Artist Uses Iraq Refugees, War Veterans in Radio Project

In 2016, an Iraqi-American artist sat down with Bahjat Abdulwahed — the so-called “Walter Cronkite of Baghdad” — with the idea of launching a radio project that would be part documentary, part radio play and part variety show.

 

Abdulwahed was the voice of Iraqi radio from the late 1950s to the early 1990s, but came to Philadelphia as a refugee in 2009 after receiving death threats from insurgents.

 

“He represented authority and respectability in relationship to the news through many different political changes,” said Elizabeth Thomas, curator of “Radio Silence,” a public art piece that resulted from the meeting with Abdulwahed.

 

Thomas had invited artist Michael Rakowitz to Philadelphia to create a project for Mural Arts Philadelphia, which has been expanding its public art reach from murals into new and innovative spaces.

 

After nearly five years of research, Rakowitz distilled his project into a radio broadcast that would involve putting the vivacious and caramel-voiced Abdulwahed back on the air, and using Philadelphia-area Iraqi refugees and local Iraq war veterans as his field reporters. It would feature Iraqi music, remembrances of the country and vintage weather reports from a happier time in Iraq.

 

“One of the many initial titles was “Desert Home Companion,” Rakowitz said, riffing on “A Prairie Home Companion,” the radio variety show created by Garrison Keillor.

Rakowitz recorded an initial and very informal session with Abdulwahed in his living room in January 2016. Two weeks later, Abdulwahed collapsed. He had to have an emergency tracheostomy and was on life support until he died seven months later.

 

At Abdulwahed’s funeral, his friends urged Rakowitz to continue with the project, to show how much of the country they left behind was slipping away and to help fight cultural amnesia.

 

Rakowitz recalibrated the project, which became “Radio Silence,” a 10-part radio broadcast with each episode focusing on a synonym of silence, in homage to Abdulwahed.

 

“The voice of Baghdad had lost his voice,” Rakowitz said, calling him a “narrator of Iraq’s history.”

 

It will be hosted by Rakowitz and features fragments of that first recording session with Abdulwahed, as well as interviews with his wife and other Iraqi refugees living in Philadelphia.

 

Rakowitz and Thomas also worked with Warrior Writers, a nonprofit based in Philadelphia that helps war veterans work through their experiences using writing and art.

 

The first episode, on speechlessness, will launch Aug. 6. It will be broadcast on community radio stations across the country through Prometheus Radio Project.

One participant is Jawad Al Amiri, an Iraqi refugee who came to the United States in the 1980s. He said silence in Iraq has been a way of life for many decades.

 

“Silence is a way of survival. Silence is a decree by the Baath regime, not to tell what you see in front of your eyes. Silence is synonymous with fear. If you tell, you will be put through agony,” he said at a preview Tuesday of the live broadcast. He said he saw his own sister poisoned and die and wasn’t allowed to speak of it.

 

When he came to the U.S. in 1981, his father told him: “We send you here for education and to speak for the millions of Iraqis in the land where freedom of speech is practiced.”

 

Lawrence Davidson is an Army veteran who served during the Iraq War and works with Warrior Writers also contributed to the project. He said the project is a place to exchange ideas and honestly share feelings with refugees and other veterans.

 

The project kicks off on July 29 with a live broadcast performance on Philadelphia’s Independence Mall — what Rakowitz calls the symbolic home of American democracy. It will feature storytelling, food from refugees and discussions from the veterans with Warrior Writers.

Stories of Survival, Women to Highlight Toronto Film Festival

Stories of survival in turbulent times, including David Gordon Green’s world premiere of Stronger about a victim of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, are among the highlights in store at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival.

Angelina Jolie’s First They Killed My Father, set in Cambodia during the Khmer Rouge reign, and horror mystery Mother! by Darren Aronofsky, starring Jennifer Lawrence and Javier Bardem, were also among the films announced Tuesday in the first look at the festival’s lineup for 2017.

Audiences can also catch social satire Downsizing, directed by Alexander Payne and starring Matt Damon, and George Clooney-directed crime-comedy Suburbicon. Guillermo del Toro’s fantastical The Shape of Water will also screen.

The Toronto event, which kicks off September 7, has become one of the world’s largest film festivals, known for debuting critically acclaimed films that have later won Academy Awards for best picture.

Stronger stars Jake Gyllenhaal as Jeff Bauman, who lost both his legs during the Boston Marathon, and Tatiana Maslany as his girlfriend.

“It’s a moment of incredible transformation, disruption, change, challenge, so I think you’ll see that reflected in the films we’re showing,” said Piers Handling, chief executive and director of the film festival, now in its 42nd year.

“One of the ideas that struck me is the whole notion of survival,” he said about the films announced so far. “It seems to be a topic that a lot of people are thinking about.”

Hany Abu-Assad’s The Mountain Between Us, starring Idris Elba and Kate Winslet, is about two strangers stranded on a mountain after surviving a plane crash.

Jennifer Baichwal and Nicholas de Pencier’s Long Time Running is a documentary about the 2016 tour of The Tragically Hip, a Canadian rock band, as frontman Gord Downie battles terminal brain cancer.

Organizers did not announce which film would kick off the 10-day festival, but said the world premiere of C’est La Vie! by Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano, the duo behind The Intouchables, would close.

Women will also grab the festival spotlight, with Haifaa Al Mansour’s Mary Shelley and Angela Robinson’s Professor Marston & the Wonder Women having their world premieres in Toronto.

“We don’t program for themes, but as you begin to step back … and you look at the films that you’ve chosen, some things begin to emerge,” Cameron Bailey, the festival’s artistic director, said in an interview.

The festival will run until September 17.

In ‘Detroit,’ Bigelow Revisits Still-burning Flames of 1967

Kathryn Bigelow hasn’t forgotten the out-of-body experience she felt when she won the best director Academy Award for her 2009 The Hurt Locker. At that moment, she became the first woman to win the award. None have been nominated since.

“The gender inequity that exists in the industry, I thought it would maybe be the beginning of that inequity not being quite so pronounced,” said Bigelow in a recent interview. “Sadly, that doesn’t seem to be the case. And I don’t know why that is. I just don’t know. But I sort of feel like on behalf of all the women who might yearn to tell challenging, relevant, topical, entertaining stories, that I was standing there for them. And that emboldened me.”

Boldness is not a fleeting quality for Bigelow. Since The Hurt Locker, she has, with the reporter-turned-screenwriter Mark Boal, continued to craft an ambitious, intrepid kind of cinema that marries visceral big-screen immersion with deeply researched journalism. Their previous collaboration, the Osama bin Laden-hunt thriller Zero Dark Thirty, proved an unparalleled flashpoint in both Hollywood and Washington, prompting debates over its representation of the role torture played in the manhunt.

“I’m the messenger. I didn’t invent the message,” she said. “I’m just compelled to make these challenging pieces. And I’m compelled by stories that are informational, that tell you what you didn’t know going in — that I didn’t know going in.”

Incident amid 1967 riots

Her latest film, Detroit, is a no less challenging dive into the violent soul of America, but this time, she’s on the home front. The film, also from a script from Boal, is about the Algiers Motel incident, a relatively little-remembered event that took place amid the 1967 Detroit riots — an uprising sparked by a police raid of an after-hours club — and a reaction to a long history of oppression of the city’s African-Americans. The riots, among the largest in U.S. history, left 43 dead and led to the deployment of thousands of national guardsmen to a Detroit that raged in fire and fury.

Detroit seeks to show the historical context and individual reality of the riots, which many say should be called a “rebellion.” Within the chaos was the particularly heinous act at the Algiers Motel. Three unarmed black males were killed in an encounter with police, and nine others (seven of them black) were beaten and terrorized. Three officers were charged with murder, as well as other crimes, but found not guilty.

Boal approached Bigelow about making a film about the incident shortly after a St. Louis County grand jury decided not to indict Officer Darren Wilson, whose fatal shooting of Michael Brown in August 2014 prompted the protests in Ferguson, Missouri. The relevance of the Detroit tale, Bigelow said, fueled her motivation for making it.

“There was something sadly, tragically contemporaneous about this story,” Bigelow said. ” ‘How can this conversation happen in a meaningful way?’ is what I walk away asking. I’m just telling this story in as authentic and truthful and honest a way as we could, given the information that is out there.”

Swept into a nightmare

The story for Boal began with Cleveland Larry Reed. During the riots, Reed (played by Algee Smith in the film) was an 18-year-old singer in the Dramatics, an up-and-coming Motown group whose concert was canceled that night. He and another bandmate hunkered down at the Algiers, only to find themselves swept into a nightmare. Reed, who met with Boal and later with Smith, never recovered from the ordeal; he gave up professional music, singing instead in church choirs.

“In the summer of 2014, I was drawn to this story after meeting Larry Reed and hearing him recount what had happened to him 50 years ago, and then, later on, hearing from other survivors of the Algiers,” Boal wrote in an email. “My idea for the movie was driven from the start by real people, being moved by the fine-grained particulars of what they went through.”

Smith, a 22-year-old actor from Saginaw, Michigan, described the set as a profoundly emotional one where the cast merely needed to “log on to our social medias for inspiration.” 

“We were shooting a movie about history but it felt like today,” he said.

He and other actors playing the terrorized victims weren’t given scripts for much of the production so that their reactions of shock and horror were more genuine.

“She wanted us to have a tomorrow’s-not-promised type of mindset,” Smith said. “We just got there and then the first day it was just total chaos. It was: ‘Put your hands on the wall.’ Screaming. I’m getting lightheaded because I’m breathing so hard in between takes. It was emotionally and physically draining every day for those first two weeks. Will Poulter (who plays the ringleader officer) broke down on set. In the middle of a scene, he just started crying. The whole set just stopped. Everyone stopped. Will went outside and I put my arm around him, but I just started crying, too.”

Not the perfect storyteller

Some may say Detroit is a story that ought to have been told by black filmmakers. Bigelow, who has spent her career either ignoring or exploding gender stereotypes, understands such criticism.

“Am I the perfect person to tell that story? Absolutely not,” Bigelow said. “But I felt honored to tell this story. It’s a story that’s been out of circulation for 50 years. And if it can encourage a conversation about race in this country, I would find that extremely encouraging and important.”

Her films, she said, are about creating empathy and, she hopes, dialogue. Earlier this year, she co-directed an eight-minute virtual reality film about park rangers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, The Protectors: Walk in the Rangers’ Shoes.

“Institutionalized racism is at the heart of the piece,” Bigelow said of Detroit. “I think the purpose of art is to agitate for change. But you can’t change anything unless you’re aware of it.”

Spanish PM Rajoy Heads to Court as Witness in Corruption Trial

Mariano Rajoy will on Wednesday become Spain’s first sitting prime minister to be called to court as he appears as a witness in a long-running graft trial that has rocked his conservative party and hurt him at the ballot box.

Rajoy returned to power for a second term last October with a severely diminished mandate, after a series of corruption scandals tainted several members of his People’s Party (PP) and turned off voters.

The prime minister’s court appearance turns the spotlight back on one of the most prominent cases at a delicate time for Rajoy, who no longer enjoys a majority in parliament and has to scrape together votes to get laws through.

He had sought to testify by videoconference, arguing that the journey to the court of San Fernando de Henares on the outskirts of Madrid would be a waste of taxpayer money. But the request was denied by Spain’s High Court.

The trial follows a long graft investigation into several city councils which are alleged to have received illegal financing from a network of companies.

Known in Spanish as the “Gurtel” case, after the nickname of supposed mastermind and businessman Francisco Correa, the probe ended up reaching several former high-ranking PP members and drew attention to an alleged party slush fund.

Former PP party treasurer, Luis Barcenas, is among those on trial on charges of organized crime, falsifying accounts, influence-peddling and tax crimes.

Rajoy is expected to be grilled about the alleged slush fund and his knowledge of party business in the early 2000s, when he held several senior positions in the PP.

He has previously denied receiving any illegal funds.

The prime minister has sought to distance himself over the years from this probe and other corruption scandals, but his turn as a witness is likely to be seized upon by opposition parties who have repeatedly called for him to step down.

That is unlikely to have any immediate consequences – left-wing parties including the Socialists and Podemos (“We Can”) have failed in their bids to oust Rajoy before, as they lack the clout in parliament and are divided on many fronts.

But it could still be damaging for the prime minister and his party.

“Corruption issues will continue to put a ceiling on the PP’s electoral aspirations,” Antonio Barroso, deputy director of research at Teneo Intelligence said in a note. “While Rajoy should be benefiting from [Spain’s] strong economic rebound, the ruling party has been losing support in the polls recently.”

Українські пауерліфтери здобули «золото» та «бронзу» на Всесвітніх іграх

Український пауерліфтер Сергій Білий став першим у важкій ваговій категорії на спортивних Всесвітніх іграх, що тривають у польському Вроцлаві. У вправі у присіданні спортсмен показав результат 407,5 кілограмів, жимі лежачи – 297,5 кілограмів та у становій тязі – 375 кілограмів. Загалом – 1080 кілограмів. Це новий світовий рекорд.

На 38 кілограмів менше підняв Дмитро Семененко і став третім.

Таким чином, 25 липня українські пауерліфтери здобули 4 нагороди для України на Всесвітніх іграх. Раніше у кошик «синьо-жовтих» принесли «срібло» Володимир Рисєв та «бронзу» – Андрій Наньєв.

Тепер в активі України 15 нагород: 3 золоті, 4 срібних та 8 бронзових. У неофіційному рейтингу серед збірних «синьо-жовті» посідають 10-е місце з 111 країн-учасниць щочотирирічних змагань із неолімпійських видів спорту.

26 липня українці змагатимуться у карате, пауерліфтингу, спортивній акробатиці, кікбоксингу, стрибках на батуті, спортивному орієнтуванні та академічному веслуванні.

Жителі передмістя Дніпра знову блокували дорогу, протестуючи проти руху вантажівок з гранітом

У вівторок жителі мікрорайону Чаплі у передмісті Дніпра влаштували акцію протесту проти руху великогабаритного вантажного транспорту їхнім селищем, передає кореспондент Радіо Свобода.

Живим «щитом» на пішохідному переході вони перекрили дорогу вантажівкам, які перевозять сировину з прилеглого гранітного кар’єру.

За словами учасників акції протесту, поблизу Чаплів розташовані два родовища граніту, де триває видобуток – Любимівське і Чаплинське, і три кар’єри. Як зазначали учасники акції, через активний рух вантажного транспорту з гранітом дорогою в населеному пункті будинки вкриваються тріщинами і руйнуються.

«Вантажівки тут не повинні рухатись – для цього є об’їзні шляхи. На підприємстві кажуть, що їм ніде їздити, але це не так. За селищем є 12 кілометрів дороги, але водії не хочуть в об’їзд, їм зручніше їхати прямо через наше селище», – сказала учасниця акції Любов Твардовська.

За даними міської ради, 18 липня виконком міськради ухвалив рішення про заборону руху вантажного транспорту через Чаплі та встановлення там заборонних дорожніх знаків. Відповідні знаки вже встановлювали кілька разів, однак уночі невідомі їх знімали.

Тепер жителі Чаплів вирішили охороняти знаки разом зі співробітниками муніципальної варти.

У середу жителі Чаплів анонсують нову акцію протесту – біля облради та облдержадміністрації.

Водночас, у вівторок голова Самарської районної в місті ради, до якої відносяться Чаплі, Юрій Федько заявив, що підтримує вимоги жителів щодо заборони руху вантажівок їхнім мікрорайоном і разом з ними клопотатимеперед Дніпропетровською обладміністрацією про будівництво об’їзної дороги поза селищем. Він також заявив, що домагатиметься, щоб гранітовидобувне підприємство, яке працює не в межах міста, а в Дніпровському районі, брало участь у благоустрої селища.

«Люди не вимагають закриття самого підприємства, адже це і робочі місця, і податки. Головне – щоб підприємство брало участь у благоустрої селища», – сказав Юрій Федько.

Попередня акція жителів Чаплів проти руху вантажівок відбулась у квітні

Тоді влада також заявляла про встановлення заборонних знаків, однак водії вантажівок продовжують їх ігнорувати.

Україна здобуває ще дві нагороди на Всесвітніх іграх та встановлює світові рекорди з пауерліфтингу

П’ятий день змагань на Всесвітніх іграх Україна розпочинає з перемог, повідомляє спеціальний кореспондент Радіо Свобода.

У пауерліфтингу у середній вазі українець Володимир Рисєв здобув «срібло». У присіданні українець підняв 360 кг, у жимі лежачи – 252,5, у становій тязі – 332,5. В сумі трьох вправ показав результат 945 кг та встановив світовий рекорд.

Його співвітчизник Андрій Наньєв виборов «бронзу». Українець підняв у усього 605 кг. Крім того Наньєв встановив світовий рекорд в жимі лежачи – 268,5 кг.

Тепер у кошику України 13 нагород: 2 золотих, 4 срібних та 7 бронзових.

Всесвітні ігри тривають у Вроцлаві з 20 липня. Церемонія закриття відбудеться 30 липня. Україна представлена у 20 видах спорту.

 

 

 

 

 

Російський омбудсман звинуватила Україну у створенні екологічних проблем у Криму

Уповноважений з прав людини Росії Тетяна Москалькова вказала на складну екологічну ситуацію в Криму і в Севастополі і звинуватила Україну в скиданні відходів у море до березня 2014 року. Про це вона заявила, виступаючи на координаційній раді уповноважених з прав людини в Росії 25 липня.

«У нас дуже важкий український спадок у Криму і в Севастополі, де прямо відходи скидаються в море… Зараз величезну роботу здійснює наш уповноважений, щоб хоча б підняти цю проблему і розвернути владу до її вирішення», – зазначила вона.

Докладніші дані про екологічну ситуацію в Криму, зокрема про обсяг відходів, що зливаються в море, Москалькова не озвучила.

Як повідомляють «Крим.Реалії»,  20 липня підконтрольний Кремлю голова Криму Сергій Аксьонов заявив, що очисні споруди в Сімферополі фактично не працюють, інфраструктура зношена майже на 100%, а їх модернізація та будівництво нового каналізаційного колектора оцінюється в 17 – 22 млрд рублів.

При цьому українські експерти запевняють, що очисні споруди в Криму виконують свою функцію краще, ніж у період 2011-2013 років. А навантаження на системи очищення на півострові скоротилося.

Тим не менш, у Криму жителі регулярно стикаються з проблемою викиду стічних вод у акваторію Чорного моря. Проблему в квітні цього року визнали в Роскомнадзорі. Російська влада Криму повідомляла, що 2016 року почнеться розробка проектів очисних споруд, щоб вже наступного року розпочати їх будівництво.

Верховна Рада України офіційно оголосила 20 лютого 2014 року початком тимчасової окупації Криму і Севастополя Росією. 7 жовтня 2015 року президент України Петро Порошенко підписав відповідний закон. Міжнародні організації визнали окупацію й анексію Криму незаконними і засудили дії Росії. Країни Заходу запровадили низку економічних санкцій. Росія заперечує окупацію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості».

British Foreign Minister: Ties With New Zealand to Remain Strong After Brexit

New Zealand will be one of the first nations Britain will strike a trade deal with once it formally leaves the European Union — a promise made Tuesday by visiting British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson.

Johnson held talks in Wellington with Prime Minister Bill English on the second day of his two-day visit to Britain’s former colony. 

Britain’s chief diplomat insisted that New Zealand would not be negatively affected once Brexit is a done deal.  “I’ll say this until I’m blue in the face,” Johnson affirmed, “Brexit is not, was not, will not be about Britain turning away from the world.” 

Johnson said New Zealand is “at or near the very front of the queue” of nations willing and ready to reach a bilateral trade pact with London.

Parents Abandon Campaign to Seek US Treatment for Baby Charlie Gard

The parents of the critically-ill British infant, Charlie Gard, dropped their legal bid Monday to send him to the United States for experimental treatment after new medical tests showed such treatment could no longer help. VOA’s Correspondent Mariama Diallo reports on the heart wrenching story of baby Charlie that attracted worldwide attention and sympathy.

Venezuela Maduro’s ‘Despacito’ Political Remix Backfires Quickly

Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro’s attempt to use Latin hit “Despacito” – which means ‘slowly’ – to inject some cool into his controversial new congress has backfired quickly.

Maduro’s unpopular leftist government on Sunday promoted a remixed version of “Despacito” to encourage Venezuelans to vote for the Constituent Assembly, which will have powers to rewrite the national charter and supersede other institutions.

“Our call to the ‘Constituent Assembly’ only seeks to unite the country … Despacito!” goes the Socialist Party-sanctioned remix of the catchy dance song, which was played during Maduro’s weekly televised show.

“What do you think, eh? Is this video approved?” a grinning and clapping Maduro called out to the crowd, which roared back in approval.

But Puerto Rican singers Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee on Monday said they do not approve at all.

“At no point was I asked, nor did I authorize, the use or the change in lyrics of “Despacito” for political ambitions, and much less in the middle of a deplorable situation that Venezuela, a country I love so much, is living,” Fonsi said in a message posted on Twitter.

Daddy Yankee, meanwhile, posted a picture of Maduro with a big red cross over it on Instagram.

“That you illegally appropriate a song (Despacito) does not compare with the crimes you commit and have committed in Venezuela. Your dictatorial regime is a joke, not only for my Venezuelan brothers, but for the entire world,” he said. “With this nefarious marketing plan, you only highlight your fascist ideal.”

Millions of Venezuelans have been staging months of protests against Maduro, a former bus driver and union leader narrowly elected to replace the late Hugo Chavez in 2013.

Some 100 people have died in the unrest, which has further hammered an imploding economy that is running short of food and medicine.

Critics say Maduro is trying to cement a dictatorship by pushing forward with the Constituent Assembly this Sunday. He says it is the only way to bring peace back to the convulsed nation.

‘Game of Thrones’ Author Teases 2 Possible New Books in 2018

Author George R.R. Martin has hinted at the possibility of not one but two new “Game of Thrones” books in 2018, whetting the appetites of fans who have been waiting for the next installment of the epic saga since 2011.

Martin, whose “A Song of Ice and Fire” novels were adapted into HBO’s hit medieval fantasy series “Game of Thrones,” currently is working on the sixth installment, “Winds of Winter,” continuing the story from 2011’s “A Dance With Dragons.”

“I am still working on it, I am still months away (how many? good question), I still have good days and bad days, and that’s all I care to say,” Martin wrote on his blog, grrm.livejournal.com, during the weekend.

“I do think you will have a Westeros book from me in 2018… and who knows, maybe two. A boy can dream…,” he said.

The seventh season of the television show, which premiered this month, already has advanced beyond the events of Martin’s published books.

There have been recent contradictory reports about “Winds of Winter” – that Martin had not even been started it or that he had finished it but was holding it back – and the author dismissed those as “equally false and equally moronic.”

“Game of Thrones” follows the epic story of warring families in a multi-generational struggle for control of the Iron Throne, which rules over the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros.

Martin has come under fire from avid “Game of Thrones” fans for taking so long to finish “Winds of Winter” and starting work on other projects. The author said in his blog post that he was working on a two-part history of Westeros’ Targaryen kings called “Fire and Blood,” with the first part to be released sometime late 2018 or early 2019.

A trailer for the HBO show, released last week, shows a brewing battle between Cersei Lannister, who currently sits on the Iron Throne, and Daenerys Targaryen, who has traveled with her army and dragons to reclaim her ancestral home.

The series will conclude next year with the eighth season, which will reveal who will sit on the Iron Throne. A series of spin-offs is being developed at HBO.

Next James Bond Film Set for November 2019, No Word on 007 Star

James Bond is returning to movie theaters in November 2019, producers said Monday, but they did not say who will play Britain’s most famous fictional spy.

Eon Productions and MGM studios said in a statement that the 25th Bond film will be released in U.S. theaters on Nov. 8, 2019, with a slightly earlier release in Britain.

They gave no title, casting or other details.

Britain’s Daniel Craig has played Bond in the last four films, including 2012’s Skyfall and 2015’s Spectre. The 2015 film took some $880 million at the global box office, according to film tracker BoxOfficeMojo.com.

His reprisal of the role for a fifth time has been the subject of much speculation after the actor said in 2015 that he would rather slash his wrists than play Bond again.

Callum McDougall, the executive producer of the Bond film franchise, told Britain’s BBC Radio last year that Craig, 49, was “absolutely the first choice. … We would love Daniel to return as Bond.”

Meanwhile, actors such as Idris Elba, Tom Hiddleston and Tom Hardy have all been named as potential candidates to step into the fast cars and sharply tailored suits of Bond, MI6’s secret agent 007.

With its futuristic gadgets, menacing super villains and larger-than-life explosions, the Bond series is the longest-running film franchise in history, with actors such as Sean Connery, Roger Moore and Pierce Brosnan inhabiting the role of the leading man.

The new film will be written by Neal Purvis and Robert Wade, who wrote the last four movies in the franchise.

IMF Warms to Eurozone Economy Amid Lower Political Risks

The International Monetary Fund is more optimistic about the economy of the 19-country eurozone after a run of elections saw populist politicians defeated and risks to its outlook abated.

 

In an update to its April projections published Monday, the IMF revised up its growth forecasts for many eurozone countries, including the big four of Germany, France, Italy and Spain, after stronger than anticipated first quarter figures.

 

Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, is projected to grow by 1.8 percent, up 0.2 percentage point on the previous estimate, while France is forecast to expand 1.5 percent, up 0.1 percentage point. Projections for Italy and Spain have been revised higher by a substantial 0.5 percentage point. The two are now expected to grow by 1.3 percent and 3.1 percent, respectively. All four are also expected to grow by more than anticipated in 2018.

 

Overall, the IMF expects the eurozone to expand by 1.9 percent this year, 0.2 percentage point more than its previous projection. That’s just shy of the IMF’s 2.1 percent forecast for the U.S., which was trimmed by 0.2 percentage point. However, it’s slightly ahead of Britain’s, whose projected growth was revised down 0.3 percentage point to 1.7 percent following a weak first quarter that raised concerns about the country’s economy ahead of its exit from the European Union.

 

The IMF’s eurozone upgrades come amid rising confidence in the bloc following a series of elections that saw populist politicians defeated, most notably in France, where Emmanuel Macron defeated the far-right candidate Marine Le Pen in May’s presidential election.

 

At the start of the year, political risks were considered the major hurdle facing the eurozone. There had been fears that radical changes in government could have seen more insular economic policies and further questions over the future of the euro itself.

 

“On the upside, the cyclical rebound could be stronger and more sustained in Europe, where political risk has diminished,” the IMF said in Monday’s report.

 

The lead eurozone economist at Oxford Economics, Ben May, thinks the IMF’s forecast may actually turn out to be too cautious. He’s predicting 2.2 percent growth as the region benefits from lower inflation, healthy global growth and a pick-up in business investment.

 

The IMF’s update came as a survey showed the eurozone economy slowed in July from a fast pace.

 

Financial information firm IHS Markit said Monday that its purchasing managers’ index for the region fell to a six-month low of 55.8 points in July from 56.3 the previous month.

 

The indicator still points to one of the strongest economic expansions in the past six years, with quarterly growth at a still-healthy 0.6 percent, down only slightly from the 0.7 percent signaled for the second quarter. Official second-quarter figures are due in early August.

 

Chris Williamson, the firm’s chief business economist, says it’s probably just a “speed bump,” with the economy “hitting bottlenecks due to the speed of the recent upturn.”

 

He noted that forward-looking indicators, such as new order inflows, suggest robust growth. As a result, job creation is “booming” as companies expand to meet demand.

 

The survey is likely to inform the ECB’s deliberations as it mulls when to start reining back its monetary stimulus. Last week, ECB President Mario Draghi sought to be neutral, worried that any indication of any change of course could cause the euro to surge. More clarity is expected at the next policy meeting on Sept. 7.

 

Much will depend on inflation. The chief purpose behind the ECB’s stimulus efforts, which has involved slashing interest rates and buying 60 billion euros ($69 billion) a month in bonds at least through the end of the year, is to get inflation up to its goal of just below 2 percent. In June, the annual rate of inflation was 1.3 percent.

 

Monday’s survey suggested that inflation pressures eased in July, which may reinforce Draghi’s belief that there isn’t “any convincing sign of a pickup in inflation.”

Україна здобула другу золоту нагороду на Всесвітніх іграх

У четвертий день змагань на спортивних Всесвітніх іграх, що тривають у польському Вроцлаві, українська збірна здобула цілий комплект нагород – «золото», «срібло» і «бронзу», повідомляє спеціальний кореспондент Радіо Свобода.

У пауерліфтингу Лариса Соловйова вчетверте стала чемпіонкою Всесвітніх ігор у середній ваговій категорії. Тепер українка – найтитулованіша спортсменка, адже досі нікому не вдавалося ставати чотириразовою переможницею цих ігор.

«Я ще не дуже розумію та не вірю, що знову перемогла. Потрібно якось переспати з цією новиною. Зараз адреналін і немає слів. Хочу присвятити цю нагороду своїй донечці, адже вона дуже хвилювалася за мене та підтримувала», – прокоментувала Соловйова.

У стрибках на батуті в парних виступах Микола Просторов та Дмитро Бедевкін показали другий результат, поступившись збірній Китаю.

«Бронзу» у спортивній акробатиці здобули Вероніка Габелок та Ірина Назімова.

Тепер у кошику України 11 нагород: 2 золоті, 3 срібні та 6 бронзових. У неформальному загальному заліку цих щочотирирічних змагань із неолімпійських видів спорту «синьо-жовті» посідають 14-е місце серед 35 країн-учасниць.

У вівторок, 25 липня, українські спортсмени боротимуться за нагороди в пауерліфтингу, стрибках на акробатичній доріжці, воднолижному спорті, карате, спортивному орієнтуванню та сквоші.

Trial Starts for Turkish Journalists in Key Press Freedom Case

The room in Istanbul’s main court house was packed as the trial of 17 journalists working for Cumhuriyet newspaper got underway. The trial is widely seen as pivotal for the future of press freedom in Turkey with Cumhuriyet one of the last remaining mainstream newspapers critical of the government and president.

The first day of the hearing Monday was devoted to reading the terrorist charges against the journalists. Most have been charged with “membership of a terrorist organization” or “actions that support a terrorist organization while not being a member.”

The charges have been widely used since the introduction of emergency rule, following last July’s failed coup, that has resulted in more than 50,000 people being jailed.

The 17 journalists on trial include some of the paper’s top executives, leading columnists and even a cartoonist. Speaking in his defense, Cumhuriyet editor in chief Kadri Gursel strongly condemned the charges, claiming prosecutors had broken the law in collecting evidence against him. He strongly refuted the evidence that included unsolicited texts from alleged supporters of exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen.

Ankara blames Gulen, who lives in self imposed exile in the Untied States, and his followers for being behind the coup attempt, in which more than 240 people died. Gursel is accused by the government of supporting Gulen and the Kurdish rebel group the PKK.

Gursel has for decades been one of the most outspoken critics of Gulen, and in the 1990’s was kidnapped and held for several weeks by the PKK.

Government dislikes editorial policy

A key part of the case against the journalists presented in Monday’s hearing was that Cumhuriyet changed its editorial policy, which prosecutors claim is evidence the paper is following Gulen’s agenda.

The change in policy cited by the prosecution included focusing on human rights violations in the ongoing crackdown on the Kurdish rebel group the PKK, and exposing links between President Recep Tayyip and his government, and Gulen before the coup attempt.

“The paper decided to cover human rights abuses during the state of emergency, and even before, abuses committed during military operations against the PKK, and highlighting the responsibility of the government for cooperating with Fethullah Gulen. All these are taboos in Turkish media today,” claims Erol Onderoglu, Turkey’s representative for Reporters Without Borders, the Paris based media freedom group, “Something which is purely editorial has been brought here to the courthouse today as a criminal activity.”

Cumhuriyet CEO Akin Atalay told the court the prosecution case against him and his fellow journalists is, “A complete legal murder.” Atalay accused prosecutors of seeking to either silence the paper or “take it over.”

Wider rights issues for Turkey

The Cumhuriyet case has become a focal point for growing concerns about media freedom in Turkey.

Before the start of the case hundreds of journalists, newspapers supporters, and members of parliament from the two main opposition parties marched from the nearby Cumhuriyet office to the Istanbul court house, chanting “rights, justice and you cannot silence the media.”

Erdogan has strongly backed the prosecution of journalists, insisting no one is above the law. He recently claimed the jailed journalists are being prosecuted for terrorism offenses, not for being journalists.

Cumhuriyet, the country’s oldest newspaper founded shortly after the creation of the Turkish Republic, has a long tradition of challenging and scrutinizing power. The case against it is increasingly seen as sending a message to wider Turkish society.

“It will be much more easier to silence all the rest of the small, diverse, media outlets critical of the government, after imposing silence on all these prominent journalists working at Cumhuriyet,” warns Reporters Without Borders Onderoglu.

 

France’s Macron Faces Grassroots Court Challenge Over Party Rules

French President Emmanuel Macron faced the first grassroots revolt from within his own camp on Monday when hundreds of activists asked a court to halt voting on new rules for the political party that helped him win power in May.

The challenge came on the heels of a poll showing a slump in the 39-year-old president’s approval rating after a series of politically testing events, including a budget row that prompted the head of the army to quit.

Members of Macron’s Republic on the Move party (LREM), which espouses a break with old ways of doing politics, are taking part in an electronic vote on new party statutes that is due to end on July 31.

The activists involved in the legal challenge say they number about 1,200, a fraction of the LREM’s total membership of more than 375,000, but they reveal a degree of discontent in the ranks with Macron’s forceful style of leadership.

The group says the disputed statutes would limit decision-making and future internal ballots to the LREM’s upper echelons.

“This ‘lockout’ exposes a lack of trust in party members and looks at odds with LREM [party] values,” they said.

“The lack of internal democracy is even more distasteful due to the fact that it’s all been done in a rush in the middle of the summer without proper consultation of activists.”

A party spokeswoman brushed off the accusations, saying LREM was giving a bigger role to grassroots members in its structures than other French parties and had further increased that power after consulting members earlier this month.

A ruling is expected this week on the court challenge after a hearing on Monday.

Macron, who swept to power on promises of non-partisan rule and an end to traditional Left-versus-Right politics, has had a tough month, marked by a public row over military spending cuts with top armed forces chief General Pierre de Villiers that led to de Villiers’ resignation.

An Ifop poll released on Sunday showed Macron’s approval rating falling 10 percentage points to 54 percent.

Billed as the biggest drop for a newly elected president since Jacques Chirac in 1995, it echoed a broadly similar result in a recent BVA poll.

Parents Abandon Campaign to Seek US Treatment for British Baby

On Monday, the parents of terminally ill British infant, Charlie Gard, abandoned the legal bid to take their son to the United States for experimental care after being presented with dire new medical tests.

The couple’s attorney, Grant Armstrong, said recent tests on the 11-month-old revealed irreversible muscular damage and that the couple made their final decision after seeing Charlie’s latest brain scans.

“It’s too late for Charlie,” Armstrong told Judge Nicholas Francis during a London High Court hearing. “The damage has been done.”

Judge Francis was due to rule Monday on whether there was sufficient new evidence to permit the parents to bring Charlie to the U.S. for a an experimental therapy.

The parents broke into tears in the courtroom as their lawyer told the judge: “It is no longer in Charlie’s best interest to pursue this course of treatment.”

The decision ends a case that has drawn global attention, prompting world leaders like President Donald Trump and Pope Francis to weigh in.

Charlie Gard was born with a rare genetic disease called encephalomyopathic mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome. Globally, there are currently only 16 confirmed cases of the genetic mutation.

He is deaf and blind, he cannot breathe or move without aid, and he suffers from frequent epileptic seizures.

Earlier this year, the London hospital treating him asked for permission to remove him from life support, calling it the most humane path forward. His parents wanted to take him to the United States in an effort to prolong his life – even though his disease has no cure – but lost the legal fight in both Britain’s Supreme Court and the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

In its decision, the Court of Human Rights argued that Charlie “was being exposed to continued pain, suffering and distress, and that undergoing experimental treatment with no prospects of success would offer no benefit, and continue to cause him significant harm.”

President Donald Trump and some conservative American politicians used the case as an opportunity to criticize Britain’s single-payer health care system. A week after the Court of Human Rights decision, Trump wrote on Twitter that the United States would be “delighted” to help.

The British government maintained that the case was never about money. It argued that under British law the courts have the final say in medical disputes about children. “In this country, children have rights independent of their parents,” Judge Francis said.

Outside the courtroom, supporters held blue balloons in solidarity with the parents, who intend to “establish a foundation for Charlie’s voice to be heard,” Armstrong said.

The judge commended the parents “for the love and the care they gave to their child Charlie,” adding that “no parents could have done more for their child.”

 

 

Linkin Park Releases Statement About Band Member’s Death

Linkin Park said their hearts are broken following the death of lead singer Chester Bennington, who died by hanging last week.

The rock band said Monday that the “shock waves of grief and denial are still sweeping through our family as we come to grips with what has happened.”

 

Bennington, who was 41, hanged himself from a bedroom door in his home near Los Angeles.

 

The band said Bennington “touched so many lives, maybe even more than you realized.”

 

Linkin Park had planned to launch a tour this week, but canceled it following Bennington’s death. Their hits include “In the End” and “Numb.”

 

 

Erdogan Says Muslims Won’t Remain Silent on Jerusalem Crisis

Turkey’s president has condemned Israeli security precautions at a sensitive Jerusalem holy site saying the Islamic world would not remain silent.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan addressed reporters Sunday in Istanbul before departing on a visit to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar.

He says: “No one can expect the Islamic world to remain unresponsive after the humiliation Muslims suffered with the restrictions at the Noble Sanctuary.”

Earlier this week, Israel installed metal detectors at the shrine in response to a deadly attack by Arab gunmen there which killed two Israeli policemen. The metal detectors are perceived by the Palestinians as an encroachment on Muslim rights and have led to protests in the Muslim world.

Erdogan called on Israel to remove the detectors in a phone conversation with his counterpart Reuven Rivlin on Thursday.

Українська шпажистка Олена Кривицька здобула «бронзу» світової першості

Українська шпажистка Олена Кривицька здобула бронзову медаль на світовій першості, що триває в німецькому Лейпцизі.

Національна федерація фехтування України, вітаючи призерку, висловила сподівання, що ця медаль не буде для неї останньою на цьому турнірі: вона ще братиме участь у командних змаганнях.

У суботу на цьому ж турнірі українська шаблістка Ольга Харлан здобула золоту медаль. Таким чином, вона стала вже триразовою чемпіонкою світу у своїй дисципліні. Крім того, ще дві золоті медалі вона має в командних змаганнях.

Цьогорічний чемпіонат світу з фехтування триває з 21 до 26 липня.

US Envoy: Russia Responsible for ‘Hot War’ in Ukraine

Russia is responsible for the “Hot War” in Eastern Ukraine, the newly appointed U.S. special envoy to Ukraine said Sunday.

Kurt Volker, who was appointed by the State Department earlier this month to negotiate an end to more than three years of fighting that has killed 10,000 people, visited Ukraine on the eve of telephone talks between its leader and Russian, German, and French counterparts.

“This is not a frozen conflict, this is a hot war and it is an immediate crisis that we all need to address as quickly as possible,” Volker said in the city of Karamatorsk in the war-torn Donetsk region.

“It is truly a high degree of suffering, there was a high human cost to this conflict and that is another reason why it is so urgent that we address it,” he added.

Volker’s visit followed a particularly bloody week in eastern Ukraine, with at least 11 people killed over the past few days, the most serious flare up of violence in recent months.

The U.S. Congress is set to vote this week on legislation calling for more sanctions against Russia, not only for its meddling last fall in the U.S. election, but also for its 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula.

US Golfer Jordan Spieth Wins British Open

Jordan Spieth won golf’s British Open on Sunday, outdueling fellow American Matt Kuchar over the final holes to capture his third major championship.

Spieth, just shy of turning 24 in the coming week, won the tournament at the Royal Birkdale course in Lancashire, England by three shots over the 39-year-old Kuchar, long a fixture on the world golf scene.  

Spieth, who won the Master’s and U.S. Open championships in 2015, led the British tournament by three shots over Kuchar after the third round and both carded final round scores of 69, one under par.

But through 13 holes Sunday, Kuchar had pulled a shot ahead of Spieth before he regained control with three birdies and an eagle on the 14th to 17th holes to win the Claret Jug, the tournament’s signature trophy.

Three different golfers have now won the first three major tournaments this year, with Spain’s Sergio Garcia winning the Master’s in April and American Brooks Koepka the U.S. Open in June. The last of the sport’s four annual major championships, the Professional Golfers’ Association tournament, will be contested next month.

 

На Всесвітніх іграх українці здобули ще одне «срібло»: Іванна Березовська, сумо

Українська сумоїстка Іванна Березовська стала срібною призеркою в абсолютній категорії на спортивних Всесвітніх іграх, що тривають у польському Вроцлаві.

«На шляху до фіналу українка виграла п’ять сутичок, і лише у фіналі у впертій боротьбі поступилася непереможній росіянці Анні Поляковій. Та все одно: наша Іванка – найкраща!» – заявив у фейсбуці Спортивний комітет України.

Попереднього дня, в суботу, українські спортсмени здобули на цих іграх одну золоту (теж сумоїстка Світлана Тросюк, категорія до 65 кг), одну срібну (Даниїл Болдирєв, скелелазіння на швидкість) і три бронзові медалі (Марина Максименко, сумо, категорія до 80 кг; Ірина Пікінер, плавання в бі-ластах на 100 м; Анастасія Антоняк, 400 м в моноласті).

Іще дві «бронзи» українські плавчині здобули першого змагального дня, у п’ятницю: Катерина Дєлова в пірнанні на дистанції 50 м і Анастасія Антоняк на дистанції 200 м у моноласті.

У неформальному командному заліку цих щочотирирічних змагань із неолімпійських видів спорту Україна перебуває на 14-му місці з 35 країн-учасниць із 1 золотою, 2 срібними і 5 бронзовими медалями.

Divided UK, Inconclusive Election Could Put Brakes on Brexit

Lucy Harris thinks Britain’s decision to leave the European Union is a dream come true. Nick Hopkinson thinks it’s a nightmare.

The two Britons — a “leave” supporter and a “remainer” — represent the great divide in a country that stepped into the unknown just over a year ago, when British voters decided by 52 percent to 48 percent to end more than four decades of EU membership.

They are also as uncertain as the rest of the country about what Brexit will look like, and even when it will happen. Since the shock referendum result, work on negotiating the divorce from the EU has slowed to a crawl as the scale and complexity of the challenge becomes clearer.

Harris, founder of the pro-Brexit group Leavers of London, says she is hopeful, rather than confident, that Britain will really cut its ties with the EU.

“If we haven’t finalized it, then anything’s still up for grabs,” she said. “Everything is still to play for.”

She’s not the only Brexiteer, as those who support leaving the EU are called, to be concerned. After an election last month clipped the wings of Britain’s Conservative government, remainers are gaining in confidence.

“Since the general election I’ve been more optimistic that at least we’re headed toward soft Brexit, and hopefully we can reverse Brexit altogether,” said Hopkinson, chairman of pro-EU group London4Europe. “Obviously the government is toughing it out, showing a brave face. But I think its brittle attitude toward Brexit will break and snap.”

Many on both sides of the divide had assumed the picture would be clearer by now. But the road to Brexit has not run smoothly.

First the British government lost a Supreme Court battle over whether a vote in Parliament was needed to begin the Brexit process. Once the vote was held, and won, Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservative government officially triggered the two-year countdown to exit, starting a race to untangle four decades of intertwined laws and regulations by March 2019.

Then, May called an early election in a bid to strengthen her hand in EU negotiations. Instead, voters stripped May’s Conservatives of their parliamentary majority, severely denting May’s authority — and her ability to hold together a party split between its pro-and anti-EU wings.

Since the June 8 election, government ministers have been at war, providing the media with a string of disparaging, anonymously sourced stories about one another. Much of the sniping has targeted Treasury chief Philip Hammond, the most senior minister in favor of a compromise “soft Brexit” to cushion the economic shock of leaving the bloc.

The result is a disunited British government and an increasingly impatient EU.

EU officials have slammed British proposals so far as vague and inadequate. The first substantive round of divorce talks in Brussels last week failed to produce a breakthrough, as the EU’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, said Britain must clarify its positions in key areas.

Barnier said “fundamental” differences remain on one of the biggest issues — the status of 3 million EU citizens living in Britain and 1 million U.K. nationals who reside in other European countries. A British proposal to grant permanent residency to Europeans in the U.K. was dismissed by the European Parliament as insufficient and burdensome.

There’s also a fight looming over the multibillion-euro bill that Britain must pay to meet previous commitments it made as an EU member. British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson recently asserted the bloc could “go whistle” if it thought Britain would settle a big exit tab.

“I am not hearing any whistling. Just the clock ticking,” Barnier replied.

EU officials insist there can be no discussion of a future trade deal with Britain until “sufficient progress” has been made on citizens’ rights, the exit bill and the status of the Irish border.

“We don’t seem to be much further on now than we were just after the referendum,” said Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London. “I’m not sure anybody knows just how this is going to go. I’m not sure the government has got its negotiating goals sorted. I’m not sure the EU really knows what [Britain’s goals] are either.

“I think we are going to find it very, very hard to meet this two-year deadline before we crash out.”

The prospect of tumbling out of the bloc — with its frictionless single market in goods and services — and into a world of tariffs and trade barriers has given Britain’s economy the jitters. The pound has lost more than 10 percent of its value against the dollar in the last year, economic growth has slowed and manufacturing output has begun to fall.

Employers’ organization the Confederation of British Industry says the uncertainty is threatening jobs. The group says to ease the pain, Britain should remain in the EU’s single market and customs union during a transitional period after Brexit.

That idea has support from many lawmakers, both Conservative and Labour, but could bring the wrath of pro-Brexit Conservatives down on the already shaky May government. That could trigger a party leadership challenge or even a new election — and more delays and chaos.

In the meantime, there is little sign the country has heeded May’s repeated calls to unite. A post-referendum spike in hate crimes against Europeans and others has subsided, but across the country families have fought and friendships have been strained over Brexit.

“It has created divisions that just weren’t there,” said Hopkinson, who calls the forces unleashed by Brexit a “nightmare.”

On that, he and Harris agree. Harris set up Leavers of London as a support group after finding her views out of synch with many others in her 20-something age group.

“I was fed up with being called a xenophobe,” she said. “You start this conversation and it gets really bad very quickly.”

She strongly believes Britain will be better off outside the EU. But, she predicts: “We’re in for a bumpy ride, both sides.”

Гран-прі Одеського кінофестивалю отримав фільм «Король бельгійців»

Головний приз восьмого Одеського міжнародного кінофестивалю отримав фільм Джесіки Вудворт і Петера Бросенса «Король бельгійців» (Бельгія, Нідерланди, Болгарія). Про це стало відомо під час церемонії закриття фестивалю, яка пройшла пізно ввечері 22 липня в Одеському національному академічному театрі опери та балету.

Переможцем конкурсу документальних фільмів стала картина «Головна роль» Сергія Буковського. Мати режисера – актриса Ніна Антонова, яка була героїнею фільму, також отримала нагороду за найкращу акторську роботу Національної конкурсної програми.

Статуетку «Золотий Дюк» за найкращу режисерську роботу вручили Нані Еквтімішвілі з Грузії за фільм «Моя щаслива сім’я». 

Найкращим іноземним фільмом фестивалю стала робота іспанського режисера Карли Сімон «Літо 1993»».

«Золотий Дюк» за найкращий український повнометражний фільм отримала кінострічка Dixie Land Романа Бондарчука (Україна, Латвія, Німеччина), приз за кращий український короткометражний фільм – «Випуск’97» Павла Острикова (Україна).

«Золотого Дюка» за вклад у кіномистецтво отримала французька актриса Ізабель Юппер. Отримуючи приз, актриса зазначила, що хоче повернутися, щоб зробити фільм в Україні. Статуетку за внесок у кіномистецтво також вручили польській режисерці Агнешці Холланд.

Восьмий Одеський міжнародний кінофестиваль стартував 14 липня.