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Which EU politicians refused to label Russia a sponsor of terror?

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Which EU politicians refused to label Russia a sponsor of terror?

Many on the far proper and a few on the left rejected the symbolic transfer to declare Moscow as a terrorist regime.

The European Parliament on Wednesday adopted a decision declaring Russia a state “sponsor of terrorism” over its struggle in Ukraine.

“The deliberate assaults and atrocities dedicated by Russian forces and their proxies towards civilians in Ukraine, the destruction of civilian infrastructure and different severe violations of worldwide and humanitarian regulation quantity to acts of terror and represent struggle crimes,” the European Parliament mentioned.

In complete, 494 members of the European Parliament (MEPS) voted in favour of the decision, 58 have been towards and 44 abstained.

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The largely symbolic transfer is unlikely to make an affect, as a result of the European Union – in contrast to the USA – doesn’t have the authorized framework to designate nations. Throughout the Atlantic, on the US checklist are North Korea, Syria, Cuba and Iran.

The EU established its terror checklist in 2001, following the September 11 assaults in New York.

It contains individuals, teams and entities and is reviewed at the very least each six months.

ISIL (ISIS) and al-Qaeda armed teams are amongst these at present on the checklist.

Which members voted towards the decision?

Russia is the primary nation to be declared a state sponsor of terrorism by the European Parliament.

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Nevertheless, members weren’t unanimous of their voting, with a bigger proportion of the right-wing bloc of the Parliament towards the affiliation of Russia with terrorism.

Twenty-six members of the far-right political group Identification and Democracy voted towards designating Russia as a sponsor of terrorism.

INTERACTIVE- European Parliament vote on labelling Russia terrorist state

Here’s a breakdown of votes by nation, residence nation get together, and member:

These French politicians who voted towards the decision are all members of the Nationwide Rally or Rassemblement Nationwide, which is led by Marine Le Pen.

  • Mathilde Androuët
  • Jordan Bardella
  • Aurélia Beigneux
  • Dominique Bilde
  • Annika Bruna
  • Patricia Chagnon
  • Marie Dauchy
  • Jean-Paul Garraud
  • Catherine Griset
  • Jean-François Jalkh
  • France Jamet
  • Virginie Joron
  • Jean-Lin Lacapelle
  • Gilles Lebreton
  • Thierry Mariani
  • Philippe Olivier
  • André Rougé

The next German politicians who voted towards the decision are all members of the far-right Various for Germany or Various für Deutschland get together (AfD).

  • Christine Anderson
  • Gunnar Beck
  • Nicolaus Fest
  • Maximilian Krah
  • Joachim Kuhs
  • Guido Reil
  • Bernhard Zimniok

Czech MEPs, who’re members of the populist Freedom and Direct Democracy get together, or Svoboda a přímá demokracie:

One member of the centre-right European Conservatives and Reformist Group voted towards the decision:

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  • Emmanouil  Fragkos, whose get together in Greece is Greek Resolution, or Elliniki Lusi-Greek Resolution

Twelve members from the centre-left Progressive Alliance of the Socialists and Democrats voted towards the decision.

From Bulgaria – all with the centre-left Bulgarian Socialist Get together:

  • Ivo Hristov
  • Tsvetelina Penkova
  • Sergei Stanishev
  • Petar Vitanov
  • Elena Yoncheva

From Germany – all with the Social Democratic Get together of Germany or Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (SPD), which is the get together of Chancellor Olaf Scholz:

  • Joachim Schuster
  • Dietmar Köster

From Italy – these three politicians belong to Partito Democratico or the Democratic Get together:

  • Pietro Bartolo
  • Andrea Cozzolino
  • Massimiliano Smeriglio

From Slovakia:

  • Monika Beňová (SMER-Sociálna demokracia, or Path – Slovak Social Democracy)
  • Robert Hajšel (Impartial)

Ten members of the Left group within the European Parliament voted towards the decision:

From Belgium:

  • Marc Botenga (Parti du Travail de Belgique or Staff’ Get together of Belgium –  which is a Marxist get together)

From Cyprus:

  • Niyazi Kizilyürek (Progressive Get together of Working Individuals – Left – New Forces)

From Czech Republic:

  • Kateřina Konečná (Komunistická strana Čech a Moravy, or Communist Get together of Bohemia and Moravia)

From Germany (​​DIE LINKE. get together, or The Left get together):

  • Özlem Demirel
  • Martin Schirdewan

From Portugal (Partido Comunista Português, or Portuguese Communist Get together – a Marxist-Leninist group)

  • Sandra Pereira
  • João Pimenta Lopes

From Eire (Independents 4 Change):

From Spain:

  • Miguel Urbán Crespo (Anticapitalistas)

9 MEPs who usually are not affiliated with any political grouping additionally voted towards the decision:

  • Nicolas Bay (France – Reconquête!, or Reconquest – a nationalist get together)
  • Francesca Donato (Italy – now an unbiased however previously with the far-right Lega Nord, or Northern league headed by Matteo Salvini)
  • Marcel De Graaff (Netherlands – Discussion board voor Democratie, or Discussion board for Democracy, a right-wing populist get together)
  • Lefteris Nikolaou-Alavanos (Greece – Communist Get together of Greece)
  • Kostas Papadakis (Greece – Communist Get together of Greece)
  • Miroslav Radačovský (Slovakia – Slovak PATRIOT, which is a right-wing get together)
  • Milan Uhrík (Slovakia – Hnutie Republika or Republic – a far-right get together)
  • Martin Sonneborn (Germany – Die Partei or The Get together, which is a satirical get together)
  • Tatjana Ždanoka (Latvia – Latvijas Krievu savienība or the Latvian Russian Union, which is backed by ethnic Russians and different Russian-speaking minorities)
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EU unable to determine impact of refugee funds given to Turkey, auditors say

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EU unable to determine impact of refugee funds given to Turkey, auditors say

European Union auditors said on Wednesday that they are unable to establish whether some of the billions of euros the bloc has given to Turkey to help it cope with Syrian refugees is actually having any impact.

Under a deal concluded between EU leaders and Turkey in 2016, the bloc committed to provide at least $6.4 billion to Turkey to help it cope with migrants crossing in from Syria. Turkey in turn committed to stop migrants leaving its territory for Europe.

16 DEAD, INCLUDING 4 CHILDREN, AFTER MIGRANT BOAT SINKS OFF THE COAST OF TURKEY

In March 2016, a month after the deal came into effect, Turkey’s government said the number of migrants crossing illegally into Greece had dropped from around 6,000 per day in November 2015 to about 130 daily.

In 2021, the leaders announced plans to send a further $3.2 billion for refugees in Turkey. The pact, which was hailed in Europe as a great success, served as a template for other more recent and elaborate deals with Tunisia and Egypt.

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Migrants wait in line for a distribution of blankets close to the Turkish-Greek border near Pazarkule, Edirne region, Turkey, Tuesday, March 10, 2020. European Union auditors said on Wednesday, April 24, 2024, they are unable to establish whether some of the billions of euros the bloc has given to Turkey to help it cope with Syrian refugees is actually having any impact. EU leaders and Turkey in 2016, committed to provide at least $6.4 billion to Turkey to help it cope with migrants crossing in from Syria.  (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)

Money from the agreement is used to supply cash cards to some of the more than 4 million registered refugees, as well as to improve education and health, help people to better integrate and to build facilities in Turkey that people fleeing the war in Syria might need.

But the European Court of Auditors, or ECA, in a follow-up last year on whether the money was being used effectively, said that Turkey’s education ministry had refused to provide information that might allow them to assess what impact EU projects are having.

“I’m quite sure that European citizens would like to see some results coming out of the various development and humanitarian projects that the EU is funding,” ECA member Bettina Jakobsen told reporters.

According to the European Commission, the bloc’s executive branch, at least $566 million was destined to “support quality inclusive education of refugees in Turkey.” It’s meant to pay teacher salaries and provide education equipment, Turkish language and teacher training, as well as counselling and other guidance.

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Auditors sought a list of the schools receiving EU support and the number of refugee pupils who are attending, as well as information on whether children who were not in education had been reintegrated into the school system and their exam pass rates, compared to Turkish students.

Without the data, Jakobsen underlined, “we are not able to conclude on measuring impact or sustainability” of the education projects underwritten by the EU.

Asked by The Associated Press what was preventing the auditors from getting the information from the education ministry, one EU auditor involved in the process said: “They just claimed that they didn’t have the data.”

“We do know that data should normally exist,” said the auditor, who under ECA regulations could not be named. “It’s not up to us to guess why or why not they don’t want to provide the data.”

An ECA official noted that it is relatively rare for authorities to fail to cooperate with auditors.

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The auditors and officials from the commission, which is responsible for ensuring that the bloc’s money is correctly spent, made joint and individual requests for the information, but without success.

The auditors were able to visit some schools, as well as hospitals, which benefit from EU funds and could see that the facilities were used by refugees and Turkish pupils and that teachers were working there.

In general, given the challenges of the coronavirus pandemic, a major earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria in February 2023, and Turkey’s rampant inflation, the auditors found that the EU funding package “provided relevant support to refugees and host communities” in Turkey.

But Jakobsen also noted that auditors “found weaknesses in the commission’s assessment of project budgets” and said the EU’s executive branch “did not systematically assess whether project costs were reasonable or compare similar costs between different projects.”

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Commission carries out first raid under foreign subsidies regulation

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Commission carries out first raid under foreign subsidies regulation

The EU Executive has used new powers for the first time against an unnamed security equipment company.

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The European Commission on Tuesday carried out unannounced inspections at a company in the security equipment sector, the first to be done under the Foreign Subsidies Regulation.

The new rules, which applied since July 2023, aim to tackle distortions caused by foreign subsidies and ensure a level playing field for all companies operating in the EU market.

So far, the Commission has opened several investigations under the regulation, including into Chinese solar panel manufacturers and wind turbine producers, but this is the first time it has acknowledged raiding premises.

“The Commission has indications that the inspected company may have received foreign subsidies that could distort the internal market under the Foreign Subsidies Regulation,” the EU institution said in a statement.

Commission officials, together with their national counterparts, have raided the company’s premises in various member states, but as the investigation is at a preliminary stage, they are not naming the company, or the countries involved.

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At this stage, it is not possible to say if this raid is a result of a complaint, a Commission spokesperson told Euronews. The EU executive has the power to instigate probes of its own volition too.

And there is no fixed deadline for gathering evidence and information to assess whether the company has received distorting foreign subsidies.

If sufficient evidence is discovered, the Commission will open an in-depth investigation. If not, the name and the member states involved would then be revealed.

“The fact that the Commission carries out such inspections does not mean that the company in question has indeed received distortive foreign subsidies, nor does it prejudge the outcome of the investigation,” the statement said.

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Terry Carter, McCloud and Original Battlestar Galactica Star, Dead at 95

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Terry Carter, McCloud and Original Battlestar Galactica Star, Dead at 95


Terry Carter Dead: Battlestar Galactica Star’s Cause Of Death, Obituary



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