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[Ticker] EU court: UK can unilaterally revoke Article 50

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 09:13
The European Court of Justice ruled on Monday that the UK can unilaterally withdraw its Article 50 notice of Brexit and remain in the EU under unchanged terms. The ruling confirms an opinion given by its advocate general last week, and is meant to clarify legal options open to British MPs when casting their votes on the UK-EU withdrawal agreement in the House of Commons vote on Tuesday.
Categories: European Union

191/2018 : 10 December 2018 - Judgment of the Court of Justice in Case C-621/18

European Court of Justice (News) - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 09:13
Wightman and Others
DGEN
The United Kingdom is free to revoke unilaterally the notification of its intention to withdraw from the EU

Categories: European Union

[Ticker] UK remains largest arms producer in western Europe

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 08:59
Sales of arms and military services by the world's 100 largest producers totalled €348bn in 2017, 2.5 percent up from 2016, new data released on Monday by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) showed. Accounting for 57 percent of sales, US companies remained the world's largest arms producers, followed by Russia with 9.5 percent. Western European companies accounted for 23.8 percent, with UK the region's largest producer.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Macron to address French nation in bid to calm tension

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 08:57
French president Emmanuel Macron is set to address the country on Monday evening in a bid to calm tensions after protests against fuel tax hikes developed into a general anti-government revolt. "We must expect a new slowdown of economic growth at year-end due to the 'yellow vest' protests," warned finance minister Bruno Le Maire. Belgian police detained more than 400 people in yellow vest-inspired riots in Brussels on Saturday.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Socialists confirm Timmermans as Spitzenkandidat

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 08:55
Europe's social democrat parties on Saturday chose Dutch politician and current vice-president of the European Commission, Frans Timmermans, as their 'Spitzenkandidat' in May's European Parliament elections to possibly succeed Jean-Claude Juncker as head of the commission. Addressing delegates, Timmermans said his party would strive to "write a new social contract with Europe's citizens". Over 1,000 participants and guests from 56 different countries took part in the congress in Lisbon.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] France to investigate Kremlin influence on 'Yellow Vest' riots

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 08:53
Some 600 Twitter accounts known to promote Kremlin views have focussed on France, boosting the 'Yellow Vest' movement's hashtag, French foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told RTL radio on Sunday. "An investigation is now underway," he said. Le Drian also urged US president Donald Trump to not meddle in French politics after he tweeted "The Paris Agreement isn't working out so well for Paris. Protests and riots all over France".
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Air passenger transport in EU reaches record high

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 08:51
New figures for air passenger transport from Eurostat show a record high 1.043 billion passengers were travelling by air in the European Union in 2017, up by seven percent compared to 2016. Intra-EU transport represented almost half (47 percent) of total air passenger transport in the EU. The figures came while EU scientists and diplomats gathered in Katowice, Poland to reduce climate emissions.
Categories: European Union

The 2018 Sakharov Prize

Written by Naja Bentzen and Ionel Zamfir,

© andrys lukowski / Fotolia

Thirty years since it was first awarded, the European Parliament’s Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought retains all its symbolic meaning, as human rights continue to be embattled in many parts of the world. The courage of those who stand up for them therefore deserves to be widely recognised. By awarding the 2018 Prize to the Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov – who is currently an inmate in a penal colony in Siberia – Parliament aims to increase the pressure on Russia to release Sentsov. At the same time, the award also draws attention to the struggle of all Ukrainian political prisoners currently behind bars in Russia and the annexed Crimean peninsula.

Background Significance of the prize

The Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought is awarded each year by the European Parliament to individuals or organisations for their outstanding achievements in upholding human rights and fundamental freedoms. Created through a Parliamentary resolution of 13 December 1985, the prize bears the name of prominent Soviet-era dissident, Andrei Sakharov, joint inventor of the Soviet hydrogen bomb, 1975 Nobel Peace Prize-winner and campaigner for human rights and nuclear disarmament in the Soviet Union. The prize was named after him in recognition of his courageous defence of human rights, among which the freedom of thought and expression, to the detriment of his professional career and personal freedom. The prize was awarded for the first time in 1988 jointly to Nelson Mandela and (posthumously) to Soviet dissident Anatoli Marchenko. Both Mandela and Marchenko embodied the bravery of the individual who stands up to the discretionary power of an oppressive regime and paying for it with their personal freedom. Mandela’s story is widely known. Marchenko was one of the best-known dissidents in the Soviet Union. He died in 1986 after a three-month-long hunger strike for the release of all Soviet dissidents. The public outcry caused by his death pushed Mikhail Gorbachev to authorise the release of political prisoners from Soviet jails. His courageous action prefigures the similarly brave standing of the 2018 laureate (see below).

The prize is awarded for a specific achievement in one of the following fields: defence of human rights and fundamental freedoms, particularly the right to free expression; safeguarding the rights of minorities; respect for international law; development of democracy and implementation of the rule of law.

Selection procedure

Nominations can be made by political groups or by at least 40 Members of the European Parliament, and are submitted during a joint meeting of the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs (AFET) and Development (DEVE) Committees. This year, on 9 October 2018, the two committees shortlisted the following three finalists from among the eight nominees: Oleg Sentsov, a Ukrainian film-director, convicted in Russia to 20 years in prison for his opposition to the annexation of Crimea (proposed by the EPP), NGOs protecting human rights and saving migrant lives across the Mediterranean Sea (proposed by S&D and the Greens/EFA), and Nasser Zefzafi, the leader of a mass protest movement in the Rif region of Morocco, sentenced to 20 years in prison (proposed by GUE/NGL). The Conference of Presidents, composed of President Antonio Tajani and the leaders of the political groups, chose Oleg Sentsov, the Ukraine filmmaker detained in Russia, as this year’s laureate. The prize, consisting of a certificate and €50 000, will be presented at a ceremony in the European Parliament during the plenary session in Strasbourg on 12 December 2018. All three finalists are invited to the award ceremony. This year’s laureate will be represented by a relative and by his lawyer. Other laureates in the history of the prize have also been prevented from attending because of detention, most recently Raif Badawi in 2015. Sentsov is the first laureate from eastern Europe since 2009, when the Russian human rights centre, Memorial, received the prize.

Oleg Sentsov: Ukrainian filmmaker and symbol for political prisoners

Born on 13 July 1976 in Simferopol (Crimea), Oleg Sentsov studied marketing at Kyiv State Economics University. He did not particularly enjoy these studies, which he said ‘disillusioned’ him. After managing a computer club in Simferopol and playing online video games professionally for years – eventually becoming the champion of Ukraine – Sentsov became the leader of the Crimean gaming movement. This experience from the gaming world served as inspiration for his first feature film Gamer, which was released in 2011 and later screened at a number of international film festivals.

Euromaidan as a turning point for Ukraine — and for Sentsov

Sentsov’s work on his film Rhino, about children of the 1990s, was interrupted in 2013, when he joined the Revolution of Dignity (‘Euromaidan’) that broke out in Ukraine after pro-Russia President Viktor Yanukovich decided to suspend talks on an EU-Ukraine Association Agreement. In February 2014, the protests paved the way for a new pro-European government and the ousting of Yanukovich. When Moscow responded by illegally annexing Crimea and launching a hybrid war against Ukraine, Sentsov helped bring food to Ukrainian soldiers and organised rallies for a united Ukraine in Simferopol. Sentsov was arrested by the Russian Federal Security Service in Crimea in May 2014, and deported to Russia. In what Amnesty International called a ‘cynical show trial’, a Russian military court in August 2015 convicted Sentsov to 20 years imprisonment for plotting terrorist acts. Sentsov denies the charges, which he and human rights groups call politically motivated. Sentsov said he was beaten for 24 hours in an attempt to force him to confess. Russian authorities have refused to investigate the allegations of torture.

Increasing concerns over Sentsov’s health after hunger strike

In May 2018, Sentsov began a hunger strike, demanding the release of all Ukrainians held on political grounds in Russia and annexed Crimea. Amid growing concern over Sentsov’s health, Ukraine’s Mission to the United Nations (UN) in June delivered an official letter on behalf of 38 countries to the UN Secretary-General. Sentsov ended the 145-day hunger strike on 6 October 2018. In a handwritten statement he explained that he had no choice but to halt the hunger strike to avoid being force-fed by Russian authorities due to the critical state of his health. Kyiv’s calls to swap Sentsov and Ukrainian journalist Roman Suschenko, arrested in Moscow in 2016 on espionage charges, for Russian prisoners, have so far been rejected by Moscow.

International support, including from the EU and the European Parliament

In addition to Ukraine, the European Union, the United States, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, human rights groups, filmmakers’ and writers’ associations and even Russian film-director Nikita Mikhalkov, who has close links to Russian President Vladimir Putin, have requested Sentsov’s release. The High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy / Vice-President of the Commission, Federica Mogherini, has repeatedly underlined that Sentsov’s detention breaches international law, and urged Russia to return Sentsov and fellow activist Oleksandr Kolchenko to Ukraine. In a June 2018 resolution, Parliament requested the immediate release of Sentsov and the 70 other Ukrainian citizens illegally detained in Russia and Crimea. After Sentsov ended his hunger strike, the European External Action Service condemned Russian authorities’ refusal to provide Sentsov appropriate medical treatment. Announcing the Sakharov Prize laureate in Strasbourg on 25 October 2018, European Parliament President Antonio Tajani stated that Sentsov’s ‘courage and determination’ has made him ‘a symbol of the struggle for the release of political prisoners held in Russia and around the world’. With the award of the Sakharov Prize, Parliament is ‘expressing its solidarity with him and his cause’, Tajani said: ‘We ask that he be released immediately’.

Responses to the 2018 Sakharov Prize

While Russia’s Foreign Ministry criticised Parliament’s decision as ‘absolutely politicised’, others hailed it. PEN America called it ‘a powerful statement in defence of writers, artists, political prisoners, and all those … actively fighting for free thought and free expression in a time of creeping – and not so creeping – authoritarianism around the world’. Human Rights Watch said the award would help increase the pressure on Moscow to release Sentsov. European Council President Donald Tusk renewed his call on Moscow to ‘free Sentsov and all other political prisoners following Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea’. Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman expressed gratitude to Parliament for the award, which he called ‘a strong message highlighting the necessity of democracy protection in the world’.

Read this At a glance note on ‘The 2018 Sakharov Prize‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.

Categories: European Union

Salvini hails six months in power, wants to personally negotiate with EU

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 08:06
Italy's far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini spoke to thousands of supporters in a packed square in Rome on Sunday (9 December) as his surging League party celebrates six months in power.
Categories: European Union

Climate change and development aid: The economic case for prevention

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:57
Climate change affects developing countries more heavily, with broad impacts on the environment and the economy, insurers say, highlighting the need to act before damage is done.
Categories: European Union

IPCC scientist: E-mobility not the only way to decarbonise transport

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:54
When it comes to decarbonisation of transport, switching to electric cars is just one option and there are a number of others, such as biofuels, that should not be discarded,  a scientist from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), told EURACTIV.com on the sidelines of COP24 in Katowice.
Categories: European Union

COP24: Options to decarbonise transport

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:51
Transport is the only sector of the economy whose GHG emissions are increasing globally, scientists have warned.
Categories: European Union

May presses on with Brexit vote as MPs demand better deal

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:51
Theresa May will push ahead with a crucial vote on her European Union exit deal, her Brexit minister said on Sunday (9 December), as senior lawmakers in her own party piled pressure on the British prime minister to go back to Brussels and seek a better offer.
Categories: European Union

EU’s renewable energy law not meant to support farmers, official admits

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:51
The updated renewable energy directive was not meant to support European farmers, but rather promote green energy in whatever form as long as it complies with sustainability criteria, a European Commission official has said.
Categories: European Union

Resentful and reckless: The EU’s misguided policy on Iran [Promoted content]

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:48
There is no justification for Europeans to continue doing business with Iran. A clear-eyed evaluation should lead any responsible actor to steer clear of the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism and the bankroller of slaughter and misery in Syria.
Categories: European Union

EU’s Balkan enlargement policy must now be guided by geopolitics

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:47
While the EU has played for time, delaying the EU enlargement process largely because of its own problems, the geopolitical context has changed, writes Vladimir Krulj.
Categories: European Union

Socialists entrust Timmermans to replace Juncker at EU helm

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:39
Europe’s socialist parties on Saturday (8 December) chose Dutch politician Frans Timmermans to lead them in May elections and to succeed his boss Jean-Claude Juncker as head of the European Commission. Delegates voted in Timmermans, currently first vice president of the EU’s powerful...
Categories: European Union

[Opinion] COP24: vital to keep big polluters away from climate policy

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:38
At COP24 climate talks in Katowice, Poland, four out of the six newly-announced sponsors are coal and gas companies, including Europe's largest coking coal producer JSW.
Categories: European Union

An EU Copyright law for the 21st century film and TV industry

Euractiv.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:34
The EU Copyright Directive, which is currently being finalised by the Council and the European Parliament, must include a principle of fair and proportionate remuneration to be fit for the 21st century film and TV industry, writes Cécile Despringre.  
Categories: European Union

[Opinion] EU foot-dragging puts rule of law at risk in Hungary, Poland

Euobserver.com - Mon, 12/10/2018 - 07:34
The European Commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, has yet to be heard on the forced eviction of the Central European University from Budapest to Vienna. Just months before crucial European parliament elections, EU leaders should not shy away from this debate.
Categories: European Union

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