Brexit Deal Cleared by EU Parliament; UK Set to Leave Friday

Britain’s departure from the European Union was backed by European lawmakers Wednesday, after a debate that mixed warm words of love with hard-headed warnings to the country not to seek too many concessions during upcoming trade talks on a future relationship.
    
The European Parliament overwhelmingly approved Britain’s departure terms from the EU, the final major decision in the four-year Brexit saga. The vote was 621 to 49 in favor of the Brexit deal that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson negotiated with the other 27 EU leaders in the fall of last year.
    
While backing Britain’s departure in the wake of the country’s vote to leave in a referendum in June 2016,  EU countries are already preparing for the possibility that talks on a new trade deal with Britain could collapse by the end of the year, and no-deal contingency planning for a chaotic end to the transition period is necessary.
    
After Britain’s departure on Friday, the U.K. will remain within the EU’s economic arrangements until the end of the year though it won’t have a say in policy as it will not be a member of the EU anymore.
    
“We will always love you and you will never be far,” said EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on a day when some legislators were moved to tears.
    
Britain is the first country to leave the EU and for many in Europe its official departure at 11 p.m. London time on Friday, Jan. 31 is a moment of enormous sadness and reduces the number in the bloc to 27.
    
The parliament’s chief Brexit official, Guy Verhofstadt, said that “this vote is not an adieu,adding that it isonly an au revoir.”
    
With only two days to spare, legislators approved the withdrawal agreement that will end the 47-year membership of Britain. At the same time, the vote cut the 73 U.K. parliamentarians from the 751-seat legislature where die-hard Brexiteers have been a disruptive force for years.
    
“That’s it. It’s all over,” said Nigel Farage, who has campaigned for Brexit for two decades. On departing the scene, the man who arguably did more than anyone else to move the country to vote for Brexit waved Britain’s Union Flag.
    
Now, negotiations move on how to cooperate in the future. Britain is seeking to thrash out a comprehensive trade deal within 11 months.
    
That timetable is viewed as ambitious by many observers of trade discussions, which can often drag on for years.
   
 “We will not yield to any pressure,” French President Emmanuel Macron said. “The priority is to define, in the short, medium and long term the interests of the European Union and to preserve them.”
    
The EU has said such a timespan is far too short and fears remain that a chaotic exit, averted this week, might still happen at the end of the year if the transition ends without any agreement in place.
   
 “The urgency of the 11 months of the calendar should in no way lead us to rush, to accept compromises that would hurt our interests,” said Macron’s Europe minister, Amelie de Monchalin.  “A trade accord is an agreement that lasts for several decades and we should ensure that we always put fundamental issues of content before calendar issues.’’   
 
Even though the European Commission’s task force, led by Michel Barnier, is negotiating on the EU’s behalf, the impact of major nations like France and Germany on those talks is important.
    
De Montchalin said that unless Britain asks to extend the transition period before the summer, both sides will be facing a cliff-edge scenario by the end of the year where borders could be closed, tariffs imposed and rules changed overnight, to the detriment of smooth trade.
   
“That’s why we had long discussions this morning on the need to prepare for such a scenario, through contingency measures that we have to keep active to be ready for all eventual scenarios,” de Montchalin said in Paris.

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Erdogan Warns Moscow on Idlib Amid Fears of Refugee Exodus

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan issued a rare warning to Moscow to rein in the Syrian government’s Idlib offensive. The capture of a critical town Wednesday by regime forces is stoking fears in Ankara of a new exodus of refugees into Turkey.Erdogan, returning from a three-day tour of Africa, accused Moscow of reneging on agreements on Syria and issued an ultimatum.
    
“We have waited until now, but from this point, we are going to take our own action. This is not a threat, but our expectation is that Russia will give the regime the necessary warning,” said Erdogan.The warning came as Syrian government forces captured the rebel-held town of Marat al-Numan. The government offensive, backed by Russian air power, is advancing deeper into Idlib province, the last bastion of rebel forces and home to 3 million people.Erdogan claims the offensive violates last year’s agreement, hammered out with Moscow to protect the province. But Moscow insists the attack is targeting only terrorists, which the deal allows.  FILE – Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks during a news conference ahead of a visit to Algeria, at Ataturk airport in Istanbul, Turkey, January 26, 2020.”Russia tells us they fight against terrorism. Who are terrorists? The people fighting to defend their own lands?” Erdogan said Wednesday, dismissing Moscow claims.Underlining Ankara’s stance, a large convoy of Turkish forces entered Idlib on Tuesday to reinforce its military presence. Under an agreement with Moscow, Turkey has 12 observation posts to monitor a de-escalation zone aimed at preventing hostilities between the rebels and Syrian forces.”Without the Russian air force, Turkey could easily take out the Assad forces,” said analyst Atilla Yesilada of Global Source Partners. “They don’t have the stamina or forces to resist a well-armed and trained army backed by the Syrian militia.”Experts warn Turkish forces in Syria are vulnerable, however, given the lack of air support, with Russian anti-aircraft missiles controlling Syrian airspace.Differing interestsAnkara also has memories of the economic pain Moscow inflicted on Turkey through sanctions, following the 2015 downing of a Russian bomber by a Turkish fighter jet.”Turkey is stuck; this is the problem. Russia is the key for Turkey to resolving Syria because Ankara can’t risk a military confrontation,” said international relations professor Huseyin Bagci of Ankara’s Middle East Technical University.”But I think Putin and Erdogan’s interpretations of interests are differing more than before, and it’s not a good development [for Ankara].”FILE – People walk past destruction by government airstrikes in the town of Ariha, in Idlib province, Syria, Jan. 15, 2020.While Ankara and Moscow back rival sides in the Syrian civil war, they have been working together to resolve the conflict — a cooperation that is providing the basis of a deeper rapprochement between the countries.   
    
Analysts suggest that, given the alarm in NATO of Turkey’s deepening ties with Russia, Moscow has a powerful incentive for containing bilateral tensions.”The different approaches towards the regime of [Syrian President Bashar al-] Assad of Moscow and Ankara is a real challenge,” said Zaur Gasimov, a Russian expert at the University of Bonn. “But due to certain dynamics in the region of the Middle East, the importance of intensive cooperation between Russia and Turkey is still much more important than any sort of confrontation for Moscow.”Moscow appears to be trying to play down tensions over Idlib.”Russia is committed to the strict implementation of its obligations undertaken in Syria,” said a Russian foreign ministry statement Wednesday in reaction to Erdogan’s criticisms.Syrian refugeesHowever, the fate of the rebel-held city of Idlib is seen as a red line for Ankara.  “My impression is that he [Assad] wants to lay siege to Idlib city, and that’s where the real headache starts for Ankara,” said Yesilada. “Because there are already a half-million refugees huddled on our border, and if Idlib comes under attack, another half-million goes to border.”Syrians drive through the city of al-Mastouma, in Idlib province, as they flee a government offensive, Jan. 28, 2020.Turkey has been hosting more than 3.5 million Syrians, with its “open-door policy” to those seeking refuge from the civil war. But Erdogan is warning his country cannot take any more refugees.  Ankara claims the cost of hosting Syrians is more than $40 billion. Mounting public discontent is cited as the driver behind the defeats suffered by Erdogan’s AKP in last year’s local elections. The prospect of a new exodus from Idlib could be politically fatal for the Turkish president.”All the polls show a deep distaste for Syrians, given the economic difficulties in Turkey,” said Yesilada. “They drive the wages down; there are social problems. If you take another half-a-million refugees in or try to feed them across the border in Syria, it’s going to be a major blow to Erdogan’s popularity, which is already sinking, because his open-door policy has completely backfired.”At this month’s opening ceremony in Istanbul of a new Russian natural gas pipeline, Erdogan described Russian relations as “strategic.” But the deepening crisis in Idlib is likely to add to increasing questions over the price of that relationship.”Turkey needs Russia desperately in Syria. Without Russian cooperation, Idlib cannot be solved. But this relationship is not one of equals. There is a significant imbalance, the more this goes on, the more the question can be asked what is Turkey getting out of this,” said Turkish analyst Mehmet Ogutcu of the London Energy Club.
 

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Pakistan Rebukes India’s Modi Over ‘War-Mongering’ Remarks

Pakistan has harshly criticized rival India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a day after he boasted his military could inflict a defeat on the neighboring country within 10 days.  A Pakistani Foreign Ministry statement said Wednesday that Modi’s “irresponsible and war-mongering” remarks reflected India’s “incurable obsession” with Pakistan and an attempt to divert attention from growing internal challenges facing the Indian leadership.”We urge the international community to take cognizance of the Indian leadership’s continuing belligerent rhetoric and aggressive measures, which pose a threat to regional peace and security,” the statement said.  Tensions between India and Pakistan remain high over the Kashmir territorial dispute, which brought the two nuclear-armed nations close to a fourth war last February.  “Pakistan has already lost three wars. Our armed forces will not take more than 7-10 days to make Pakistan bite the dust,” Modi was quoted as telling military officers in New Delhi on Tuesday.His comments come as Modi’s ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) faces increasing domestic and international pressure amid an economic slowdown and after weeks of ongoing protests against a new citizenship law that critics say discriminates against India’s Muslim minority.The BJP government’s decision to unilaterally scrap the special constitutional autonomous status for the Indian-ruled part of Kashmir last August and place the Muslim-majority region under months of security lockdown have also drawn international criticism.  Islamabad swiftly denounced the Kashmir-related measures, saying it is an internationally recognized dispute under United Nations resolutions and neither country can unilaterally change the status.Pakistan has since downgraded an already strained bilateral relationship, fueling mutual tensions and sparking almost daily military skirmishes across the Kashmir cease-fire line. Both countries control parts of the Himalayan region and claim it in full.In his Tuesday speech, Modi cited a 2016 Indian cross-border military operation or so-called “surgical strike” in the Pakistan-administered part of Kashmir and last year’s airstrikes against alleged militant training camps in the Pakistani city of Balakot, as evidence of New Delhi’s military readiness.The Pakistani military had dismissed as “fictitious” Indian claims of conducting any cross-border Kashmir operation and denied the existence of militant camps in Balakot. The Indian airstrike triggered a similar Pakistani response, leading to a rare aerial dogfight. Pakistani jets brought down an Indian plane and captured its pilot before releasing him two days later, bringing the two countries back from the brink of war.  “Pakistan’s immediate and effective response to India’s Balakot misadventure, including the downing of Indian fighter aircraft and capture of Indian pilot last year, should suffice to underscore the will, capacity and preparedness of our armed forces,” warned the Pakistani Foreign Ministry Wednesday. 

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US Promoters Push to Make Basketball Big in Africa

The death of American basketball star Kobe Bryant has caused worldwide mourning, and Africa is no exception. But along with the grief, there are signs of new enthusiasm for a sport that has, until now, not taken hold in much of the continent.Promoters have been trying to grow basketball’s presence on the continent for the past 20 years. With a rising number of African players now in the American NBA, those promoters hope Africans will embrace the region’s talents and efforts when the Basketball Africa League, or BAL,  launches in March.Twelve African teams from Mozambique, Senegal, Egypt, Nigeria, Mali, Cameroon  and many more will compete. The rules of the game will be up the standard of America and the world. The aim is to be excellent — and take on the best of them. “Ultimately we want to grow our business on the continent and the Basketball Africa League is a professional basketball league,” said Amadou Galo Fall, the NBA vice president and managing director for Africa, and the head of BAL.
“It is about building an industry and using basketball as an economic engine that is going to contribute to GDP of countries. The sports and entertainment industry and the creative industry in general contributes trillions of dollars in global GDP, and we want to make sure Africa starts to earn its part of this massive industry.”FILE – Team World’s Jaylen Brown of Boston Celtics, gives away his shoes after playing the NBA Africa Game between Team Africa and Team World, at the Dome in Johannesburg, South Africa.Morocco’s AS Sale basketball club was crowned African champion in 2017 and is among the 12 teams winning a spot in the BAL. Other countries with participating teams include Mozambique, Senegal, Egypt, Nigeria, Mali and Cameroon.ElHassouni Abdallah, AS Sale’s secretary general, says representing the African continent is a source of pride and the team is eager to present a good image.The National Basketball Association partnered with the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) to launch the new league. Among the challenges the promoters face: improving infrastructure — such as building more basketball courts — and persuading the region’s governments to invest more.   “To solve this problem of infrastructures, we need the commitment of the governments,” said Anibal Manave, head of FIBA Africa and a BAL board member. “For now, the best principle is to have public private partnerships. We believe this year Congo will build infrastructures, Guinea and Nigeria too. And we believe next year more countries will build infrastructures.”The participants of the Jr. NBA World Championship battle for the ball during the a basketball tournament for the top 13- and 14-year-old boys and girls teams for the NBA and FIBA’s global basketball development and community outreach program.Gender gapThere is also a gender gap to address. Organizers are focusing on helping more women and girls gain access to the court.”In all of our initiatives, we have boys and girls competing, training and learning from role models,” Gallo Fall said. “We are committed to really grow our sport across genders. The WNBA has been around since 1997, and the good news in Africa is that the women’s game is very strong.”Each BAL team will play a schedule of more than 40 games. The final four tournament for the league will take place in Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, around mid-year.
 

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UNICEF: Children Suffer as Violence Surges in Sahel

UNICEF says nearly five million children are the main victims of surging violence in Africa’s Sahel region, subjecting them to gross violations of human rights, including abductions, recruitment as child soldiers, sexual assault and other forms of abuse.A combination of factors is causing misery among the children and their families in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. The U.N. children’s fund says increasing drought and flooding due to climate change are destroying the livelihoods of farmers and herders.The agency says that is contributing to an increase in inter-communal violence over resources. In addition, the proliferation of extremist groups and armed groups is leading to an increase in the recruitment of youngsters as child soldiers.UNICEF’s deputy director of emergency operations, Meritzell Relano, told VOA families have no income and lack food, water and other essentials. All of that, she said, is having an impact on children.“In addition, all this violence is affecting access to school and health…Schools have been attacked by these extremist groups. In other cases, teachers have been killed, etc., so children cannot go to school anymore,” she said.Relano said children cannot access health and are not being immunized against deadly diseases. She said many of the more than 700,000 children who are suffering from severe acute malnutrition are not getting lifesaving treatment. She said bone thin children are a common sight throughout the countries of the Sahel.She added escalating violence in the region is killing and maiming many children. During a mission to Burkina Faso at the end of last year, Relano said she heard testimony from girls she met in a camp for displaced people. She said they spoke about their horror at being sexually abused.FILE – Displaced children wait for help at a village of Dablo area, Burkina Faso, March 2, 2019.”The girls were telling us please give us some kind of occupation. Organize something for us to be in school. We do not want to be in the camp here the whole day alone. We feel unprotected. We feel fear. We feel that something bad will happen to us if we are not in school or being supported or protected,” she said.UNICEF and partners are working to provide Sahelian children with urgently needed support and protection, education, health and other lifesaving needs. It says money is always a problem.The children’s agency says it hopes the international community will support its appeal for $208 million to carry out its humanitarian operation in the central Sahel this year.The semi-arid region stretches from Sudan on the east to the Atlantic Ocean on the west. It includes countries such as Niger, Mali, Chad, Burkina Faso and Mauritania. Those nations are known as the G5 Sahel countries. 

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Из “прорыва” да в “прорыв”: в России закрываются крупнейшие гипермаркеты…

Из “прорыва” да в “прорыв”: в России закрываются крупнейшие гипермаркеты…

Кто сказал, что санкции против России не работают? Конец эпохи гипермаркетов: их заменят маленькие гастрономы а-ля СССР…
 

 
 
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Хрещений Дядько Київпастрансу: хто будує золоті колії в столиці

Хрещений Дядько Київпастрансу: хто будує золоті колії в столиці.

Юрій Курбаль, один з керівників “Київпастрансу” дозволяє вигравати тендера компанії свого дядька. І робить вигляд, що вони незнайомі. Журналісти виявили це ще у 2018-му і ттоді поліція почала розслідування. Проте за рік нічого не змінилось. Хоча ні, тепер тендерів у компанії дядька стало ще більше
 

 
 
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Деду шумит. Стратегическая задача Путина

Деду шумит. Стратегическая задача Путина
 

 
 
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Leaked Report Shows United Nations Suffered Hack

The United Nations has been hacked.An internal confidential document from the United Nations, leaked to The New Humanitarian and seen by The Associated Press, says that dozens of servers were “compromised” at offices in Geneva and Vienna.Those include the U.N. human rights office, which has often been a lightning rod of criticism from autocratic governments for its calling-out of rights abuses.One U.N. official told the AP that the hack, which was first detected over the summer, appeared “sophisticated” and that the extent of the damage remains unclear, especially in terms of personal, secret or compromising information that may have been stolen. The official, who spoke only on condition of anonymity to speak freely about the episode, said systems have since been reinforced.The level of sophistication was so high that it was possible a state-backed actor might have been behind it, the official said.There were conflicting accounts about the significance of the incursion.“We were hacked,” U.N. human rights office spokesman Rupert Colville. “We face daily attempts to get into our computer systems. This time, they managed, but it did not get very far. Nothing confidential was compromised.”The breach, at least at the human rights office, appears to have been limited to the so-called active directory – including a staff list and details like e-mail addresses – but not access to passwords. No domain administration’s account was compromised, officials said.The United Nations headquarters in New York as well as the U.N.’s sprawling Palais des Nations compound in Geneva, its European headquarters, did not immediately respond to questions from the AP about the incident.Sensitive information at the human rights office about possible war criminals in the Syrian conflict and perpetrators of Myanmar’s crackdown against Rohingya Muslims were not compromised, because it is held in extremely secure conditions, the official said.The internal document from the U.N. Office of Information and Technology said 42 servers were “compromised” and another 25 were deemed “suspicious,” nearly all at the sprawling United Nations offices in Geneva and Vienna. Three of the “compromised” servers belonged to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, which is located across town from the main U.N. office in Geneva, and two were used by the U.N. Economic Commission for Europe.Technicians at the United Nations office in Geneva, the world body’s European hub, on at least two occasions worked through weekends in recent months to isolate the local U.N. data center from the Internet, re-write passwords and ensure the systems were clean.The hack comes amid rising concerns about computer or mobile phone vulnerabilities, both for large organizations like governments and the U.N. as well as for individuals and businesses.Last week, U.N. human rights experts asked the U.S. government to investigate a suspected Saudi hack that may have siphoned data from the personal smartphone of Jeff Bezos, the Amazon founder and owner of The Washington Post, in 2018. On Tuesday, the New York Times’s bureau chief in Beirut, Ben Hubbard, said technology researchers suspected an attempted intrusion into his phone around the same time.The United Nations, and its human rights office, is particularly sensitive, and could be a tempting target. The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, and her predecessors have called out, denounced and criticized alleged war crimes, crimes against humanity and less severe rights violations and abuses in places as diverse as Syria and Saudi Arabia.Dozens of independent human rights experts who work with the U.N. human rights office have greater leeway – and fewer political and financial ties to the governments that fund the United Nations and make up its membership – to denounce alleged rights abuses.Jake Williams, CEO of data firm Rendition Infosec and former U.S. government hacker, said of the U.N. report: “The intrusion definitely looks like espionage.”He noted that accounts from three different domains were compromised. “This, coupled with the relatively small number of infected machines, is highly suggestive of espionage,” he said after viewing the report.“The attackers have a goal in mind and are deploying malware to machines that they believe serve some purpose for them,” he added.The U.N. document highlights a vulnerability in the software program Microsoft Sharepoint, which could have been used for the hack.Matt Suiche, a French entrepreneur based in Dubai who founded cybersecurity firm Comae Technologies, said that based on the report from September: “It is impossible to know if it was a targeted attack or just some random internet scan for vulnerable SharePoints.”But the U.N. official, speaking to The Associated Press on Tuesday, said that since then, the intrusion appeared sophisticated.“It’s as if someone were walking in the sand, and swept up their tracks with a broom afterward,” the official said. “There’s not even a trace of a clean-up.”

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Britain’s BBC to Cut 450 Newsroom Jobs in Cost-Cutting Drive

The BBC said on Wednesday it will cut around 450 jobs from its news division as part of an 80 million pound savings drive and modernization program.The corporation said it would reorganize its newsroom along a “story-led” model where staff will be assigned to stories and not attached to individual programs.
“We need to reshape BBC News for the next decade in a way which saves substantial amounts of money,” said Fran Unsworth, director of News and Current Affairs. “We are spending too much of our resources on traditional linear broadcasting and not enough on digital.”
  

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No Injuries Reported After Mag 7.7 Quake Hits Between Cuba and Jamaica

A powerful magnitude 7.7 earthquake struck in the Caribbean Sea between Jamaica and eastern Cuba on Tuesday, shaking a vast area from Mexico to Florida and beyond, but there were no reports of casualties or heavy damage.
    
The quake was centered 139 kilometers (86 miles) northwest of Montego Bay, Jamaica, and 140 kilometers (87 miles) west-southwest of Niquero, Cuba, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It hit at 2:10 p.m. (1910 GMT) and the epicenter was a relatively shallow 10 kilometers (6 miles) beneath the surface.
    
Dr. Enrique Arango Arias, head of Cuba’s National Seismological Service, told state media that there had been no serious damage or injuries reported on the island.
    
The Cayman Islands were rocked by several of the strong aftershocks that followed in the area, including one measured at magnitude 6.1. Water was cut off to much of Grand Cayman Island, and public schools were canceled for Wednesday.
    
Gov. Carlos Joaquin Gonzalez of Mexico’s Quintana Roo state, which is home to Cancun, Tulum and other popular beach resorts, said the earthquake was felt in multiple parts of the low-lying Caribbean state but there were no reports of damage or injuries.
    
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center initially warned that the quake could generate waves 1 to 3 feet above normal in Cuba, Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, Honduras, Mexico and Belize, but issued a later message saying the danger had passed.
    
The quake was felt strongly in Santiago, the largest city in eastern Cuba, said Belkis Guerrero, who works in a Roman Catholic cultural center in the center of Santiago.
    
“We were all sitting and we felt the chairs move,’ she said. “We heard the noise of everything moving around.”
    
She said there was no apparent damage in the heart of the colonial city.
    
“It felt very strong but it doesn’t look like anything happened, “she told The Associated Press.
    It was also felt a little farther east at the U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on the southeastern coast of the island. There were no immediate reports of injuries or damages, said J. Overton, a spokesman for the installation, which has a total population of about 6,000 people.
    
Several South Florida buildings were evacuated as a precaution, according to city of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials. No injuries or road closures were reported. No shaking was felt at the Hard Rock stadium in Miami Gardens, which will host the Super Bowl on Sunday.
    
In the Cayman Islands, the quake left cracked roads and what appeared to be sewage spilling from cracked mains. There were no reports of injuries or more severe damage, said Kevin Morales, editor-in-chief of the Cayman Compass newspaper.
    
The islands experience so few earthquakes that newsroom staff were puzzled when it hit, he said.
    
“It was just like a big dump truck was rolling past,” Morales said. “Then it continued and got more intense.”
    
Dr. Stenette Davis, a psychiatrist at a Cayman Islands hospital, said he saw manhole covers blown off by the force of the quake, and sewage exploding into the street, but no more serious damage.
    
Claude Diedrick, 71, who owns a fencing business in Montego Bay, said he was sitting in his vehicle reading when the earth began to sway.
    
“It felt to me like I was on a bridge and like there were two or three heavy trucks and the bridge was rocking but there were no trucks,” he said.
    
He said he had seen no damage around his home in northern Jamaica.
    
Mexico’s National Seismological Service reported that the quake was felt in five states including as far away as Veracruz, on the country’s Gulf Coast.

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Bangladesh to Improve Schools for Rohingya Refugee Children

Authorities in Bangladesh in partnership with the United Nations will expand educational programs for hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingya children living in refugee camps who are currently receiving only basic lessons, officials said Wednesday.
    
The children, who fled with their families from neighboring Myanmar to the camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar district, now attend about 1,500 learning centers run by UNICEF that provide basic education, drawing and other fun activities. Under the new program starting in April, they will receive a formal education using a Myanmar curriculum from grade 6 to 9, the U.N. said in a statement.
    
Mahbub Alam Talukder, Bangladesh’s refugee, relief and repatriation commissioner, said the government agreed in principle with a proposal from the U.N. that the Rohingya children be provided with a Myanmar education.
    
“They will be taught in Myanmar’s language, they will follow Myanmar’s curriculum, there is no chance to study in formal Bangladeshi schools or to read books in the Bengali language,” he said by phone. “There’s no scope for them to stay here in Bangladesh for long, so through this approach they will be able to adapt to Myanmar’s society when they go back.”
    
The U.N. said initially 10,000 Rohingya children will be enrolled in a pilot program using the Myanmar curriculum, which will allow them to fit into the Buddhist-majority nation’s national educational system when they return to their homeland.
    
The decision was hailed by human rights groups and the United Nations.
    
‘We believe this is a positive step and a clear indication of the commitment by the government of Bangladesh to ensure access to learning for Rohingya children and adolescents, as well as to equip them with the right skills and capacities for their future and return to Myanmar when the conditions allow,” the U.N. said.
    
About 400,000 Rohingya children currently live in the refugee camps, and global rights groups have been demanding that the Bangladesh government allow them to have a formal education.
    
More than 700,000 Rohingya have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since August 2017, when Myanmar’s military launched what it called clearance operations in Rakhine state in response to an attack by an insurgent group. Security forces have been accused of committing mass rapes, killings and burning thousands of homes. In total, more than 1 million Rohingya refugees currently live in Bangladesh.
    
Myanmar’s government has long considered the Rohingya to be migrants from Bangladesh, even though their families have lived in Myanmar for generations. Nearly all have been denied citizenship since 1982, effectively rendering them stateless. They are also denied freedom of movement and other basic rights including education.

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Afghan Forces Free 62 Soldiers From Taliban Prison

Officials in Afghanistan said Wednesday a commando operation in a northwestern region has freed 62 security personnel held in a Taliban prison. Meanwhile, the insurgent group, in a fresh attack elsewhere, says it has killed at least 18 Afghan security forces.A Defense Ministry statement noted the overnight commando raid targeted the insurgent-run detention center in the restive Bala Murghab district in Badghis province.It captured five Taliban guards and inflicted casualties on several others, the statement said. The captives were mostly members of the Afghan National Army (ANA).There was no immediate reaction from the Taliban.FILE – Afghan security forces take position during a battle with the Taliban in Kunduz province, Afghanistan, Sept. 1, 2019.Officials, meanwhile, said a major insurgent assault late Tuesday targeted a military base in the troubled northern Kunduz province, killing at least 18 security forces, mostly ANA personnel.  A Taliban statement claimed its fighters overran the base in Dashti Archi district, killing 35 Afghan forces and capturing four others, though the group often exaggerates its battlefield actions.On Monday, an insurgent attack on a police base in neighboring Baghlan province killed at least 13 government forces.Afghan officials say counterinsurgency ground and air offensives in different provinces inflicted heavy casualties on the Taliban over the past few days.There has been a sharp increase in Taliban attacks in recent days in the northern provinces of Afghanistan despite an unusually harsh winter. Heavy casualties reportedly have been inflicted on government forces being trained and advised by the United States.  The U.S. special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction explained to Congress on Tuesday reasons for the increase in insurgent attacks on Afghan security forces.”The biggest problem we have seen and our trainers have seen with the Afghan military, is they’re not aggressive, they are not moving out… and are usually getting attacked and wiped out by the Taliban,” said John Spoko quoting U.S. military commanders on the ground. He added corruption was another major factor undermining the ability of Afghan forces to contain Taliban advances.Qatar peace talks
Meanwhile, fresh challenges are facing ongoing peace talks between U.S. and Taliban representatives in Qatar.Washington wants the insurgent group to commit to a “significant and lasting” reduction in violence before signing a peace agreement the two adversaries have negotiated over the past year.FILE – US troops wait for their helicopter flight at an Afghan National Army (ANA) Base in Logar province, Afghanistan.The deal, if reached, could set the stage for a gradual drawdown of U.S. and coalition forces in Afghanistan, closing America’s longest war. It would also open the way for Taliban-Afghan negotiations on governance-related matters.Taliban envoys have proposed a week-long reduction in violence in a bid to conclude the peace deal with American interlocutors.But  sources in the insurgent group say the U.S. side is demanding a reduction in insurgent hostilities for a prolonged period and until the intra-Afghan negotiations begin.   The Taliban insisted in a statement last week it had already shown “enough flexibility” by offering a reduction in violence for a limited duration. The insurgent group said that “the ball is now in their [U.S.] court” to move the Afghan peace forward without wasting more time.  

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Virus Outbreak Impacts Africans at Home and Abroad

African nations are preparing for what experts believe is the inevitable emergence of cases of coronavirus on the continent. With growing economic ties and increased travel between the African continent and China, health professionals say they must be ready to treat and isolate cases.On Tuesday, Ethiopia announced it had quarantined three Ethiopian students and one Chinese student returning from a university in Wuhan, China. The students were stopped during a screening at the airport when it was discovered they had symptoms including sore throat and a cough.Dr. Munir Kassa, chief of staff for Ethiopia’s Minister of Health, said the country has been determined to stay ahead of the outbreak. Since the beginning of January, the Ethiopian government has communicated with the World Health Organization and the Chinese government for status updates. “We had several meetings and there is also an emergency center [that] has been activated. And so active surveillance and vigilance. So we have been doing active surveillance of the case for this potential threat,” he told VOA’s Horn of Africa service.Checking temperaturesAt Bole International Airport in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia has been using thermal scanners to take temperatures of airline passengers arriving from the affected Chinese region, quarantining anyone sick and taking the addresses of healthy people for follow-up visits. The country has set up quarantine centers and formed a high-level task force that reports to the prime minister.Kassa said they have screened 22,000 passengers and have sent samples from potential coronavirus cases for testing in South Africa.“So currently in our country, we don’t have anyone who has contracted this novel coronavirus and those who are suspected are under quarantine. So people can go about their daily business,”  Kassa said. There is no reason to “be afraid currently.” But, he added, “because this is a global issue, particularly in China, and because we have frequent flights, people should take cautions.”Other African countries including Kenya, Nigeria and Uganda have begun screening passengers arriving from Wuhan.Passengers arriving on a China Southern Airlines flight from Changsha in China are screened for the new type of coronavirus, upon their arrival at the Jomo Kenyatta international airport in Nairobi, Kenya, Jan. 29, 2020.In Zimbabwe, WHO representative Dr. Alex Gasasira, said the organization has not yet declared the virus to be a “public health emergency of international concern” but is advising countries on how to screen, treat, quarantine and follow-up on suspected cases. He said even countries that do not have high volumes of travelers from China are still at risk.“As long as the country receives travelers, there’s always a risk,” Gasasira said. “Because some of the people from the affected areas may travel while demonstrating symptoms. Some travel before they have any symptoms, but develop symptoms after arriving in the country.”Gasasira said there have been no reported cases of the virus in Zimbabwe, but health officials have recorded information on people who have traveled to the affected region and are following upon them. “The health authorities know where these travelers are going and checking them on a daily basis to ensure that they don’t report symptoms and then give them the right information, if they develop symptoms, what to do,” he told VOA’s Zimbabwe service in a phone interview.Students study in ChinaAfrican travelers to China, particularly students have also been affected by the outbreak. An estimated 61,000 African students are studying in China and many now face canceled classes and a limited ability to move freely.A Mozambican engineering student in Beijing told VOA’s Portuguese Service that it is becoming hard to get food and that many African students are considering returning home. “We are afraid. We are afraid to go outside. We are afraid to be with other people,” said Francisco Sithoi Jr, a 22-year-old civil engineering student at Beijing University of Technology. “We are afraid even to go to the bathroom because, here in my school, we have a public bathroom. And we know that coronavirus, you can get it even from touching something that someone who has it has touched. So we are afraid almost of everything.”A Rwandan student studying in China told VOA’s Central Africa service that classes have been canceled until at least Feb. 13, students have been instructed to stay inside their buildings and were told to buy groceries that could last for at least three weeks.Another student from Cabo Verde studying in Wuhan said fear is growing, but people are trying to remain calm and focus on safety. “I’ve been trying my best to keep myself safe from what has happened,” Wagner Perei, a computer science master’s student, told VOA’s Portuguese service. “I’ve been trying to stay indoors most of the time and they’re just praying that everything’s going to be over soon.”This story originated in VOA’s Africa Division with reporting contributions from the Horn of Africa Amharic service’s Eden Geremew, Portuguese service’s Amancio Vilanculos and Alvaro Andrade, Zimbabwe service’s Gibbs Dube and Central Africa service’s Etienne Karekezi. 

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ГАЗПРОМ МЕЧТЫ СДУВАЮТСЯ…

ГАЗПРОМ МЕЧТЫ СДУВАЮТСЯ.

«Газпром» на Урале предлагает жителям подключиться к газовой трубе за 17 млн.

Последние новости России и мира, экономика, бизнес, культура, технологии, спорт
 

 
 
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Путін змінює Суркова на Козака: що зміниться для України?

Путін змінює Суркова на Козака: що зміниться для України?

Кривавий диктатор путін призначив колишнього віце-прем’єра Дмитра Козака заступником керівника своєї адміністрації. Прогнозується, що він тепер відповідатиме за політику Кремля відносно України. Натомість свою посаду нібито залишає помічник путіна владислав сурков, який раніше був куратором так званих «ДНР» і «ЛНР», його називали ідеологом проєкту «Новоросія». Що це означає для України
 

 
 
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