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Ocean Breeze

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Ukrainian comedian Volodymyr Zelensky wins presidential election over incumbent Petro Poroshenko, according to exit polls


Zelensky, who plays Ukraine��s president in a popular television show, secures an apparent landslide win amid economic hardship and fatigue from conflict with Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine. The strategically pivotal country becomes the latest to turn to a politically untested leader.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...c=al_news__alert-world--alert-national&wpmk=1
 

Ocean Breeze

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Death toll rises to 311 in Sri Lanka bombings


A Sri Lankan state minister for defense said officials raised the death toll in Sunday's attacks to 311, up from 290 the day before. The country is marking a national day of mourning on Tuesday.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/
 

bill barilko

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Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy dissolves parliament after being sworn in
https://news.sky.com/story/ukraines...lves-parliament-after-being-sworn-in-11724914
This new leader might be interesting to watch........
Why-the asshole/idiot can't even speak Ukrainian-WTF kind of a 'president' can't speak the language of the country he was elected to lead?

And then he hauls out the old 'Come Home Overseas Ukrainians Come Home' shtick-does he think we're stupid (don't answer we know the answer)

This clown (literally) is a front man for the same oligarch thieves as before.

Ukrainians once again have proved themselves incapable of mature decision making partly because no matter how badly they screw up the West is there to bail them out.
 

Ocean Breeze

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U.N. inquiry into Khashoggi killing calls for greater scrutiny of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, other top Saudi officials


Agnes Callamard, a human rights expert who is a special rapporteur for the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, released a 101-page report on her months-long inquiry into journalist Jamal Khashoggi��s death at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul.
Callamard said the culpability for Khashoggi��s killing extends beyond the 11 unnamed Saudis who are on trial in a closed-door judicial proceeding.

source: WAPO


.........Like anything will happen.....(in the corrective sense) Donny's buddy (the unprincely prince) has carte Blanche status as far as Trump et al is concerned.
 

petros

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Nov 21, 2008
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U.N. inquiry into Khashoggi killing calls for greater scrutiny of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, other top Saudi officials

Agnes Callamard, a human rights expert who is a special rapporteur for the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, released a 101-page report on her months-long inquiry into journalist Jamal Khashoggi��s death at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul.
Callamard said the culpability for Khashoggi��s killing extends beyond the 11 unnamed Saudis who are on trial in a closed-door judicial proceeding.
source: WAPO
.........Like anything will happen.....(in the corrective sense) Donny's buddy (the unprincely prince) has carte Blanche status as far as Trump et al is concerned.
Where have you been hiding? Saudis have been running ramshod for decades.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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How about some news about Ukraine
The downing of MH17 rallied the West against Russia. Now, not so much.
The various attacks on Ukraine, including the occupation of Crimea have led to a major build up of NATO resources in Poland, the Baltic and the Black Sea. Ukraine was not forgotten but alas was not yet a NATO member (hence the timing of the Russian moves) and member states got the added "trip wire" protection that the Ukraine needed but lacked.
 

MHz

Time Out
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U.N. inquiry into Khashoggi killing calls for greater scrutiny of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, other top Saudi officials


.........Like anything will happen.....(in the corrective sense) Donny's buddy (the unprincely prince) has carte Blanche status as far as Trump et al is concerned.
So the Deep State can't even hack the leader of a combative nation yet they want 'us' to know they know what time everybody takes a dump. Paper they are paper everything.
 

Twin_Moose

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The various attacks on Ukraine, including the occupation of Crimea have led to a major build up of NATO resources in Poland, the Baltic and the Black Sea. Ukraine was not forgotten but alas was not yet a NATO member (hence the timing of the Russian moves) and member states got the added "trip wire" protection that the Ukraine needed but lacked.

I agree, I also think the sanctions and the low oil prices are starting to sting the Russian economy seeing Putin's popularity dropped by 30% since his "landslide" victory in his re-election.
 

MHz

Time Out
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The various attacks on Ukraine, including the occupation of Crimea have led to a major build up of NATO resources in Poland, the Baltic and the Black Sea. Ukraine was not forgotten but alas was not yet a NATO member (hence the timing of the Russian moves) and member states got the added "trip wire" protection that the Ukraine needed but lacked.
How long is NATO going to allow the people of Crimea to be held hostage, 5 years and counting and there is no plan in place which shows everybody should bold and NATO can do fuk all (NATO= Rothschild Goons)


https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/news_164656.htm

  1. Five years ago, Russia used force against Ukraine to illegally and illegitimately annex Crimea. This violation of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity is a serious breach of international law and a major challenge to Euro-Atlantic security. We strongly condemn this act, which we do not and will not recognise. We call on Russia to return control of Crimea to Ukraine. We reiterate our full support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity within its internationally recognised borders and territorial waters. Crimea is the territory of Ukraine.
  2. Allies are deeply concerned by the human rights abuses and violations being carried out by the Russian de-facto authorities in illegally annexed Crimea against Ukrainians, the Crimean Tatars, and members of other local communities. These violations include extrajudicial killings, abductions, enforced disappearances, violence, arbitrary detentions, arrest, and torture. Despite the 2017 Order of the International Court of Justice, the Mejlis, the Crimean Tatars' self-governing body, remains under persecution and is banned in its homeland.
  3. NATO calls on Russia to bring an immediate end to all violations and abuses in illegally annexed Crimea, to release Ukrainian political prisoners and hostages, and to grant international monitoring organisations access to Crimea. Any attempts to legitimise or normalise the illegal and illegitimate annexation of Crimea must end, including the automatic imposition of Russian citizenship, forced population movements, conscription in the armed forces of the Russian Federation, and illegal holding of Russian election campaigns.
  4. We condemn Russia's ongoing and wide-ranging military build-up in Crimea, and are concerned by Russia's efforts and stated plans for further military build-up in the Black Sea region. We also condemn Russia's construction of the Kerch Strait bridge, which represents another violation of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity and is imposing additional hardship on Ukraine's economy. Russia's unjustified use of military force against Ukrainian ships and naval personnel near the Sea of Azov and the Kerch Strait in November 2018 is part of the larger pattern of Russian aggressive actions in the region. In line with United Nations General Assembly Resolution 73/194 from 17 December 2018, we call on Russia to unconditionally release the Ukrainian crew members it detained, to return the captured vessels and to comply with its international commitments by ensuring unhindered access to Ukrainian ports in the Sea of Azov and allowing freedom of navigation.
  5. NATO's response to address Russia's illegal actions in Ukraine has been alongside and in support of an overall international effort, which has included sanctions. There can be no return to "business as usual" until there is a clear, constructive change in Russia's actions that demonstrates compliance with international law and its international obligations and responsibilities.
 

MHz

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I agree, I also think the sanctions and the low oil prices are starting to sting the Russian economy seeing Putin's popularity dropped by 30% since his "landslide" victory in his re-election.
https://wiiw.ac.at/eu-russia-sancti...conomic-and-political-consequences-n-365.html
In a few weeks we will mark the fifth anniversary of the Russian annexation of Crimea, and the onset of open conflict between Russia and the West. This conflict has gravely affected not only Russia and Ukraine, but it may potentially endanger a fragile economic growth in Europe as well. Western sanctions on Russia, which were initially introduced in March 2014 even before the Russian annexation of Crimea, have been since that time several times expanded and regularly prolonged.
Russia and Ukraine have naturally been the hardest hit. Among the key economic consequences of the conflict and, implicitly of sanctions, are:

  • a deep recession in Ukraine where the economy shrank by more than 15% during 2014-2015 and the subsequent recovery - with expected GDP growth below 3% per year according to latest wiiw forecast - has been unimpressive;
  • the economic losses incurred by Russia were estimated at some 1% of annual GDP during 2014-2015 (cumulated about EUR 100 billion), or at some 0.5%-1.5% of foregone GDP growth after the latest round of US financial sanctions introduced in August 2018 elevated investment risks;
  • both the Russian recession of 2015 and the subsequent economic stagnation of 2016, as well as a weak recovery afterwards, have been attributed at least partly to Western sanctions (the collapse of oil prices 2015 and a depreciation of the Rouble played a role as well);
Impact on the EU varies by country

While on aggregate the impact on the EU has been much less, some individual countries have been negatively affected by the sanctions. The economic effects on individual EU countries vary according to their exposure to the Russian market, with the Baltics and several East European EU member states affected more than others.
Recent wiiw estimates based on Eurostat and Rosstat foreign trade data reckon with a -0.2% loss of German GDP owing to the reduction of exports to Russia, cumulated over the period 2014-2018 (2018 was estimated from the Russian mirror statistics). A similar estimate for Austria yields a cumulated GDP loss of -0.5% of GDP over the same period. More affected were the Czech Republic and Hungary (each -0.6% of GDP), and especially Slovakia which has relatively high exposure towards the Russian market (loss of more than -1% of GDP – see Figure 1). In absolute terms, however, the biggest loss was incurred by Germany (export loss of more than EUR 14 billion during 2014-2016), with a subsequent export recovery in 2017 and 2018. Italy, France and Poland incurred large absolute export losses in Russia as well (Figure 1). As far as the EU as a whole is concerned, the cumulated export loss to Russia during 2014-2018 is estimated at EUR 30 billion (about -0.2% of EU’s GDP in 2018), again incurred largely during 2014-2016 as EU exports to Russia recovered in 2017 (see below).


The five European sectors most exposed to the Russian market at the time the sanctions were introduced were textiles, pharmaceuticals, electrical machinery, machinery and transport equipment – all sectors where goods exports to Russia accounted for more than 3% of the total in 2013. Machinery, transport equipment and pharmaceuticals still play an important role in Austrian and German exports to Russia.
By contrast, foodstuffs (imports of meat, milk, fish, fruits and vegetables from the West which were banned by the Russian embargo since August 2014) did not play a major role in EU exports (except for the Baltic states, Finland, Germany, the Netherlands and Poland). Austrian exports of these products to Russia amounted to just EUR 100 million in 2013 (ibid). Part of these exports was diverted to other markets and/or found their way to Russia e.g. via Belarus or Serbia.
In Russia, there was just an uptick in food inflation in 2014-2015 as a result, but a simultaneous import substitution contributed to a revival of domestic agriculture that has been one of the rare successes of the domestic economy – at least until the last year. In services, especially tourism was adversely affected as the number of Russian tourists dropped substantially after 2014, though rather than sanctions this can again be largely attributed to the devaluation of the Rouble in 2014-2015 (which made foreign trips for Russians much more expensive).
2017 witnessed a strong revival of Russian imports (+22% against 2016). This included higher imports from the EU, as the Russian economy returned to growth and the rouble appreciated – without any substantial change in sanctions policies during that year. The Russian import recovery, albeit weaker, continued in 2018 and economic growth reached a conspiciously high level (+2.3%) unmatched (and unsustainable) in the previous five years.
Russia-EU trade relationship has been permanently affected

In this way a part of export losses incurred during 2014-2016 could be compensated (Figure 1). Nonetheless, EU exports to Russia still remain about 20% (EUR 30 billion) below the pre-sanctions level of 2013. Simultaneously, Russian imports from China (but also from Japan, Turkey and Switzerland) expanded much faster. Consequently, Russia has been changing the pivot from the EU towards the East, particularly to China. Though China still cannot replace the EU as a source of imports due to structural reasons, these ‘structural gaps’ have been significantly reduced during the last couple of years. Russia has been reorienting its imports from the EU and China has become the biggest Russian trading partner, accounting last year for 21% of Russian imports and 13% of exports (2013: 17% and 7%, respectively), overcoming Germany (by imports already since 2008) and The Netherlands (by exports since 2017).


At the same time, the EU as a whole and even its new member states have become less dependent on the Russian market. On aggregate, the share of EU exports going to Russia halved between 2013 and 2018 (Figure 2). However, the EU’s import dependency – especially on Russian oil and gas that account for more than 60% of EU imports from Russia – is poised to increase, especially since the EU’s energy consumption is continuing to rise, and the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline will be completed
Conclusion: sanctions damaged Russia economically, but had perverse impact on integration and modernisation strategies

One could conclude – perhaps with a bit of sarcasm – that Western sanctions ‘crippled Russia’s long-term economic prospects’ as they deter modernisation and restructuring investment, but they did not achieve the intended aims, namely the change in Russian policies – particularly with respect to Crimea and Eastern Ukraine (although some experts argue that sanctions have been effective since they might have prevented Russia from further incursions in Ukraine). While there is currently a stalemate in Ukraine prior to presidential elections scheduled for 29th March 2019, the Minsk agreements remain unfulfilled, with OSCE diplomatic initiatives stalled and, paradoxically, the issue of Russian sanctions remaining a toxic domestic policy topic in the US.
In addition, the sanctions definitely contributed to Russia’s pivot towards the authoritarian regime in China. With a current account surplus of more than EUR 100 billion in 2018 (7% of GDP), foreign exchange reserves of EUR 450 billion, simultaneous foreign debt deleveraging and fiscal surplus, Russia is getting ready for a prolonged conflict with the West – disregarding the collateral damage that sanctions have on the domestic economy.




Seems like Putin is more popular on his worst day than any western leader on their best day. I guess you missed that part, lol.