under Belgian informant legislation that had only been used once before.

“It is crucial to remember that this is a man who is destroyed and he doesn’t have much of a life left,” his lawyer Marc Uyttendaele said.

However, his client sought to “protect his status” by committing to “explain whatever he knows about the matter,” Mr. Uyttendaele added.

After leaving Parliament, Mr. Panzeri, 67, founded the Fight Impunity lobbying group. Mr. Figà-Talamanca worked for a different NGO from the same building in Brussels.

According to a statement from Belgium’s federal prosecutor, the former MEP agreed to the plea bargain under a law modeled after an Italian provision that allows repentant mafia members, known as “pentiti,” to testify against the state.

According to a spokeswoman, he faces a year in prison rather than a “far longer prison sentence,” as well as a fine and the forfeiture of €1 million in assets.

In return he would be needed to reveal details of how the network operated, what the financial arrangements were with the countries concerned, and “the involvement of known and unknown personnel inside the inquiry, including the identity of the persons he admits to having bribed”.

The plea agreement was announced the same day that an Italian court agreed to extradite the ex-daughter, MEP’s Silvia Panzeri, 38, on suspicion of involvement in the affair.

The same court in the northern city of Brescia ruled last month that Mr. Panzeri’s wife, Maria Colleoni, may also be extradited, but their case will be decided by Italy’s top appeal court. The two women are currently under house arrest and deny any wrongdoing or money laundering.

Eva Kaili, a Greek MEP who likewise denies any involvement in the affair, is accused, along with the others, of accepting bribes from Qatar in exchange for influencing EU policy-making.

Her lover, Francesco Giorgi, was said to have admitted to his role in the affair last month.

However, a mention of “unknown” people within the probe hints that further discoveries are on the way.

Prosecutors have also requested that two additional center-left MEPs, Belgian Marc Tarabella and Italian Andrea Cozzolino, be granted immunity.

Both MEPs’ lawyers have denied any involvement in the incident, but the request is being considered by Parliament’s legal affairs committee.

[embedpost slug=”/european-union-to-add-aid-for-ukraine-in-2023-budget/”]

Read more

Google claims that India’s commission “copied” EU verdict

Google

On Wednesday, the tribunal will hear Google’s appeal against the fine. Indian regulator punished Google 13 billion rupees for monopolizing. 2019 saw the launch of the Android-related investigation. Google claims that India’s competition commission “copied” portions of an EU verdict in its decision to punish the company. According to the article, the IT giant made … Read more

UN, EU protest Twitter’s reporter ban

twitter

UN joins EU in denouncing Twitter’s suspension of several journalists. Reporters for the NYT, CNN, and WP were locked out. UN tweets that media freedom is “not a toy” EU threatens Twitter with sanctions. UN joins EU in denouncing Twitter’s suspension of several journalists. Reporters for the NYT, CNN, and WP were locked out. UN … Read more

Humanitarian crises will be increased due to climate change

climate change

Number of people in need of humanitarian assistance has increased. Numerous death have been reported in Pakistan due to flood. Agreement between rich countries to help poor countries in climate change. Humanitarian crises would spread more quickly throughout the world due to climate change, compounding the problems brought on by armed conflict and economic downturns … Read more

Pakistan-EU hold broad-based political dialogue in Brussels

Pakistan EU

The 8th round of Pakistan-European Union Political Dialogue was held in Brussels Both sides underlined the importance attached to multi-faceted partnership The next round of the political dialogue will be held in Islamabad in 2023   BRUSSELS: The 8th round of Pakistan-European Union Political Dialogue was held in Brussels covering a broad range of bilateral … Read more

EU hands over mobile food-testing lab to Balochistan Food Authority

Balochistan Food Authority

The mobile food-testing laboratory was handed to the Balochistan Food Authority (BFA) European Union (EU) Ambassador to Pakistan Dr Riina Kionka handed over the keys It will help support the implementation of food safety standards QUETTA: European Union (EU) Ambassador to Pakistan Dr Riina Kionka on Wednesday handed over keys to a mobile food-testing laboratory to … Read more

Commerce Minister urges diversification of Pakistan’s exports to EU

EU exports

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Commerce and Investment Syed Naveed Qamar expressed Pakistan’s desire to diversify its export portfolio with the European Union. The federal minister met Executive Vice President of European Union Commission and EU Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis on Friday during an official visit to Brussels. Pakistan’s Ambassador to Belgium, Luxembourg, and the European … Read more

Commerce Minister discusses GSP Plus, trade ties with EU officials

commerce minister

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Commerce and Investment Naveed Qamar on Monday held important and productive meetings in the EU Parliament and the European Union Commission. The federal minister is visiting Brussels on a weeklong official visit from October 23 to 29. The commerce minister met the Chair of the European Parliament’s committee for International Trade … Read more

Europe slaps drone sanctions against Iran

Europe slaps drone sanctions against Iran

For providing Russia with lethal “kamikaze” drones to attack Ukraine. Iran is now subject to a slew of new European penalties. On Wednesday, sanctions experts from the 27-member EU bloc decided to blacklist Shahed Aviation Industries, two top military officers, and Brig. For providing Russia with lethal “kamikaze” drones to attack Ukraine, Iran is now … Read more

Largest hotel in EU close due to energy crisis

Largest hotel in EU close due to energy crisis
  • Danubius Hotel Hungaria City Center in Budapest will not take reservations from November 1 through February 28.
  • The 499-room hotel is located adjacent to the Budapest Keleti railway station from the late 19th century.
  • News comes as a number of upscale Hungarian hotels have announced temporary closures.

The largest hotel in Hungary will close for four months as a result of rising energy costs as the nation struggles with inflation. The 499-room Danubius Hotel Hungaria City Center in Budapest will not take reservations from November 1 through February 28 because it will be “impossible to run successfully during the winter season,” according to management, according to the Hungarian travel news website Turizmus on Monday.

The four-star hotel is located in a scenic area of the city, adjacent to the Budapest Keleti railway station from the late 19th century. It debuted in 1985 with its present name. The structure, which has undergone numerous renovations throughout its existence, opened as a hotel in 1915.

The owner stated that guests will still be accepted at its eight hotels in Budapest, Gyor, and Buk.

“We can offer our guests a variety of other accommodation options in our hotels in the capital, and it is equally important for us to take care of all our colleagues working in Danubius Hotel Hungaria, which will be temporarily closed from November,” Danubius Hotels CEO Balazs Kovacs said. 

“Despite the difficult months ahead, our owner is committed to the development and refurbishment of our hotels, and is thinking long-term.”

The news comes as a number of upscale Hungarian hotels, including the opulent Kastelyhotel Sasvar Resort, housed in a 19th-century Gothic-style castle, announced temporary closures.

More than a quarter of the nation’s spa hotels may close for the winter, according to Tamas Flesch, honorary president of the Association of Hungarian Hotels and Restaurants, who made this statement earlier this month.

[embedpost slug=”partnership-to-financially-empower-the-co-working-ecosystem/”]

Read more

Volodymyr Zelensky: Joint 2030 World Cup bid ‘symbol of faith’ in Ukraine victory

Volodymyr Zelensky

Zelensky stated that Ukraine’s joint candidacy to host the 2030 World Cup was “more than a symbol of faith in our joint victory”. Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay have submitted the other formal proposal. The decision is due from FIFA in 2024. President Volodymyr Zelensky stated on Wednesday that Ukraine’s joint candidacy with Spain and … Read more

North Korean missile launch ‘deliberately provocative,’ EU says

north korea

The European Union calls North Korea’s missile launch a “reckless and calculated provocation”. N.Korea recently launched 5 ballistic missiles this week so far. Recently N.Korea fired even further. A representative for the European Union stated that the launch of a missile by North Korea over Japan on Tuesday was a “reckless and calculated provocation” that … Read more