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Young policy advisers from Western Balkans take part in OSCE/ODIHR training event in Prague

Fri, 11/16/2018 - 13:23
403232 Public Affairs Unit, OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights

Young professionals from across the Western Balkans improved their knowledge about democratic institutions and OSCE commitments in the field of democratic governance during the Young Policy Adviser Course organized by the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR). The course took place at the CEELI Institute (Central and Eastern European Law Initiative) in Prague from 12 to 16 November 2018.

The event was designed to help participants better understand the role of policy advisers and the skills needed to undertake core policymaking tasks and functions. The students – 23 women and eight men – explored ways to navigate complex political environments and participate effectively in policy-related decision-making. The course highlighted the importance of exercising professional ethics, mainstreaming gender into policies and upholding democratic values.

“Helping support young professionals in their learning process in building relevant knowledge and skills is incredibly rewarding, especially considering that these individuals will take this knowledge and apply it in the future,” said Augusta Featherston, ODIHR Youth Focal Point and Associate Democratic Governance Officer.

Eneida Marku, a participant from Tirana, said: “This course is an opportunity for the younger generation to learn skills relevant to democracy, human rights and fundamental freedoms, and we can take that knowledge home with us in the Western Balkans. I learned from a highly-skilled team of mentors whose expertise and teaching methods helped make the link between policy advising theory and practical application.”

The course methodology and content, originally developed by ODIHR in collaboration with the Folke Bernadotte Academy, was subsequently refined to suit specific audiences in the OSCE area with input from the School of Public Policy at the Central European University in Budapest.

The participants were professionals up to the age of 35 who work as political or policy advisers in government ministries, presidential administrations, parliaments or other public institutions in the Western Balkans. Facilitated by experts in the field of policy advising, the course provided a rich base for the participants to explore real world applications and outcomes, both positive and negative.

Categories: Central Europe

On International Day for Tolerance, OSCE/ODIHR Director urges states to renew efforts to counter hate-motivated crime as new hate crime data published

Fri, 11/16/2018 - 11:13

WARSAW, 16 November 2018 – As the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) released its hate crime data for 2017 today, on the International Day for Tolerance, ODIHR Director Ingibjörg Sólrún Gísladóttir called on OSCE participating States to strengthen their efforts to counter hate crime.

“The International Day for Tolerance is an opportunity for us to send the clear message that there can be no space for discrimination or intolerance in our societies. Any attack against someone simply because of who he or she is reinforces a message of hate and rejection that can undermine the security of our societies. This is why every single OSCE participating State has committed to make great efforts to counter hate crime,” the ODIHR Director said. “Collecting data is only the first step, but it puts into place elements that can be used by public institutions and civil society to make a real difference for victims.”

The 2017 data, published on ODIHR’s dedicated hate crime reporting website, contain information provided by participating States, civil society and international organizations. This includes official data reported by 39 states, including disaggregated official hate crime statistics for 23 countries. These are complemented by information on hate incidents in 47 participating States, as reported by 124 civil society groups, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, the International Organization for Migration and OSCE field operations.

"Our data show that the quality of the information provided to us by countries is improving, along with their ability to generate detailed statistics. However, much remains to be done. This is why I call on states to meet their commitments on hate crime, in close co-operation with ODIHR. We have developed a host of programmes to help ensure a comprehensive approach to hate crime and stand ready to assist states with implementation," Gísladóttir said.

The data were presented to national points of contact on hate crime, who are public officials responsible for reporting hate crime data to ODIHR, during an annual meeting held on 15 and 16 November in Vienna. Participants were introduced to ODIHR’s data collection assistance programme Information Against Hate Crimes Toolkit (INFAHCT), as well as other tools recently published by ODIHR as part of a two-year project on defining a comprehensive approach to counter hate crime.

ODIHR’s hate crime data, and more information on ODIHR's capacity-building programmes, can be found at http://hatecrime.osce.org.

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Categories: Central Europe

Victims must remain central to discussions on international counter-terrorism efforts, say OSCE PA participants at Madrid conference

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 17:57

MADRID, 15 November 2018 – Terrorism is a transnational threat that requires a concerted multilateral response at global, regional and national levels, said Greek parliamentarian Makis Voridis, Chair of the OSCE PA’s Ad Hoc Committee on Countering Terrorism (CCT), at a conference in Madrid today. At the same time, the tragic human cost of terrorism must remain at the forefront of policy-making discussions, he said.

“We must never forget the tens of thousands of people who have been injured, traumatized or lost their lives during terrorist attacks,” said Voridis. He emphasized that the extreme sacrifice of the victims has empowered countries to become more resilient against the terrorist threat.

“Our society owes a debt to the victims of terrorism and we should do whatever it takes to render them justice and dignity for what they have suffered, including through adequate compensation,” he said.

Voridis was speaking at the opening session of the Conference on Victims of Terrorism in the Sphere of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, hosted by the Spanish Senate. The conference is taking place Thursday and Friday in the Spanish capital.

CCT member Ignacio Cosidó Gutiérrez, Head of the Spanish Delegation to the OSCE PA Pere Joan Pons, and Vice-Chair of the Spanish Senate Pedro María Sanz Alonso are also participating in the conference, along with several other members of the PA.

In his opening remarks, Cosidó Gutiérrez said that terrorism has generated much suffering and cut short many lives and dreams in Spain and other countries. But fighting terrorism has made Spanish society stronger and more united in defence of democracy and freedom, he said.He added that the defeat of ETA terrorism in Spain would never have been possible without placing the victims at the center of counter-terrorism policies and decision-making.

The two-day conference is exploring topics such as increasing support to victims of terrorism in Spain, victims of terrorism in the sphere of the OSCE, and the Spanish experience in the fight against terrorism.

Representatives of victims are sharing experiences of suffering terrorist attacks and discussing their personal situations and their experiences with authorities and public administrations. Security experts from police corps are also participating, explaining how their departments manage the fight against terrorism, the problems they face, the way they confront threats, and how they organize their actions and institutions.

Participants have emphasized that survivors of terror attacks require long-term support with adequate psychological, judicial, legal and social assistance in order to cope with the trauma and carry on with their lives. Greater investment in the rehabilitation and reintegration of victims helps to build more resilient and inclusive societies is also needed, they said.

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Categories: Central Europe

Latest from the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine (SMM), based on information received as of 19:30, 14 November 2018

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 17:40

This report is for the media and the general public.

The SMM recorded more ceasefire violations in Donetsk and Luhansk regions compared with the previous reporting period. The SMM’s access remained restricted in all three disengagement areas as well as near Novolaspa and Novoselivka Druha.* The Mission facilitated and monitored adherence to the ceasefire to enable repairs to houses and essential civilian infrastructure on both sides of the contact line, as well as to enable demining near Nyzhnoteple. The SMM observed two protests in Kyiv regarding heating supply in Dnipropetrovsk and Cherkasy regions.

In Donetsk region, the SMM recorded more ceasefire violations[1], including 265 explosions, compared with the previous reporting period (about 170 explosions).

On the evening of 13 November, while in Svitlodarsk (government-controlled, 57km north-east of Donetsk), the SMM heard 54 explosions (49 assessed as outgoing rounds and five undetermined) at an assessed range of 2-4km east and south-east and about 280 bursts and shots of small-arms and heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 2-5km north-east, east and south-east. The following day, from the same location, the SMM heard three undetermined explosions and four bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 3-5km south-west.

On the evening and night of 13-14 November, the SMM camera located 1.5km north-east of Hnutove (government-controlled, 20km north-east of Mariupol), recorded 16 explosions (three assessed as impacts and 13 undetermined) and about 90 projectiles in flight (mostly from northerly to southerly directions and from southerly to northerly directions), all at an assessed range of 2-5km east-north-east, east and east-south-east.

On the day of 14 November, positioned in Maiorsk (government-controlled, 45km north-east of Donetsk), the SMM heard 90 undermined explosions at an assessed range of 2-8km in directions ranging from east-north-east to south-west. The Mission also heard 26 bursts and shots of heavy-machine-gun and 30mm cannon fire as well as about 20 minutes of uncountable overlapping shots and bursts of small-arms and heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 1-5km east-south-east, south and south-west.

In Luhansk region, the SMM recorded more ceasefire violations, including about 180 explosions, compared with the previous reporting period (about 70 explosions).

On the morning of 14 November, positioned on the western edge of Tsarivka (government-controlled, 41km north-west of Luhansk) the SMM heard 40 explosions assessed as anti-tank gun (MT-12 Rapira, 100mm) rounds and 100 bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all 4km north-east (all assessed as live-fire exercise outside the security zone).

On the same morning, positioned in Holubivske (non-government-controlled, 51km west of Luhansk) the SMM heard 19 undetermined explosions and 17 bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 2-5km north and north-west.

The SMM continued to monitor and to pursue full access to the disengagement areas near Stanytsia Luhanska (government-controlled, 16km north-east of Luhansk), Zolote (government-controlled, 60km west of Luhansk) and Petrivske[2] (non-government-controlled, 41km south of Donetsk), as foreseen in the Framework Decision of the Trilateral Contact Group relating to disengagement of forces and hardware of 21 September 2016. The SMM’s access remained restricted, but the Mission was able to partially monitor them.*

On the day of 14 November, positioned in Zolote-2/Karbonit (government-controlled, 62km west of Luhansk), the SMM heard 80 undetermined explosions and 200 bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 4-6km south-east (all assessed as outside the disengagement area).

On the same day, positioned 1km south-south-east of the Stanytsia Luhanska bridge (15km north-east of Luhansk), the SMM heard 15 shots of small-arms fire, 1km south-south-west (assessed as outside the disengagement area).

The SMM continued to monitor the withdrawal of weapons in implementation of the Memorandum and the Package of Measures and its Addendum.

Beyond withdrawal lines but outside designated storage sites, in a government-controlled area, the SMM saw two stationary surface-to-air missile systems (9K33 Osa), one of them in a firing position, near an inhabited residential building in Pidhorodne (73km north of Donetsk).

The SMM revisited a permanent storage site whose location was beyond withdrawal lines in a non-government-controlled area of Luhansk region and noted that a tank (T-64) was again missing.

The SMM saw two anti-tank guns (type undetermined) being towed near Volnovakha (government-controlled, 53km west of Donetsk).

The SMM observed an armoured combat vehicle[3] in the security zone. In a non-government-controlled area, the SMM saw an infantry fighting vehicle (BMP-2) in Yasynuvata (16km north-east of Donetsk).

The SMM facilitated and monitored adherence to the ceasefire to enable repair works to the Petrivske water pumping station near Artema (government-controlled, 26km north of Luhansk), a gas pipeline in Marinka (government-controlled, 23km south-west of Donetsk), water pipelines near Zaitseve (50km north-east of Donetsk) and near a coal mine close to the Gagarina settlement of Horlivka (non-government-controlled, 39km north-east of Donetsk) and damaged houses in Marinka and Krasnohorivka (government-controlled, 21km west of Donetsk), as well as to enable demining activities near Nyzhnoteple (government-controlled, 26km north of Luhansk). The Mission continued to facilitate the operation of the Donetsk Filtration Station.

In Kyiv, the SMM monitored two public gatherings protesting lack of heating in Dnipropetrovsk and Cherkasy regions. On 13 November, in front of the headquarters of NaftoGaz Ukraine at 6 Bohdana Khmelnytskoho Street, the SMM saw 40-50 people (25-60 years old, 60 per cent men), some carrying banners with messages such as “Supply heating to houses of Kryvyi Rih inhabitants” and “Children and the elderly are freezing”. One participant (male, 50 years old) told the SMM that the group had travelled from Kryvyi Rih (133km south-west of Dnipro) where, he said, many inhabitants were without heating. The SMM observed about 40 police officers in riot gear and National Guard officers surrounding the building. On 14 November, in front of the Cabinet of Ministers building at 12/2 Mykhaila Hrushevskoho Street, the Mission saw about 30 people (mixed genders and ages), half of whom were waving flags with the emblem of the town of Smyla (169km south-east of Kyiv). About 20 National Guard officers were positioned around the building. Shortly thereafter, the Mission saw the same group of people in front of the NaftoGaz Ukraine headquarters, as well as about 30 police officers around the entrance of the building. At both public gatherings, the Mission observed a calm situation.

The SMM continued monitoring in Kherson, Odessa, Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Kharkiv, Dnipro and Chernivtsi.

*Restrictions of SMM’s freedom of movement or other impediments to fulfilment of its mandate

The SMM’s monitoring and freedom of movement are restricted by security hazards and threats, including risks posed by mines, unexploded ordnance (UXO) and other impediments – which vary from day to day. The SMM’s mandate provides for safe and secure access throughout Ukraine. All signatories of the Package of Measures have agreed on the need for this safe and secure access, that restriction of the SMM’s freedom of movement constitutes a violation, and on the need for rapid response to these violations. They have also agreed that the Joint Centre on Control and Coordination (JCCC) should contribute to such response and co-ordinate mine clearance. Nonetheless, the armed formations in parts of Donetsk and Luhansk regions frequently deny the SMM access to areas adjacent to Ukraine’s border outside control of the Government (for example, see SMM Daily Report 12 November 2018). The SMM’s operations in Donetsk and Luhansk regions remain restricted following the fatal incident of 23 April 2017 near Pryshyb; these restrictions continued to limit the Mission’s observations.

Denials of access:

  • At a checkpoint on the eastern edge of Novolaspa (non-government-controlled, 50km south of Donetsk), two armed members of the armed formations denied the SMM passage, citing “security risk for the SMM”.
  • A Ukrainian Armed Forces soldier denied the SMM access to a compound in Novoselivka Druha (government-controlled, 36km north-east of Mariupol) citing “instructions from superiors”.

Regular restrictions related to disengagement areas and mines/UXO:

  • The SMM was prevented from accessing parts of the Stanytsia Luhanska disengagement area, with the exception of the main road, due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A Ukrainian Armed Forces officer of the JCCC informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed and informed the JCCC.[4]
  • The SMM was prevented from accessing secondary roads in the Zolote disengagement area due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A Ukrainian Armed Forces officer of the JCCC informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed and informed the JCCC. [4]
  • The SMM was prevented from accessing secondary roads south of the Zolote disengagement area due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A member of the armed formations informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed.

[1] Please see the annexed table for a complete breakdown of the ceasefire violations as well as a map of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions marked with locations featured in this report.

[2] Due to the presence of mines, including on a road between Bohdanivka and Petrivske, the SMM’s access to its camera in Petrivske remains limited, and thus the SMM has not been able to access observations from the camera since 22 June 2018.

[3] This hardware is not proscribed by the provisions of the Minsk agreements on the withdrawal of weapons.

[4] The SMM informed Ukrainian Armed Forces officers of the JCCC. Russian Federation Armed Forces officers of the JCCC withdrew from the JCCC as of 18 December 2017.

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Categories: Central Europe

OSCE Media Freedom Representative condemns attempted arson attack at home of Rai 3 journalist in Italy

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 17:31

VIENNA, 15 November 2018 - The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Harlem Désir today condemned an attempted arson attack at the home of Rai 3 investigative journalist Federico Ruffo near Rome.

“I condemn this unacceptable attack on a journalist. It could have had ended tragically and it is a very serious act of intimidation,” Désir said. “Journalists should be able to do their work without fear. I call on the authorities to fully investigate this attack and punish the perpetrators.”

Early in the morning on 13 November, petrol was poured in front of the entrance to Ruffo’s apartment and a red cross was painted on a wall in the doorway. When Ruffo got up after he heard a noise, the perpetrators fled. The Italian police have launched an investigation. Ruffo stated that he and his team received threats before airing an investigative report on the Juventus football club, their supporters and possible connections with the mafia.

The Representative expressed concern that there have been multiple cases of intimidation and threats against journalists in Italy recently and called on the authorities to do their utmost to ensure a safe work environment for media workers.

The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media observes media developments in all 57 OSCE participating States. He provides early warning on violations of freedom of expression and media freedom and promotes full compliance with OSCE media freedom commitments. Learn more at www.osce.org/fom, Twitter: @OSCE_RFoM and on www.facebook.com/osce.rfom.

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Categories: Central Europe

OSCE Project Co-ordinator in Uzbekistan organizes workshop on combating corruption in state organizations

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 15:54
403133

The Academy under the General Prosecutor’s Office of the Republic of Uzbekistan welcomed some 100 representatives of state bodies to a two-day training workshop on increasing the efficiency of anti-corruption measures in state organizations on 14 November 2018 in Tashkent. The event was organized jointly with the OSCE Project Co-ordinator in Uzbekistan, the General Prosecutor’s Office and NGO the Regional Dialogue.   

During the workshop the participants discussed how to implement measures to prevent anti-corruption in the state bodies and were familiarized with the international experience in promoting a zero-tolerance to the corruption across the population. The participants also learned how to raise public awareness on anti-corruption topics.

Juergen Becker, Senior Project Officer of the Human and Politico-Military dimensions at the Project Co-ordinator in Uzbekistan, said: “Government services should be a sector where corruption has no place. Corruption is not something that is driven top-down, but it is something that can be stopped that way. Without clear regulations and strong compliance mechanisms, without establishing the ethics on which state servants should base themselves at the top it will be difficult to speak about the efficiency of state measures towards combating corruption.”

The workshop was organized as part of the Project Co-ordinator’s efforts to assist Uzbekistan in achieving its international commitments in regard to combating corruption by facilitating collective action against corruption in the business sector.

Categories: Central Europe

Role of well-governed and accountable security sector in addressing transnational threats explored at OSCE-UNODC sub-regional expert meeting in Minsk

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 14:48
Communication and Media Relations Section SDGs SDGs:  17 - Partnerships for the goals

The importance of a well-governed and accountable security sector in effectively addressing transnational organized crime, including trafficking in persons and illicit drugs, corruption and terrorism, was the focus of a sub-regional expert-level workshop for senior practitioners and policy-makers from Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine in Minsk on 14 and 15 November 2018.

Discussions focused on the promotion of regional co-operation and information exchange among national security sector actors, as well as the importance of shared responsibility in addressing the security threats and their prevention in line with the UN Peace and Security Agenda and UN Security Council Resolution 2151 on Security Sector Reform.

The workshop was organized by the OSCE and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in partnership with the Government of Belarus and the Government of Slovakia, which chairs the OSCE Group of Friends of Security Sector Governance and Reform, and is also Co-Chair of the UN Group of Friends of Security Sector Reform.

Held at the International Training Centre of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Belarus, the workshop brought together representatives of security and law enforcement agencies, the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Interior and Health, anti-corruption authorities, customs and taxation departments, parliamentary oversight bodies and civil society, as well as experts from neighbouring countries, regional and international organizations, and relevant think tanks.

“Modern transnational organized crime is a factor that seriously destabilizes public safety and significantly undermines the efforts of states to improve security,” said Ivan Podgursky, Belarus’ First Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs. He added that the workshop was an excellent opportunity to boost regional and international co-operation in this sphere.

Katarína Žáková, Deputy Permanent Representative at Slovakia’s Permanent Mission to the OSCE emphasized the centrality of national ownership in Security Sector Governance and Reform that must be informed by the needs of the population and developed through inclusive national political processes.

Fred Tanner, Senior Advisor at the OSCE Conflict Prevention Centre, added: “Ensuring that the security sector is capable to respond to today’s challenges requires constant adjustments and the improvement of police, border security institutions and judicial systems.”

The sessions of the workshop focused on multilateral and regional co-operation approaches, crime prevention, the effective regulation and management of borders, ensuring the democratic oversight of security sector institutions, and strengthening public health security.

Gilberto Gerra, Chief of the Health Department at UNODC, said: “The role of the UN Drugs Convention is to protect the health and well-being of people, and stresses the need for an integrated approach in addressing drug-related challenges. This does not only involve law enforcement, but also includes the health and justice sectors.”

The workshop was organized under the OSCE-UNODC Joint Action Plan for 2018-2019, which commits both organizations to support the implementation of Security Sector Governance and Reform.

Categories: Central Europe

Moldova’s national human rights institutions, with support of OSCE Mission, work together to protect rights of national minorities

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 14:48
403094 Anna Vorobeva OSCE Mission to Moldova

The three Moldovan human rights institutions – the Agency for Interethnic Relations, the Ombudsman’s Office and the Council for Preventing and Eliminating Discrimination and Ensuring Equality - signed a Memorandum of Understanding on 15 November 2018 to work together on protecting and promoting the rights of national minorities in the country. The ceremony took place on the premises of the OSCE Mission to Moldova, which facilitated the development of the document.

Earlier this year, at the request of the three institutions the Mission conducted an assessment of the national human rights institutions’ competences which recommended the creation of a joint co-operation mechanism between the institutions.

The Memorandum of Understanding is an effective tool to support the implementation of the National Strategy for the Consolidation of Interethnic Relations till 2027, which was adopted by the Moldovan Government in 2017. It sets a framework for strengthening the co-operation between the three national human rights institutions through regular meetings, the exchange of information, joint research and mutual support. The Memorandum of Understanding places a specific focus on the national minorities’ right to education, access to information, public participation and other cultural, religious and linguistic rights, which are reflected in the National Strategy.

“The OSCE Mission to Moldova together with the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities supported the commendable efforts of the Moldovan Government to develop the Strategy, which seeks to create an inclusive and tolerant society in Moldova. This kind of environment, where human rights, including the rights of national minorities, are respected, builds a strong foundation for the settlement process,” said Claus Neukirch, Head of the OSCE Mission to Moldova during the signing ceremony.

The Memorandum of Understanding was developed as part of an OSCE Mission project to strengthen the co-operation and capacity of actors in promoting and protecting the rights of national minorities. It complements the Mission’s two-day training course held on 2 and 3 October 2018 in Chisinau in which an international expert explored issues related to national minority rights for representatives of the three institutions. It also complements the ongoing training seminars for lawyers throughout Moldova on the rights of national minorities.

Categories: Central Europe

OSCE organizes workshop for civil society representatives on Open Government Partnership initiative in Kazakhstan

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 10:28
Colin McCullough, OSCE Programme Office in Astana

An OSCE-organized workshop for 20 representatives of civil society on the Open Government Partnership (OGP) initiative took place on 15 November in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

A Georgian expert from the Tbilisi-based Institute for Development of Freedom of Information delivered a presentation on the benefits of the OGP and identified key challenges for Kazakhstan to join it. The participants discussed the shortcomings in national anti-corruption legislation and proposed ways to strengthen interaction with the government to ensure transparency and civic participation in government decision-making.

The OGP is a multilateral initiative to help governments and civil society develop a dialogue platform to advance transparency, accountability and civic engagement. It aims to secure concrete commitments from national governments to promote open government, empower citizens, fight corruption and harness new technologies to strengthen governance.

The event is a follow-up to an OSCE-supported roundtable discussion in Astana last month involving non-governmental organizations.

The workshop is part of the Programme Office’s multi-year efforts to promote good governance by focussing on anti-corruption activities in Kazakhstan.

Categories: Central Europe

Good governance in public administration discussed at OSCE-supported event in Bishkek

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 10:26
Kunduz Rysbek

The OSCE Programme Office in Bishkek supported a round-table discussion, on 14 November 2018 in Bishkek, where Kyrgyzstan’s draft Unified Register of Functions of Ministries and State Agencies was brought for discussion to the public. The register is meant to systematize functions and bringing them into one coherent list.

“The register gives a clear overview of all functions in ministries and state agencies at the national level,” said Eni Gjergji, Acting Head of the Economic and Environmental Dimension of the OSCE Programme Office in Bishkek. “This functional review identified redundant functions, duplications between state agencies, missing functions, as well as inconsistencies and omissions in the legal framework that hinder state agencies from performing their duties.”

The register is the result of a six-month project, which was initiated at the request of the Prime Minister’s Office and implemented by the Centre for Public Policy NGO.

The register was drafted by a group of experienced national experts who worked in close co-operation with the Kyrgyz Ministry of Economy. This expert group profoundly analyzed the functions of 35 ministries and state agencies, as well as conducted an analysis of laws and legal acts regulating the activities of ministries and state agencies. The local expert community, representatives of state bodies and the Prime Minister’s Office collaborated on and contributed to the final version of the register. 

The register covers 35 ministries and state agencies. It does not include bodies that operate in the areas of national defence, state borders protection, national security and law- enforcement. 

Mirbek Akmatov, Head of the civil service sector in the Prime Minister’s Office, said: “Based on the results of this important analysis, we can clarify the tasks and functions, optimize the structure of the ministries and state agencies. Thus, this register allows creating the conditions for systemic changes in public administration.”

The aim of this project was to support the efforts of the host government in increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of the public administration system, with the ultimate goal of improving service delivery to the citizens of Kyrgyzstan. 

Categories: Central Europe

OSCE Programme Office starts its new patrol field capacity building project to train Tajik border troops

Thu, 11/15/2018 - 09:07
402935 Munira Shoinbekova, OSCE Programme Office in Dushanbe

On 12 November 2018, the OSCE Programme Office in Dushanbe started a new project “Patrol Field Capacity Building of the Tajik Border Troops through promotion of Regional Co-operation”. The project is supported by the Federal Republic of Germany and was launched in the Regional Training Centre of Khalkayor, some 230km south of Dushanbe.  

The five-year project aims to deliver specialized tactical trainings to 1,500 Tajik border troops who are part of a recently established border management team named “Special Border Unit under the Border Troops of the Republic of Tajikistan”. The first group of 25 senior Tajik border officers of the Special Border Units will be the first trainees attending a four-week course on Sustained Field Operational Capacities, which also started on 12 November 2018.

The First Secretary of the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in Dushanbe Maik Sydoruk, the Japanese Ambassador to Dushanbe Hajime Kitaoka and the Commander of the Border Troops for Khatlon Region, General Dilshod Tohirzoda, attended the project launch. Maik Sydoruk underlined that Germany “values international co-operation as the only way to address common challenges and the OSCE is the best placed organization to facilitate such co-operation on a large scale.”

The Japanese Ambassador to Tajikistan, Hajime Kitaoka, underscored the importance of global solidarity in the face of terrorism and all forms of organized crime. He stressed the importance of the OSCE’s work in building the capacities of the Tajik border troops and neighbouring countries.

General Dilshod Tohirzoda expressed high appreciation for the co-operation between the OSCE and the Tajik Border Troops, considering its assistance is “vital in addressing all types of security threats in Tajikistan and beyond.”      

Categories: Central Europe

Latest from the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine (SMM), based on information received as of 19:30, 13 November 2018

Wed, 11/14/2018 - 16:12

This report is for the media and the general public.

The SMM recorded fewer ceasefire violations in Donetsk and Luhansk regions, compared to the previous reporting period. It observed for the first time anti-tank mines inside the Zolote disengagement area. The SMM’s access remained restricted in all three disengagement areas.* It observed weapons in violation near Volnovakha. The Mission facilitated and monitored adherence to the ceasefire to enable repairs to houses and essential civilian infrastructure, as well as to enable demining near Nyzhnoteple and the clearance of unexploded ordnance near Marinka.

In Donetsk region, the SMM recorded fewer ceasefire violations[1], including, however, more explosions (about 170), compared with the previous reporting period (about 140 explosions).

On the evening and night of 12-13 November, the SMM camera in Chermalyk (government-controlled, 31km north-east of Mariupol) recorded 100 projectiles in flight (mostly from east-north-east to west-south-west) at an assessed range of 2-4km south-east and south-south-east. During the day on 13 November, the same camera recorded four undetermined explosions and about 30 projectiles in flight (mostly from east-north-east to west-south-west), all at an assessed range of 2-4km south-east, south-south-east and south.

On the evening of 12 November, while in Svitlodarsk (government-controlled, 57km north-east of Donetsk), the SMM heard about 60 undetermined explosions and about 50 bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 3-4km south-south-east.

In Luhansk region, the SMM recorded fewer ceasefire violations, including about 70 explosions, compared with the previous reporting period (about 110 explosions).

On the morning of 13 November, positioned in the north-western part of Holubivske (non-government-controlled, 51km west of Luhansk) for about 40 minutes, the SMM heard 25 explosions assessed as caused by mortar rounds (120mm) at an assessed range of 4-5km north-north-east  and north-west.

During the day on 13 November, positioned about 1.5km south-west of Molodizhne (non-government-controlled, 63km north-west of Luhansk) for about five minutes, the SMM heard 18 undetermined explosions at an assessed range of 7-10km north-east.

The SMM continued to monitor and to pursue full access to the disengagement areas near Stanytsia Luhanska (government-controlled, 16km north-east of Luhansk), Zolote (government-controlled, 60km west of Luhansk) and Petrivske[2] (non-government-controlled, 41km south of Donetsk), as foreseen in the Framework Decision of the Trilateral Contact Group relating to disengagement of forces and hardware of 21 September 2016. The SMM’s access remained restricted, but the Mission was able to partially monitor them.*

On the morning of 13 November, positioned on the southern edge of the Zolote disengagement area for about ten minutes, the SMM heard 18 undetermined explosions and 19 bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 7-10km north-east (assessed as outside the disengagement area). On the same morning, the SMM saw a military truck (ZIL-131) entering the disengagement area from the north and driving south. It also observed a Ukrainian Armed Forces soldier inside a black Volkswagen Passat civilian car with military plates driving out of the Zolote disengagement area, near Katerynivka (government-controlled, 64km west of Luhansk).

On the same morning, inside the Zolote disengagement area, the SMM observed for the first time six anti-tank mines (TM-62 variant) 2m east of road T1316, about 350m north of the checkpoint of the armed formations on the southern edge of the disengagement area, as well as an anti-tank mine (TM-62 variant) 8m west of the same road, about 450m north of the abovementioned checkpoint and 1.6km west of the disengagement’s eastern edge. About 600m south-east of the same anti-tank mine, the SMM also saw for the first time a remnant of an anti-tank guided missile 2m west of road T1316 and previously observed remnants of a grenade round (PG-9) 3m west of the same road, both inside the disengagement area (see SMM Daily Report 15 September 2018).

Positioned inside the Stanytsia Luhanska disengagement area, the SMM observed a calm situation.

The SMM continued to monitor the withdrawal of weapons in implementation of the Memorandum and the Package of Measures and its Addendum.

In violation of withdrawal lines in a government-controlled area, on 12 November, the SMM saw a towed howitzer (D-20, 152mm) near Volnovakha (53km south of Donetsk).

Beyond withdrawal lines but outside designated storage sites in non-government-controlled areas, on 13 November, an SMM mini-unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) spotted 32 tanks (20 T-64 and 12 T-72) in a training area near Kruhlyk (31km south-west of Luhansk). On 13 November, the SMM saw five tanks (type undetermined) in a training area near Ternove (57km east of Donetsk).

The SMM observed weapons that could not be verified as withdrawn, as their storage did not comply with the criteria set out in the 16 October 2015 notification from the SMM to the signatories of the Package of Measures on effective monitoring and verification of the withdrawal of heavy weapons. In a non-government-controlled area of Donetsk region, the SMM observed five self-propelled howitzers (2S1 Gvozdika, 122mm) and noted that two self-propelled howitzers (2S1) were again missing.

The SMM revisited a permanent storage site whose location was beyond withdrawal lines in a non-government-controlled area of Donetsk region and noted that 11 tanks (seven T-72 and four T-64) were again missing. The SMM revisited a permanent storage site whose location was beyond withdrawal lines in a government-controlled area of Donetsk region and noted that the site continued to be abandoned and that 53 tanks (T-64) and seven mortars (two M120-15 Molot 120mm and five 2B9M Vasilek 82mm) were missing.

The SMM observed armoured combat vehicles[3] and other signs of military presence in the security zone. In a government-controlled area, on 12 November, an SMM mini-UAV spotted four infantry fighting vehicles (BMP-2) and an aircraft communications automatic jamming station (R-934B/BM VHF/UHF) near Prychepylivka (50km north-west of Luhansk).

In non-government-controlled areas, on 13 November, the SMM saw an armoured personnel carrier (APC) (BTR-80) in Oleksandrivsk (10km west of Luhansk) and two APCs (one BTR-80 and one type undetermined) near Sentianivka (44km west of Luhansk).

The SMM observed the presence of a mine. About 1.4km west of Verkhnoshyrokivske (formerly Oktiabr, non-government-controlled, 29km north-east of Mariupol), 1.5m north of a paved road, the Mission again saw a mine, assessed as a MON-100 anti-personnel type, fastened to a tree about 1.5m from the ground.

The SMM facilitated and monitored adherence to the ceasefire to enable the clearance by the Ukrainian State Emergency Services of a piece of unexploded ordnance (UXO), assessed as the tailfin of a 120mm mortar round, on the side of road H-15 about 400m east of a checkpoint near Marinka (government-controlled, 23km south-west of Donetsk) (for previous observation, see SMM Daily Report 12 November 2018). The SMM heard an explosion and observed a plume of black smoke rising from the location of the UXO. Later on, it noted that the UXO was no longer present.

The SMM also facilitated and monitored adherence to the ceasefire to enable repair works to the Petrivske water pumping station near Artema (government-controlled, 26km north of Luhansk), a gas pipeline in Marinka, water pipelines near Zaitseve (50km north-east of Donetsk) and near a coal mine near the Gagarina settlement of Horlivka (non-government-controlled, 39km north-east of Donetsk) and damaged houses in Marinka and Krasnohorivka (government-controlled, 21km west of Donetsk), as well as to enable demining activities near Nyzhnoteple (government-controlled, 26km north of Luhansk). The Mission continued to facilitate the operation of the Donetsk Filtration Station.

The SMM visited a border area outside government control. While at a border crossing point near Marynivka (78km east of Donetsk) for about 90 minutes, the SMM saw 22 cars (eight with Ukrainian and five with Russian Federation licence plates, as well as nine with “DPR” plates), three vans with Ukrainian licence plates and six covered cargo trucks (five with Ukrainian licence plates as well as one with “DPR” plates) exiting Ukraine, and 27 cars (seven with Ukrainian, 15 with Russian Federation and one with Georgian licence plates, as well as four with “DPR” plates), a van with Ukrainian licence plates and three pedestrians entering Ukraine.

The SMM continued monitoring in Kherson, Odessa, Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Kharkiv, Dnipro, Chernivtsi and Kyiv.

*Restrictions of SMM’s freedom of movement or other impediments to fulfilment of its mandate

The SMM’s monitoring and freedom of movement are restricted by security hazards and threats, including risks posed by mines, UXO and other impediments – which vary from day to day. The SMM’s mandate provides for safe and secure access throughout Ukraine. All signatories of the Package of Measures have agreed on the need for this safe and secure access, that restriction of the SMM’s freedom of movement constitutes a violation, and on the need for rapid response to these violations. They have also agreed that the Joint Centre on Control and Coordination (JCCC) should contribute to such response and co-ordinate mine clearance. Nonetheless, the armed formations in parts of Donetsk and Luhansk regions frequently deny the SMM access to areas adjacent to Ukraine’s border outside control of the Government (for example, see SMM Daily Report 12 November 2018). The SMM’s operations in Donetsk and Luhansk regions remain restricted following the fatal incident of 23 April 2017 near Pryshyb; these restrictions continued to limit the Mission’s observations.

Regular restrictions related to disengagement areas and mines/UXO:

  • The SMM was prevented from accessing parts of the Stanytsia Luhanska disengagement area, with the exception of the main road, due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A Ukrainian Armed Forces officer of the JCCC informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed and informed the JCCC.[4]
  • The SMM was prevented from accessing secondary roads in the Zolote disengagement area due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A Ukrainian Armed Forces officer of the JCCC informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed and informed the JCCC. [4]

The SMM was prevented from accessing secondary roads south of the Zolote disengagement area due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A member of the armed formations informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed.

[1] Please see the annexed table for a complete breakdown of the ceasefire violations as well as a map of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions marked with locations featured in this report.

[2] Due to the presence of mines, including on a road between Bohdanivka and Petrivske, the SMM’s access to its camera in Petrivske remains limited, and thus the SMM has not been able to access observations from the camera since 22 June 2018.

[3] This hardware is not proscribed by the provisions of the Minsk agreements on the withdrawal of weapons.

[4] The SMM informed Ukrainian Armed Forces officers of the JCCC. Russian Federation Armed Forces officers of the JCCC withdrew from the JCCC as of 18 December 2017.

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Categories: Central Europe

OSCE assists Tajikistan’s Interior Ministry in establishing second model police station

Wed, 11/14/2018 - 15:20
402926 Munira Shoinbekova, OSCE Programme Office in Dushanbe

The OSCE Programme Office in Dushanbe and Tajikistan’s Interior Ministry inaugurated a second model police station in Tajikistan at a ceremony in the Esanboy community of the Rudaki district on 9 November 2018. The station will serve as a community policing centre where local community members can meet and discuss legal and strategic documents on police reform, and provide their recommendations to the Interior Ministry on improving community policing.

Tajikistan’s Deputy Interior Minister, Major-General Umarzoda Ikrom, Chairperson of the Esanboy community of Rudaki district, Saidzoda Bahodur, National Co-ordinator for Police Reform, Major General Farhodbek Shodmonzoda, representatives of the OSCE, of the local community and of the police participated in the opening ceremony.

Major-General Umarzoda Ikrom said: “We support the national police reform and the concept of community policing. The local government allocated a plot of land for the construction of a model police station at our request. We are grateful to the OSCE for its support in building and equipping it with new furniture and office equipment.”

Major General Farhodbek Shodmonzoda added: “The model police station in Esanboy community will serve as a centre to establish co-operation between police and community. Its establishment follows the success of the first station that has helped to promote community policing in rural communities of Hissor districts.”

Categories: Central Europe

OSCE representatives on gender conduct country visit to Uzbekistan

Wed, 11/14/2018 - 11:31
402920 Communication and Media Relations Section Giovanni Davoli

From 6 to 9 November, the Special Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office on Gender, Melanne Verveer and OSCE Senior Adviser on Gender Issues, Amarsanaa Darisuren conducted a country visit to Uzbekistan. The visit was organized by the Italian OSCE Chairmanship-in-Office.

During their visit, Verveer and Darisuren met with various counterparts including Deputy Chairperson of the Senate Svetlana Artykova, Director of the Scientific Research Centre “Oyila” under the Cabinet of Ministers Diloram Tashmukhamedova, Head of the National Human Rights Centre Akmal Saidov, Ombudsperson Ulugbek Mukhammadiev, and Chairperson of the Business Women Association Gulnara Makhmudova. The visit provided an opportunity for Uzbekistan’s representatives to discuss the progress achieved in increasing Uzbek women’s active participation in public, political and socio-economic life.  

The OSCE representatives received first-hand information and examples of Uzbekistan’s commitment to gender equality, reflected in national legislation, education curricula, and specific measures to strengthen women’s participation in different areas of the economy.

Verveer and Darisuren shared good practices to enhance women’s participation from the OSCE region at the conference on “The Role of Women in Democratic Renewal and Modernization of the Country: Best International Practice and Experience of Uzbekistan”, organized by the Women’s Committee under Deputy Prime Minister of Uzbekistan Tanzila Narbaeva. 

The OSCE representatives on gender also explored possible areas of co-operation with Uzbekistan’s government representatives with the objective of effectively implementing existing legislation that fosters equal opportunities for women.

The OSCE Gender Section also took the opportunity to discuss gender mainstreaming opportunities with the OSCE Project Coordinator in Uzbekistan who assisted in arranging meetings with various counterparts.

Categories: Central Europe

OSCE presents its Guidebook on Intelligence-Led Policing at headquarters of League of Arab States

Wed, 11/14/2018 - 10:10
Communication and Media Relations Section OSCE Guidebook Intelligence-Led Policing Intelligence-Led Policing – From Reaction to Prevention

The OSCE Transnational Threats Department’s Strategic Police Matters Unit presented the Arabic translation of the OSCE Guidebook on Intelligence-Led Policing at a launch event organized jointly with the League of Arab States (LAS) at the League’s headquarters in Cairo on 14 November 2018.

The event brought together 52 participants, including representatives of 19 of the 21 LAS Member States as well as law-enforcement representatives from the Arab-speaking OSCE Partners for Co-operation – Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia.

OSCE experts introduced the OSCE-recommended model of intelligence-led policing presented in the guidebook, its advantages, and how it can be implemented in practice.

“Police-related activities are one of the fundamental components of the OSCE’s efforts aimed at strengthening security and stability through enhancing the capacities and professionalism of law enforcement services of OSCE participating States and Partners for Co-operation,” said Rasa Ostrauskaite, OSCE Co-ordinator of Activities to Address Transnational Threats. “However, the evolution of transnational threats and the ever-changing criminal patterns call for a constant update of skills and capabilities, adopting new strategies, plans and methods. Intelligence-led policing has already proven its significant potential in a number of countries around the world to address these challenges.”

The OSCE Guidebook on Intelligence-Led Policing, which has already been translated into seven languages, is designed as a practical tool for policy-makers, law enforcement managers, criminal intelligence analysts and other law enforcement practitioners in their efforts to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of the police. The guidebook puts a strong emphasis on adherence to national and international legislation, human rights and data protection principles in intelligence-led policing practices.

During the launch event, international experts from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, INTERPOL and Europol also highlighted the intelligence-led policing programmes in which they are engaged.

Categories: Central Europe

Latest from the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine (SMM), based on information received as of 19:30, 12 November 2018

Tue, 11/13/2018 - 17:49

This report is for the media and the general public.

The SMM recorded more ceasefire violations in Donetsk and Luhansk regions compared to the previous 24 hours. The Mission followed up on reports of a civilian casualty in Marinka. The SMM’s access remained restricted in all three disengagement areas as well as near Bezimenne and Zaichenko. The SMM observed weapons in violation near Shymshynivka. The Mission facilitated and monitored adherence to the ceasefire to enable repairs to houses and essential civilian infrastructure on both sides of the contact line, as well as to enable demining near Nyzhnoteple. The SMM observed two protests in Kyiv and a gathering commemorating the founding of Karpatska Sich in Ivano‑Frankivsk.

In Donetsk region, the SMM recorded more ceasefire violations[1], including about 140 explosions, compared with the previous 24 hours (about 115 explosions).[2]

On the evening and night of 11-12 November, while in Svitlodarsk (government-controlled, 57km north-east of Donetsk), the SMM heard 76 explosions (27 assessed as outgoing rounds, seven as impacts and the remainder undetermined) and about 130 bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 2-6km east and south-east. The following day, from the same location, the SMM heard 13 undetermined explosions and five bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire, all at an assessed range of 2-5km south-east.

During the day on 12 November, positioned in the south-eastern part of Avdiivka (government-controlled, 17km north of Donetsk), the SMM heard ten undetermined explosions and 25 bursts of small-arms fire, all at an assessed range of 1-5km south and south‑east.

In Luhansk region, the SMM recorded more ceasefire violations, including about 110 explosions, compared with the previous 24 hours (about 40 explosions).

During the day on 12 November, positioned on the southern edge of Kalynove-Borshchuvate (non-government-controlled, 61km west of Luhansk), the SMM heard 48 undetermined explosions assessed as from mortar rounds at an assessed range of 5-7km south.

On the same day, positioned in Pervomaisk (non-government-controlled, 58km west of Luhansk), the SMM heard 25 explosions assessed as from 120mm mortar rounds at an assessed range of 7-10km south.

The SMM followed up on reports of a civilian casualty in Marinka (government‑controlled, 23km south-west of Donetsk). At a hospital in Kurakhove (government‑controlled, 40km west of Donetsk), a man (in his fifties) with a bandaged right thigh told the SMM that at around 18:00 on 10 November, he was in his outhouse on Prokofiev Street in Marinka when he heard small-arms fire and felt a sharp pain in his right thigh. A doctor in the hospital told the SMM that the man had been struck by a 5.45mm bullet, which perforated his right thigh and bruised his left thigh.

The SMM continued to monitor and to pursue full access to the disengagement areas near Stanytsia Luhanska (government-controlled, 16km north-east of Luhansk), Zolote (government-controlled, 60km west of Luhansk) and Petrivske[3] (non-government-controlled, 41km south of Donetsk), as foreseen in the Framework Decision of the Trilateral Contact Group relating to disengagement of forces and hardware of 21 September 2016. The SMM’s access remained restricted, but the Mission was able to partially monitor them.*

On the evening of 11 November, the SMM camera in Stanytsia Luhanska recorded two muzzle flashes of undetermined weapons at an assessed range of 100-150m south (assessed as outside the disengagement area).

During the day on 12 November, positioned on the eastern edge of Zolote-5/Mykhailivka (non-government-controlled, 58km west of Luhansk), the SMM heard two undetermined explosions at an assessed range of 7-10km north-north-east. Positioned in Zolote‑5/Mykhailivka, the SMM heard 17 undetermined explosions and about 160 shots and bursts of heavy-machine-gun and small-arms fire, all at an assessed range of 1-3km north‑north-east. Positioned on the northern edge of Zolote-4/Rodina (government-controlled, 59km west of Luhansk), the SMM heard two undetermined explosions assessed as from mortar rounds, five bursts of heavy-machine-gun fire and 50 shots and bursts of small-arms fire, all at an assessed range of 2-3km east. Positioned in Zolote-3/Stakhanovets (government‑controlled, 61km west of Luhansk), the SMM heard four explosions assessed as from artillery rounds at an assessed range of 7-10km south. Positioned in Zolote, the SMM heard eight explosions assessed as rounds of artillery at an assessed range of 7-10km west‑south‑west. All of these observations were assessed as outside the disengagement area.

During the same day, positioned on the north-eastern edge of Katerynivka (government‑controlled, 64km west of Luhansk), the SMM heard about 20 shots and bursts of automatic-grenade-launcher and small-arms fire at an assessed range of 3-4km east‑south-east, assessed as outside the Zolote disengagement area.

Positioned near the Petrivske disengagement area, the SMM observed a calm situation.

The SMM continued to monitor the withdrawal of weapons in implementation of the Memorandum and the Package of Measures and its Addendum.

In violation of withdrawal lines on 11 November, in a non-government-controlled area, an SMM mini-unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) spotted five self-propelled howitzers (2S1 Gvozdika, 122mm) in a training area near Shymshynivka (27km south-west of Luhansk).

Beyond withdrawal lines but outside designated storage sites in government-controlled areas, on 12 November, the SMM saw three surface-to-air missile systems: an S-300 near Nikolske (formerly Volodarske, 21km north-west of Mariupol), a 9K37 near Shevchenko (19km north-west of Mariupol) and a Strela variant near Polkove (65km south of Donetsk). In non-government-controlled areas, on 11 November, an SMM mini-UAV spotted ten tanks (T-72), one of which had no barrel, in a training area near Shymshynivka.

The SMM observed armoured combat vehicles[4] in the security zone. In government‑controlled areas, on 12 November, the SMM saw an armoured personnel carrier (BTR-80) near Zolote-2/Karbonit (62km west of Luhansk) and an infantry fighting vehicle (BMP variant) in Nyzhnie (56km north-west of Luhansk).

The SMM facilitated and monitored adherence to the ceasefire to enable repair works to the Petrivske water pumping station near Artema (government-controlled, 26km north of Luhansk), the sewage system near the Bakhmut Agrarian Union’s pig farm near Novoluhanske (government-controlled, 53km north-east of Donetsk) and damaged houses in Marinka and Krasnohorivka (government-controlled, 21km west of Donetsk), as well as to enable demining activities near Nyzhnoteple (government-controlled, 26km north of Luhansk). The Mission continued to facilitate the operation of the Donetsk Filtration Station.

The SMM visited a border area outside government control. While at a pedestrian border crossing point near Novoborovytsi (79km south of Luhansk) for about 30 minutes, the SMM observed no traffic transiting the border.

The SMM observed a gathering of individuals wearing balaclavas. In Ivano-Frankivsk, on 10 November, the SMM observed about 100 people (mainly men, different age groups), many of whom were wearing black clothing (some with emblems of Runas and Karpatska Sich) and balaclavas and carrying flares, marching from the Ivan Franko monument on Nezalezhnosti Street  to Ratusha Square. Posters around the city announced that the march was held to commemorate the eighth anniversary of the founding of the Karpatska Sich. At Ratusha Square, the SMM observed several individuals, including a senior member of Karpatska Sich, address the crowd and conduct a roll call of Karpatska Sich members who had died in the conflict. After each name was called, someone from the crowd shouted “present”, and all the participants extended their right arms upwards from the neck with hands straightened. The SMM observed about 25 police officers and three police cars directing traffic.

In Kyiv, the SMM observed two protests by individuals wearing C14 (Sich) insignia. At the Kyiv Central Bus Station at 1 Nauky Avenue on 10 November, the SMM observed a protest of about 60 people (aged 20-50, one woman), about 40 of whom were wearing C14 emblems on their clothes. A senior member of C14 told the SMM the gathering had been organized to protest bus companies that were not providing discounted tickets to veterans, as per Ukrainian law. The SMM saw a man come out of the station, identify himself as the deputy director of the station and then get pushed to the ground by protestors (the man was able to get up, and the SMM did not see him get further assaulted). Other protestors were seen spraying red graffiti on the station’s windows and on the office of a bus company which, they alleged, transports passengers into areas beyond government control. Some of the protestors then blocked buses from entering or exiting the station. The SMM did not observe a police presence at the station.

On 12 November, the SMM observed about 20 people (20-25 years old, one woman), including a senior member of Sich (C14), erecting posters criticizing the Prosecutor General in front of the Office of the Prosecutor General at 15 Riznicka Street in Kyiv. The SMM observed nearly 50 police officers (including about 30 in riot gear) standing on both sides of the protest. The SMM saw the protesters disperse without security incidents.

The SMM continued monitoring in Kherson, Odessa, Lviv, Kharkiv, Dnipro and Chernivtsi.

*Restrictions of SMM’s freedom of movement or other impediments to fulfilment of its mandate

The SMM’s monitoring and freedom of movement are restricted by security hazards and threats, including risks posed by mines, unexploded ordnance (UXO) and other impediments – which vary from day to day. The SMM’s mandate provides for safe and secure access throughout Ukraine. All signatories of the Package of Measures have agreed on the need for this safe and secure access, that restriction of the SMM’s freedom of movement constitutes a violation, and on the need for rapid response to these violations. They have also agreed that the Joint Centre on Control and Coordination (JCCC) should contribute to such response and co-ordinate mine clearance. Nonetheless, the armed formations in parts of Donetsk and Luhansk regions frequently deny the SMM access to areas adjacent to Ukraine’s border outside control of the Government (for example, see SMM Daily Report 12 November 2018). The SMM’s operations in Donetsk and Luhansk regions remain restricted following the fatal incident of 23 April 2017 near Pryshyb; these restrictions continued to limit the Mission’s observations.

Denials of access:

  • At a checkpoint about 1km north of Zaichenko (non-government-controlled, 26km north-east of Mariupol), an armed member of the armed formations again stopped the SMM and denied it passage to Pikuzy (formerly Kominternove, non-government-controlled, 23km north-east of Mariupol) and to Sakhanka (non-government-controlled, 24km north-east of Mariupol), citing “orders from superiors.”
  • At a checkpoint near Bezimenne (non-government-controlled, 30km east of Mariupol), two armed members of the armed formations again denied the SMM passage west along road M14, citing “orders from superiors.”

Regular restrictions related to disengagement areas and mines/UXO:

  • The SMM was prevented from accessing parts of the Stanytsia Luhanska disengagement area, with the exception of the main road, due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A Ukrainian Armed Forces officer of the JCCC informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed and informed the JCCC.[5]
  • The SMM was prevented from accessing secondary roads in the Zolote disengagement area due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A Ukrainian Armed Forces officer of the JCCC informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed and informed the JCCC. [5]
  • The SMM was prevented from accessing secondary roads south of the Zolote disengagement area due to the possible presence of mines and UXO. A member of the armed formations informed the SMM that no demining had taken place during the previous 24 hours. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed.
  • At a checkpoint of the armed formations south of the bridge in government-controlled Shchastia (government-controlled, 20km north of Luhansk), a member of the armed formations told the SMM that there had been no demining activities in the area and that there were mines on the bridge. The SMM did not consider it safe to proceed.

[1] Please see the annexed table for a complete breakdown of the ceasefire violations as well as a map of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions marked with locations featured in this report.

[2] During the reporting period, the SMM camera in Krasnohorivka was not operational.

[3] Due to the presence of mines, including on a road between Bohdanivka and Petrivske, the SMM’s access to its camera in Petrivske remains limited, and thus the SMM has not been able to access observations from the camera since 22 June 2018.

[4] This hardware is not proscribed by the provisions of the Minsk agreements on the withdrawal of weapons.

[5] The SMM informed Ukrainian Armed Forces officers of the JCCC. Russian Federation Armed Forces officers of the JCCC withdrew from the JCCC as of 18 December 2017.

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Categories: Central Europe

Addressing security needs of Jewish communities in Western Balkans focus of OSCE/ODIHR event in Skopje

Tue, 11/13/2018 - 16:53
Public Affairs Unit, OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights

The security needs of Jewish communities were at the centre of discussion at a regional conference co-organized by the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) in Skopje on 12 and 13 November 2018.

The conference, organized in co-operation with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, the OSCE Mission to Skopje and the local Jewish community, was designed to raise awareness of and discuss ways to address the security needs of Jewish communities in the Western Balkans region. The event brought together more than 50 law enforcement officials and Jewish community representatives (35 men and 17 women) from the host country, as well as Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia.

The conference featured a presentation of ODIHR's practical guide Understanding Anti-Semitic Hate Crime and Addressing the Security Needs of Jewish Communities.

“The security of Jewish communities is the responsibility of governments,” said Christie Edwards, Deputy Head of ODIHR's Tolerance and Non-Discrimination department. “Only strong co-operation between governments and Jewish communities can pave the way to safer and more tolerant societies in the OSCE region.”

Participants discussed methods to strengthen co-operation between law enforcement agencies and Jewish communities, and the role that international organizations, such as the OSCE, can play.

“Responding to contemporary anti-Semitism and ensuring the safety of Jewish, and other communities, is particularly important for our government,” said Oliver Spasovski, the host country's Minister of Interior. “I believe that today’s event will allow my colleagues from law enforcement institutions from the Western Balkans region to enhance their understanding of anti-Semitism and how best to collaborate with community representatives in preventing and addressing crimes grounded in anti-Semitism.”

Ambassador Clemens Koja, Head of the OSCE Mission to Skopje, said: “Our Mission supports the host country in the implementation of the Ohrid Framework Agreement that stipulates in its basic principles that ‘non-discrimination and equal treatment of all under the law will be respected completely’. Discrimination, hate crime and hate speech are serious problems in this region and represent a potential threat to improving inter-ethnic relations.”

The conference was organized as part of ODIHR’s Words into Action to Address Anti-Semitism project.

Categories: Central Europe

OSCE/ODIHR toolkit to help states, civil society adopt comprehensive approach against hate crime presented at Vienna event

Tue, 11/13/2018 - 15:59
402992 Representatives of civil society, national and international legal associations participating in the conference. Vienna, 14 November 2018. Public Affairs Unit, OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights

A toolkit developed by the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) to assist participating States in adopting a comprehensive approach to countering hate crime was presented to government officials and civil society representatives at a conference organized by ODIHR in Vienna on 14 November 2018.

The toolkit, developed as part of the Office's Building a Comprehensive Criminal Justice Response to Hate Crime project, includes training packages, methodologies and guidelines that can be used by public institutions and civil society involved in addressing hate crime. The materials were developed based on project work in Bulgaria, Greece, Italy and Poland.

“It is only through a whole-of-government approach that states and criminal justice systems can effectively respond to hate crimes. This lesson, along with many others that we have drawn from our co-operation with partners, can be applied across the OSCE region,” said Cristina Finch, Head of ODIHR’s Tolerance and Non-discrimination department. “While this project provides the building blocks for a comprehensive approach to hate crime, major challenges still lie ahead for international organizations, national institutions and civil society. ODIHR will continue to provide support and expertise to all those who are ready to collect data, strengthen capacities and partnerships and, most of all, protect the victims of hate crimes.”

The conference brought together civil society activists, officials from project countries and national points of contact on hate crime from OSCE participating States, as well as representatives of the European Union, the Council of Europe, the International Association of Prosecutors and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

Petya Karayaneva, a Protection Officer with the UNHCR, told the conference: “One of the main challenges in combatting racism and xenophobia is under-reporting due to the victims’ fear and lack of trust in redress mechanisms. The protection of victims should be at the epicenter of all efforts to combat racism and xenophobia. Bringing affected communities closer to authorities will ensure that community fears and perspectives feed into appropriate policies and strengthen support for victims.”

The ODIHR toolkit includes a manual on conducting joint training for police and prosecutors, a methodology on developing an inter-agency co-operation protocol on addressing hate crimes, an innovative methodology to map unreported hate crimes and guidance on implementing a comprehensive approach to addressing hate crime on a regional level.

The event marked the closure of the project, which ODIHR implemented with financial support from the European Union and the United States.

Categories: Central Europe

Weekly Update from the OSCE Observer Mission at Russian Checkpoints Gukovo and Donetsk based on information as of 13 November 2018

Tue, 11/13/2018 - 13:30

This report is for the media and the general public.

SUMMARY

KAMENSK-SHAKHTINSKIY, Russian Federation. The Observer Mission (OM) continues to operate 24/7 at both Border Crossing Points (BCPs). The overall number of border crossings by persons slightly decreased at both BCPs compared to the previous week.

OPERATIONAL REMARKS

The OM is currently operating with 20 permanent international staff members, including the Chief Observer (CO).The Mission is supported administratively by a Vienna-based staff member.

OBSERVATIONS AT THE BORDER CROSSING POINTS

Persons crossing the border                                                                                                                                                                                         

The profile of the people crossing the border can be categorized as follows:

  1. Adults travelling on foot or by car with little or no luggage;
  2. Persons in military-style outfits;
  3. Families (often including elderly people and/or children) travelling on foot or by car with a significant amount of luggage.

The average number of entries/exits decreased from 10,434 to 9,790 per day at both BCPs compared to last week[1].

During the reporting period, the majority of border crossings were to the Russian Federation, with an average net flow of plus 130 for both BCPs.

The Donetsk BCP continued to experience more traffic than the Gukovo BCP.

Persons in military-style outfits

During the reporting period, the number of persons in military-style outfits noted crossing the border in both directions at both BCPs was ten this week; seven of them crossed into the Russian Federation, and three into Ukraine (100 per cent of this category’s crossings occurred at the Donetsk BCP). They continued to cross the border individually or in groups. Most individuals crossed on foot, however, some made use of private vehicles, buses or minivans, making it more difficult for the observer teams (OTs) to observe their movement across the border, especially since some of the private vehicles have tinted windows, and buses and minivans have drawn curtains.

Families with a significant amount of luggage

During this reporting week, no family travelling with a significant amount of luggage, or travelling in heavily loaded cars was observed, compared to the previous reporting period when eight families were observed crossing the border into the Russian Federation and five into Ukraine.

Bus connections                                         

Regular local and long-distance bus connections continued to operate between Ukraine (mostly from/to the Luhansk region) and the Russian Federation. In addition to regular bus connections, the OTs continued to observe bus connections on irregular routes. Often the buses do not state their route; instead they have a sign on the windshield stating “irregular”.

During the reporting period, the OTs observed a slight decrease in the overall number of buses crossing the border at both BCPs (389 compared to 393 observed during the previous week). There were 207 buses bound for the Russian Federation and 182 bound for Ukraine.

Among the bus connections observed by the OTs, the following “irregular” routes or destinations were noted: Kyiv; Rovenky-Kyiv; Pervomaisk-Kyiv.

On some occasions, the OTs noticed the bus drivers removing the itinerary signs from the windshields of their buses, while some buses do not display their route at all. The majority of long-distance buses commuting between the Luhansk region and cities in the Russian Federation have Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region.

Trucks

During the reporting period, the OM observed an increase in the overall number of trucks crossing the border in both directions and at both BCPs. Compared to the previous week, the total number of trucks went from 684 to 737 (247 at the Gukovo BCP and 490 at the Donetsk BCP); 428 of these trucks crossed into the Russian Federation and 309 crossed into Ukraine. Most of the trucks observed by the OTs had Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region; however, on a daily basis, the OTs also noted trucks registered in the Russian Federation and in Belarus.                                                                                           

Among them, the OTs also continued to observe tanker trucks crossing the border in both directions. During the reporting week, the number of tanker trucks increased to 62 (compared to 47 during the previous reporting period). These trucks were observed crossing the border at both BCPs. The trucks had the words “Propane” and “Flammable” written across the tanks in either Russian or Ukrainian. The majority of tanker trucks had hazard signs, indicating that they were transporting propane or a mix of propane and butane.

All trucks undergo systematic inspection by Russian Federation officials, which may include an X-ray check. Due to the unfavourable observation position at the Gukovo BCP, the OTs continued to be unable to observe any X-ray checks.

Compared to the previous week, the total number of X-ray checks at the Donetsk BCP increased from 91 to 114: of the total number of trucks scanned, 74 trucks (65 per cent) were bound for Ukraine; the remaining 40 trucks (35 per cent) crossed into the Russian Federation.

Minivans

The OM continued to observe passenger and cargo minivans[2] crossing the border in both directions at both BCPs. The OTs observed minivans predominantly with Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region; however, the OTs also frequently saw minivans registered in the Russian Federation. Compared to the previous week, the number of cargo minivans slightly decreased from 169 to 167 vehicles; 87 crossed into the Russian Federation and another 80 into Ukraine.

Trains

The OTs continued to pick up the sound of trains running on the railway tracks located approximately 150 metres south-west of the Gukovo BCP. During the reporting week, the OTs heard trains on 21 occasions, compared to 23 last week; the OTs assessed that ten trains were travelling to the Russian Federation and 11 to Ukraine. The OSCE Special Monitoring Mission (SMM) to Ukraine was regularly informed about the trains bound for Ukraine.

Visual observation was not possible because of the line of trees located between the train tracks and the BCP.

Other observations

The majority of vehicles crossing the border had Ukrainian licence plates issued in the Luhansk region, or Russian Federation licence plates. A significant number of vehicles with “LPR” plates were also observed crossing the border in both directions on a daily basis, as were vehicles with Georgian licence plates.

On 6 November at 19:00, an ambulance entered the Donetsk BCP. The vehicle arrived from the Russian Federation and stopped outside the main building. At 19:54 on the same day, the ambulance left the BCP and returned to the Russian Federation.

On 7 November at 14:47, a Russian police vehicle entered the Donetsk BCP from the direction of the Russian Federation. The vehicle stopped outside the main building and at 14:57 the police vehicle left the BCP in the direction of the Russian Federation.

On 8 November at 08:37, the OM observed a vehicle (Mercedes Vito van) with “LPR” plates passing through the Gukovo BCP.  The vehicle bore the sign “GRUZ 200” and crossed the border from Ukraine to the Russian Federation.

On 9 November at 08:37, the OM at the Donetsk BCP noticed an ambulance with “LPR” plates. The vehicle crossed the border from Ukraine to the Russian Federation. The car bore inscriptions “Ambulance” (in English) and “Urgent medical help” (in Russian). 

At 16:20 on the same day at the Donetsk BCP, an ambulance with “DPR” plates and a crew consisting of two people entered the BCP. They travelled from the Russian Federation to Ukraine.

Later on the same day, the OM observed a Russian police vehicle entering the area of the BCP at 10:21. The vehicle returned to the Russian Federation at 10:24.

For trends and figures at a glance covering the period from 17 October to 13 November 2018, please see the attachment here.

[1] Based on data received from the Regional Representation of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation.

[2] Cargo minivans: light commercial vehicles with a maximum authorized mass of more than 3.5 t and not more than 7.5 t; with or without a trailer with a maximum mass of less than 750 kg (small cargo vehicles which correspond to driving licence C1).                       

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Categories: Central Europe

OSCE media freedom representative calls for protection of journalists' right to confidential sources in Romania

Tue, 11/13/2018 - 12:02

VIENNA, 13 November 2018 - The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Harlem Désir, today sent a letter to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Romania expressing concern about an investigative journalism organization being requested to reveal its confidential sources, and asking for this request to be withdrawn.

On 8 November, the RISE Project non-profit journalism organization in Bucharest received a letter from the Romanian data protection authority, the National Supervisory Authority for Personal Data Processing (ANSPDCP), requesting information related to the sources of an investigative report on a case of alleged fraud involving European funds. The Authority also threatened the organization with a fine in case of non-compliance.

"I call for the withdrawal of this request in order to safeguard the journalists' right to confidential sources," said Désir. "The confidentiality of journalists’ sources is one of the basic preconditions for press freedom.”

“This case shows that there is a need to strengthen the protection of journalists’ confidential sources in line with international standards, in order to avoid similar cases in the future” concluded Désir.

The RISE Project is a member of the regional network Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and of the Global Investigative Journalism Network.           

The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media observes media developments in all 57 OSCE participating States. He provides early warning on violations of freedom of expression and media freedom and promotes full compliance with OSCE media freedom commitments. Learn more at www.osce.org/fom, Twitter: @OSCE_RFoM and on www.facebook.com/osce.rfom

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Categories: Central Europe

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