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Here’s what EU election observers do when monitoring ballots abroad

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Here’s what EU election observers do when monitoring ballots abroad

Lebanon’s parliamentary election, held final weekend, was hotly contested because the nation stays severely impacted by an financial meltdown so to make sure transparency, European election observers monitored the poll.

In complete, some 167 European election observers from the 27 member states in addition to Norway and Switzerland had been dispatched together with 30 who arrived in early April to start the groundwork for a radical evaluation. 

They discovered elementary “irregularities” within the electoral course of reminiscent of vote-buying, marketing campaign obstruction and intimidation at polling centres.

What does election monitoring entail?

Within the preliminary countdown to polling day, the position of the observers is to fulfill with all related brokers of the method in an effort to judge the extent taking part in area, and whether or not there’s a likelihood for all events to advance their marketing campaign within the pursuits of equity and democracy.

“Once we meet with candidates, we speak to them about how the marketing campaign goes, what sort of marketing campaign technique or strategies they use to be able to attain out to the voters, in the event that they really feel that they’ll marketing campaign freely,” Nikolay Paus, an EU observer based mostly in Tripoli in north Lebanon, advised Euronews.

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“We additionally speak to the electoral administration to see how the preparations are going. We speak to the media to see if they’ll marketing campaign freely”.

Crucially the mission will not be there to analyze the election or to challenge a judgment on the election per se. “We’re not right here to intervene within the course of, we aren’t investigators,” György Hölvényi, Chief Observer of the European Union Election Remark Mission, advised reporters on the publication of the preliminary assertion from the mission.

A crew of two long-term observers was despatched to every of the 26 districts within the nation during the marketing campaign. They visited 798 polling stations on polling day to monitor the voting course of on this present day.

What observers noticed

Crucially, observers can not intervene in any scenario even when they witness a breach. 

Some EU Observers advised Euronews they noticed heavy-handed ranges of intimidation and coercion by celebration operatives or brokers of some candidates. On some events brokers forcibly accompanied voters to the poll field. Usually these had been aged, disabled or susceptible folks.

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On polling day quite a few tensions had been reported by observers, and the “lack of coaching” of workers on the centres turned seen. The EU mission formally confirmed in its preliminary assertion that the dearth of coaching of workers was apparent, they usually had been “not in charge of the voting course of” the place operatives and political teams had been “controlling who voted.”

General, the observer mission was given entry to carry out their duties, nevertheless, in a single station, the Lebanese Armed Forces expelled the EU crew solely permitting them to return when the voting course of had completed.

As soon as the poll closed, votes had been packed, packing containers sealed and the Observer mission travelled to the tabulation centres to look at the counting course of. Whereas the mission mentioned the counting course of was largely clear, the plethora of procedural errors within the lead-up constituted a serious affect on the end result of the outcome. 

Primarily, the EU concludes the secrecy of the poll was not all the time assured.

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Russia and Ukraine to hold first direct peace talks in over 3 years

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Russia and Ukraine to hold first direct peace talks in over 3 years
Russian and Ukrainian negotiators will meet in Istanbul on Friday for their first peace talks in more than three years as both sides come under pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to end Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War Two.
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Melania Trump statue sawed off at the ankles and stolen in Slovenia

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Melania Trump statue sawed off at the ankles and stolen in Slovenia

A bronze statue of Melania Trump was sawed off at the ankles and stolen this week in the first lady’s native Slovenia, police said. 

The statue replaced a wooden one that was erected near her hometown of Sevnica in 2020 at the end of President Donald Trump’s first term after it was targeted in an arson attack. 

Both statues were a collaboration between Brad Downey, an artist from Kentucky, and a local craftsman, Ales “Maxi” Zupevc. 

The original figure, made of wood and cut from the trunk of a linden tree, portrayed the first lady in a pale blue dress, similar to the one she wore at Trump’s 2016 inauguration.

FIRST LADY MELANIA TRUMP TURNS 55: HER LIFE IN PHOTOS, FROM SLOVENIA TO WHITE HOUSE

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A bronze statue of Melania Trump was sawed off at the ankles and stolen this week in the first lady’s native Slovenia, police said.  (Associated Press)

The new statue was placed on the same stump as the old one and modeled after the previous design. In July 2020, Downey said the statue would be made “as solid as possible, out of a durable material which cannot be wantonly destroyed,” according to The Guardian.

Slovenian police spokesperson Alenka Drenik Rangus said Friday that police were investigating after the vandalism and theft were reported Tuesday. 

Franja Kranjc, a worker at a bakery that sells cakes with the first lady’s name in support of her, told The Associated Press the rustic likeness wasn’t well liked. 

Stump left after Melania Trump statue removed

Only the ankles remain of a Melania Trump statue that was sawed off and stolen, Slovenian police said.  (AP Photo/Relja Dusek)

WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY SAYS STATUE OF LIBERTY GOING NOWHERE, REPLIES TO FRENCH POLITICIAN

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“I think no one was really proud at this statue, not even the first lady of the USA,” Kranjc said. “So, I think it’s OK that it’s removed.”

Zupevc said he and Melania Trump were born in the same hospital, which partly inspired him to create the design. He carved the statue with a chainsaw and sanded it with a power tool. 

Melania Trump in Capitol

The statue was a rustic likeness of the first lady.  (Getty Images)

“I plugged in my angle grinder. … I worked and made mistakes … finished the hair … the eyes and all. Then, I called my brother, who said, ‘Spitting image of our waitress.’ And so it was,” Zupevc said during a documentary film by Downey on the making of the original statue.

A plaque next to the statue says it is “dedicated to the eternal memory of a monument to Melania which stood at this location.”

Born Melanija Knavs in nearby Novo Mesto in 1970, the first lady grew up in Sevnica while Slovenia was part of the Communist-ruled former Yugoslavia. An Alpine nation of 2 million people, Slovenia is now a member of the European Union and NATO.

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The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Commissioner Hansen presents plan to cut farming bureaucracy in EU

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Commissioner Hansen presents plan to cut farming bureaucracy in EU
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European Commissioner for Agriculture Christophe Hansen presented his simplification plan for the agricultural sector during a meeting organised by Euronews.

The European Commission unveiled the plan, which aims to simplify the European Union’s agricultural rulebook, on Wednesday in Brussels.

The measures are designed to reduce what the Commission sees as unnecessary administrative burdens in implementing the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), the EU’s farming subsidy framework.

Hansen believes the proposed strategy should serve all stakeholders. The plan, therefore, aims to reduce the administrative burden for farmers and member states.

“What is felt to be an administrative burden on the farm is not only the CAP (Common Agricultural Policy), but also environmental legislation, health legislation, and often national or regional legislation, so I think that everyone must contribute to reducing this bureaucracy,” Hansen explained.

This simplification plan could potentially save farmers up to €1.58 billion a year and the national authorities €210 million. The package of measures is aimed in particular at organic farming and small farms, which play an essential role in rural areas’ economic activity.

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The plan proposes exemptions from environmental rules, also known as conditionalities. Hansen points out that this package aims not to reform the sector, but to adjust certain rules.

For example, Hansen said, “If grassland remains in place for more than five years, it becomes permanent grassland. This is a devaluation of this farmland because it can no longer be used as arable land. After four years or so, farmers plough to preserve this status.”

“For me, it’s more valuable if the grass stays for seven years rather than five. So this is environmental progress. It’s the applicability (of the rules) that changes,” he added.

Flexibility and financial support

The European Commission also wants to help small farmers obtain financial aid and make their farms more competitive. The institution is considering an offer of up to €50,000.

Hansensuggested digitalising the sector, mentioning, for example, a digital portfolio to facilitate checks.

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“I, as a farm, have my digital wallet and if the water authority needs to know something about my land, they can turn to that wallet,” Hansen explained.

Hansen further reiterated his desire to make the profession attractive again and to help professionals.

“It’s very important that we reduce the stress on our farmers, because at the moment it all depends on the Member State. They have to deal with five, six, seven controls a year, which causes enormous stress for our farmers,” Hansen insisted.

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“That’s why we also want to reduce these controls, and the member states are also obliged to act. We want to reduce the number of checks to just one a year,” he added.

Environmental NGOs believe that the plan threatens the agricultural sector’s green objectives. Hansen, however, rejects this criticism and emphasises that he is responding to the concerns of farmers, who have repeatedly protested against overly restrictive European regulations.

Yet, this simplification plan is only the first step. The European Commission intends to present new measures later this year.

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