У Києві вшановують пам’ять жертв Голодомору 1932–1933 років (трансляція)

У Києві вшановують пам’ять жертв Голодомору 1932–1933 років.

Богослужіння та вшанування пам’яті відбуваються в Національному музеї Голодомору-геноциду в столиці.

Як очікується, участь у вшанувальних заходах візьме президент України Володимир Зеленський.

Радіо Свобода веде пряму трансляцію з місця подій.

23 листопада в Україні та світі вшановують пам’ять загиблих під час Голодомору-геноциду 1932–1933 років. У цей день о 16:00 пройде акція «Запали свічку пам’яті» – щоб долучитися, достатньо запалити свічку на своєму вікні.

Читайте також: Чверть Донбасу померло від Голодомору, а втрати грецького населення Приазов’я досягли 30% – історик Марочко​

У листопаді 2006 року Верховна Рада України визнала Голодомор 1932–1933 років геноцидом українського народу.

Україна з посиланням на дані науково-демографічної експертизи стверджує, що загальна кількість людських втрат від Голодомору 1932–33 років становить майже 4 мільйони осіб, а втрати українців у частині ненароджених становлять понад 6 мільйонів.​

В Україні відзначають День пам’яті жертв Голодомору

23 листопада в Україні відзначають День пам’яті жертв голодоморів 1932-1933 років. У цей день о 16:00 пройде акція «Запали свічку пам’яті» – щоб долучитися, достатньо запалити свічку на своєму вікні.

 

Вшанувати пам’ять загиблих від штучного голоду, організованого радянською владою, закликав днями Український інститут національної пам’яті.

 

Серед тих, хто вже нагадав про роковини трагедії – голова Православної церви України Епіфаній.

«Слава Богу, сьогодні ми можемо говорити правду і маємо це робити голосно, бо зло не повинне приховуватися, як це робилося раніше, впродовж десятиліть, режимом радянської влади. Ми маємо згадувати жертв Голодомору-геноциду, прямо називати винуватців трагедії для того, щоби це найжорстокіше сплановане масове вбивство людей ніколи більше не повторилося», – написав він.

 

У листопаді 2006 року Верховна Рада України визнала Голодомор 1932–1933 років геноцидом українського народу.

Читайте також: Невідомі фото Голодомору інженера Вінербергера

Україна з посиланням на дані науково-демографічної експертизи стверджує, що загальна кількість людських втрат від Голодомору 1932–33 років становить майже 4 мільйони осіб, а втрати українців у частині ненароджених становлять понад 6 мільйонів.​

 

Campus Siege Winds Down as Hong Kong Gears up for Election

A Hong Kong university campus under siege for more than a week was a deserted wasteland Saturday, with a handful of protesters holed up in hidden refuges across the trashed grounds, as the city’s focus turned to local elections.

The siege neared its end as some protesters at Polytechnic University on the Kowloon peninsula desperately sought a way out and others vowed not to surrender, days after some of the worst violence since anti-government demonstrations escalated in June.

“If they storm in, there are a lot of places for us to hide,” said Sam, a 21-year-old student, who was eating two-minute noodles in the cafeteria, while plotting his escape.

Another protester, Ron, vowed to remain until the end with other holdouts, adding, “The message will be clear that we will never surrender.”

A protester who calls himself “Riot Chef” and said he was a volunteer cook for protesters smokes in a canteen in Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hong Kong, Nov. 23, 2019.

Many arrests

About 1,000 people have been arrested in the siege in the Chinese-ruled city, about 300 of them younger than 18.

Police have set up high plastic barricades and a fence on the perimeter of the campus. Toward midday, officers appeared at ease, allowing citizens to mill about the edges of the cordon as neighborhood shops opened for business.

Rotting rubbish and boxes of unused petrol bombs littered the campus. On the edge of a dry fountain at its entrance lay a Pepe the frog stuffed toy, a mascot protesters have embraced as a symbol of their movement.

A worker repairs toll booths which were damaged during protests, at the Cross Harbour Tunnel near Hong Kong Polytechnic…
A worker repairs toll booths that were damaged during protests, at the Cross Harbour Tunnel near Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hong Kong, Nov, 23, 2019.

Scores of construction workers worked at the mouth of the Cross-Harbour Tunnel, closed for more than a week after it was first blockaded, to repair toll booths smashed by protesters and clear debris from approach roads.

The road tunnel links Hong Kong island to the Kowloon area.

Elections Sunday

The repairs got underway as a record 1,104 people gear up to run for 452 district council seats in elections Sunday.

A record 4.1 million Hong Kong people, from a population of 7.4 million, have enrolled to vote, spurred in part by registration campaigns during months of protests.

Young pro-democracy activists are now running in some of the seats that were once uncontested and dominated by pro-Beijing candidates.

The protests snowballed since June after years of resentment over what many residents see as Chinese meddling in freedoms promised to Hong Kong when the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Beijing has said it is committed to the “one country, two systems” formula by which Hong Kong is governed. It denies meddling in the affairs of the Asian financial hub and accuses foreign governments of stirring up trouble.

Trump says he spoke to Xi

In an interview with Fox News Channel on Friday, U.S. President Donald Trump said he had told Chinese President Xi Jinping that crushing the protests would have “a tremendous negative impact” on efforts to end the two countries’ 16-month-long trade war.

“If it weren’t for me Hong Kong would have been obliterated in 14 minutes,” Trump said, without offering any evidence.

“He’s got a million soldiers standing outside of Hong Kong that aren’t going in only because I ask him, ‘Please don’t do it, you’ll be making a big mistake, it’s going to have a tremendous negative impact on the trade deal,’ and he wants to make a trade deal.”

US Lawmakers Seek to Limit Ambassador Positions for Political Donors

U.S. Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland has been a key witness in the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump. Sondland was appointed to his post after donating $1 million to Trump’s inaugural committee. The practice of awarding ambassador positions to wealthy political supporters is not new to either party, but some lawmakers and presidential candidates say it is time to limit the practice. VOA’s Diplomatic Correspondent Cindy Saine reports from the State Department.
 

Nearly One Year Later, American Remains Jailed in Moscow

In late December, it will be one year since Moscow detained U.S. citizen Paul Whelan on espionage charges. During his 11 months in the infamous Lefortovo prison, Whelan has denied the allegations and complained of systematic mistreatment. His family in the U.S. is working to bring the former Marine home. Yulia Savchenko met with Whelan’s sister, Elizabeth, in Washington to get the latest on the case.
 

Iran Keeps Internet Mostly Off for 7th Day as US Levies Sanctions

Iran has extended a major shutdown of internet access into a seventh day to suppress domestic opposition to the government, prompting the United States to sanction the Iranian official overseeing the outage.

The #Iran internet shutdown is now in its 144th hour, keeping friends and family out of touch and limiting the basic rights of Iranians⏱

Subscribe to our network monitor channel to track national connectivity in real-time #IranProtests#Internet4Iran

?https://t.co/71lkPvV2e2pic.twitter.com/EHpyZflNSE

— NetBlocks.org (@netblocks) November 22, 2019

In a tweet late Friday, London-based internet monitoring group NetBlocks said the shutdown had lasted a full six days and was “keeping friends and family out of touch and limiting the basic rights of Iranians.” A livestream of Iran’s internet connectivity rate on the group’s YouTube channel  showed a slight improvement to 20%, after having risen to 15% from 5% on Thursday.

Some Iranian officials have said they expect internet access to be gradually restored in the coming days. But there was no government announcement of a date for an end to the shutdown, which began in the evening of November 16 as authorities tried to stop Iranians from sharing images of nationwide anti-government protests that had erupted the previous day.

A news agency of Iran’s Islamic Azad University, a private national university network, said in a Thursday article  that seven other major universities in the country had their internet access restored. But it cited a public relations director for one of them, Sharif University, as saying the renewed access was “very slow.”

Iranian officials sparked the protests when they raised the subsidized price of gasoline by 50% on Nov. 15. The hike further strains the finances of many Iranians facing hardship in an economy already weakened by U.S. sanctions and government corruption and mismanagement.

In its first punitive response to the internet shutdown, the Trump administration sanctioned Iranian Information and Communications Technology Minister Mohammad Javad Azari Jahromi on Friday.

The Treasury Department said Azari Jahromi’s ministry has been responsible for restricting the Iranian people’s access to the internet, including popular messaging apps used by tens of millions of Iranians to communicate with each other and the outside world. It added Azari Jahromi to its Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons list, freezing his assets under U.S. jurisdiction and prohibiting Americans from any dealings involving those assets.

British rights group Amnesty International has said it documented the killings of 106 protesters in the crackdown by security forces during the period Nov. 15-19.

Tehran has rejected Amnesty’s death toll as speculative but has declined to issue its own tally of protester fatalities. Authorities said several security personnel also were killed in violence by “thugs” who attacked stores and burned buildings in cities around the country.

Iranian leaders have said they succeeded in crushing the unrest after several days, while blaming the protests on incitement by foreign “enemies” and exiled opposition groups. The internet shutdown made it difficult to verify whether the demonstrations have ended.

FILE – U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo talks to journalists during a news conference during a NATO Foreign Ministers meeting at the NATO headquarters in Brussels, Nov. 20, 2019.

“The United States stands with the people of Iran in their struggle against an oppressive regime that silences them while arresting and murdering protesters,” said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a Friday statement. “No country or company should enable the regime’s censorship or human rights abuses. The United States will expose these human rights abusers and record their shameful acts for history.”

A day earlier, Pompeo took the unusual step of tweeting an appeal, in Farsi and English, for Iranians to send “videos, photos and information documenting the regime’s crackdown on protesters.” He said people could do so via the @RFJ_Farsi_Bot Telegram channel. It was not clear when the State Department would reveal any content that it has received.

Azari Jahromi, who has 168,000 followers on his verified Twitter account, tweeted late Friday for the first time since the protests began, issuing a defiant response to being sanctioned by Washington.

I’m not the only member of club of sanctioned persons (Based on Trump’s fairytales). Before me, Iran ICT startups, Developers, Cancer patients and EB children were there.
I’ll continue advocating access to Internet & I won’t let US to prohibit Iran development.#EconomicTerrorism

— MJ Azari Jahromi (@azarijahromi) November 22, 2019

“I’m not the only member of [the] club of sanctioned persons (Based on Trump’s fairytales). Before me, [there were] Iran ICT startups, Developers, Cancer patients and EB [skin disease] children,” Jahromi wrote.

Iran has said U.S. sanctions targeting its oil, banks and other major industries represent a campaign of “economic terrorism” against the Iranian people. Washington has said humanitarian trade with Iran is exempt from its sanctions, whose aim is to deny resources to the Iranian government for malign activity.

“I’ll continue advocating access to Internet & I won’t let US to prohibit Iran development,” Azari Jahromi added.

A U.S. Treasury statement identified the 38-year-old as a former Iranian intelligence officer involved in surveillance operations that enabled the government to arrest protesters involved in peaceful opposition demonstrations in 2009. The Treasury said Azari Jahromi has been accused of personally interrogating multiple activists during that period.

In a VOA Persian interview, analyst Behnam Ben Taleblu of the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies said Azari Jahromi has been a key figure in Iran’s censorship apparatus.

“Targeting him is both symbolic and effective, but should not be the end of the stick. It should be a first step toward the U.S. going after Iran’s entire telecommunications infrastructure, and that could include its satellites,” Taleblu said.

This article originated in VOA’s Persian service. Katherine Ahn contributed to this report.

Hundreds of IS Fighters, Families Surrender to Afghan Forces

About 250 Islamic State fighters have surrendered to Afghan security forces in eastern Nangarhar province, a traditional IS stronghold. Dozens of women and children have surrendered as well. Officials told VOA they would work toward deradicalizing those of Afghan origin and eventually would unite them with their families. The Kabul government has yet to determine the fate of the non-Afghan detainees. VOA’s Zabihullah Ghazi reports.

China Hits Back at US for Criticizing Corridor Project With Pakistan

China and Pakistan urged the United States on Friday “to sift fact from fiction” before questioning their bilateral infrastructure development program, which Beijing is funding under its global Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

The reaction came a day after a senior American diplomat spoke critically of the multibillion-dollar collaboration, known as the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), and warned it would eventually worsen Islamabad’s economic troubles and benefit only Beijing.

Alice Wells, acting assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian affairs, testifies during a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing Sept. 19, 2019, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Speaking to an audience at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars on Thursday, Alice Wells, acting assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian affairs, said the U.S. offered a better model that would improve the fundamentals of Pakistan’s troubled economy. She also raised questions about the transparency and fairness of CPEC projects as well as related Chinese loans Islamabad has received.

Her remarks drew a strong response from Chinese and Pakistani officials on Thursday.

Beijing’s ambassador to Islamabad, Yao Jing, said Wells lacked “accurate” knowledge and relied primarily on Western media “propaganda” to level the accusations.

“I would like to remind my American colleague that if you are really making this kind of allegation, please be careful, show your evidence, give me evidence; we will take action,” Yao said while addressing reporters.

He said China and Pakistan are determined to ensure the infrastructure project is free of corruption.

The Chinese diplomat said CPEC is open to investment from anywhere in the world and China would happily welcome U.S. investment in it. Yao described Wells’ remarks as astonishing, saying he had personally briefed her twice on the program during her recent visits to Islamabad.

In this Nov. 30, 2018 photo, Mushahid Hussain, chairman of Pakistan’s Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, speaks to The Associated Press in Islamabad, Pakistan.

Meanwhile, Pakistani Senate Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Mushahid Hussain described the allegations by Wells as disappointing. He noted that CPEC has ensured energy security for Pakistan and set the stage for an “industrial revolution” in the next stage of the massive project, which is already in progress.

“CPEC is central to Pakistan’s future and it’s a pivot of our strategic relationship with China and for which Pakistan has benefited already. We feel she had got her facts mixed up because of unfounded media reports. So, I think it is important to sift fact from fiction,” Hussain said.

Beijing has invested around $20 billion in Pakistan over the past five years to help upgrade and build ports, roads and power plants, effectively ending nationwide crippling electricity outages.

Most of the money has come as direct foreign investment, while some has been in the form of soft loans and grants. The overall investment of CPEC is estimated to grow to around $60 billion by 2030.

Critics in the U.S. and elsewhere see China’s BRI program as a “debt trap” for countries like Pakistan, which have struggling economies that would make it difficult for them to make Chinese loan repayments. Islamabad’s repayments are due in the next few years and analysts say that process will bring the country’s depleting foreign exchange reserves under pressure.

Ahsan Iqbal, left, Pakistan’s minister of planning and development, and Yao Jing, Chinese ambassador to Pakistan, attend the launching ceremony of a CPEC long-term cooperation plan in Islamabad, Pakistan Dec. 18, 2017.

Ambassador Yao dismissed those concerns, saying unlike Washington and West-governed lenders like the International Monetary Fund, Beijing does not offer or suspend financial loans for “political” reasons.

“China will never ever ask for these loan repayments as long as you are in need of this money. If Pakistan needs it, we keep it here,” he told the audience.

Yao took issue with the U.S. for questioning Chinese aid or loans he said were meant only to help partner nations to improve and stabilize their economies.

“The United States is the biggest loan taker from the world, and even China gave them in credit about $3 trillion,” said the Chinese envoy.

Wells noted, however, that even if loan payments are deferred, they are going to continue to hang over Pakistan’s economic development potential to hamper Prime Minister Imran Khan’s reform agenda.

She said CPEC relies primarily on Chinese workers and supplies, noting that local industry does not benefit from the initiative and that CPEC is not addressing the issue of rising unemployment in Pakistan.

Yao rejected the assertions, saying CPEC has provided more than 75,000 direct jobs to Pakistani workers and is expected to create as many as 2.3 million jobs by 2030.

The Chinese envoy said the project will have built several special economic free zones by then, enabling Pakistan to improve the quantity and quality of its exports to bring home much-needed dollars to boost its foreign exchange reserves.

Yao criticized Wells for using reported estimated costs of certain projects in her speech. He said those projects were still under discussion and their final cost had not been determined.

Аеропорт Одеси відновив роботу у штатному режимі

Аеропорт «Одеса» працює в штатному режимі, після денної перерви летовище відновило виконання рейсів з 22:00, повідомила його пресслужба.

«У складі робочої групи з Туреччини прибули спеціалісти з додатковим обладнанням, необхідним для ліквідації наслідків авіаційного інциденту з рейсом TK467. Служби аеропорту спільно з інженерами Turkish Airlines під час злагодженої роботи успішно відбуксирували літак до тимчасової стоянки. Після додаткової перевірки фахівцями злітно-посадкової смуги, було підтверджено відповідність усі нормам та не виявлено додаткових пошкоджень, тож було ухвалене рішення про відновлення рейсів», – йдеться в повідомленні.

21 листопада літак авіакомпанії Turkish Airlines, який прямував зі Стамбула до Одеси, при посадці підломив передню стійку шасі, у результаті інциденту ніхто не постраждав, але польоти довелося призупинити.

Через негоду на Азовському узбережжі з острова Бирючий евакуювали людей

У Держслужбі з надзвичайних ситуацій України повідомили, що сильний поривчастий вітер упродовж останніх трьох днів на Азовському узбережжі призвів до підвищення рівня води на Федотовій косі у селищі Кирилівка Якимівського району Запорізької області, в результаті чого острів Бирючий залишився відрізаним від суходолу, а піщану дорогу вкрило водою.

Як повідомили рятувальники, оперативний штаб вирішив передислокувати з Кирилівки плаваючий транспортер з тягачем на острів, щоб евакуювати людей.

«Рятувальники доставили на суходіл 11 людей. Медична допомога евакуйованим не знадобилась. Органи місцевої влади організували їхнє перевезення на автовокзал Кирилівки», – йдеться в повідомленні.

Бирючий острів розташований у північно-західній частині Азовського моря, розширеній частині Федотової коси. Перешийок, яким Бирючий острів з’єднаний з косою, повністю ховається під водою під час осінніх та весняних штормів.

Раніше сьогодні у Держслужбі з надзвичайних ситуацій попередили про погіршення погодних умов через сильний вітер. Попередження, зокрема, стосувалося акваторії Азовського моря.

У суботу, 23 листопада, на сході та півні країни очікуються пориви вітру 15-20 м/с, вночі у Приазов’ї 25 м/с.

Israel Braces For Bitter Fight After Netanyahu Indictment

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s indictment is expected to sharpen the battle lines in Israel’s already deadlocked political system and could test the loyalty of his right-wing allies, Israeli commentators said Friday.
                   
The serious corruption charges announced Thursday appear to have dashed already slim hopes for a unity government following September’s elections, paving the way for an unprecedented repeat vote in March, which will be the third in less than a year.
                   
In an angry speech late Thursday, Netanyahu lashed out at investigators and vowed to fight on in the face of an “attempted coup.”
                   
His main opponent, the centrist Blue and White party, called on him to “immediately resign” from all his Cabinet posts, citing a Supreme Court ruling that says indicted ministers cannot continue to hold office. Netanyahu also serves as minister of health, labor and Diaspora affairs, as well as acting minister of agriculture.
                   
He is not legally required to step down as prime minister, but Netanyahu faces heavy pressure to do so, and it is unclear whether an indicted politician could be given the mandate to form a new government. Netanyahu has already failed to form a majority coalition of 61 seats in the 120-seat Knesset after two hard-fought elections this year.
                   
“This will not be an election, it will be a civil war without arms,” columnist Amit Segal wrote in Israel’s Yediot Ahronot newspaper. “There is a broad constituency that believes what Netanyahu said yesterday, but it is far from being enough for anything close to victory.”
                   


Reactions Mixed on Netanyahu’s Corruption Charges video player.
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Can Netanyahu Hold Onto Power After Indictment?

Writing in the same newspaper, Sima Kadmon compared Netanyahu to the Roman emperor Nero, saying “he will stand and watch as the country burns.”
                   
Netanyahu was indicted on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust stemming from three long-running corruption cases. He has denied any wrongdoing and accused the media, courts and law enforcement of waging a “witch hunt” against him.
                   
The corruption charges will weigh heavily on Netanyahu’s Likud party in future elections, but it’s unclear if any senior member has the support or willingness to replace him.
                   
Hours before the indictment was announced, Gideon Saar, a senior Likud member, said a party primary should be held ahead of any future elections and that he would compete. But there are several other leading members of the party, and it’s unclear if any one of them can gain enough support to topple its longtime leader.
                   
Some Likud members expressed support for Netanyahu after the indictment was announced, but most have remained mum.
                   
“If the attorney general should indeed announce that Netanyahu can no longer form a government, will (Likud members) stand up openly and work to form an alternative government? For that to happen, they will have to sit together in one room and trust each other, which is something that has not happened for the past decade,” Segal wrote.
                  
Nevertheless, he concluded, “the great threat to Netanyahu is now posed from within.”
                   
Amid all the political machinations, Netanyahu will have to prepare to go on trial. He can battle the charges, or he might seek a plea bargain in which he agrees to resign in return for avoiding jail time or hefty fines. Either process could drag on for months.
                   
Netanyahu is Israel’s first sitting prime minister to be charged with a crime. His predecessor, Ehud Olmert, was forced to resign a decade ago ahead of a corruption indictment that later sent him to prison for 16 months.
                   
“We’ve got a number of political and legal processes which are all going to be happening now simultaneously,” Anshel Pfeffer, a Haaretz columnist and the author of a biography of Netanyahu, told The Associated Press.
                   
 “It’s impossible to predict which one will bring about the end of Netanyahu’s career,” he said. “All these things are going ahead now, but slowly.”

Rights Group Draws Attention to Heavy Smog in Pakistan

Tens of thousands of people in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore are at risk of respiratory disease because of poor air quality related to thick smog hanging over the region, an international rights group said Friday.
                   
Amnesty International called for “urgent action” for residents of Lahore in a bid to mobilize supporters around the world to campaign on their behalf due to smog that has engulfed the city of more than 10 million people over the past week.
                   
Amnesty says Pakistani officials’ inadequate response to the smog raises significant human rights concerns.
                   
“The hazardous air is putting everyone’s right to health at risk,” said Rimmel Mohydin, South Asia Campaigner at Amnesty. “The issue is so serious that we are calling on our members around the world to write to the Pakistani authorities to tell them to stop downplaying the crisis and take urgent action to protect people’s health and lives.”
                   
Once known as the “city of gardens,” Lahore is considered one of the world’s most polluted cities, where many residents have been forced to stay at home.
                   
Mohydin said on one out of every two days since the beginning of November the air quality in Lahore has been classified as “hazardous” by air quality monitors installed by the United States Consulate in Lahore and the Pakistan Air Quality Initiative.
                   
She said people in Lahore have not had healthy air for a single day this year and that the air quality deteriorated to “hazardous” levels in November. Air quality measuring systems advise people to avoid all outdoor activity when that happens.
                   
Air becomes unhealthy when the Air Quality Index level reaches 100. Mohydin said at 300 and above, the air is considered “hazardous” and the Air Quality Index in Lahore skyrocketed to 598 on Thursday.
                   
She said the so-called “smog season,” which runs from October to February, is when poor fuel quality, uncontrolled emissions and crop burning worsens the quality of the already unhealthy air in eastern Punjab Province, where Lahore is the capital.
                   
Authorities in Lahore and elsewhere in the province have asked parents not to send their children to school on Friday to avoid being in the bad air.
                   
Pakistan often blames farmers in neighboring India for burning waste from their crops in open farms fields.
                   
“The fast blowing winds brought thick smog from India to Lahore and the international community should pressure India to take measures for controlling air pollution as it also affects us,” said Naseem-Ur-Rahman Shah, who heads the provincial Environment Protection Department in Punjab.
                   
It’s a popular practice among poor farmers in Pakistan and India to set fire to remnants of the previous season’s crop before preparing their land for the next planting. Punjab Province is considered Pakistan’s breadbasket.
                   
Rahman said thousands of people were treated this week at hospitals and private clinics for respiratory-related diseases, including asthma, flu, fever and cough.
                   
“People should not expose themselves to smog because it is harmful,” he said. “We are also taking steps to control air pollution in Punjab.”
                   
But many residents in Lahore blame the government for not taking adequate measures to contain air pollution.
                   
“I can show you several factories releasing smoke in the heart of Lahore. I can show you brick kilns on the outskirts of Lahore and you can see smoke-emitting vehicles everywhere,” said 23-year-old Mohammad Abdullah, a college student, as he sat in a bed at Mayo Hospital after having breathing problems.
                   
Uzma Tareen, 56, also complained she had to come to the same hospital on a smoke-emitting rikshaw as she could not afford a taxi.
                   
“Doctors say smog will end when rains come so I am praying for rain,” she said. “I don’t expect any action from the government to control toxic air.”

In Thailand, Pope Tells Bishops, Priests to Spread the Faith

Pope Francis Friday called on bishops in Thailand to keep their doors open for priests and to spread the faith as their missionary predecessors did.

“Be close to your priests, listen to them and seek to accompany them in every situation, especially when you see that they are discouraged or apathetic, which is the worst of the devil’s temptations. Do so not as judges but as fathers, not as managers who deploy them, but as true elder brothers.”

Francis gave a speech to the Asian Bishops Conference at the Shrine of Blessed Nicholas Bunkerd Kithamrung in Sam Phran, 56 kilometers west of capital Bangkok.

Huge crowds, including faithful from Vietnam, Cambodia and China welcomed the pope  when he earlier arrived for a meeting with clergy and seminarians at Saint Peter’s Parish in Nakhon Pathom province.   

Francis concluded the day’s celebrations with a Mass dedicated to young people at Bangkok’s Cathedral of the Assumption.
       
Francis is only the second pope to visit Thailand. Pope John Paul II, now Saint John Paul II, was the first in 1984.

 

Телеканал Коломойського під час виборів акредитовував Богдана у ЦВК як свого кореспондента – «Схеми»

Нинішній керівник Офісу президента Андрій Богдан у розпал президентської кампанії був акредитований до Центральної виборчої комісії як власний кореспондент Телевізійної служби новин телеканалу «1+1». Про це йдеться у матеріалі «Зе Комбінатор» програми «Схеми: корупція в деталях» (спільний проєкт Радіо Свобода та телеканалу «UA:Перший»).

Журналісти виявили, що Богдан Андрій Йосипович був у списку співробітників, який «ТСН» подало до ЦВК 6 лютого 2019 року на «постійну акредитацію на період проведення виборів президента України 31 березня 2019 року» – його ім’я було вказано першим у переліку серед 15 співробітників від телеканалу «1+1».

Цей канал пов’язують із олігархом Коломойським. В передвиборчий період у ЗМІ адвоката Андрія Богдана називали «неформальним керівником штабу Зеленського і «куратором» від бізнесмена Ігоря Коломойського, інтереси якого він захищає».

Про те, чим Андрій Богдан займався на «ТСН», «Схеми» поцікавилися в тодішнього генпродюсера «1+1», а тепер – народного депутата від «Слуги народу» Олександра Ткаченка. 

Пригадати цього Олександр Ткаченко так і не зміг, натомість припустив, що Богдан справді міг бути кореспондентом – позаштатним.

– Можливо, він певний час працював позаштатним кореспондентом. Можливо, і таке було – але я ж кажу, я не всіх знав.

– А які матеріали він випускав?

– Очевидно, контроверсійні, тому що якщо ми подивимось – це було під час передвиборчої кампанії.

– А коли його брали позаштатно працювати в той час, коли…

– Знаєте, я не слідкую за всіма, кого ми беремо позаштатно.

«Схеми» запитали про те, чи був Андрій Богдан кореспондентом «ТСН» у народної депутатки від «Слуги народу» Ольги Василенко-Смаглюк, яка також була у тому ж списку акредитації до ЦВК як оглядач новин «1+1».

Спершу вона заявила, що «Андрія Богдана в «ТСН» не було». Утім, потім припустила, що він міг працювати не в ньюзрумі, а «на окремому трудовому договорі» – проте сама вона цього не пам’ятає: «Не всіх журналістів ставлять до відома щодо роботи інших журналістів».

«Схемам» не вдалося розшукати його матеріалів на офіційному сайті телеканалу «1+1». Водночас, журналісти виявили, що сам Андрій Богдан ставав героєм кількох сюжетів «ТСН» за 2018 рік – як кандидат в народні депутати.

«Акредитація в ЦВК – це документ, який забезпечує пропуск у державне приміщення Центрвиборчкому на конкретний період часу. Достеменно невідомо, чи скористався цим правом Богдан і з якою саме метою», – йдеться у матеріалі.

«Схеми» звернулися до «1+1» з офіційним листом із запитаннями.

Окремо журналісти також заздалегідь відправили запит Андрію Богдану з проханням про коментар, але відповіді не отримали. 

Раніше журналісти також з’ясували, що Андрій Богдан, обіймаючи державні посади за часів трьох українських президентів, одночасно з тим займатися іншою діяльністю, що заборонено низкою норм українських законів: про державну службу, антикорупційне законодавство та адвокатуру.

Журналісти також розповідали про те, як Андрій Богдан літав разом з Азаровим на переговори до Росії за день до зупинки євроінтеграції у 2013 році. І про те, як він отримав заслуженого юриста за повернення заводу державі, хоча підприємство залишилося під контролем олігархів.

 

Богдан обходив антикорупційне законодавство на держслужбі за трьох різних президентів – «Схеми»

Керівник Офісу президента Андрій Богдан на державній службі одночасно обіймав кілька посад, тим самим не дотримуючись низки норм українського законодавства, зокрема антикорупційного. Випадки поєднання державної служби з іншою діяльністю простежуються протягом всієї кар’єри Андрія Богдана, за трьох різних президентів України. Про це повідомляють журналісти програми «Схеми: корупція в деталях» (спільний проєкт Радіо Свобода та телеканалу «UA:Перший») у розслідуванні «Зе Комбінатор».

«Схеми» дослідили, що Богдан неодноразово поєднував службу на державних посадах з іншою роботою.

Так, зокрема, протягом 2010-2011 років він перебував на посаді Урядового уповноваженого з питань антикорупційної політики – і в цей же час не припиняв адвокатської діяльності. І, тим самим, виходить, проігнорував норми антикорупційного законодавства щодо сумісництва.

«Показово, що в той період Андрія Богдана можна було назвати головним відповідальним за антикорупційну політику в країні за президента Віктора Януковича», – йдеться в матеріалі. 

«Державний службовець або інша особа, уповноважена на виконання функцій держави, не має права: (…) виконувати роботу на умовах сумісництва (крім наукової, викладацької, творчої діяльності, а також медичної практики)», – зазначено у 5 статті закону «Про боротьбу з корупцією».

Раніше, починаючи з 2007 року, Богдан також поєднував державну службу з іншою діяльністю, в порушення низки законодавчих норм. 

У грудні 2007 він був призначений заступником міністра юстиції, в той же час він був керівником приватної юридичної фірми, а також не зупинив дію своєї адвокатської ліцензії.  

«Відповідно були порушені норми закону про адвокатуру, норми закону про державну службу і боротьбу з корупцією. За таке порушення передбачена відповідальність – за всіма цими законами. З точки зору закону про адвокатуру – це дисциплінарна відповідальність. Яка може бути у вигляді попередження, зупинення чи припинення адвокатської діяльності», – аналізує юрист Богдан Боровик.

«Законом про боротьбу з корупцією були встановлені так звані спеціальні обмеження – це ті обмеження, які забороняли якраз займатися іншою діяльністю, роботою за сумісництвом. І якщо особа порушувала ці вимоги – це означає, що це порушення цього закону, за яке передбачена відповідальність», – додає інший юрист Денис Свириденко. 

Як з’ясували «Схеми», Андрій Богдан на той момент дійсно підписав документ, що ознайомлений із усіма обмеженнями на держслужбі.

Крім того, в цей же період, він понад рік одночасно працював помічником на громадських засадах депутата Андрія Портнова.

«Сумісництво – характерна особливість Андрія Богдана, яка простежується під час його кар’єри державного посадовця», – йдеться у розслідуванні.

Також чинний керівник офісу президента у минулому працював помічником судді і залишався адвокатом. Починаючи з 2001 року, як вказано в його офіційній біографії, Богдан працював помічником судді Київського апеляційного господарського суду (нині – Північний апеляційний госпсуд Києва – ред.). Підтвердження цьому журналісти «Схем» також отримали в архіві суду. В цей час він не зупиняв адвокатської діяльності – про що зазначено у реєстрі адвокатів. Тоді Богдан так само підписав документ-попередження, що ознайомлений із забороною сумісництва. 

«Отже, кілька років помічник судді залишався адвокатом, маючи статус державного службовця. І систематично поєднував іншу роботу з державною службою. Тобто, заплющував очі на українське законодавство. Тож чи прийнятно для президента нині мати очільником свого офісу людину, яка легко могла обходити закони, перебуваючи на державних посадах?» – йдеться у розслідуванні.

«Схеми» надіслали листа з проханням про інтерв’ю до президента Володимира Зеленського та керівника його офісу Андрія Богдана за два тижні до публікації. Відповіді не отримали. 

Раніше «Схеми» також розповідали про те, як Андрій Богдан літав разом з Азаровим на переговори до Росії за день до зупинки євроінтеграції у 2013 році.

А також – як він отримав заслуженого юриста за повернення заводу державі, хоча підприємство залишилося в олігархів.

Pope Urges Thais: Don’t See Christianity as ‘Foreign’

Pope Francis paid tribute Friday to Catholics in Thailand who suffered or were killed for their faith in the past and urged today’s Thais not to consider Christianity a “foreign” religion.

The pope was on his last full day of a visit to Thailand, where the dominant culture is closely tied to Buddhism, although the Catholic minority of fewer than 1% were generally treated well in modern times.

On Friday, Francis traveled to Wat Roman, a mostly Catholic area on the outskirts of the bustling capital of Bangkok.

Pope Francis waves to the crowd following his visit to St. Peter's Parish church in the Sam Phran district of Nakhon Pathom…
Pope Francis waves to the crowd following his visit to St. Peter’s Parish church in the Sam Phran district of Nakhon Pathom Province, Thailand, Nov. 22, 2019.

World War II era priest

The pope visited a modern sanctuary built in honor of Nicholas Bunkerd Kitbamrung, a Thai priest who died in 1944. The son of Christian converts from Buddhism, he was arrested for ringing a church bell during a period dominated by an anti-Western government suspicious of foreign influences, such as the French colonial powers in neighboring countries.

The priest was sentenced to 15 years in prison and died of tuberculosis in a hospital where he was treated badly and denied proper care because he was Catholic.

In a talk to priests and nuns gathered in the church, Francis expressed his gratitude to those he said had offered the “silent martyrdom of fidelity and daily commitment” in the past.

In 1940, seven Catholics, including three teenage girls, were killed by Thai police in the northeastern province of Nakhon Phanom. Pope John Paul II later declared them martyrs.

The World War II period and other spells of persecution are considered aberrations and today relations between Buddhists and Catholics are generally very good.

During the reign of Thailand’s King Narai 350 years ago, the Vatican formally established its “Mission de Siam.”

Although missionaries failed to achieve mass conversions, they were largely tolerated by the Buddhist majority and particularly the royal court.

Thai face of Catholicism

Since the start of his pontificate in 2013, Francis has preached that the Church should grow by attraction and not by proselytizing, or conversion campaigns.

This has provoked criticism from some conservatives who favor an aggressive approach and largely oppose what is known as “inculturation,” or adapting Church teachings to local culture.

Francis urged priests and nuns to find more ways to talk about their religion in local terms, saying he had learned “with some pain, that for many people, Christianity is a foreign faith, a religion for foreigners.”

He added, “Let us give faith a Thai face and flesh, which involves much more than making translations.”

Meeting Thai bishops in the same shrine complex later, Francis once again talked about issues such as human trafficking and exploitation.

On Thursday he condemned the exploitation of women and children for prostitution in Thailand, which is notorious for its sex tourism, saying the violence, abuse and enslavement they suffer are evils to be uprooted.

Francis was scheduled to meet leaders of other religions and celebrate a Mass in Bangkok’s Assumption Cathedral on Friday afternoon, before leaving on Saturday for Japan.

Tesla Enters Pickup Truck Market with Electric Model

Tesla CEO Elon Musk is taking on the workhorse heavy pickup truck market with his latest electric vehicle.

The “cybertruck,” an electric pickup truck, will be in production in 2021, Musk said at the Los Angeles Auto Show Thursday.

The pickup, which Musk said will cost $39,900 and up, will have an estimated battery range of more than 500 miles.

With the launch, Tesla is edging into the most profitable corner of the U.S. auto market, where buyers tend to have fierce brand loyalty.

Brand-loyal buyers

Many pickup buyers stick with the same brand for life, choosing a truck based on what their mom or dad drove or what they decided was the toughest model, said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business.

“They’re very much creatures of habit,” Gordon said. Getting a loyal Ford F-150 buyer to consider switching to another brand such as a Chevy Silverado, “it’s like asking him to leave his family,” he said.

Tesla’s pickup is more likely to appeal to weekend warriors who want an electric vehicle that can handle some outdoor adventure. And it could end up cutting into Tesla’s electric vehicle sedan sales instead of winning over traditional pickup truck drivers.

“The needs-based truck buyer, the haulers, the towers at the worksites of the world, that’s going to be a much tougher sell,” said Akshay Anand, executive analyst at Kelley Blue Book.

However, it will help Musk fill out his portfolio and offer a broader range of electric vehicles.

“Elon Musk is trying to not be one-dimensional when it comes to automotive,” said Alyssa Altman, transportation lead at digital consultancy Publicis Sapient. “He doesn’t want to look like he only has a small selection. He wants to build a brand with a diverse offering and in doing that he wants to see where he could enter in the market.”

Electric truck competition

Musk stands to face competition when his truck hits the market. Ford, which has long dominated the pickup landscape, plans to launch an all-electric F-150 pickup. General Motors CEO Mary Barra said that its battery-electric pickup will come out by the fall of 2021.

Rivian, a startup based near Detroit, plans to begin production in the second half of 2020 on an electric pickup that starts at $69,000 and has a battery range of 400-plus miles (643.7-kilometers). The Rivian truck will be able to tow 11,000 pounds (4,989.5 kilograms), go from zero to 60 mph (96.6 kph) in three seconds and wade into 3 feet (0.91 meters) of water, the company said. Ford said in April it would invest $500 million in Rivian.

Tesla has struggled to meet delivery targets for its sedans, and some fear the new vehicle will shift the company’s attention away from the goal of more consistently meeting its targets.

“We have yet to see Tesla really make good on some of the very tight deadlines they imposed on themselves, and this has the added challenge of having architecture that is going to be challenging because we haven’t seen an EV pickup before,” said Jeremy Acevedo, manager of industry analysis at Edmunds.

US Army Examines TikTok Security Concerns

The U.S. Army is undertaking a security assessment of China-owned social media platform TikTok after a Democratic lawmaker raised national security concerns over the app’s handling of user data, Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy said Thursday.

Speaking to reporters at an event at the American Enterprise Institute think tank, McCarthy said he ordered the assessment after the top Democrat in the U.S. Senate, Chuck Schumer, asked him to investigate the possible risks in the military’s use of the popular video app for recruiting American teenagers.

“National security experts have raised concerns about TikTok’s collection and handling of user data, including user content and communications, IP addresses, location-related data, metadata, and other sensitive personal information,” Schumer wrote in a Nov. 7 letter to McCarthy.

Schumer said he was especially concerned about Chinese laws requiring domestic companies “to support and cooperate with intelligence work controlled by the Chinese Communist Party.”

Tik Tok logo is displayed on the smartphone while standing on the U.S. flag in this illustration picture taken, November 8,…
Tik Tok logo is displayed on the smartphone while standing on the U.S. flag in this illustration picture taken, Nov. 8, 2019.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) has launched a national security review of TikTok owner Beijing ByteDance Technology Co.’s $1 billion acquisition of U.S. social media app Musical.ly.

TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The company has previously emphasized its independence from China but has failed to assuage congressional concerns about the security of the personal data of U.S. citizens who use the platform and whether content on the platform is subject to any censorship from Beijing.

In a Nov. 5 blog post, TikTok’s U.S. general manager, Vanessa Pappas, said that the company’s data centers “are located entirely outside of China.” She said U.S. user data is stored in the United States, with backup redundancy in Singapore.

ByteDance is one of China’s fastest-growing startups. About 60% of TikTok’s 26.5 million monthly active users in the United States are between the ages of 16 and 24, the company said this year.

Earlier this year, Schumer also called on the FBI and the Federal Trade Commission to conduct a national security and privacy investigation into FaceApp, a face-editing photo app developed in Russia.

The potential for the sharing of army information through the use of apps was highlighted after researchers found in 2018 that fitness-tracking app Strava was inadvertently exposing military posts and other sensitive sites.

In 2017, the Army ordered its members to stop using drones made by Chinese manufacturer SZ DJI Technology Co Ltd because of “cyber vulnerabilities” in the products.

У Новому Роздолі почали подачу тепла – уряд

У Новому Роздолі на Львівщині ліквідували всі витоки на магістральному трубопроводі і почали подавати теплоносій до будинків, повідомляє у четвер ввечері урядовий портал.

«На даний час у Новояворівську теплоносій з температурою +45 С почав надходити в тепломережу 2-го мікрорайону і зараз відбувається заповнення мереж дошкільних і шкільних закладів та внутрішньо будинкових систем житлових будинків, інших споживачів. Відновлюється циркуляція по системах споруд», – йдеться в повідомленні уряду з посиланням на місцеву владу.

Раніше сьогодні вранці тепло почали подавати жителям Новояворівська.

Минулого тижня «Нафтогаз» через товариство з обмеженою відповідальністю «Нафтогаз тепло» долучився до управління майном ТЕЦ Нового Роздолу та Новояворівська, де досі немає опалення у щонайменше 60 тисяч людей. За даними «Натфогазу», заборгованість теплоелектроцентралі перед його підприємствами становить майже 800 мільйонів гривень. При цьому борги із зарплат працівникам ТЕЦ оцінюють у понад 11 мільйонів гривень.

Новояворівська та Новороздільська ТЕЦ раніше належали фірмам братів Богдана та Ярослава Дубневичів. Торік були затримані кілька службовців цих фірм за підозрою у розкраданні газу НАК «Нафтогаз України» на 1,4 мільярда гривень. У результаті під тимчасове управління і через конкурс було обрано нового управителя ТЕЦ – київське приватне підприємство «Гарант Енерго М». У «Нафтогазі» заявили, що «Гарант Енерго М» не змогло впоратися із викликами управління, головним чином – технічним станом ТЕЦ і питаннями оплати праці робітникам.

Study: Yellowstone Bison Mow, Fertilize Their Own Grass

A study of grazing in Yellowstone National Park found that bison essentially mow and fertilize their own food. This allows them to graze in one area for two to three months during the spring and summer while other hoofed mammals must keep migrating to higher elevations to follow new plant growth.

Hundreds of bison grazing in an area stimulates the growth of nutritious grasses, in part because their waste acts as a fertilizer, according to research published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“They add fertilizer through urinating and defecating, they drop nutrients back on the landscape, which are then available to plants,” Yellowstone scientist Chris Geremia said Wednesday.

“It’s almost like the bison become this giant fleet of lawnmowers moving back and forth across the landscape,” he said.

When more bison grazed an area more intensely, the area greened up earlier and faster and the grass stayed greener and had a higher nutritional quality for a much longer time, Geremia said.

Many other migratory animals in Yellowstone — pronghorn, bighorn sheep, mule deer and elk — do not form these large groups while they migrate and graze, Geremia said.

“Bison don’t just move to find food, kind of the classic way that we think of animal migration,” Geremia said, “but they create good food by how they move and how they graze.”

From 2012 to 2017, researchers fenced off plots of grass along bison migration corridors and compared them to the grazed areas.

“The data showed that grasses heavily grazed by bison were more productive compared to exclosures where bison were not allowed to graze,” said Matthew Kauffman, unit leader of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at the University of Wyoming. “The mowed-down forage had higher ratios of nitrogen to carbon, a standard measure of nutritional quality.”

Trampling and nibbling by the bison kept the plants shorter and denser and forced the plants to keep growing, giving the bison a steady supply of fresh, nutritious grass.

“During most of May and June and part of July … they are grouped together

US Schools Try to Diversify Mainly White Teaching Ranks

It wasn’t until she became a high school senior that Kayla Ireland had another black person as a teacher in Waterbury, a former manufacturing hub where the students are mostly minorities and the educators are generally white.

The imbalance never troubled her much, except for some moments, like when a white teacher led a discussion of police brutality and racial profiling. But the absence of black teachers has been a frequent topic of discussion among Kayla’s classmates at Wilby High School, which has struggled with high numbers of disciplinary issues, including a mass suspension over dress-code violations.

“Sometimes people go through bad days. But because you don’t have that person that looks like you, a person that you can talk to that can relate to it, you don’t really know how to explain it,” said Kayla, 16. “So it feels good to have a teacher that you can go to, and you feel comfortable with, because you’re not going to be deemed the girl in class who doesn’t know anything.”

More than half of the students in American public schools are minorities, but the teaching force is still 80% white, according to statistics from the U.S. Education Department. As mounting research highlights the benefits minority teachers can bestow on students, the gap has received renewed attention, including from Democratic presidential candidates who have endorsed strategies to promote teacher diversity.

Sen. Kamala Harris, who spoke at a September debate about the importance of black teachers for black students, has proposed spending $2.5 billion for teacher-preparation programs at historically black colleges and universities. Other leading Democrats have also called for investment in those schools, as well as mentorship programs, assistance for teacher aides and new requirements to promote transparency around teacher hiring.

The Waterbury school system has taken steps to close the racial gap following complaints from the NAACP. Its limited success so far highlights some of the challenges of addressing the problem, which some see as rooted in teacher training programs and barriers that date back to the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education ruling that led to desegregation.

An agreement reached by a state human rights commission and Waterbury’s mayor in 2017 committed the city to build a partnership with black colleges and universities for recruiting purposes, to train students interested in teaching beginning as early as middle school and to provide cultural competency training to current educators. The 2016 national teacher of the year, Waterbury’s Jahana Hayes, was hired as the top recruiter before becoming the first black woman from Connecticut elected to Congress in 2018.

Known as the Brass City for its historical brass production, Waterbury has 19,000 students in its school district. The number of black and Hispanic educators has been rising, but the teaching force was still 86% white as of the last school year. Among new hires, the percentage of minority teachers jumped above 30% for two years before falling back to around 25% last year.

Despite the district’s outreach efforts, teachers and administrators often pass up or leave jobs in Waterbury for nearby districts offering higher salaries.

“We’re one of 169 towns in the state. And so there is stiff competition,” said W. Lee Palmer, the district personnel director. “And that’s one of the reasons that we have to be really aggressive about what we do.”

Cicero Booker, a former NAACP Waterbury branch president, said the district is doing the necessary work and change will take time. He also raised questions about the city’s financial commitment.

“What are we going to do to make it attractive for teachers from other communities? Are we going to help them with housing? Are we going to give them six months’ living expenses?” he said.

Research has found that black students who have at least one black teacher are more likely to graduate from high school and that black teachers are likely to have higher expectations for black students. Exposure to teachers of the same race has also been linked to lower rates of suspension and expulsion for black students.

Kayla remembered the police brutality discussion as an example of when a white teacher struggled to connect with black students. During a sophomore-year English course, the teacher assigned the class to read “The Hate U Give,” a young adult novel about a police shooting. As students talked about how they avoid going into stores with hoodies on, the teacher understood but could not relate, she said.

After the mass suspension of over 150 students for dress code violations at Wilby in the spring of 2017, the appointment of a black principal brought optimism that the climate would improve, Kayla said. With more minority educators, she said, there would be less antagonism.

“I just feel like if we had a more diverse staff that reflected the school population, people would feel a little more comfortable in school, a little more comfortable to open up,” she said.

The low numbers of minority educators nationally results partly from disparities in teacher training programs, which have been shown to enroll disproportionately large numbers of white students. Researchers also have traced declines in the numbers of black teachers to the period of desegregation marked by school consolidations and a trend toward tighter accreditation requirements.

The issue has received attention from state leaders in Connecticut, which this year passed a law creating new flexibility in teacher certification requirements and providing mortgage assistance for teachers who graduated from colleges that traditionally serve minority students. But advocates say it will take change at each individual district.

“If there is an opening in your building, unless you say I am intentionally going to fill that opening with a person of color, we will not change,” said Subira Gordon, director of the ConnCAN education advocacy group.

Kayla’s mother, LaToya Ireland, said she will never forget a black teacher she had in seventh grade.

“She took her time not just with me but with other students, and she really left a lasting impression on my life,” she said. “I would like for my girls and other kids to see that.”

Iran’s Internet Mostly Down for 5th Day, With Slight Easing of Access in South

A major Internet outage in Iran aimed at suppressing anti-government protests has extended into a 5th day, with access levels rising slightly as authorities said they reconnected several regions to the web.

Real-time technical data corroborate reports in #Iran news media that some connectivity is being restored, although only partially.

At the current time national connectivity has risen further to 10%.

Follow our live report for updates on the situation ?https://t.co/1Al0DT8an1

— NetBlocks.org (@netblocks) November 21, 2019

In a series of Thursday tweets, London-based Internet monitoring group NetBlocks said Iran’s almost-total Internet shutdown began to ease after 113 hours, with the national connectivity rate rising from 5% to 10%. Connectivity had plummeted to about 5% late Saturday and mostly remained at that level until Thursday afternoon Iran time.

Iranian state news agencies reported that authorities were gradually restoring Internet access in several regions, including the southern province of Hormozgan that is home to the major port of Bandar Abbas.

Speaking to reporters in Tehran, the Secretary of Iran’s Supreme Cyberspace Council Abolhassan Firouzabadi said the state body would make a decision later Thursday about whether to end the five-day Internet shutdown that has caused further damage to an economy already weakened by U.S. sanctions and government corruption and mismanagement. He expressed hope  the outage would end “within the next two days.”
 
Iranian authorities imposed the shutdown to stop opposition activists from communicating and posting online images of nationwide protests that erupted last Friday in response to the government’s abrupt 50% increase in the subsidized price of gasoline. The protests had spread to more than 50 urban centers in Iran by Saturday, according to images received from Iran and verified by VOA Persian.

Anti-government Protests in at least 54 Iranian Cities

Many Iranians see the gas price increase as putting a further burden on their wallets at a time of worsening economic conditions. Iran’s currency has slumped versus the dollar, while inflation and unemployment have soared in the past year, as the U.S. has tightened economic sanctions aimed at pressuring Tehran to stop perceived malign behaviors. Government corruption and mismanagement also have contributed to the malaise.
 
“Mismanagement by the Iranian regime is helping to make the U.S. sanctions more effective,” Ilan Berman, a Middle East security analyst at the American Foreign Policy Council, said in a VOA Persian interview.
 
“Iranians are angry at the regime for the way it is conducting political and economic business. There is much less anger directed at the United States. Iranians know who the real culprit is,” he said.
 
State-approved Iranian news sites published several articles on Wednesday, highlighting ways in which the internet shutdown has been hurting the economy even more.
 
Economics news site Eqtesad quoted Communications Minister Mohammad-Javad Azari-Jahromi as saying online business transactions “have fallen by 90%” since the outage began.
 
Conservative news agency ILNA cited Tehran Chamber of Commerce member Ali Kolahi as saying the shutdown “presents us with problems in exports. We have no idea where our shipments are.”

FILE - An internet cafe manager works on his computer as a man talks on his cell phone, in Tehran, Iran, July 25, 2019.
FILE – An internet cafe manager works on his computer as a man talks on his cell phone, in Tehran, Iran, July 25, 2019.

Kolahi added that if the internet is restored “in the next couple of days, it may be possible to reverse some of the damage to our international image, but if this situation continues, it will be too late.”
 
The internet outage also has caused losses in the Iranian stock market, according to pro-government news site Bahar News in a report citing Investors Guild secretary Said Elsami.

In a Thursday statement, Iran’s most powerful military branch, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said it had restored “calm” to the country after suppressing the protests. State TV showed more images of pro-government rallies around the country, as it has done for the past few days.

State media have reported the arrests of at least 1,000 people whom authorities accused of engaging in violent confrontations with security personnel, damaging businesses and looting.
 
Many of the anti-government protests seen in videos from the first few days of the unrest were peaceful.

Iran’s ongoing internet outage made it difficult to verify whether the demonstrations had ended. VOA Persian did not receive any reports of protests in Iran on Thursday.

In a photo taken Nov. 18, 2019, and released by the Iranian Students' News Agency, ISNA, people walk past buildings which burned during protests that followed the authorities' decision to raise gasoline prices, in the city of Karaj, west of Tehran.
In a photo taken Nov. 18, 2019, and released by the Iranian Students’ News Agency, ISNA, people walk past buildings which burned during protests that followed the authorities’ decision to raise gasoline prices, in the city of Karaj, west of Tehran.

Iran’s government has not released figures on the numbers of people killed and wounded in the protests, besides saying several security personnel were among the dead.

British rights group Amnesty International said it received information indicating Iranian security forces had killed at least 106 protesters by Tuesday. The group said it based the figure on eyewitness accounts, social media videos and reports of exiled Iranian human rights activists.
 
On Wednesday, Iran’s mission to the United Nations dismissed reports of more than 100 fatalities in the unrest as “baseless.”
 
VOA Persian has independently confirmed the killings of at least seven protesters in shootings by Iranian security forces on Saturday.
 
The killings of protesters have drawn statements of concern from the United States, the U.N. human rights agency OHCHR and the EU.

In a late Wednesday tweet, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence reiterated U.S. criticism of Iran’s crackdown on the protests and expressed solidarity with the Iranian people.

“As Iranians take to the streets in protest, the Ayatollahs in Tehran continue to use violence and imprisonment to oppress their people. The United States’ message is clear: the American people stand with the people of Iran,” Pence said.

As Iranians take to the streets in protest, the Ayatollahs in Tehran continue to use violence and imprisonment to oppress their people. The United States’ message is clear: the American people stand with the people of Iran.

— Vice President Mike Pence (@VP) November 21, 2019

U.S. Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook, speaking to VOA Persian on Monday, said the Trump administration has been trying to help Iran’s people to circumvent the internet shutdown, without elaborating.

Hook also called on social media companies to suspend the accounts of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohamad Javad Zarif until they turn the internet back on. All three have accounts with U.S. social media companies Twitter and Instagram.
 
Instagram spokesperson Stephanie Otway declined to comment on Hook’s appeal when contacted by VOA Persian.
 
Katie Rosborough, a Twitter spokesperson, also declined a direct response to a VOA Persian query on the issue. Instead, she pointed to a company statement published last month, saying Twitter will take action against accounts of world leaders only if they use the platform to promote violence or post content deemed harmful to others.
 
This article originated in VOA’s Persian Service. Gabriele Barbati contributed.
 

Активісти пікетували посольство Китаю в Києві на підтримку протестів у Гонконгу

Активісти організації Free Hong Kong Center («Центр вільного Гонконгу») зібралися увечері 21 листопада на пікет біля будівлі посольства Китайської Народної Республіки. Учасники акції прийшли підтримати учасників протестів у Гонконгу.

Акцію під назвою «Звільни Гонконг: Акція солідарності» навмисне організували в річницю початку Революції гідності. За словами організаторів, протестувальники в Гонконгу надихаються українським Євромайданом, тож пікет влаштували, щоб висловити солідарність із ними.

 

Пікетувальники вимагають від КНР зокрема звільнити арештованих протестувальників, розслідувати дії силовиків, змінити систему виборів, дозволивши гонконгцям самим обирати весь склад Законодавчої ради та провести перевибори губернатора. Ці вимоги аналогічні тим, які висувають самі мітингарі. 

Читайте також: Гонконг і Революція гідності. Активісти в Києві заявляють про тиск з боку посольства Китаю​

Крім того, Free Hong Kong Center закликає українську владу підтримати протестувальників Гонконгу.

 

На акцію прийшов, поміж інших, Piano Extremist – учасник Євромайдану, який став відомим завдяки своїй грі на піаніно під час протестів у Києві.

Раніше голова Центру Артур Харитонов в коментарі Радіо Свобода заявив, що представники посольства Китаю вдавалися до тиску на організацію та погроз її членам. Посольство КНР наразі не коментувало заяву.

 

21 листопада в Україні відзначають День гідності і свободи – шосту річницю початку Революції гідності. За даними поліції, лише в Києві у цей день планується п’ять акцій.

 

Протести розпочалися в червні проти намірів влади дозволити екстрадицію громадян Гонконгу до Китаю. Під юрисдикцію Пекіна колишня британська колонія перейшла в 1997 році. Зараз Гонконг – напів автономний «спеціальний адміністративний регіон».

У жовтні влада Гонконгу офіційно відкликала законопроєкт про екстрадицію на материковий Китай правопорушників, підозрюваних у кримінальних злочинах.

Наразі протестувальники вимагають прямих виборів лідерів Гонконгу, незалежного розслідування дій поліцейських проти демонстрантів та амністії всіх затриманих учасників акцій протесту.

Іграшки у вигляді цукерок, лускунчики-«охоронці» і хода звіздарів – КМДА про новорічну програму

У Київміськадміністрації повідомили, що святкування новорічних свят у Києві стартує 14 грудня.

«Офіційне святкування Нового року на Софійській та Контрактовій площах триватиме із 14 грудня до 19 січня. Святкове засвічення ялинок для киян та гостей міста традиційно відбудеться 19 грудня о 19:00, у день Святого Миколая…. Тематикою Нового року на Софійській площі стала відома на весь світ різдвяна історія про Лускунчика. Так, 19 грудня о 17:00 святкування відкриватиме різдвяний парад, який пройде від Національної Опери України до Софійської площі. Після закінчення параду відбудеться офіційне засвічення ялинки», – йдеться в повідомленні.

За даними КМДА з посиланням на організаторів святкування – компанію «Folk Ukraine», цьогоріч ялинку прикрасять 750 іграшок у вигляді цукерок та 4 кілометри гірлянд теплого кольору.

«Головні герої казки про Лускунчика будуть «охороняти» ялинку разом із українськими козаками», – розповіли у мерії.

Крім Софійської площі, святкові локації будуть і на Контрактовій площі, де облаштують різдвяне європейське містечко в українських традиціях. У програмі святкування – хода звіздарів 7 січня, виконання масової коляди, встановлення Дідуха та народні гуляння, щедрування в переддень Святого Василя.

Із 14 грудня до 12 січня святкування триватимуть в районі Софійської площі, до 19 січня – на Контрактовій.

Постановою Кабінету міністрів України № 7-р пропонується чотири вихідних дні з 29 грудня 2019 року до 1 січня 2020 року. Пропонується перенести робочий день з 6 на 11 січня. Таким чином вихідні триватимуть з 4 до 7 січня.​ Також очікується додатковий вихідний 25 грудня на Різдво за Григоріанським календарем.

Ex-White House Adviser to Urge Lawmakers to Reject False Urkaine Narrative

 A former White House official on Thursday will call on some lawmakers investigating impeachment of U.S. President Donald Trump not to perpetuate the “alternative narrative” that Ukraine, not Russia, interfered in the 2016 U.S. election, according to her prepared remarks.

“I would ask that you please not promote politically driven falsehoods that so clearly advance Russian interests,” Fiona
Hill, the former senior director for European and Russian Affairs on Trump’s National Security Council, wrote ahead of her public appearance.
 

 

Son of Egypt’s Former President Mubarak Says Mother Ill

One of the sons of Egypt’s former autocratic President Hosni Mubarak says his 78-year-old mother and former first lady is in hospital.

Alaa Mubarak tweeted late Wednesday that Suzanne Mubarak was in intensive care but didn’t elaborate on her illness. He sought to reassure his followers and tweeted: “Things will be fine, God willing!”

During Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year-long rule, his wife had enjoyed significant political power and championed several projects, including efforts to eradicate female genital mutilation.

The 91-year-old Mubarak was ousted in the 2011 uprising that swept Egypt as part of the Arab Spring movements across the region. He was sentenced to life imprisonment but later retried and subsequently acquitted and released in 2017.

Mubarak’s two sons, Alaa and Gamal, were both convicted and served terms for corruption.