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- Italy bans planes that search for migrant boats from using airportswww.independent.co.uk Italy bans planes that search for migrant boats from using airports
Charity Sea Watch said the ordinance was aimed at preventing the world from seeing what was happening
- Migration to UK has failed to boost economic growth, warns reportwww.euronews.com Migration to UK has failed to boost economic growth, warns report
According to a new study from the Centre for Policy Studies, migration to the UK is putting pressure on housing, public services and infrastructure. However, other countries take a different stance, with many viewing migration as beneficial for their economies.
- Eurovision expresses disappointment over performer wearing pro-Palestinian symboltribune.com.pk Eurovision expresses disappointment over performer wearing pro-Palestinian symbol | The Express Tribune
Eric Saade of Sweden wore a keffiyeh at Eurovision 2024, showing support for Palestine amid controversy over Israel's involvement.
The musician was seen wearing a keffiyeh on his arm, a symbol commonly used to show support for Palestine.
In reponse, a representative of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) said in a statement: “All performers are made aware of the rules of the contest, and we regret that Eric Saade chose to compromise the non-political nature of the event.”
Despite facing criticism for its decision not to exclude Israel and worldwide protests condemning the organizers' choice, the competition maintained its stance.
“Politics does influence the event from time to time,” said Paul Jordan, a contest enthusiast and researcher who was part of its communications team from 2015 to 2018, in an interview with CNN.
However, he noted, “the presence of Israel has become such a big issue (that) I think it’s going to overshadow the event.”
The news comes during Israel’s seizure and closure of the Rafah crossing in Gaza, which has raised concerns that already-scarce food and medical supplies will be further depleted and lead to a “catastrophic” humanitarian disaster.
- Russia steps up attacks on energy facilities with Ukraine 'vulnerable' without stronger air defencesnews.sky.com Russia steps up attacks on energy facilities with Ukraine 'vulnerable' without stronger air defences
Experts suggest that while Kyiv awaits its much-needed air defences from the West, it is a race to see how quickly they are delivered versus how much damage Russia can sustain on the frontline.
- EU reaches a tentative deal on Ukraine aid coming from profits of frozen Russian assetsapnews.com EU reaches a tentative deal on Ukraine aid coming from profits of frozen Russian assets
European Union nations have reached a tentative breakthrough deal to provide Ukraine with billions in additional funds for arms and ammunitions coming from the profits raised from frozen Russian central bank assets held in the bloc.
European Union nations reached a tentative breakthrough deal to provide Ukraine with billions in additional funds for arms and ammunitions coming from the profits raised from frozen Russian central bank assets held in the bloc.
The agreement among the 27 EU ambassadors was announced by Belgium, which holds most of the frozen assets in the bloc. It came after weeks of tough negotiations among member states, which were made more complicated by the stringent financial limits on using such funds.
The deal should free up to 3 billion euros ($3.2 billion) a year for Kyiv, of which 90% could be spent on ammunition and other military equipment.
Officials said a first installment of the funds could reach Kyiv in July.
The EU is holding around 210 billion euros ($225 billion) in Russian central bank assets, most of it frozen in Belgium, in retaliation for Moscow’s war against Ukraine. Kyiv has long been urging that those funds be used to get vital military supplies as it struggles to stave off renewed Russian attacks.
A small group of member states, especially Hungary, refuse to supply weapons to Ukraine so special safeguards had to be included in the deal to allow for some 10% of the funds to be considered general aid.
EU member states still need to officially endorse the ambassadors’ agreement.
- Austria's Raiffeisen Bank International (RBI) drops plan to buy a stake in Austrian construction company Strabag from sanctioned Russian billionaire over concerns of sanctionswww.rbinternational.com 08.05.2024 (13:30 CEST) - RBI's Board of Management has decided today not to pursue the proposed acquisition of STRABAG SE shares by RBI Group
In recent exchanges with the relevant authorities, Raiffeisen Bank International AG (RBI) has been unable to obtain the required comfort in order to proceed with the proposed transaction. In an abundance of caution, the bank has decided to walk away from the deal. Since the start of the war, RBI has...
In recent exchanges with the relevant authorities, RBI has been "unable to obtain the required comfort in order to proceed with the proposed transaction", the bank says on its website.
Therefore, "in an abundance of caution", the bank has decided to walk away from the deal, it says.
RBI planned to buy a 27.78% stake in Strabag, an Austrian construction company, for 1.51 billion euros in cash from Russia-based Rasperia Trading, a holding company controlled by Oleg Deripaska, through the bank's Russian subsidiary AO Raiffeisenbank, and then transfer it to the wider RBI group by issuing a dividend in kind.
However, after Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the EU, US, and UK sanctioned Deripaska, imposing an asset freeze. The European regulator and the US recently urged RBI to cancel its plan.
Raiffeisen entered the Russian market in the 1990s. Unlike other businesses and banks, it didn't exit Russia after Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine. Today RBI is the largest Western bank in Russia.
- Chinese network behind one of world’s ‘largest online scams’ took money and personal data from people in Europe and the US through a vast web of fake shops touting designer brands, data suggestswww.theguardian.com Chinese network behind one of world’s ‘largest online scams’
Exclusive: Vast web of fake shops touting designer brands took money and personal details from 800,000 people in Europe and US, data suggests
A trove of data examined by experts indicates the operation is highly organised, technically savvy – and ongoing.
Operating on an industrial scale, programmers have created tens of thousands of fake web shops offering discounted goods from Dior, Nike, Lacoste, Hugo Boss, Versace and Prada, as well as many other premium brands.
Published in multiple languages from English to German, French, Spanish, Swedish and Italian, the websites appear to have been set up to lure shoppers into parting with money and sensitive personal data.
However, the sites have no connection to the brands they claim to sell and in most cases consumers who spoke about their experience said they received no items.
- Germany sends two warships to Indo-Pacific amid China and Taiwan tensions
Germany sent two warships to the Indo-Pacific region on Tuesday in a bid to strengthen its military presence in the region amid rising tensions between China and Taiwan and over the disputed South China Sea.
Those tensions were putting pressure on the freedom of navigation and free passage on trade routes, Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said at the northern German navy base in Wilhelmshaven.
Some 40% of Europe's foreign trade flows through the South China Sea. "Looking the other way, showing no presence in the Indo-Pacific in support of the international rules-based order, that's not an option for Germany," he told reporters before the vessels departed. "Presence matters."
Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea as its own, despite an international tribunal ruling that Beijing has no legal basis for these claims. China also claims democratically-governed Taiwan as its own territory, despite the latter's strong objections.
The supply ship Frankfurt am Main set sail from Wilhelmshaven, while the frigate Baden-Wuerttemberg left from the Spanish harbour of Rota. The vessels will meet at sea, then sail to Halifax in Canada and onwards to the Indo-Pacific.
The ships will pass through the South China Sea but it was not clear whether they will also sail through the Taiwan Strait as the United States has done, a move certain to irk Germany's top trade partner, China.
"Since several allied navy vessels have passed (the Taiwan Strait), this obviously is an option. But no decision has been taken yet," said Pistorius.
In 2021, a German warship sailed into the South China Sea for the first time in almost 20 years, joining other Western nations in expanding military presence in the region amid alarm over China's territorial ambitions.
- Udi Raz: Berlin stepping up repression of pro-Palestine Jewswww.newarab.com Udi Raz: Berlin stepping up repression of pro-Palestine Jews
Amid the Gaza genocide, Jewish activists like Udi Raz have demonstrated in solidarity with Palestine, enduring prejudice, and harassment from the German state.
> > > The German government and establishment are stepping up the repression of pro-Palestine Jews including Israelis, but it's all about anti-Arab/Muslim racism by proxy, says Udi Raz, a Jewish activist who spoke to The New Arab in Berlin. > > > --- > > > “Germany is very much engaged in an attempt to self-define itself through the exclusion of other minorities. In the 30s and 40s, it was the Jews, and now it is Muslims,” explained Raz, adding that Germany is eager to protect Jews but only to the extent that those Jews are also “willing to produce anti-Muslim racism.” > > > > Calling the last seven months a culmination of a decades-long oppression of Palestinians in Germany, Raz believes that this marginalisation of Palestinians also targets the entire Muslim population living in the country. [...] > >
- Berlin ex-mayor Giffey hurt in wave of attacks on German politicianswww.bbc.com Berlin ex-mayor Giffey hurt in wave of attacks on German politicians
Berlin ex-mayor and senator Franziska Giffey was hit on the head and neck as she visited a library in Berlin.
- "Peace can only come when Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity are restored:" Italy’s president says Russia’s invasion of Ukraine can’t be solved by rewarding Moscow’s aggressionapnews.com Italy's president says Russia's invasion of Ukraine can't be solved by rewarding Moscow's aggression
Italy’s president says Russia’s invasion of Ukraine can’t be solved by rewarding its aggression and peace can only come when Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity are restored.
Italy’s president told the U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine can’t be solved by rewarding its aggression and peace can only come when Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity are restored.
Sergio Mattarella said Italy, which now heads the G7 meetings, and many international partners have come to Ukraine’s defense to support the principle that solidarity must be given to nations attacked by acts that violate international law and the U.N. Charter.
“No state, no matter how powerful or how equipped it is with a menacing nuclear arsenal can think of violating principles, including the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and independence of another country without facing sanctions,” he said.
Mattarella said the end of two world wars and the collapse of the Soviet Union had brought new hope to Europe, and that “Russia has taken on the great historic responsibility of having brought war back to the heart of the European continent.”
The Italian president stressed that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine isn’t merely a regional conflict since Moscow wants to exercise global influence. Russia is a veto-wielding permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, which is charged with ensuring international peace and security.
- ‘Countries are now forced to confront it’: Rise in Chinese espionage arrests alarms Europewww.theguardian.com ‘Countries are now forced to confront it’: Rise in Chinese espionage arrests alarms Europe
Increase in cases reflects changing mood across continent towards Chinese threats, say experts
Experts say the recent increase in arrests and investigations reflects a changing mood in Europe towards Chinese threats.
“A lot of this activity has been around a while,” said Martin Thorley, a senior analyst at the Global Initiative against Transnational Organised Crime. “Countries have now been forced confront it, despite the unpalatable nature of dealing with this at the same time as having market dependencies, supply-chain links etc in China. This has been present for a while and has been left too long.”
Roderich Kiesewetter, a German MP and former army officer, said the German secret services had been warning for “several years” about the threat from China but “the warning was … on purpose not heard”.
He noted that the recent arrests in Germany would have sent a “stronger signal” if they had been announced before the chancellor, Olaf Scholz, went to Beijing in April. Instead, they were made public days after Scholz’s return to Germany.
- Seven out of 10 Europeans believe their country takes in too many immigrantsenglish.elpais.com Seven out of 10 Europeans believe their country takes in too many immigrants
More than 60% say the EU should strengthen its support for Ukraine and favor a ceasefire with Moscow, according to a survey in all 27 member states
- Polish judge seeks political asylum in Belaruswww.euractiv.com Polish judge seeks political asylum in Belarus
High-level Polish judge Tomasz Szmydt, loyal to the previous PiS (ECR) government, has requested political asylum in Belarus on Monday, calling it an act of “protest against Poland’s unjust and harmful policy” towards Moscow and Minsk.
- European People’s Party to which Ursula von der Leyen belongs declines to sign letter condemning far right political violencewww.theguardian.com European People’s Party declines to sign letter condemning far right political violence
Sources say EPP had baulked at use of term ‘far right’ in joint statement of parties in Europe
The open letter calls on Von der Leyen to “reject any normalisation, cooperation or alliance with the far right and radical parties” and denounces a physical assault on German centre-left politician Matthias Ecke. Ecke was “seriously injured” after allegedly being attacked by four young men while putting up campaign posters.
The letter has been signed by five of the main political parties in the European parliament including the Socialists & Democrats, Renew representing the liberals, the Greens and The Left.
But the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest group in the parliament, representing conservative-leaning parties throughout Europe, declined.
French MEP Valérie Hayer, head of Renew, said her group, which is backed by Emmanuel Macron, regretted that the EPP had not signed. “This puts their commitment to the common fight against destructive, far right forces into question. We urge the EPP to reconsider and to join this pro-European commitment,” she said.
- Russian soldier says in video that Russian commanders execute their own men
It has long been rumored that Russia is executing its own soldiers; deserters and those disobeying orders.
A young soldier, who identifies himself with full name, military number tag, and location at the frontline, now tells the barbaric story from the trench on the battlefield.
“…the situation is difficult. My own people want to nullify me, to shoot me,” he tells.
The 5 minutes long video-recording aimed for his girlfriend was first posted on Telegram and later spread across social media this weekend. The Barents Observer is not identifying the soldier or his fellow colleague now fighting in the front line of Russia’s battlefield in occupied Ukraine.
- Germans grill Olaf Scholz over soaring cost of doner kebabswww.theguardian.com Germans grill Olaf Scholz over soaring cost of doner kebabs
Die Linke party is among those calling for a Dönerpreisbremse or price cap on the hugely popular street food
- Belgian, Dutch university students join pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel protestswww.timesofisrael.com Belgian, Dutch university students join pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel protests
University students in Amsterdam demand end to cooperation with Israel, while protest at Ghent's university to last until Wednesday
AMSTERDAM/BRUSSELS — Students in the Netherlands and Belgium occupied parts of the universities of Amsterdam and Ghent on Monday to protest against Israel’s war against Hamas, joining international student protests inspired by those on US campuses.
At a campus of the University of Amsterdam (UvA) in downtown Amsterdam, hundreds of students set up camp, pitching dozens of tents, playing in drum circles, and barricading access with wooden pallets.
The students want UvA and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU) to stop their partnerships with Israel.
In neighboring Belgium, some 100 students also occupied a part of Ghent’s university, UGent.
Footage shared on social media shows students surrounded by tents chanting, “Hey hey, ho ho, the occupation has to go” in one of UGent’s buildings.
- German chancellor backs EU plan to use frozen Russian assets to fund Ukraine arms
Around 90% of the revenues generated from Russian frozen assets should be spent on arms purchases for Ukraine, Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Monday, supporting an earlier EU proposal to use Russian assets' interest payments to boost Ukraine defence.
"It is important that we also agree that this money can be used for arms purchases not only in the EU, but for purchases worldwide," Scholz told journalists after a meeting with members of the three Baltic countries governments in Riga. In March, the European Union's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell proposed taking take 90% of revenues from Russian assets frozen in Europe and transfer them to an EU-run fund that finances weapons for Ukraine.
Some 70% of all Russian assets immobilised in the West are held in the central securities depository Euroclear in Belgium, which has the equivalent of 190 billion euros ($204.67 billion) worth of Russian central bank securities and cash.
- Hungary and Serbia’s autocratic leaders to roll out red carpet for China’s Xi during Europe tourapnews.com Hungary and Serbia's autocratic leaders to roll out red carpet for China's Xi during Europe tour
Chinese leader Xi Jinping will spend the bulk of his five-day tour in Europe this week in two small countries at the continent’s eastern half.
Chinese leader Xi Jinping will spend the bulk of his five-day tour in Europe this week in two small countries at the continent’s eastern half, a region that Beijing has used as a foothold for its expanding economic ambitions in Europe.
Following a stop in Paris on Monday to kick off his first European trip in five years, Xi will then travel to Hungary and Serbia, two nations with autocratic leaders that are seen as China-friendly and close to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
As mainstream European leaders have pursued more protectionist policies to limit Beijing and Moscow’s reach on the continent, the governments of nationalist conservative leaders Viktor Orbán of Hungary and Aleksandar Vučić of Serbia have vigorously courted economic ties with China, inviting major investments in infrastructure, manufacturing, energy and technology.
As the first European Union country to participate in Xi’s signature Belt and Road Initiative, Hungary has straddled a middle ground between its membership in the EU and NATO, and an unusual openness to diplomatic and trade relationships with eastern autocracies.
Tamás Matura, a China expert and associate professor at Corvinus University in Budapest, said that Hungary’s hosting of major Chinese investments and production sites — and its agnosticism on doing business with countries with spotty democratic and human rights records — has opened a crucial door to China within the EU trading bloc.
"The Hungarian government is the last true friend of China in the whole EU,” Matura said. “It is very important now to the Chinese to settle down in a country that is within the boundaries of the EU ... and is friendly to the Chinese political system.”
One of the major benefits to China of establishing bases within the EU: avoiding costly tariffs. The European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, is mulling raising duties on the import of Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) from its current 10% to protect the European auto manufacturing market — a mainstay for Germany, the 27-member EU’s largest economy.
Yet in December, Hungary announced that one of the world’s largest EV manufacturers, China’s BYD, will open its first European EV production factory in the south of the country — an inroad into the EU that could upend the competitiveness of the continent’s auto industry.
That shift is already visible in Budapest, where one car dealership has begun scaling down its supply of European vehicles and instead introducing models produced by BYD.
Márk Schiller, the strategy and marketing director for the family-owned Schiller Auto Group, said he believes that European carmakers are “already behind” China in transitioning to EV production. His company recently stopped selling cars made by German carmaker Opel, and switched to BYD.
“This was a huge shift,” Schiller said.
Unconfirmed reports suggest that during Xi’s visit to Hungary from Wednesday to Friday, he and Orbán will announce another EV manufacturing investment involving China’s Great Wall Motor. Orbán’s office didn’t respond to multiple requests for information on the schedule of the visit.
In Serbia, to Hungary’s south, China runs mines and factories across the Balkan country, while billions more in infrastructure loans have funded roads, bridges and new facilities.
Hungary and Serbia have an agreement with Beijing to modernize the railway between the countries’ capitals of Budapest and Belgrade, part of a Belt and Road plan to connect with the Chinese-controlled port of Piraeus in Greece as an entry point for Chinese goods to Central and Eastern Europe.
The bulk of the project, which after numerous delays is expected to be completed in 2026, is financed through loans from Chinese banks — the kind of capital that Hungary and Serbia have been eager to utilize.
According to the AidData research lab at William & Mary, a public university in Virginia, Chinese lenders have issued loans worth more than $22 billion to nine countries in Central and Eastern Europe between 2000 and 2021.
Of that sum, $9.4 billion has gone to Hungary and $5.7 billion to Serbia, dwarfing the totals of other regional countries.
Vučić has said he is “honored” that Xi — whom he often describes as a “friend” — is visiting on Tuesday. He said before the visit that Serbia would seek further Chinese investment, particularly when it comes to advanced technologies.
But economic analyst Mijat Lakićević said he didn’t expect any major new investment deals, because “everything that Serbia does with China has already been agreed.”
Hungary, too, has created a favorable investment environment for China, providing generous tax breaks, subsidies and infrastructural assistance to Chinese companies, as well as helping them navigate Hungarian bureaucracy.
“They get the red carpets rolled out and they get everything tailor-made by the government. And that is a huge advantage,” said Matura, the China analyst.
Near Debrecen, Hungary’s second-largest city, construction is underway of a nearly 550-acre (222-hectare), 7.3 billion euro ($7.9 billion) EV battery plant, Hungary’s largest-ever foreign direct investment.
Orbán’s government hopes the factory, run by Chinese battery giant CATL, will make the country a global hub of lithium-ion battery manufacturing in an era where governments are increasingly seeking to limit greenhouse gas emissions by switching to electric cars.
Such investments are coming at a time when Hungary’s sluggish economy has been further hindered by record-setting inflation and the freezing of billions in EU funding that has been withheld over Orbán’s track record on democracy standards and the rule of law.
With EU money at a standstill, Matura said, China has been willing to fill in the gaps in Hungary’s budget.
“EU funds have almost came to full stop flowing into the Hungarian economy, so now there is a desperate need in Hungary to turn towards other alternatives, other sources of financial capital,” he said.
Orbán has been open about why he has prioritized Chinese investment: his belief that Western economies are declining, and that China is on the rise.
During a recent speech at the CPAC Hungary conservative conference, Orbán outlined a vision of a “global economy that will be organized according to the principle of mutual benefit, free of ideology.”
- Menorcan village threatens to close to tourists after explosion in numberswww.theguardian.com Menorcan village threatens to close to tourists after explosion in numbers
Binibeca Vell residents say officials have left them to grapple alone with noise and rubbish from stampede of visitors
- EU Chief Urges China To Curtail 'Dual Use Goods' Delivery To Russiawww.barrons.com EU Chief Urges China To Curtail 'Dual Use Goods' Delivery To Russia
EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen on Monday urged China to limit the delivery of dual use goods to Russia which end up being used in its war against Ukraine.
EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen on Monday urged China to limit the delivery of dual use goods to Russia which end up being used in its war against Ukraine.
"More effort is needed to curtail delivery of dual use goods to Russia that find their way to the battlefield," she said after talks in Paris with President Xi Jinping and French President Emmanuel Macron, warning that "this does affect EU-China relations".
- EU restates readiness to launch trade war with China over cheap importswww.theguardian.com EU restates readiness to launch trade war with China over cheap imports
Bloc ‘will not waver’ from making tough decisions to protect economy and security, says Ursula von der Leyen
The European Commission chief said she was “convinced that if the competition is fair” from China, then Europe “will have thriving durable economies”. But she said the “imbalances” caused by state support for Chinese industry leading to cut-cost products threatened jobs in Europe, and that was “a matter of great concern”. “Europe will not waver from making tough decisions needed to protect its economy and security,” she said.
- 'No to the Russian law!’ - Georgia protesters demand a ‘European future’www.aljazeera.com ‘No to the Russian law!’ Georgia protesters demand a ‘European future’
Violence has rocked Tbilisi as angry citizens fear Georgia will fall into ‘enemy hands’.
Crowds of protesters have been braving tear gas and water canons after more than two weeks of protest against the Georgian government’s draft law targeting civil society.
The new law would require non-profit entities (NGOs and media outlets) receiving more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad to register as “organisations pursuing the interest of a foreign influence”, with tough penalties for noncompliance of up to $9,000.
Mass demonstrations last year forced the government to withdraw a similar bill. This second attempt has given renewed energy to thousands of young people, from school pupils to university students, swelling a tide of discontent.
They believe their government has fallen under the influence of the Kremlin and is sabotaging their dreams of being part of Europe. Each night, the rallies have begun with the Georgian national anthem, as well as the EU’s, Ode to Joy.
- Emmanuel Macron’s urgent message for Europewww.economist.com Emmanuel Macron’s urgent message for Europe
The French president issues a dark and prophetic warning
- Latvia Starts Digging Ditches On Its Belarus Border Amid Concerns Of Attackcharter97.org Latvia Starts Digging Ditches On Its Belarus Border
A chain of fortifications will be created.
Along the Latvian border with Russia and Belarus, the military will create a chain of strongholds: defensive fortifications, obstacles and ammunition depots.
It is noted that the country plans to spend 303 million euros on this over five years.
According to the engineering inspector of the National Armed Forces (NAF) of Latvia, Lieutenant Colonel Kaspars Lazdiņš, the first defensive line will be erected at a distance of about a kilometer from the border with Russia, near the border point of Terehovo in the Lauda region. Anti-tank ditches are being dug there.
- Putin’s one-way ticket to The Hague: international law experts, judges, and diplomats on a hypothetical trial of the Russian dictatortheins.ru Putin’s one-way ticket to The Hague: international law experts, judges, and diplomats on a hypothetical trial of the Russian dictator
The Insider continues its series on international tribunals. A year after the International Court of Justice in The Hague issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin, a total of 44 countries have already expressed support for a special military tribunal to try Russian war criminals. The new ICC pres...
Addition for the archived version
A year after the International Court of Justice in The Hague issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin, a total of 44 countries have already expressed support for a special military tribunal to try Russian war criminals.
The new ICC president, Tomoko Akane, has expressed confidence that the Russian president will not escape accountability, and Putin has notably avoided traveling to countries where he could potentially be arrested.
Legal experts affiliated with the ICC and past international tribunals affirmed that the time for a fair trial will come — even if not immediately.
In the meantime, Ukrainian law enforcement officers are hard at work gathering evidence of Russian war crimes, thereby laying the groundwork for charges against specific perpetrators. Putting Putin himself on trial will be a difficult legal and logistical task, but it is one that most experts believe is feasible.
- Estonia proposes blocking Russia in the Baltic Sea in the event of a Russian attack on any of the Baltic statesen.socportal.info Estonian navy commander proposes blocking Russian Federation in the Baltic Sea
Estonia proposes to take such a step in case of aggression from Russia.The commander of the Estonian Armed Forces, General Martin Herem, has suggested that Western countries discuss and prepare for a possible blockade of the Russian Federation in the Baltic Sea.
The commander of the Estonian Armed Forces, General Martin Herem, has suggested that Western countries discuss and prepare for a possible blockade of the Russian Federation in the Baltic Sea. According to Herem, Estonia has the necessary means to achieve this goal, the Melitarny portal writes.
Herem pointed out that such a scenario is possible in the event of a Russian attack on any of the Baltic states and called on Poland, Sweden and Finland to take it seriously.
He pointed out that Estonia has mines and anti-ship missiles for a possible blockade of the Russian fleet.
The general explained that in the event of a Russian attack on the Baltics, it would be too late to think about defence; at the same time, the steps taken in advance would allow allies to provide air support to the Baltics.
It should be noted that Estonia is preparing for a possible attack from Russia. The country has strengthened its ground defence and modernised both anti-tank and anti-aircraft capabilities. Procurement of large calibre ammunition has begun. In the next two years, the country will put into service additional self-propelled howitzers, armoured personnel carriers, medium-range air defence and multiple rocket launchers.
We would like to add that many analysts believe that in the event of a victory in Ukraine, Russia may move on the Baltic states, as the Kremlin is paranoid about restoring the USSR to the borders in which it previously existed.
- Multiple European intelligence agencies accuse Russia of plotting sabotage across the continentwww.firstpost.com Multiple European intelligence agencies accuse Russia of plotting sabotage across the continent
The intelligence agencies have warned their governments that Russia has already begun to more actively prepare covert bombings, arson attacks and damage to infrastructure on European soil, directly and via proxies
European intelligence agencies issued a major warning and accused Russia of “plotting violent” acts of sabotage across the continent as the Russia-Ukraine war continues to escalate.
The intelligence agencies have warned their governments that Russia has already begun to more actively prepare covert bombings, arson attacks and damage to infrastructure on European soil, directly and via proxies. The Intelligence officials warned that the Russian forces have little to no regard for civilian lives while conducting such operations. Advertisement
According to The Financial Times (link behind paywall), the problematic assessment was conducted by the intelligence officials of three European nations. “We assess the risk of state-controlled acts of sabotage to be significantly increased,” said Thomas Haldenwang, head of German domestic intelligence.
“Russia now seems comfortable carrying out operations on European soil [with] a high potential for damage,” he said at a European security conference last month.
Examples of Russian sabotage
The proclamation from Haldenwang came just days after two German-Russian nationals were arrested in Bayreuth, Bavaria. They were arrested by the German police for allegedly plotting to attack military and logistics sites in Germany on behalf of the Kremlin.
Meanwhile, in the United Kingdom, two men were charged with having started a fire at a warehouse containing aid shipments for Ukraine, last month. Following the arrest the prosecutors accused them of working for the Russian government.
In Sweden, security services are investigating a series of railway derailment incidents and in Estonia, the country’s Internal Security Service said that the attack on the interior minister’s car in February, this year, was allegedly perpetrated by Russian intelligence operatives
Not only this, Russia was also accused of attempting to destroy the signalling systems on Czech railways by the European nation’s transportation minister, The Financial Times reported.
“The obvious conclusion is that there has been a real stepping up of Russian activity,” said Keir Giles, senior consulting fellow at Chatham House, the think-tank.
“One cannot tell if that’s a reflection of the fact that the Russians are throwing more resources at it; whether they are being more sloppy and getting caught; or whether western counter-intelligence has simply become better at detecting and stopping it,” he added.
NATO gets involved
One senior European government official said that the information about Russia’s malicious activities was being shared through Nato security services.
“The time had come to raise awareness and focus” about the threat of Russian violence on European soil,” he added. In light of this, NATO issued a statement on Thursday expressing its deep concern about growing “malign activities on allied territory” by Russia, and also citing what it said was an “intensifying campaign . . . across the Euro-Atlantic area”.
On Friday, Germany vowed consequences for Moscow — in a statement which was backed by EU and NATO over 2023 hacking attacks on the social democratic party of the county’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
- China to open drone production plant in Russiauawire.org China to open drone production plant in Russia
Chinese company Jitian Intelligent Equipment has announced its intention to build a drone manufacturing plant in Krasnodar, Russia. Preliminary reports suggest the facility will produce 20 unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) per month, reports the Russian news outlets CNews. The Chinese company reported...
Initially, the company will produce the Jtilep JT40 UAV, designed for agricultural use such as spraying fertilizers over crops. However, media reports highlight that the drones can also be deployed for surveillance of various facilities and patrol duties. Moreover, the Jtilep JT40 can carry payloads of up to 60 kg. The intended selling price for the drones is 2.9 million rubles ($31,624).
Preliminary reports suggest the facility will produce 20 unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) per month, reports the Russian news outlets CNews.
- 2024 European farmers’ protests: Europe’s climate agenda appears dead on arrival | Voxwww.vox.com How rioting farmers unraveled Europe’s ambitious climate plan
Road-clogging, manure-dumping farmers reveal the paradox at the heart of EU agriculture.
Imo a very good article outlining the contradictions that underlie EU farming policies from an outisder's perspective.
(via climate@slrpnk.net)
- Germany vows to fight violence against politicians after MEP seriously hurtwww.theguardian.com Germany vows to fight violence against politicians after MEP seriously hurt
Interior minister Nancy Faeser promises ‘tough action’ to protect democracy as political assaults rise
- EU says three Chinese electric vehicle makers have not supplied sufficient information for its anti-subsidy investigation, warns it would "use evidence available elsewhere to compute tariffs"www.euractiv.com EU says information from three Chinese EV makers insufficient
The European Commission has warned three Chinese electric vehicle makers that they have not supplied sufficient information for its anti-subsidy investigation, according to two people familiar with the case.
Warnings of this kind occur frequently in EU trade defence cases. Indeed, for all 10 past anti-subsidy cases against China for which measures are still in place, the Commission used such “facts available” to fill in certain gaps.
The companies -BYD, SAIC and Geely- have been given the right to respond to the warning.
The Commission, which oversees trade policy in the 27-nation European Union, launched an investigation in October into whether battery electric vehicles manufactured in China were receiving distortive subsidies and warranted extra tariffs.
The China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Machinery and Electronic Products (CCCME) said earlier this month that the investigation was stacked against Chinese manufacturers.
The investigation, officially launched on 4 October, can last up to 13 months. The Commission can impose provisional anti-subsidy duties nine months after the start of the probe.
- German police bust Europe's 'largest' scam call centerwww.dw.com German police bust Europe's 'largest' scam call center – DW – 05/02/2024
Investigators teamed up with colleagues from the Balkans and Lebanon in raids set up by months of intense surveillance. Authorities say the operation thwarted over €10 million in damages and led to 21 arrests.
- Estonia creating state-backed fund to directly invest into the equity of companies developing defense technologiesnews.err.ee Estonia creating €50 million defense investment fund
A €50 million fund that will invest in defense-related or dual-use technologies will be set up after the government backed a proposal by Prime Minister Kaja Kallas (Reform). It will launch this year.
The €50 million fund will mainly invest in companies operating in Estonia to alleviate excessive risks so the companies are attractive for private capital.
The detailed terms and conditions of the fund will be developed by the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Communications and the government plans to discuss them in July.
Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said this will strengthen Estonia's security and help boost the economy. The fund will help Estonian defense industry companies to develop and bring their products to the market.
"Estonia has a very highly developed technology sector, but there is a market failure in the use of this capacity to increase our national security. The state can help with seed funding here," she said, adding it will also create jobs.
- Eurovision vows to remove Palestinian flags or symbolswww.euronews.com Eurovision vows to remove Palestinian flags or symbols
Organisers of the Eurovision Song Contest have said they reserve the right to remove any Palestine flags from the competition, due to take place 7-11 May.
- French President reaffirms possibility of sending troops to Ukrainewww.france24.com Macron reaffirms possibility of sending troops to Ukraine
French President Emmanuel Macron reaffirmed he did not rule out sending troops to Ukraine, saying the issue would "legitimately" arise if Russia broke through Ukrainian front lines and Kyiv made such…
"I'm not ruling anything out, because we are facing someone who is not ruling anything out," said French President Emmanuel Macron when asked if he stood by comments earlier this year not excluding the sending of Western troops that sent shockwaves around Europe.
Macron said "if Russia decided to go further, we will in any case all have to ask ourselves this question" of sending troops, describing his refusal to rule out such a move as a "strategic wake-up call for my counterparts".
He described Russia as "a power of regional destabilisation" and "a threat to Europeans' security".