Thursday, September 29, 2022

Kotha Lekha Horipur negotiate with the United States amin Pur Rel Sultan UK USA 2023

 Cuba’s top diplomat said Tuesday his country’s officials have no choice but to engage the United States in negotiations to normalize relations, despite a decade of diplomatic whiplash and mixed messages from Washington. 

Individuals killed during the 1994 Rwandan genocide, from a display at the Kigali Genocide Memorial. At least 800,000 died.
Credit...Ben Curtis/Associated Press

In a rare admission of sexual harassment in Japan’s military, its army chief apologized Thursday to a former soldier for suffering caused by a group of servicemembers.

Former Everton and Russian national team soccer player Diniyar Bilyaletdinov received a summons from Russia's military registration and enlistment office, his father, Rinat Bilyaletdinov, told Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.

"Diniyar really received a summons. It's hard to talk about emotions, because he didn't serve, although he did military service, but it was specific, with a sports bias. That was 19 years ago," the player's father said.
Rinat Bilyaletdinov argued that Diniyar was incorrectly summoned as he is older than the cutoff age of 35 years old.
 

China’s famous ‘Panda diplomacy’ faces a test – after a bear in Taiwan came down with a life-threatening brain lesion.

Taipei Zoo told CNN on Thursday they had requested help from experts in China to treat their Giant Panda, Tuan Tuan, after an MRI scan revealed the damage.

They are hoping for support in treating Tuan Tuan after he began behaving abnormally, lost his appetite and suffered a three-minute seizure in late August.

But the request raises the possibility of a delicate diplomatic balancing act, given relations between China and Taiwan have taken a nosedive since US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited the self-governing island in August.

China considers Taiwan part of its territory, despite never having governed it, and has vowed to “reunify” it with the Chinese mainland, by force if necessary. Since Pelosi’s visit, it has ramped up pressure on the island by holding a series of military exercises on its doorstep.

Now animal lovers on both sides of the Taiwan Strait will be watching to see how it responds the zoo’s

"The law still says -- to call people up to 35 years old, and he is 37, so there is some kind of inconsistency. Now it will be found out whether this agenda is correct or it was sent early," said Rinat Bilyaletdinov per RIA Novosti.
"Anything can happen. If there was a general mobilization, then ask questions. In the meantime, the president has established a partial one, everything should be in accordance with the law."

Ukrainian Premier League match halted four times by air raid sirens and takes over four hours to complete

 
Ukrainian Premier League match halted four times by air raid sirens and takes over four hours to complete
Last week, President Vladimir Putin announced the immediate "partial mobilization" of Russian citizens, in an effort to bolster the Kremlin's faltering invasion, following Ukraine's gains in its ongoing counteroffensive.
As part of the mobilization efforts, Russia will call up 300,000 reservists, according to Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu.
 
 
Putin moved to amend the country's Criminal Code over the weekend and strengthen punishments relating to military service during times of mobilization, martial law or wartime, with Russians who fail to report for duty now facing up to 10-years in prison under the new regulations.
Bilyaletdinov joined Everton in 2009 and played with the English Premier League side for three seasons
The 37-year-old played in 46 matches for the Russian national team, scoring six goals and helping his country reach the semifinals at the European Championships in 2008.

Thanks for reading the Ottawa Playbook. I'm your host, Nick Taylor-Vaisey. Today, a peek into what happens when federal and municipal politics collide on the Hill. Also, the more you know about ministerial car allowances. Plus, it's not gerrymandering — but federal riding redistribution is here, and it's messy.

DRIVING THE DAY

LIBERALS TAKE SIDES — The race for Ottawa's next mayor is heating up, and it's stirring up a partisan divide on the Hill. Nothing mean-spirited. So far, it's not awkward. But there's no incumbent in the running, and the Liberal flock is pulled in different directions by two rival candidates with serious backing.

— The state of play: The race's standout progressive candidate is CATHERINE MCKENNEY, a two-term city councilor and longtime city hall denizen. They're the choice of virtually every New Democrat in town, and likely to scoop up most votes in the city's core.

Then there's the stridently centrist MARK SUTCLIFFE, a broadcaster and columnist whose lengthy list of honorary campaign co-chairs includes Conservatives like MARJORY LEBRETON, a Tory operative for 50 years, and MICHELLE COATES-MATHER, the director of communications for the recent JEAN CHAREST leadership campaign.

— And then there's the Red team: Sutcliffe's campaign manager is SABRINA GROVER, a consultant who carried the Liberal banner in Calgary Centre in last year's election. Sutcliffe recruited a pair of suburban Liberal MPs, JENNA SUDDS in Kanata and MARIE-FRANCE LALONDE in Orleans, to his list of honorary co-chairs. LIAM ROCHE, a KPMG consultant who has toiled plenty for federal and provincial Liberals, is campaign spokesperson.

— Lo, a big get: McKenney announced a pair of co-chairs late Tuesday. One of them is VICKY SMALLMAN, director of human rights at the Canadian Labor Congress and veteran local New Democrat.

But the other is TYLER MEREDITH, an architect of JUSTIN TRUDEAU's platforms and budgets since 2016 who happens to be an old friend of McKenney's.

Meredith's name is synonymous with the Trudeau era's signature social and economic policy. And it's not like he's hiding it.

"Better is always possible," he tweeted, cheekily appropriating a Trudeau campaign slogan circa 2015. "And right now we have a chance to mark our ballots for real change, for the Ottawa we want." (The irony? Back in 2015, "real change" was Trudeau's rhetorical attempt to outflank the NDP as a progressive alternative to STEPHEN HARPER.)

Fun fact: Meredith is leaving Finance Minister CHRYSTIA FREELAND's office at the end of the month. His going-away party went down last night at the Rabbit Hole on Sparks, where the crowd eye-rolled at a certain local professor's incredulity. (Scroll down for SPOTTEDS.)

Meredith coming aboard isn't a "3D chess play or a signal" to fellow partisans, said one Liberal who's also in McKenney's orbit. "The main objective is probably to produce bullet-proof policy." Another Liberal-watcher said Meredith beefs up McKenney's "economic bonafides" for a voter pool that needed some reassurance before heading to the ballot box.

— It all boils down to this: Younger Liberals are openly flocking to McKenney. Centrists who identify as Blue Liberals are likely to bet on Sutcliffe.

If formal political parties duked it out at city hall, all these Grits would have a much easier time coalescing around a single candidate. But McKenney vs. Sutcliffe blurs those lines, and everybody on the Hill gets a free vote in the battle of center versus left.

— Reminder: Voting day is Oct. 24.

BOUNDARY BICKERING — Tap an MP's shoulder and ask for their opinion about the painstaking process of federal riding redistribution currently underway in every province. Odds are they'll have one.

Yoshihide Yoshida, head of Japan’s Ground Self-Defense Force, said an internal investigation found evidence that several servicemen were involved in the case brought by former soldier Rina Gonoi last month.

“Representing the Ground-Self Defense Force, I deeply apologize to Ms. Gonoi for the pain she had to suffer for a long time,” Yoshida told a news conference. “We offer a sincere apology.”

The investigation was ongoing and further details, including the assailants and their punishment, were not yet released Thursday.

Japan’s Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada earlier this month ordered a ministry-wide investigation into growing reports of sexual assault after Gonoi brought allegations of harassment of her and others.

In a country where gender inequality remains high, sexual harassment is often disregarded and the #MeToo movement has been slow to catch on. But Japanese women have started to speak up, including in the film industry.

Earlier this year, two film directors apologized after media reports emerged about sexual abuse allegations brought by several women, prompting a group of filmmakers and others in the industry to call for improvement.

Gonoi submitted a petition earlier this month to the Defense Ministry signed by more than 100,000 people seeking a reinvestigation of her case by a third party.

She said three senior male colleagues in August 2021 in a dorm at a training ground pressed the lower part of their bodies against her, forcing her to spread her legs, as more than 10 other male colleagues watched and laughed, but none tried to stop them.

Gonoi said in a statement that she filed a case with the ministry, but the investigation was not properly conducted and local prosecutors dropped the case in May.

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Prosecutors in The Hague thought it would never happen.

The tribunal’s most wanted man, once among Rwanda’s wealthiest and most influential people, had managed to escape for 23 years, living under ever-changing false names, switching countries and homes in Africa and Europe until he was finally arrested two years ago in a suburban apartment not far from Paris.

Now 86 and frail, Félicien Kabuga went on trial on Thursday on multiple charges of genocide. He refused to appear in court, saying in a note that this was in protest against a refusal to let him change lawyers, but judges ordered that the proceedings should go ahead and asked the prosecution to read its opening statement.

The proposals come after Director General Tim Davie said the World Service’s budget would be reduced by £30M ($32.7M) by 2023/24 as part of a digital-first BBC blueprint and, speaking earlier this week at RTS London, he hinted that foreign-language news services could be cut if the government doesn’t help with increased financing.

Deadline understands the proposals center on a decentralization of the World Service teams, meaning that the majority of the Asian language services including the Thai, Vietnamese, Indonesian, Korean, Chinese and some South Asian services targeted at India will be relocated from London’s New Broadcasting House to the respective countries they report on.

Landor will use the Zoom to “share the results of our strategic review and talk through our proposals for change and the strategic reasons behind these proposals,” according to an email seen by Deadline.

Team members raised concerns with Deadline that the move will mean many will lose their jobs as they are unable to relocate for various reasons. One pointed to press freedom difficulties in certain nations, such as Thailand, where press freedom is constrained, or Vietnam, where journalists have to report from neighboring countries due to the ruling Communist Party.

According to the BBC Annual Report, which described the World Service as “one of the jewels in the UK’s crown,” the part-government-funded division received £251M ($271M) last year, and there were 1,433 staff in the World Service Group.

The proposals will now be submitted to unions and come at a tricky time for the whole of the BBC News division, which has recently seen former NBC News International President Deborah Turness become CEO.

Journalists are reportedly considering strike action over the planned merger of the domestic and international news channels, which will see 70 jobs axed.

News has been one of the hardest hit BBC divisions since the government imposed savings on the corporation several years ago, and hundreds have lost jobs already.

The BBC declined to comment on the proposals but information is expected on record shortly.

He is accused of being a financier and logistical backer of the groups that led the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi minority and moderate Hutus.

During that three-month blood bath in the spring of 1994, at least 800,000 people, maybe as many as a million, were killed in the small central African nation of six million. Tutsi women were raped

In an interview with The Hill, Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla responded to a question posed by former Obama administration adviser Ben Rhodes on whether Cuban officials would “ever, ever negotiate anything with America ever again after this?”

“We will have to,” said Rodríguez Parrilla, who was in New York to attend the United Nations General Assembly.

“We will have to, first, because there is a historical trend that will, at some point, force us to reestablish dialogue and lift the blockade.”

After a historic and controversial push to normalize relations between Washington and Havana under former President Obama, the Trump administration did an about-face, most famously adding Cuba to a list of state sponsors of terrorism.

The Biden administration, though less hawkish than the Trump administration, has not taken major steps to normalize relations, including keeping Cuba on the terrorism watchlist.

“We shouldn’t expect President Biden to return to the policies of President Obama. One would have expected President Biden to implement his own policy, adjusted to his electoral platform, to his commitments with his voters, to the current reality of the international situation,” said Rodríguez Parrilla.

“What has been a regrettable surprise is that President Biden continues to apply, precisely, the adverse, abusive, failed policies that do not bring the United States closer to any result [inherited from] President Trump, who is [Biden’s] political antipode,” he added.

Still, the Biden administration has softened some of its predecessor’s Cuba policies, often despite domestic political pressure.

“President Biden’s policy toward Cuba is rooted in supporting the Cuban people and protecting human rights. Our approach to Cuba, just like any other country, takes into account various current political, economic, and security factors. Over the past few years, conditions in Cuba and in the region have changed, and we have adapted our Cuba policy accordingly,” a National Security Council spokesperson told The Hill.

In May, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) panned a Biden administration announcement that some travel restrictions to the island were being lifted, while celebrating the resumption of the Cuban Family Reunification Parole program, which streamlines legal immigration for Cubans with family in the United States.

“I am dismayed to learn the Biden administration will begin authorizing group travel to Cuba through visits akin to tourism. To be clear, those who still believe that increasing travel will breed democracy in Cuba are simply in a state of denial. For decades, the world has been traveling to Cuba and nothing has changed,” said Menendez, the highest-ranking Cuban American in the history of the United States Congress.

The Biden administration has also announced that the U.S. consulate in Havana will resume processing migrant visas in 2023, and in May, it announced eased restrictions on remittances — money sent by U.S. residents to friends and relatives on the island.

“I think it was positive, that announcement in May by the current U.S. government to reestablish the regular flow of remittances,” said Rodríguez Parrilla.

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