Tag Archives: Europe

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‘Drunk’ minister halts Ukraine parliament hearing

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A parliamentary hearing on Ukraine’s budget was suspended on Tuesday when opposition deputies alleged that the deputy finance minister presenting the budget report was drunk.

Anatoly Myarkovsky, the first deputy finance minister, spoken for 10 minutes on the budget. But when questions were invited, deputies from Ukraine’s opposition yelled out “He’s drunk”. One deputy even shouted: “Anyone within five metres can tell he reeks of someone who has been drinking vodka. Mr. Speaker, go and sniff for yourself.”

Speaker Volodymyr Rybak suspended the budget hearing until it had been clarified whether or not Myarkovsky had indeed been under the influence of alcohol.
Myarkovsky himself left the chamber as Rybak was speaking. There was no formal word from his office.

A deputy from the ruling Regions party, Volodymyr Makeyenko, sprang to Myarkovsky’s defence. “There wasn’t any smell of alcohol coming from the deputy minister. I have known him for 20 years and he’s a responsible person – these allegations are just an attempt by the opposition to undermine the proceedings,” he told journalists later.

Ukraine’s parliament is often a theatre for physical tussles and fist-fights among deputies. A parliamentary session had to be cancelled in December last year after a brawl broke out among MPs.

With REUTERS

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US presidents and their famous Berlin speeches

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Berlin has been getting ready for Obama. The second-term US president will give a speech in the symbolic city on Wednesday.

Barack Obama is still popular with Berliners, but not with the same rapture as in 2008, before his historic first entry into the White House. Then, Obama said: “This city, of all cities, knows the dream of freedom.”

Berlin has been inspiring American presidents for 50 years.

Kennedy declared US support for democratic West Germany two years after the Eastern Bloc Communists isolated West Berlin by land by building the Wall. His words rang around the world.

Kennedy said: “As a free man, I take pride in the words ‘Ich bin ein Berliner.’”

Michael Haltzel, Senior Fellow at the Center for Transatlantic Relations, and a former vice-presidential adviser, told euronews correspondent Stefan Grobe: “Absolute jubilation, it was brilliant. I can’t think of another visit by any American president anywhere that had that kind of immediate emotional impact. It was fantastic.”

Haltzel contrasted Kennedy’s oratory with Reagan’s speech shortly before the collapse of the Soviet Union more than 20 years later, when he demanded his counterpart in Moscow prove he was sincere about perestroika.

In 1987, Reagan said: “Mister Gorbachov, open this gate.”

Haltzel said: “I think this was a very important speech and I think a welcome speech. And I don’t think the reaction that President Reagan got in Berlin at that time is remotely comparable to the reaction John Kennedy got in ’63, but it was a different time.”

Clinton and Chancellor Kohl strolled through the Brandenburg Gate in 1994 once Germany’s eastern and western halves had again become one country, after the Iron Curtain no longer divided Europe.

Clinton said: “Nothing will stop us; all things are possible: nichts wird uns aufhalten, alles is möglich, Berlin ist frei! Berlin is free!”

Haltzel said: “It was the right thing to say at the time. It was a few years after German reunification. I think he was praising normality – which is always a good thing. But I don’t think it compares either with the ’63 speech by Kennedy or the ’87 speech by Reagan.”

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Herschel telescope left for dead in space

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The billion-euro Herschel space telescope has been switched off. On Monday its controllers emptied the satellite’s fuel tanks and commanded the observatory to sever all communications.

The spacecraft is now in a slow drift around the Sun, around 2.14 million km from Earth.

Mission controllers sent the final command to the Herschel satellite on Monday at 12:25 GMT (14:25 CEST), marking the end of operations for ESA’s hugely successful space observatory. Herschel’s scientific mission had already ended in April after the exhaustion of the crucial liquid helium that cooled the observatory’s instruments close to absolute zero. However, the spacecraft had to be kept active for a few more weeks, during which the final manoeuvres and ‘passivation’ activities were to be performed.

Almost immediately after helium exhaustion, engineers at ESA’s European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt also seized the rare opportunity to conduct a series of technological tests on the satellite, which remained fully functional although no longer capable of scientific observation.

“Normally, our top goal is to maximise scientific return, and we never do anything that might interrupt observations or put the satellite at risk,” says Micha Schmidt, Herschel’s Spacecraft Operations Manager at ESOC. “But the end of science meant we had a sophisticated spacecraft at our disposal on which we could conduct technical testing and validate techniques, software and the functionality of systems that are going to be reused on future spacecraft. This was a major bonus for us.”

Micha says that requests for in-orbit validation and analysis of hardware and software came from the mission control teams at ESOC, from the European industry teams that built the satellite and its components and from science instrument teams.

“For example, the ExoMars team asked us to do some validation using Herschel’s Visual Monitoring Camera, a similar model will fly on their mission. And the Euclid team asked us for some reaction wheel tests.”

The final command issued on Monday was the last step in a complex series of flight control activities and thruster manoeuvres designed to take Herschel into a safe disposal orbit around the Sun and passivate its systems.

The most spectacular event came on 13–14 May , when Herschel depleted most of its fuel in a record 7-hour, 45-minute thruster burn.

This was the main manoeuvre in a series that ensured the satellite was boosted away from its operational orbit around the L2 Sun–Earth Lagrange Point and into a heliocentric orbit, further out and slower than Earth’s.

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‘Most wanted’ WWII criminal charged aged 98

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A 98-year-old man has been charged in Hungary with war crimes committed while he served as a Nazi officer nearly 70 years ago.

Laszlo Csatary was named last year as the ‘most wanted Nazi war criminal’ by the Jewish Nazi-hunting NGO, the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Csatary was found guilty in absentia in 1948 of whipping and torturing Jewish prisoners and helping deport them to Auschwitz and other concentration camps during the Holocaust. After receiving the death sentence, he spend decades in hiding. Initially he sought refugee status under an assumed name in Canada until 1997, when he was deported after it was discovered he lied in his application for citizenship. He was eventually found last year by British tabloid journalists in a residential area of Budapest, and was subsequently arrested and placed under house arrest.

A spokesperson for the Budapest Chief Prosecutor’s Office said “He is charged with the unlawful execution and torture of people, committing war crimes partly as a perpetrator, partly as an accomplice.”

He denies any guilt and is expected to got to trial within three months.

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Assad warns Europe will pay a price if it supplies arms to rebels

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As Russia and the West clash over how to bring an end to the Syria conflict, President Bashar al Assad has issued a warning in an interview with a German newspaper.

Speaking for the first since Friday’s decision by the US to supply arms to Syrian rebels, Assad said Europe will pay the price if it follows Washington’s lead.

He went on to say such a move will backfire as it will spread terrorism leading to Europe’s own backyard becoming a haven for terrorists with extremist ideologies.

Syrian rebels are calling for the West to help arm them against the superior weaponry of Assad’s forces. After having lost the strategically important city of Qusair, they claim regime troops with the help of Lebanon’s Hezbollah militants are now planning to re-take Aleppo thus cutting off opposition supplies from nearby Turkey.

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G8: Cameron sets the agenda

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As Britain prepares to host the G8 Summit in London on Monday, euronews reporter Ali May spoke to the British Prime Minister David Cameron:

Ali May; euronews:
“The Syrian crisis is at a turning point. Aggressive tax evasion by big corporations seems to be endemic. Millions of people every day suffer from hunger. Meanwhile Britain hosts the G8 summit. What does David Cameron make of these issues? We are here to find out.”
“Hello Prime Minister. Is it naive to think the western powers can identify the moderate rebels in Syria and that military backing will not fall into the hands of extremists?”

David Cameron; British Prime Minister:
“No, I think it is vital we do work with the moderate opposition in Syria, the national coalition that came together that supports a democratic Syria, that supports human rights, that wants to have a Syria that is for everyone, including the minorities, including Christians in Syria, that we work with them, we help them, that we train them, we advise them, because if we don’t do that there will only be extremist elements to the opposition – extremist elements I would like to see driven out of Syria altogether. So I think it is very important we work with the proper official opposition, otherwise we will only be left with extremists.”

euronews:
“But of course Russia is very much opposed to arming the rebels. What will you tell President Putin when you shake his hand at G8?“ 

David Cameron:
“Well as I said to President Putin, we had very good discussions in Sochi in Russia recently. And although we have a different perspective on this, I think in the end we all want the same thing, which is a Syria that is at peace with its neighbours, that has a government that can represent its people, and we need a peace conference and a transition to bring that about. And I think it is important that everybody understands that President Assad can’t win this by military means. There has to be a transitional process.”

euronews:
“One of your major priorities at this G8 is tax dodging, but arguably…”

David Cameron:
“My priority is cracking down on tax dodging, let’s get that one straight.”

euronews:
“What’s important also is that most major tax havens are British territories.”

David Cameron:
“First of all, that is not true. That is simply not the case and if you look at what are called the Crown Dependencies and the Overseas Territories of the United Kingdom they have now signed up to the exchange of tax information – to taking action to uncover the beneficial ownership of companies registered in those places – and I think it is quite wrong anyway to say that they have been the ones who are holding up progress. Here we are on euronews, for years in Europe there was no proper exchange of tax information. Countries like Austria and Luxembourg blocked it year, after year, after year. They have only stopped blocking it because I put tax and transparency at the top of the G8 agenda, that led to a European Council where Europe took action, where those countries removed their block and now proper tax cooperation will take place. So we should make sure we get our facts right before pointing any fingers.”

euronews:
“It is very interesting because Britain has been losing billions in tax dodging, but the time is interesting, why are you putting so much emphasis on it now?”

David Cameron:
“Well, because I think it is the right agenda and not just for wealthy countries. I think most of all this is the right agenda for the developing world. Unlike many countries in the world, Britain has kept her promises about aid to the poorest countries in the world. We made promises, we kept our promises. Many others in Europe did not do that and I think that, therefore, gives us the permission to say now is the time to move on to a fresh agenda , which is about making sure companies pay their taxes, making sure companies are transparent about the payments they make to governments for minimal rights and the like. And this agenda, I think, will help the developing world because they suffer from tax evasion and aggressive tax avoidance, but it will also help the developed world, the West as well.”

euronews:
“But how are you going to make sure those big multi-nationals, that you have been very clearly criticising recently, are going to pay their fair share of tax.”

David Cameron:
“Well what we are going to do is two things, basically. The first is making sure there is an effective exchange of information between tax authorities. That is absolutely vital. The second thing is making sure all companies are taking action to have, in our case, a register of beneficial ownership so you can see who owns every company. Because, if you do that, you have the exchange of information and you can see who owns what. Then you are much more likely to get companies to pay their taxes in a way that is fair and right. So those two steps – we will be making further steps at the G8 I believe, on Monday or Tuesday next week – those two steps will make a big difference.”

euronews:
“In the summit when you shake hands with François Holland and Angela Merkel, and you have advocated closer ties within the G8, but you are aware that Europe has been watching with worry at all this anti-EU rhetoric in Britain. So how do you reconcile these? And what do you tell your European colleagues when the cameras are off?”

David Cameron:
“What I say to my European colleagues is what I say to the British people as well, which is: we want to have good cooperation in Europe; we want to have good relations in Europe; but we need reform of the European Union. To somehow pretend that anti-European rhetoric only exists in Britain is a complete fiction. Go and listen to people on the streets of Madrid, or on the streets of Paris, or on the streets of Athens and find out what they think about the European Union right now, they are not satisfied with it. The European Union is not working properly right now. It needs reform, it needs to be more open, it needs to be more flexible. We need to be more competitive, we need to have fewer instructions and bossiness from Brussels and more cooperation between nation states. This is not just a British view, this is a view you find very widely around Europe, that people are not satisfied with the way the European Union works. My plan is to make reforms in the European Union and then put to the British people a referendum: whether they want to stay in this reformed European Union or leave the European Union. I believe a reformed European Union will be in Britain’s interest and I have made that case very clearly. Now I say that to Angela Merkel and François Hollande, whether the cameras are on or the cameras are off. I say the same thing in private as I say in public, and what is interesting is that actually there are many in Europe who recognise it is time for a debate, it is time for change. We need to make sure Europe works properly.”

euronews:
“You touched on aid and the population of the G8 countries is around 900 million. That is pretty much the same number of people who sleep hungry every night in the world. Is there any strong will to tackle this scandal?”

David Cameron:
“Yes, I believe there is, as I said. I think if you go back to Gleneagles in 2005, when the world made lots of promises about aid, some countries like Britain have kept their promises on aid. We said we would reach 0.7 percent of our Gross National Product going in aid every year. This year in 2013, on time, we have met that promise. We have made a promise to the poorest in the world and we have kept it. And as a result there are millions of children in school, there are millions of children getting vaccinated against diseases, there is widespread availability of anti-retro viral drugs, things that would not have happened if Britain had not kept her promises. So I think there is across Britain, a very generous people that give money every year to these charities. So I think there is an appetite to deal with this, there is also – and we should be frank about this – a cynicism and a worry about does the aid go to the right people, is it enough? Will it work? And the answer is on its own. It is not enough and that is why we need this agenda, companies need to pay their taxes properly, we need more transparency about government contracts and what happens to the money. We need to crackdown on corruption and, as I argued at the United Nations in this new high level panel report, we need to make sure we prioritise good government, the rule of law, absence of corruption, absence of conflict, the presence of property rights. We need to advocate those things instead of just giving aid.”

euronews:
“Thank you, Prime Minister.”

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Anti-G8 groups demand real action against super-rich tax avoiders

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Protesters have been organising against the G8 summit which is being hosted in Northern Ireland on Monday and Tuesday. In London, one week ahead, demonstrators demanded that the VIPs from the world’s most industrialised countries hold their meetings openly, “… because they are making decisions that effect our lives.”

British Prime Minister David Cameron has been talking about tougher rules on tax evasion and avoidance. Detractors say that is hypocritical in the extreme, given that Britain’s own tax havens are world leaders – with overseas territories and offshore trusts.

Global tax evasion could be costing more than 2.3 trillion euros per year according to researchers from Tax Justice Network while as much as 24 trillion euros could be hidden by individuals in tax havens.

European Union countries, according to Brussels, fail to take in one trillion euros each year from people who don’t pay their taxes. This is while the population that obeys the rules is subjected to austerity policies.

Cameron issued a determined message last month, going in to a summit of the soon to be 28 EU member states.

He said: “We’ve got to make sure as we set those tax rates that companies pay taxes and that means international collaboration, sharing of tax information. I am making that the headlines of my G8 summit in a month time and it is important that we make sure that the European Union [does] as well.”

The leaders are said to be considering strategies of fiscal optimisation to focus on multinationals that pay minimal levels of taxes to the same countries in which they reap vast profits.

Germany’ Angela Merkel, at the end of that summit in Brussels said: “We will work towards ensuring that companies pay more where they are based. To achieve that, they must also join the fight against tax havens.”

Worldwide operators such as Starbucks, Apple, Google and Amazon have made headlines in the past few months for having navigated ways to considerably reduce what they pay the tax man in both the US and Europe – without even breaking the law.

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