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MEPs will vote on banning ‘golden passports’ to hurt Putin allies

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European lawmakers are calling on the European Fee to ban so-called ‘golden passports’ to forestall Russian oligarchs from bypassing sanctions imposed after the invasion of Ukraine.

MEPs will vote on Wednesday on whether or not the sale of EU passports to third-country residents needs to be phased out by 2025, together with new rules that needs to be imposed to make it unimaginable to make use of EU citizenship to evade sanctions.

Between 2011 and 2019 the golden passport business raised over 20 billion euros for EU member states together with Malta, Greece, Bulgaria, Portugal, and Cyprus, with at the least 130,000 folks participating in schemes.

In quite a lot of these states, citizenship is supplied in return for vital property funding.

Dutch MEP Sophie in ‘t Veld informed Euronews that Russians are the biggest group of third-party nationals which have benefitted from the scheme and that many are near the Putin regime.

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“It attracts very shady characters, shady enterprise. We now have seen that there are loads of Russian oligarchs for instance which have purchased citizenship or residency within the EU,” she mentioned.

“Previously, there have been warfare criminals, or certainly all the Saudi royal household in some unspecified time in the future acquired citizenship which has been revoked. So this isn’t about authentic funding within the financial system of the EU.”

She mentioned there have been instances in Malta and Cyprus the place the data required by the authorities had not been supplied adequately.

“Let’s face it when you see the place individuals are coming from: the principle teams are Russian and Chinese language so which means you must depend on Russia and Chinese language to offer us with background data on oligarchs who’re near Putin. How dependable is that data?” she mentioned.

The report will go to the European Fee which is able to assess how one can proceed.

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MEPs are additionally calling for a levy from every nation benefitting from issuing golden passports and residency schemes the place proceeds ought to go in the direction of the EU price range.

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German author Jenny Erpenbeck wins International Booker Prize for tale of tangled love affair

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German author Jenny Erpenbeck wins International Booker Prize for tale of tangled love affair

German author Jenny Erpenbeck and translator Michael Hofmann won the International Booker Prize for fiction on Tuesday for “Kairos,” the story of a tangled love affair during the final years of East Germany’s existence.

The novel beat five other finalists, chosen from 149 submitted novels, for the prize, which recognizes fiction from around the world that has been translated into English and published in the U.K. or Ireland. The 50,000 pounds ($64,000) in prize money is divided between author and translator.

COURT FINES GERMAN-TURKISH AUTHOR OVER ‘DEATH CAMP’ SPEECH

Canadian broadcaster Eleanor Wachtel, who chaired the five-member judging panel, said Erpenbeck’s novel about the relationship between a student and an older writer is “a richly textured evocation of a tormented love affair, the entanglement of personal and national transformations.”

Jenny Erpenbeck, author of Kairos, poses ahead of the International Booker Prize, in London, Tuesday, May 21, 2024.  (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

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It’s set in the dying days of the German Democratic Republic, leading up to the fall of the Berlin Wall. Erpenbeck, 57, was born and raised in East Berlin, which was part of East Germany until the country disappeared with German reunification in 1990.

“Like the GDR, (the book) starts with optimism and trust, then unravels so badly,” Wachtel said.

She said Hofmann’s translation captures the “eloquence and eccentricities” of Erpenbeck’s prose.

The International Booker Prize is awarded every year. It is run alongside the Booker Prize for English-language fiction, which will be handed out in the fall.

Last year’s winner was another novel about communism and its legacy in Europe, “Time Shelter” by Bulgarian writer Georgi Gospodinov and translated by Angela Rodel.

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The prize was set up to boost the profile of fiction in other languages — which accounts for only a small share of books published in Britain — and to salute the underappreciated work of literary translators.

Hoffman is the first male translator to win the International Booker Prize since it launched in its current form in 2016.

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Serbian parliamentary minnow pushes for 'Russian law' equivalent

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Serbian parliamentary minnow pushes for 'Russian law' equivalent

The proposed anti-foreign NGO law could bring more attention to the left-wing nationalist Movement of Socialists party, which currently has just two MPs in the 250-seat National Assembly.

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Serbia’s Movement of Socialists party has announced it will draft a bill aiming to restrict the activities of foreign non-governmental organisations operating in the Balkan country.

The draft closely resembles the highly controversial law on foreign agents that is expected to be implemented in Georgia soon.

Defending the draft law, Movement of Socialists MP Bojan Torbica said, “Betraying one’s own country and people can no longer be a highly profitable activity.”

The proposed anti-foreign NGO law could bring more attention to the left-wing nationalist party, which currently has just two MPs in the 250-seat National Assembly.

“I really believe that it is a threat to the Republic of Serbia if there are NGOs that are donated from abroad and work here to propagate Kosovo as an independent state, to propagate the genocide in Srebrenica and the destruction of Republika Srpska,” said Đorđe Komlenski, parliamentary leader of the Movement of Socialists.

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The three issues — two of which pertain to neighbouring Bosnia and Herzegovina — have been prominent talking points of nationalist politicians in Serbia ever since the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia and a series of bloody wars in the region in the 1990s.

While it is unclear whether Komlenski and Torbica alone can gather enough support to advance the law past the draft stage, civil society actors, such as the Youth Initiative for Human Rights, are concerned that the bill will impact Serbian society’s future.

Marko Milosavljević from Youth Initiative for Human Rights sees the move as a means of intimidating civil society and independent media. 

“Through these announcements, we actually see the ban on the advocacy of certain democratic principles is kind of desireable,” Milosavljević said.

Serbian voters will go to the polls on 2 June to participate in a rerun of last year’s local election in 66 electoral units, including the capital, Belgrade.

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The EU recently criticised Serbia, a candidate for EU membership, for not conducting free and fair elections, citing allegations of voter fraud.

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Primo Cancelled at Freevee After ‘Short but Beautiful Run,’ Says Creator

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Primo Cancelled at Freevee After ‘Short but Beautiful Run,’ Says Creator


‘Primo’ Comedy Cancelled at Freevee — No Season 2



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