Archive for May, 2017

Ukraine seeking Canada’s help to set up high-level corruption court – CBC.ca

Ukraine is looking for Canada's backing as the embattled eastern European country establishes a special court to deal with anti-corruption cases.

Legislation to set up the separate judicial framework is still making its way through the Ukrainian parliament, but the country's deputy Speaker OksanaSyroyid saidher government needs other nations to help select independent-minded judges.

Syroyidis in Ottawa for three days of meetings with Canadian officials, where she is pressing the case for judicial reform, but also explaining the growing complexities of the war with Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

Faith in the justice system has been sorely tested in two recent cases, one of them involving a powerful ex-lawmaker, Mykola Martynenko, who is accused of widespread corruption.

He was arrested April 21on a series of charges.

But he was granted bail under a judiciary which is still largely modelled on the old Soviet system and populated with appointees of ousted former president Viktor Yanukovych.

Syroyid saidthe dismay of ordinary people is understandable.

"They just don't have trust in the justice system," said Syroyid, who received a master's degree in law from the University of Ottawa in 2003.

"Trust has been lost, unfortunately, a long time ago. People of Ukraine are frustrated by state institutions in general. For decades, Ukrainian state institutions were working not for the people of Ukraine but for the interests of seven specific persons," she said, referencingpowerful oligarchs who have andin some casescontinue to control vast swaths of the country's economy.

Oksana Syroyid, deputy Speaker of Ukraine's parliament, was in Ottawa and Washington pressing the case for judicial reform. (Murray Brewster/CBC)

Both the Canadian and American embassies were consulted in the development of the legislation for the anti-corruption court, and Syroyid saidshe believes Canada would have several good candidates to help in the selection of judges.

A separate court is also one of the benchmarks established by the International Monetary Fund, which is pressuring the current government of Petro Poroshenko to clean up the economy.

The country recently established a separate prosecution wing for high-level official corruption.

Syroyid saidoverhauling the existing justice system is a going to be a decade-long process that will require training lawyers and judges in a completely new way of thinking.

Ukraine's issues were underlined recently when four former Berkut riot police officers were granted bail after being charged with murder and torture related to the 2014 Maidan protests that brought down the Yanukovych government.

Each of the former, highly trained cops promptly fled to Russia, claiming in local media reportsthat it was "too dangerous" for them to remain in Ukraine.

The country's interior minister has been accused of obstructing the prosecution. The department oversaw the officers, whowere accused of firing into protesters during the uprising, killing as many as 100 people.

At least six other members of the same unit, including one commander, fled the country in 2014 to avoid prosecution.

Canada has been involved in helping Ukraine overhaul its traffic police, training and equipping new officers.

The Trudeau government also committed to helping with judicial reform and pledged funding to develop a modern legal aid system, which Syroyid saidwill go a long way to restoring faith in the justice system for ordinary people.

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Ukraine seeking Canada's help to set up high-level corruption court - CBC.ca

Juventus just one Champions League knockout game away from equalling a record set by Arsenal after 2-0 win over … – The Sun

In shutting out the Ligue 1 leaders at the Stade Louis II on Wednesday, Juve made it five European clean sheets in a row

GONZALO HIGUAIN scored twice against Monaco on Wednesday night as Juventus put one foot in the Champions League final.

Away from home, the Argentinian netted two goals at the Stade Louis II to almost certainly set-up a heavyweight showdown with Real Madrid in Cardiff.

Getty Images

However, in shutting out Monaco, Juventus became only the fourth team in Champions League history to keep five consecutive, knockout stage clean sheets in a season.

Keep up to date with ALL the football news, gossip, transfers and goals on our club page plus fixtures, results and live match commentary.

The 2004-05 AC Milan team who were stunned by Liverpool in the final that year in what became known as the Miracle of Istanbul managed the feat.

Their back four that season boasted one of the greatest of all time, with Cafu, Jaap Stam, Alesssandro Nesta and Paolo Maldini in the starting XI with Dida in goal.

EPA

The only other team prior to Juve to accomplish the feat was the Arsenal side of 2005-06 - who reached the final, only to be beaten 2-1 by Barcelona.

The Gunners' back four that season was often the fearsome quartet of Emmanuel Eboue, Kolo Toure, Sol Campbell and Ashley Cole, with Jens Lehmann between the sticks.

In fact, that Arsenal XI managed to go SIX knockout games without conceding - with Juventus hoping to equal that feat in the second leg at home to Monaco.

May 3 - Monaco (A) - 2-0 Apr 19 - Barcelona (A) - 0-0 Apr 11 - Barcelona (H) - 3-0 Mar 14 - Porto (H) - 1-0 Feb 22 - Porto (A) - 2-0

AP:Associated Press

The only other team to go five games were Manchester United in 2007-08 - when they beat Chelsea in the final on penalties.

The talented back-line that season saw Edwin van der Sar in goal, with Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic joined by Patrice Evra and Wes Brown.

All in all, the Turin outfit have kept six clean sheets in a row in the tournament, if you include their final group stage game against Dinamo Zagreb - winning that one 2-0.

AC Milan - 2004-05 Arsenal - 2005-06 Man United - 2007-08 Juventus - 2016-17

Getty Images Europe

In fact, the last time Juventus conceded in the competition was all the way back on November 22, 2016 - when they beat Sevilla 3-1 away.

Incredibly, Massimiliano Allegri's men have shipped just TWO goals all tournament.

The defensive line consists ofDani Alves, Leonardo Bonucci, Andrea Barzagli Giorgio Chiellini and Alex Sandro - with the ever-brilliant Gianluigi Buffon in goal.

The only question remaining now is, can Juventus match Arsenal's incredible record... or even beat it?

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Juventus just one Champions League knockout game away from equalling a record set by Arsenal after 2-0 win over ... - The Sun

In Win for Environmentalists, Senate Keeps an Obama-Era Climate Change Rule – New York Times


New York Times
In Win for Environmentalists, Senate Keeps an Obama-Era Climate Change Rule
New York Times
WASHINGTON In a surprising victory for President Barack Obama's environmental legacy, the Senate voted on Wednesday to uphold an Obama-era climate change regulation to control the release of methane from oil and gas wells on public land.
Senate blocks move to overturn Obama-era rule on drillingUSA TODAY
Senate unexpectedly rejects bid to repeal a key Obama-era environmental regulationWashington Post
Senate rejects repeal of Obama drilling ruleThe Hill
The Verge -Reuters
all 118 news articles »

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In Win for Environmentalists, Senate Keeps an Obama-Era Climate Change Rule - New York Times

Obama Speaks in Milan, With Food as Text and Politics as Subtext – New York Times


New York Times
Obama Speaks in Milan, With Food as Text and Politics as Subtext
New York Times
ROME Barack Obama took his first step back onto the world stage on Tuesday, shedding his tie to give wide-ranging, if studiously nonpartisan, remarks during a food and technology conference in Milan. First in a keynote address, during which he often ...
Obama's Contradictory Climate TalkNational Review
Barack Obama Shares His Lessons Learned on Leadership and PowerFortune
Former President Obama Says He's 'Captive to Selfies' Since Leaving OfficeNBCNews.com
TIME -The Hill (blog)
all 210 news articles »

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Obama Speaks in Milan, With Food as Text and Politics as Subtext - New York Times

Senate fails to kill Obama-era methane rule – Los Angeles Times

May 10, 2017, 9:39 a.m.

Some Republican lawmakers balked at fully embracing the Trump administrations climate skepticism Wednesday, as the Senate failed to kill an Obama-era plan for containing methane emissions that had deep support among environmental activists and many landowners in the West.

Three Republican senators joined Democrats in blocking the effort to kill the methane restrictions that the GOP congressional leadership had been confident it could scuttle. The push to scrap the methane rules faltered amid an uprising of protest in Western states,where tens of thousands of residents near drilling operations risk exposure to the toxic compounds that leak in tandem with the methane.

At issue is 41 billion cubic feet of a greenhouse gas leaking from many of the nearly 100,000 oil and gas wells on federally owned land. Methane is among the most potent accelerators of global warming, 25 times more harmful than carbon dioxide.

A House vote in March to eliminate an Obama-era Bureau of Land Management rule requiring energy firms to trap the escaping gas and convert it to electricity was followed by a swift public backlash. Several Republican senators wavered on the measure in recent weeks.

The vote, said Gene Karpinski, president of the League of Conservation Voters, shows that President Trumps plans to unravel hard-won environmental protections are not a foregone conclusion. The Republican senators who joined Democrats in voting against the rule were Susan Collins of Maine, John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

After the vote, the American Petroleum Institute warned the methane rule will prove costly to consumers and ineffective at limiting emissions. The rule could impede U.S. energy production while reducing local and federal government revenues, said a statement from Erik Milito, who directs upstream and industry operations at API.

The fight over the restrictions does not end with the Senate vote. Trump administration officials have expressed their own misgivings with the methane restrictions, and they will likely work through their agencies to try to roll them back. But such efforts involve a laborious bureaucratic process that is ultimately vulnerable to legal action from environmental groups and states supportive of the methane rule.

The Obama administration had concluded the amount of methane escaping each year from drilling operations is enough to provide electricity for nearly 740,000 homes. The Government Accountability Office alerted Congress in July that capturing it would boost royalties owed to taxpayers by $23 million.

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Senate fails to kill Obama-era methane rule - Los Angeles Times