Крим: син фігуранта «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» записав відеозвернення напередодні оголошення вироку

Син фігуранта Бахчисарайської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» Ремзі Меметова, координатор «Кримської солідарності» Ділявер Меметов записав відеозвернення,у якому заявив, що кримськотатарський народ не прийме ярлик «терористів», передає проект Радіо Свобода Крим.Реалії.

«Сьогодні цих людей звинувачують у тероризмі і насильницькому захопленні влади. Всі ці огульні звинувачення на їхню адресу будуються лише на свідченнях лжесвідків та експертизах, що не витримують ніякої критики. Я з упевненістю можу сказати, що мій батько – не терорист. Я також впевнено можу сказати, що всі інші хлопці не мають ніякого стосунку до тероризму. Мусульмани – не терористи», – сказав Меметов в зверненні, яке опублікував у Facebook.

Північнокавказький окружний військовий суд у Ростові-на-Дону у понеділок, 24 грудня, винесе вирок чотирьом кримським татарам, фігурантам Бахчисарайського «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» Ремзі Меметову, Руслану Абільтарову, Енверу Мамутову і Зеврі Абсеїтову.

Фігуранти бахчисарайської «справи Хізб ут-Тахрір» 21 грудня виступили в Північно-Кавказькому окружному військовому суді в Ростові-на-Дону (Росія) з останнім словом. Жоден із них не визнав своєї провини. Всі вказали на «політично вмотивований» характер кримінальної справи.​

Російські прокурори просять призначити обвинувачуваним покарання у вигляді ув’язнення терміном від 10 до 17 років.

12 травня 2016 року в Бахчисараї російські силовики провели низку обшуків у будинках мусульман, кримських татар, а також у місцевому кафе. В результаті були затримані і звинувачені в тероризмі четверо бахчисарайців: Зеврі Абсеїтов, Ремзі Меметов, Рустем Абільтаров і Енвер Мамутов. Їх підозрюють в участі в організації «Хізб ут-Тахрір», визнаної в Росії терористичною.

Захисники заарештованих і засуджених у «справі Хізб ут-Тахрір» кримчан вважають їхнє переслідування мотивованим за релігійною ознакою. Адвокати відзначають, що переслідувані у цій справі російськими правоохоронними органами – переважно кримські татари, а також українці, росіяни, таджики, азербайджанці і кримчани іншого етнічного походження, які сповідують іслам. Міжнародне право забороняє запроваджувати на окупованій території законодавство держави, що окуповує.

Волкер висловив бажання зустрітися з Сурковим, як тільки звільнять українських моряків – ЗМІ

Спеціальний представник Держдепартаменту США Курт Волкер заявив, що зустрінеться із представником Росії Владиславом Сурковим у Москві, як тільки та сторона звільнить незаконно утримуваних українських моряків, повідомляє ТСН.Тиждень. За словами Волкера, він скасував свій грудневий візит до російської столиці, назвавши його наразі «неможливим» у зв’язку з обставинами.

«Нещодавно, як мені відомо, у президента Путіна була розмова з канцлером Меркель, де він послався на так званий законний процес всередині Росії, який, звісно, не є законним. Утім, навіть, якщо він послався на законний процес, через який мають пройти моряки, ми сподіваємося, що це буде зроблено якомога швидше, якщо докладати зусиль. Але найголовніше – це звільнити моряків якнайшвидше. В ідеалі – до Різдва», – зазначив він.

Спеціальний представник Держдепартаменту США щодо України Курт Волкер прибув 18 грудня з дводенним візитом до Києва. Тут він провів декілька зустрічей, зокрема, зустрівся із президентом України, спікером Верховної Ради та очільником оборонного відомства.

Читайте також: Волкер про полонених моряків, Керченську протоку і нові санкції проти Росії за Азов

Міністерство оборони України вказує, що міністр Степан Полторак обговорив із ним «питання регіональної безпеки та ситуацію в Азовському та Чорному морях, а також динаміку мілітаризації Росією окупованих територій Донбасу та Криму».

Попередній візит Волкера в Україну відбувся у вересні, коли він брав участь у форумі «Ялтинська європейська стратегія» в Києві.

Trump, Erdogan Agree to Coordinate US Pullout From Syria

President Donald Trump says he and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talked about the planned U.S. military pull out from Syria during a “long and productive call” Sunday.

Trump gave few details about his conversation. But he tweeted he and Erdogan discussed Islamic State, trade, and what he called “the slow and highly coordinated pullout of U.S. troops from the area.”

Erdogan’s office said in a statement he and Trump agreed to “ensure coordination between their countries’ military, diplomatic, and other officials to avoid a power vacuum which could result following any abuse of the withdrawal and transition phase in Syria.”

Erdogan said late last week that Turkey is postponing an operation against Kurdish forces in Syria in the wake of Trump’s decision.

Trump has declared Islamic State defeated and says it is time for other members of the anti-ISIS coalition to step in and clean up the last remaining pockets.

But his decision to leave Syria is unpopular among many in Washington, including within his own administration.

Trump’s defense secretary, Jim Mattis, and special envoy to the global coalition fighting Islamic State, Brett McGurk, have both resigned, at least in part, because of Syria.

But acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney told ABC’s This Week broadcast Trump will not change his mind.

“I think the president has told people from the very beginning that he doesn’t want us to stay in Syria forever…you’re seeing the end result now of two years of work.”

Mulvaney was asked about the Mattis and McGurk resignations and said it is “not unusual” for cabinet members to resign “over these types of disagreements.”

Republican Senator Bob Corker, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said Sunday he is “devastated” by the decision and calls the United States “unreliable.”

French President Emmanuel Macron said that he “deeply regrets” Trump’s decision to withdraw from Syria.

Meanwhile, witnesses say Turkish forces have started massing on the border of the northern Syrian town of Manbij controlled by U.S. forces and their Kurdish allies.

Convoys of troops, tanks, and other equipment began crossing the Turkish border overnight.

Turkish military officials have not given an exact reason why their troops have headed to Manbij.

But Turkey has angrily accused the United States and the Kurds of failing to carry out their deal to pull out of Manbij.

Turkey accuses the U.S.-backed YPG Kurdish militia, of being a terrorist group and tied to the Kurdistan Workers Party – which has been fighting a long insurgency for more Kurdish autonomy in Turkey.

 

Нова «кримська» резолюція ООН визнає Балуха, Сенцова і Куку політв’язнями

Ухвалена Генеральною Асамблеєю ООН резолюція щодо ситуації з правами людини в анексованому Росією Криму визнає утримуваних у російських в’язницях кримчан Володимира Балуха, Олега Сенцова і Еміра-Усеіна Куку політичними в’язнями.

Як повідомляє представництво України при ООН, в документі є заклик до Росії звільнити всіх українців, переслідуваних за політичними мотивами і яких «незаконно утримують в окупованому Криму і в Росії».

У березні 2014 року Росія анексувала український півострів Крим. Міжнародні організації визнали анексію Криму незаконною і засудили дії Росії, країни Заходу запровадили проти неї економічні санкції. Кремль заперечує анексію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості».

 

US Allies Reeling from ‘Trump Withdrawal’ Scramble in Syria

British and French officials are scrambling to determine how they can maintain military pressure on the Islamic State terror group once the United States has pulled out its ground forces from northeast Syria.

Both countries have said they plan to continue airstrikes and ground operations in Syria, but the timing and scope of the U.S. withdrawal, say officials still reeling from President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw U.S. forces, remains unclear and is complicating war-planning in London and Paris.

The British and French governments are trying also to gain a clearer understanding, say officials, of Turkish military intentions in northeast Syria, and when or if the Turks, as they have threatened, launch an offensive east of the Euphrates River to attack the Western-allied Kurdish Peoples’ Protection Units, or YPG.

The YPG is the main formation in the Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF, the West’s only ground partner in the fight against IS. Turkey has been restrained from moving into Syria’s Kurdish-controlled northeast in the past by the presence of U.S. troops. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he would delay an offensive possibly for several months, although the Kurds say his concession shouldn’t be taken at face value.

President Erdogan has threatened to smash the Western-allied Kurdish forces in northern Syria, arguing they are indistinguishable from militant Kurdish separatists in Turkey, who have waged a three-decade-long insurgency. Kurdish leaders hope Washington will continue to press the Turks to hold off. “It’s their duty to prevent any attack and to put an end to Turkish threats,” says Aldar Khalil, a senior Kurdish official.

In the meantime, they are renewing talks with Damascus, using the northeastern oil fields, which they control, as leverage to strike a semi-autonomy deal with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

A critical question for London and Paris, say defense officials in both capitals, is whether the YPG will be able to keep control of the 800 IS prisoners it holds, many from European countries.

Kurdish officials warned Friday French President Emmanuel Macron’s representative to Syria, François Senemand, that if Turkey does attack, it would create a chaotic situation in which they might not be able to spare the guards to make sure IS detainees are secure — let alone continue with an offensive against remaining IS formations along the border with Iraq.

The IS prisoners include two Britons accused of being members of the so-called “Beatles” murder cell, responsible for the torture and beheading of Western journalists and aid workers, including American reporters James Foley and Steve Sotloff.

The Kurds have long pleaded with European governments to repatriate foreign fighters to be prosecuted in their home countries, but to no avail, despite the Kurdish pleas being echoed by Washington and the families of journalists and aid workers murdered by IS.

Now there’s rising alarm in Western capitals that the U.S. withdrawal may trigger a chain of events that will lead to IS prisoners either escaping or being released by the Kurds, with the risk they could find their way back to the West, posing a major security headache for European governments. The Kurds say the only way to ensure their detention is for France and Britain to play a bigger military role in northern Syria. Some observers view the Kurds’ warning about IS detainees as an ultimatum.

“Under the threat of the Turkish state, and with the possibility of Daesh [Islamic State] reviving once again, I fear the situation will get out of control and we will no longer be able to contain them,” Ilham Ahmed, a Kurdish official told reporters Friday in Paris.

France has 200 special forces soldiers operating in Syria’s Kurdish northeast as well as artillery units, part of an anti-IS international coalition trying to root out remaining pockets of militant fighters.

French Defense Minister Florence Parly told a French radio station she disagrees with President Trump’s assessment that IS has all but been annihilated.

“It’s an extremely grave decision and we think, the job must be finished,” she said speaking three days after Trump tweeted his order for U.S. ground troops to depart Syria, declaring IS defeated. U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis resigned in protest midweek after he and other U.S. military and national security staff failed to persuade the U.S. leader to reverse his decision.

On Saturday, it emerged Brett McGurk, the special presidential envoy for the global coalition to counter IS, has also resigned in protest.

When Trump made his pull-out decision, McGurk was in Iraq briefing coalition partners about how the U.S. remained committed to keeping troops in Syria, both to finish off IS and counter Iran. His departure has added to fears that without the U.S. playing a leading role the 77-nation anti-IS coalition will fall apart.

Britain’s defense minister has also pledged to maintain British airstrikes on IS targets in Syria, saying that although the anti-IS coalition has rolled up the militant’ territorial caliphate, IS “as an ideology and as an organization has become more dispersed. He warns of a possible IS resurgence. “We recognize we’ve got to continue to keep a foot on the throat of Daesh,” said Gavin Williamson, using an Arab acronym for IS.

As well as mounting airstrikes, British commandos have been deployed in northern Syria. They are currently engaged with American special forces alongside the SDF in the mid-Euphrates valley, where an offensive has been underway since early September against 2,000 to 8,000 IS fighters, most of whom fled from Raqqa and Mosul when those cities fell.

Despite progress, including capturing the town of Hajin, the offensive there have been episodic reversals with IS mounting mobile counter-attacks under the cover of winter sandstorms and fog, say British and American officials. U.S. airstrikes have been crucial in the battle.

In October, the Kurds halted the offensive after Turkey bombarded Kurdish positions near Kobani, a town on the Turkish-Syrian border, where some of the Kurds’ IS prisoners are being detained.

Asked if British forces could continue to operate without considerable American military support, Williamson responded: “We’re going to continue to look at all our options.” Officials acknowledge Anglo-French options would be much reduced, if they’re unable to call on U.S. air support, something that the Pentagon has so far not clarified.

Some independent analysts have warned also that declaring victory over IS is premature. In a report issued last month by the International Center for Counter-Terrorism, a think tank based in The Hague, three analysts, Liesbeth van der Heide, Charlie Winter and Shiraz Maher, warned the militant group has the capacity to regroup.

“Its shift towards clandestine tactics has left it a more slippery foe,” they argued. “The organization has now changed trajectory, its overt insurgency devolving back into covert asymmetric warfare. Now, its focus is on hit-and-run operations geared towards undermining stability and discrediting the state. These are being deployed through a careful strategy of destabilization: IS sleeper cell networks are systematically working to subvert security in liberated territories,” they added in their report entitled, “The Cost of Crying Victory.”

Since Trump’s decision, other analysts have echoed their warning. “A U.S. pullout in Syria is a win for ISIS, Iran, Russia, & Assad,” tweeted Mike Pregent, an analyst at the Hudson Institute, a U.S.-based think tank, and former U.S. army intelligence officer. Pregent, who’s been highly critical of both Mattis and McGurk, arguing they have overseen a flawed strategy in Iraq and Syria, added: “We’ll see an ISIS resurgence & a further entrenched & aggressive Iran in Syria — all before Nov 2020.”

But President Trump, who has long favored a U.S. withdrawal from the Middle East, has received praise from some quarters. “Staying in Syria offers grave risk for the United States with no justifying security payoff,” says Kurt Couchman of Defense Priorities, a libertarian-leaning think tank. “Now that the Islamic State is reduced to remnants, and local forces are committed to containing them, it is in America’s interest to bring our troops home for the holidays.”

UN: Rights Violations Continue in E. Ukraine Conflict

As Ukraine enters its fifth winter of conflict, the United Nations says civilians continue to be victimized by widespread human rights violations and abuse perpetrated by both the government and Russian-backed rebels in Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine. The report issued by the U.N. Human Rights Office covers the three-month period between mid-August and mid-November.

Ukraine’s civil conflict, which began April 2014 appears to be at a stalemate. However, this has not stopped the warring parties from subjecting the civilian population to gross violations of human rights on both sides of the contact line. This refers to the 500-kilometer line of separation between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed separatist rebels.

The U.N. has documented hundreds of abuses of the right to life, deprivation of liberty, enforced disappearance, torture and ill-treatment, sexual violence, and unlawful or arbitrary detention.

The report describes the hardships endured by the population due to Ukraine’s worsening economic situation. U.N. Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, Kate Gilmore, said large segments of the population suffer from the socio-economic barriers created by the armed conflict. She said the elderly, children, disabled people and those displaced by the conflict are particularly vulnerable.

“Disproportionate restrictions on the freedom of movement along and across the contact line continue to disrupt people’s access to social entitlements, such as pensions and social benefits. This in turn unduly impedes their access to basic services, those that are essential for daily dignity, including, for example water, sanitation, heating and health care,” she said.

The U.N. report harshly criticizes Russia for continuously violating its international obligations as the occupying power in Crimea.

It documents dozens of human rights violations including stifling dissent, instilling fear and denying individuals their freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly. It notes Crimean Tatars are disproportionately affected by these measures.

Fewer French ‘Yellow Vests’ Take to Streets Ahead of Holidays

Fewer “yellow vest” protesters turned out across France on Saturday, yet tensions between demonstrators and police boiled over in Paris later in the evening on the well-known Champs-Elysees thoroughfare.

Police fired tear gas and used water cannons against demonstrators. A video showed a group of protesters surrounding and attacking several police officers who were on motorcycles. One officer appeared to point his gun at the protesters, but Paris police told the Associated Press he did not fire his weapon.

Nationwide protests, which began Nov. 17 against a planned fuel tax increase, have continued into a sixth week. They have morphed into protests largely against President Emmanuel Macron’s liberal economic reform policies.

Reacting to the movement, on Dec. 10 Macron made tax and salary concessions. He has largely kept out of the public eye since then.

​Smaller crowds

French officials estimated about 38,000 people had taken part in protests around the country Saturday, with Paris police estimating about 2,000 in the capital. By comparison, more than 280,000 people took part in nationwide protests Nov. 17. As many as 4,000 protesters were in Paris on Dec. 15.

On Saturday, police arrested 81 people nationwide, compared with several hundred arrests during nationwide protests two weeks ago, officials said.

Police were also called to protesters setting up roadblocks near France’s borders with Spain, Belgium, Italy and Germany.

Death toll rises to 10

Media reports said the death toll from the protests rose to 10 on Saturday, after a driver was killed overnight in southern France after driving into a truck that had been stopped by a roadblock.

The “yellow vest” movement was named after the safety vests French motorists are required to keep in their vehicles, which the protesters wear at demonstrations.

Ashdown, British Marine Who Led Bosnia, Dies at 77 

Paddy Ashdown, who died Saturday at age 77, was a former marine and British opposition politician who served as the top international envoy in Bosnia following the Yugoslav wars.

Ashdown stepped down from his post in Bosnia in 2006 after nearly four years in charge but had been at the forefront of peace efforts in the Balkans long before his stint. 

 

Taking over the role after Sweden’s Carl Bildt, Carlos Westendorp of Spain and Austria’s Wolfgang Petritsch, Ashdown quickly built a reputation as a no-nonsense implementer of tough measures to help the country recover from its 1992-95 war. 

 

During his mandate, Ashdown sacked corrupt officials and Bosnia completed some painful reforms aimed at strengthening central institutions at the expense of the two postwar entities — the Serbs’ Republika Srpska and the Muslim-Croat Federation.

Defense, tax reforms

They notably included defense reforms aimed at merging two ethnically divided armies into one, as well as police force and customs and tax reforms. 

 

In 2008, he was on the brink of being appointed as the U.N. envoy to Afghanistan but withdrew from the role, saying that he did not have the backing of the Afghan government. 

 

Born in India in 1941, and known as “Paddy” after the accent he acquired from spending part of his childhood in Northern Ireland, John Jeremy Durham Ashdown left school at 18 and joined the marines. 

 

He left the armed forces in 1971 after spending his early years in uniform in Northern Ireland, Borneo and Malaya. He joined the Foreign Office, which sent him as part of the British delegation to the United Nations in Geneva. 

 

Five years later he returned to Britain, where before entering politics he worked as a businessman and social worker. 

 

Ashdown’s gritty attitude and enormous energy levels were largely responsible for transforming the Liberal Democrats from political also-rans into a viable opposition party. 

 

Shortly after he took the reins of the party in 1988, support had dwindled to 3 percent. But Ashdown soon made some significant gains from the Conservative government and was polled in the early 1990s as the most-liked British party leader. 

 

His profile soared again in 1992 when he disclosed that, five years earlier, he had had a five-month-long affair with his former secretary, earning him the nickname “Paddy Pantsdown” in The Sun tabloid.  

At his final elections in 1997, the Liberal Democrats won 19 percent of the vote, securing the party 46 seats, then a record showing for a third party in Britain. 

 

Ashdown was staunchly pro-federalist toward Europe and favored a common European foreign and defense policy independent of the United States. 

 

He campaigned for Britain to stay in the European Union in the 2016 referendum and, after losing, founded a cross-party centrist movement called More United.

 

He was knighted under his real name of Jeremy in 2000 and was made a member of Parliament’s upper House of Lords. 

 

Married, with two children, Ashdown lived in Yeovil, southwest England. 

Malta, Italy Refuse to Allow Hundreds of Migrants to Disembark

More than 300 migrants were rescued Friday off the coast of Libya by the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms. But now they are facing Christmas at sea after Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said Italian ports are closed and they will not be allowed to disembark.

The rescue was carried out by the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms, which said it had saved the migrants aboard three vessels that were in distress from certain death at sea off the Libyan coastline. This included men, women, children and babies suffering from the cold winter temperature.

The NGO said Malta refused to accept the migrants and would not provide any needed food supplies. Open Arms founder Oscar Camps said among those rescued were pregnant women and a mother with her two-day old baby born on a Libyan beach. Camps asked that the case of the newborn who had spent 24 hours at sea be dealt with urgently by Malta.

A Maltese coastguard helicopter agreed early Saturday morning to airlift the mother and her baby. They were then taken to the Mater Dei hospital on the island, though the Maltese government said it would do no more than that.

Proactiva Open Arms asked Italy to allow them to disembark, but Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said Italian ports are closed. And on twitter Salvini added: “For the traffickers of human beings and those who help them, the fun is over.”

Camps angrily responded with his own tweet saying that one day Salvini’s rhetoric would be over and his descendants would be ashamed of his behavior in the decades to come. With just days to Christmas, the fate of these 300-plus migrants remains unclear.

The situation in this area of the Mediterranean has become increasingly complicated this year after a populist government came to power in Italy last March and stated clearly that it would behave quite differently than the preceding government in regards to immigration policies. The new government announced it was closing its ports to vessels carrying migrants and called on the EU to share the burden of the endless flow of migrants from Africa.

According to the International Organization for Migration, more than 1,300 migrants have drowned this year alone in their efforts to make the crossing from Africa to Malta or Italy. 

Справу про розкрадання торговельного флоту скерували до суду – НАБУ

Обвинувальний акт стосовно підозрюваних у справі «Сі Трайдент» скерували до суду 21 грудня – про це 22 грудня повідомляє Національне антикорупційне бюро.

Акт стосується колишнього директора приватного акціонерного товариства «Сі Трайдент», яке належить державі, та екс-директора судноплавної компанії «Zealand Holdings». НАБУ звинувачує їх у привласненні, розтраті або заволодінні майном шляхом зловживання службовим становищем.

Про завершення розслідування цієї справи НАБУ повідомило в липні 2018 року.

За даними слідства, колишній президент підприємства «Сі Трайдент» спільно зі службовими особами Міністерства інфраструктури, колишнім директором компанії «Zealand Holdings Inc.» упродовж 2012 року продали за заниженими цінами морські торговельні судна «African Lark», «Etna», «Elbrus» та «Everest», які належали міністерству.

За висновками НАБУ, унаслідок цих дій державі завдали збитків на понад 219 мільйонів гривень.

Досудове розслідування у справі детективи НАБУ розпочали в 2015 році. У січні 2018-го колишньому президенту «Сі Трайдент» повідомлено про підозру в злочині за статтею 191 Кримінального кодексу – привласнення, розтрата майна або заволодіння ним шляхом зловживання службовим становищем. Керівника підприємства тоді ж взяли під варту.

Наразі підприємство «Сі Трайдент» перебуває в стані припинення.

«Кожен їхній успіх – це збережені життя на передовій». Порошенко привітав українських дипломатів

Президент України Петро Порошенко 22 грудня привітав українських дипломатів з професійним святом.

«Майже п’ять років пліч-о-пліч з українським військом наші дипломати протистоять російській агресії. Кожен їхній успіх на дипломатичній ниві – це збережені життя наших героїв на передовій. Кожна їхня домовленість про зміцнення підтримки України – це посилення нашої стійкості на фронті і висхідного розвитку в інтересах європейського майбутнього держави», – написав президент у Фейсбуці.

Порошенко подякував дипломатам за те, що завдяки їхнім діям на міжнародній арені послаблюються аргументи російської пропаганди і зміцнюється проукраїнська глобальна коаліція.

«Де б не проявила себе російська отрута, там завжди на сторожі український дипломат, навіть якщо йдеться про захист української автокефалії. Пишаюсь бути частиною нашої великої і славної сім’ї українських дипломатів. Вітаю вітчизняну дипломатію з професійним святом», – наголосив президент.

Раніше голова МЗС України Павло Клімкін у колонці для американського ЗМІ Politico зазначив, що захоплені біля берегів Криму 25 листопада українські моряки не порушили жодного закону. Міністр наголосив на злочинних діях президента Росії Володимира Путіна, а також закликав Захід спільно діяти, аби звільнити моряків.

UN Tells Britain to Let Assange Leave Ecuador Embassy

U.N. rights experts called on British authorities Friday to allow WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to leave the Ecuador embassy in London without fear of arrest or extradition.

The U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention reiterated its finding published in February 2016 that Assange had been de facto unlawfully held without charge in the embassy, where he has now been holed up for more than six years.

He initially took asylum to avoid being extradited to Sweden, where authorities wanted to question him as part of a sexual assault investigation. That investigation was dropped.

Bail violation

Assange, whose website published thousands of classified U.S. government documents, denied the Sweden allegations, saying the charge was a ploy that would eventually take him to the United States where prosecutors are preparing to pursue a criminal case against him.

Britain says Assange will be arrested for skipping bail if he leaves the embassy, but that any sentence would not exceed six months, if convicted. It had no immediate comment on the experts’ call, but in June, foreign office minister Alan Duncan said Assange would be treated humanely and properly.

“The only ground remaining for Mr. Assange’s continued deprivation of liberty is a bail violation in the UK, which is, objectively, a minor offense that cannot post facto justify the more than six years confinement that he has been subjected to since he sought asylum in the Embassy of Ecuador,” the U.N. experts said in a statement.

“It is time that Mr. Assange, who has already paid a high price for peacefully exercising his rights to freedom of opinion, expression and information, and to promote the right to truth in the public interest, recovers his freedom,” they said.

​Ecuador rules

Lawyers for Assange and others have said his work with WikiLeaks was critical to a free press and was protected speech.

The experts voiced concern that his “deprivation of liberty” was undermining his health and could “endanger his life” given the disproportionate amount of anxiety that has entailed.

Ecuador in October imposed new rules requiring him to receive routine medical exams, following concern he was not getting the medical attention he needed. The rules also ordered him to pay medical and phone bills and clean up after his cat.

Assange has sued Ecuador, arguing the rules violate his rights. An Ecuadorean court on Friday upheld a prior ruling dismissing Assange’s suit.

“We have lost again,” said Carlos Povedo, Assange’s attorney in Ecuador, adding that the legal team would consider bringing a case to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

Police Arrest Two in Gatwick Airport Drone Investigation

British police have arrested a man and a woman in connection with the drone incursions that have hampered operations at Gatwick Airport for three days.

No other information about the detainees has been released.

Sussex police said in a statement early Saturday that the arrests were made late Friday.

The statement said the investigation is “still ongoing and our activities at the airport continue to build resilience to detect and mitigate further incursions from drones, by deploying a range of tactics.”

The closing down of the runway at Britain’s second largest airport because of the drones has disrupted flights and has affected hundreds of thousands of passengers.

Gatwick shut down late Wednesday after the first drone sightings and reopened on a limited basis Friday. By Friday afternoon, however, flights were suspended again, following reports of additional drone sightings. Later Friday, the airport’s runway reopened.

Sussex Police Superintendent Justin Burtenshaw said the number of drone sightings at Gatwick has been “unprecedented.”

Gatwick, 45 kilometers (29 miles) south of London, is Britain’s second largest airport.Its shutdowns have affected flights at London’s main airport, Heathrow, as well as other hubs across Europe.

More than 43 million passengers a year travel through Gatwick.

Report Puts Russia, China and Iran in Line for Sanctions for Election Meddling

Voters who went to the polls last month in the United States’ midterm elections can rest assured that their votes were registered and counted properly.

However, a new report by the U.S. intelligence community concluded Americans were subjected to ongoing influence operations and disinformation campaigns by several countries, a finding that could trigger automatic sanctions.

“The activity we did see was consistent with what we shared in the weeks leading up to the election,” Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats said in a statement late Friday.

“Russia, and other foreign countries, including China and Iran, conducted influence activities and messaging campaigns targeted at the United States to promote their strategic interests,” he added.

Early signs were there

In the months leading up to the November vote, intelligence and security officials, and analysts had expressed concerns that countries like Russia and even non-state actors might seek to physically compromise U.S. voting systems.

But the fears, based on evidence Russian hackers had accessed some U.S. state and local systems, such as voter databases, in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election did not play out according to the new assessment.

“At this time, the intelligence community does not have intelligence reporting that indicates any compromise of our nation’s election infrastructure that would have prevented voting, changed vote counts, or disrupted the ability to tally votes,” Coats said.

The report, required under an executive order signed by President Donald Trump in September, supports the initial assessment by Homeland Security officials the day of the election and in the weeks that followed.

“There were no indications at the time of any foreign compromises of election equipment that would disrupt the ability to cast or count a vote,” Christopher Krebs, director of the DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said a week after voters went to the polls.

Report could spur new sanctions

The new report now goes to the U.S. attorney general and to the Department of Homeland Security, which have 45 days to review the findings. Should they concur with the intelligence community’s assessment, Russia, China and Iran could be slapped with new sanctions.

Those measures could include blocking access to property and interests, restricting access to the U.S. financial system, prohibiting investment in companies found to be involved, and even prohibiting individuals from entering the United States.

Additionally, the president’s executive order authorizes the State Department and the Treasury Department to add additional sanctions, if deemed necessary.

But as in the aftermath of the 2016 election, when the CIA and FBI concluded with “high confidence” that Russia sought to undermine confidence in the U.S. electoral process and help then-candidate Donald Trump win election, gauging the success of the 2018 meddling efforts is difficult.

“We did not make an assessment of the impact that these activities had on the outcome of the 2018 election,” Coats cautioned in his statement. “The U.S. intelligence community is charged with monitoring and assessing the intentions, capabilities and actions of foreign actors; it does not analyze U.S. political processes or U.S. public opinion.”

‘Witch hunt’

That impact will likely be debated in U.S. political circles, fueled in part by the president’s own attacks against the ongoing special counsel investigation into Russia’s activities and into possible collusion with Trump’s own campaign staff.

Trump has repeatedly dismissed the investigation as a “witch hunt.”

Still, some lawmakers see the new intelligence community assessment as reason to act.

“The Russians did not go away after the 2016 election,” Sen. Mark Warner, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in a statement.

Warner, who previously criticized the president’s executive order for failing to lay out strong, clear consequences for election meddling, said it was no surprise China and Iran tried to manipulate American voters, and that the problem will only get worse.

“We’re going to see more and more adversaries trying to take advantage of the openness of our society to sow division and attempt to manipulate Americans,” he added. “Congress has to step up and enact some much-needed guardrails on social media, and companies need to work with us so that we can update our laws to better protect against attacks on our democracy.”

Executive order praised

Former officials have urged patience, praising the executive order as a good start and cautioning it will take time to see how well it works.

“I don’t know that it will be a complete solution,” said Sean Kanuck, a former intelligence officer for cyber issues, said when the order was first introduced. “I doubt it will completely change the incentive-cost-benefit analysis of the other side.”

Even after the executive order was unveiled, U.S. officials, as well as social media companies, continued to turn up evidence that Russia and others tried to meddle in the 2018 U.S. midterm election.

In October, the U.S. Justice Department unsealed an indictment against 44-year-old Elena Alekseevna Khusyaynova, 44, of St. Petersburg, charging her with helping to finance disinformation campaigns on social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter, targeting both Republican and Democratic voters.

As with previous efforts, the accounts were designed to make it appear as though they belonged to American political activists and some managed to generate tens of thousands of followers.

Later that month, Facebook said it had removed 82 accounts, pages or groups from its site and from Instagram that originated in Iran and targeted liberal U.S. voters.

But U.S. officials and experts have also warned that the heavy focus on social media and influence campaigns, and the lack of evidence of tampering with U.S. voting systems and databases, should not be seen as a victory.

Saving ‘best tricks for 2020’

They say that just as the U.S. has hardened its systems against attacks and intrusions, cyber adversaries like Russia have been watching and learning, with their eyes perhaps on a much more significant target.

“The Russians were going to save their best tricks for 2020,” said William Carter, deputy director, Technology Policy Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies, predicted in the days before the U.S. midterm elections in November.

“They’re going to let us chase our tails in 2018 and look for them where they’re not,” he added.

Італійська компанія визнала постачання обладнання для заводу в анексованому Криму

В італійській компанії Bertolaso підтвердили факт постачання обладнання для нового заводу агрофірми «Золота Балка» в анексованому Росією Криму. Про це в ефірі Радіо Крим.Реалії 21 грудня повідомила кореспондентка Радіо Свобода.

Представник комерційного відділу компанії Bertolaso Лука Карассі повідомив кореспонденту Радіо Свобода в Римі, що два місяці тому компанія поставила фірмі «Золота Балка» для заводу в Сімферополі машину для миття, наповнення та закупорювання пляшок.

«Контракт підписаний з Росією, агрофірма «Золота Балка» – Росія, але ми знали, що наш товар призначений для встановлення на кримському підприємстві. Спочатку замовлення було оформлене із «Золотою Балкою» з офісом у Криму, потім адреса фірми змінилася, і на прохання клієнта остаточний контракт із продажу підписали з Росією», – сказав Карассі.

Читайте також: В окупованому Криму суд залишив під арештом ще двох українських моряків​

Він додав, що, на його думку, компанія «мала справу напряму з росіянами».

«Все законно, нічого підозрілого ми не бачимо. Ми продаємо машинне обладнання різним клієнтам, а де вони його встановлюють – нас не ікавить. Ми розглядаємо Крим як сприятливий регіон для ведення бізнесу з великим потенціалом для розвитку. Якщо ви питаєте про санкції та моральну сторону питання, я закінчую розмову», – заявив представник комерційного відділу італійської компанії.

Решта італійських компаній, які, як стверджують представники заводу агрофірми «Золота Балка», також постачали кримському підприємству обладнання, детально не коментували ситуацію.​

Представник компанії Gortani у телефонній розмові з кореспондентом Радіо Свобода спростував факт співпраці з кримським заводом, хоча її логотип і телефонний номер видно на відеопрезентації «Золотої Балки». Водночас компанії Innotec та Robino&Galandrino не підтвердили і не спростували інформацію про співрацю з кримським підприємством.

Читайте також: Вино з нотками санкцій: як італійські компанії постачають обладнання до Криму (рос.)

Посольство України в Римі постачання обладнання до анексованого Криму вважають порушенням європейського законодавства. Як повідомили в посольстві, Україна разом з європейськими партнерами реагуватиме на ці факти. Українські дипломати вже адресували усім чотирьом компаніям запити щодо можливої співпраці з фірмою «Золота Балка», проте відповідей наразі не отримали.

Новий завод аграрної компанії «Золота Балка» запустили в анексованому Севастополі 12 грудня.

Верховна Рада України офіційно оголосила 20 лютого 2014 року початком тимчасової окупації Криму і Севастополя Росією. Міжнародні організації визнали окупацію і анексію Криму незаконними і засудили дії Росії. Країни Заходу запровадили низку економічних санкцій. Росія заперечує окупацію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості».

Полторак обговорив із британським держсекретарем створення «офісу друзів України» – Міноборони

Міністр оборони України Степан Полторак обговорив в Одесі із Державним секретарем з питань оборони Гевіном Вільямсоном спільні заходи у відповідь на загострення ситуації у Чорному морі, повідомило українське оборонне відомство на своєму сайті.

За його словами, була ухвалена домовленість щодо створення «офісу друзів України», щоб координувати дії щодо надання допомоги у реформуванні Збройних сил, Військово-Морських сил, а також нарощування бойових спроможностей ВМС Збройних сил України.

«Рішення, які ми прийняли, пов’язані з початком роботи з підготовки морських піхотинців. Вже в січні в Україну прибуде група військовослужбовців Військово-морських сил Великої Британії для організації взаємодії, планування спільних навчань, а також визначення необхідної матеріально-технічної допомоги Збройним Силам України, безпосередньо Військово-Морським Силам», – заявив Степан Полторак.

25 листопада російські прикордонники ФСБ у Керченській протоці відкрили вогонь по українських кораблях і захопили три судна з 24 моряками. Українська влада визнає їх військовополоненими.

Дії Росії в районі Керченської протоки критикують у низці європейських країн і США. У НАТО заявили, що уважно стежать за розвитком подій у Керченській протоці і закликали до стриманості й деескалації напруги.

В архіві КДБ знайшли картку на ім’я предстоятеля Латвійської православної церкви

Як зазначено в картці, Олександра Кудряшова завербували в агенти КДБ під псевдонімом «Читач» у січні 1982 року

UK Defense Chief Takes Black Sea Ride on Ukrainian Gunboat

Britain’s defense minister has taken a ride aboard a Ukrainian naval vessel in the Black Sea in a gesture of support after last month’s naval clash between Russia and Ukraine.

On November 26, Russian coast guard vessels fired upon and seized three Ukrainian naval ships in the Black Sea as they tried to sail to Ukrainian ports on the nearby Sea of Azov. Russia also detained the ships’ 24 crewmen.

U.K. Defense Minister Gavin Williamson went to sea Friday on a vessel similar to one of the seized Ukrainian gunboats with Ukrainian Defense Minister Stepan Poltorak.

Williamson’s visit followed the arrival earlier this week of a British warship at the Ukrainian port of Odessa, located on the Black Sea. Poltorak was given a tour of the British vessel.

ЄС продовжив економічні санкції щодо Росії

Ці заходи спрямовані на фінансовий, енергетичний та оборонний сектори, а також на область товарів подвійного використання

Violations Increase in DRC’s North Kivu Province as Security Worsens

The United Nations reports human rights violations have surged over the past two years in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s North Kivu Province as security in that conflict-ridden region has worsened.

A report issued by the U.N. human rights office documents hundreds of cases of violations against civilians in North Kivu province between January 2017 and October 2018. It said a significant increase in the number of armed groups fighting against each other and the Congolese security forces has led to escalating abuse.

The report found that two-thirds of the human rights violations are committed by armed groups, and government army and security forces are to blame for one-third.

Together, it said the number of violations and abuses occurring in North Kivu province amounts to one-third of all the human rights violations documented throughout the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Human Rights spokeswoman, Marta Hurtado said civilians are victims of extra-judicial killings, torture, forced labor and other forms of abuse.

She said sexual violence is on the rise, and women and children often are kidnapped for purposes of sexual exploitation. She added that rapes and gang rapes are being committed by all armed groups as a tactic of war.

“In cases where one group thinks that a specific community has been collaborating or likely collaborating with another group, they do rape women and girls there, and explicitly say it is to punish the whole community for their alleged involvement with another group,” she told VOA.

Hurtado said internal displacement is soaring as thousands of people flee their homes to escape the violence. And instability in the region, she said, is affecting the emergency response to the Ebola epidemic and the likely spread of the disease.

The authors of the report fear insecurity in North Kivu could undermine the political rights of the population.

Presidential elections in DRC were to have taken place next Sunday but have been postponed to December 30. The U.N. says violence in the province could discourage many people from going to the polls, thereby preventing many from participating in this democratic process.