Archive for June, 2017

Pride parade through Ukraine capital – Newshub

Ukrainian politicians and foreign diplomats have joined a gay pride march in Kiev, carrying banners and waving rainbow and Ukrainian flags in a parade flanked by a thick cordon of helmeted police.

Some supporters of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights see progress in Ukraine as symptomatic of the country's closer integration with the European Union and rejection of its ties with neighbouring Russia.

Sunday's march was largely incident-free, although around 200 people protested, variously calling it an affront to traditional values and to soldiers fighting pro-Russian separatist rebels in the eastern Donbass region.

Ukrainian authorities have increased their support for gay rights since a pro-Western government took power following the Maidan protests in 2014. In 2015, a law was passed banning workplace discrimination against the LGBT community.

But critics say homophobic attitudes remain widespread. Six people were detained for trying to breach the security cordon, the police said in a statement.

"Sunny & well organised #KyivPride2017. Another step forward for equality in #Ukraine," Judith Gough, the British ambassador to Ukraine who joined the march, wrote in a tweet.

A day before the parade, Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze, the Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister on European and Euroatlantic Integration, said the parade would help Ukraine shake off its "imperial legacy".

Reuters

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How a female Jewish journalist alerted the world to Ukraine’s silent starvation – The Times of Israel

While driving through the Ukrainian countryside in 1932, Rhea Clyman, a Jewish-Canadian journalist, stopped in a village to ask where she could buy some milk and eggs.

The villagers couldnt understand her, but someone went off and came back with a crippled 14-year-old boy, who slowly made his way to her.

We are starving, we have no bread, he said, and went on to describe the dire conditions of the previous spring. The children were eating grass they were down on all fours like animals There was nothing else for them.

To illustrate the point, a peasant woman began to peel off her childrens clothes.

She undressed them one by one, prodded their sagging bellies, pointed to their spindly legs, ran her hand up and down their tortured, misshapen, twisted little bodies to make me understand that this was real famine, recalled Clyman in a piece published by the Toronto Telegram, one of the largest Canadian newspapers at the time.

Largely forgotten, a Ukrainian professor in Canada is writing a book about Clyman, the first ever biography of the intrepid reporter.

Soviet Red Army soldiers confiscate vegetables from villagers in the Odessa province, 1932. (Public domain)

She went to the Soviet Union feeling very optimistic, [expecting that there would be] no unemployment, that men and women were equal, said Jaroslaw Balan, of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Alberta. But she very quickly came to the realization that this was an incredible totalitarian state how poor people were and how difficult their lives were.

Clyman was born in 1904 in Poland, then a part of the Russian Empire, and immigrated to Canada when she was 2 years old. At the age of 6, she was hit by a streetcar and had her leg amputated. She spent the next few years in and out of hospitals.

Yet this didnt stop her, at age 24, from traveling alone to the Soviet Union and trying to make a living as a freelance foreign correspondent.

She learned the language. She developed a perspective that was very different

In 1928 Clyman got off the train in Moscow with no acquaintances and only a few words of Russian. She spent hours in the train station until someone showed her the way to a hotel, where she slept in the bathtub of an American journalist. She was to remain in the Soviet Union for the next four years.

A lot of newspapers sent journalists [to the USSR] for short [stints], Balan said. But she learned the language. She developed a perspective that was very different.

At one point, Clyman traveled to Russias far north to the town of Kem, near a Soviet prison camp, a place off-limits to foreigners. She met the wives of the prisoners, saw the former inmates who were not permitted to leave the town even after they were freed, and reported on how the Soviets used political prisoners as forced laborers to chop wood. This was an important story for Canada, which was then losing its lumber market in the United Kingdom to the cheaper Soviet competitor.

It supported the claims that cheap labor was used in the Soviet Union, and [thats why] Canada couldnt compete, Balan said.

But it was Clymans coverage of the Holodomor, the man-made famine estimated to have led to the deaths of some 4 million Ukrainians between 1932 and 1933, that really interests Balan. He first came across Clymans work while searching through Canadian newspapers for what was written about the famine in Ukraine.

In 1932, Clyman drove in a car southward from Moscow through Kharkiv then the capital of Ukraine to the Black Sea and on to Stalins birthplace in Georgia.

A man starved to death lies in the street in Ukraine during the Holodomor, a 1932-1933 famine that killed 4 million. (Public domain)

In Ukraine, she passed empty villages and wondered where had all the people gone?

A group of villagers on a collective farm gathered around her to see if she could bring a petition to the Kremlin to tell the Soviet leaders that the people were starving. All their grain had been taken away. Their animals were long ago slaughtered. When she tried to buy eggs, a village woman looked at her incredulously and asked if she expected to get them for money.

Of course, Rhea answered. I dont expect to get them for nothing.

You dont understand, the peasant told her. We dont sell eggs or milk for money. We want bread. Have you any?

A report of Rhea Clymans expulsion by Soviet officials. (Public domain)

Balan said that Clyman developed insights into the causes of the famine that it was not just due to drought, but a result of forced collectivization. For instance, the Soviet attempt to mechanize agriculture led to problems when the production of machinery didnt go as quickly as planned. Horses and cattle were already killed, but there werent enough tractors to harvest the crops. This was the result of poor decisions from the top, Balan said. When Ukrainians were starving, the Soviets sealed the borders between Ukraine and Russia so that people couldnt escape, he added.

Her story is important for Jews and Ukrainians, Balan said. Among Ukrainians, there are a lot of stereotypes that the Jews were Bolsheviks and that they were responsible for the famine. And heres a Jewish woman whos written about the famine. In truth, Jews were also persecuted. Shes Jewish too, but look, she wrote the truth.

In 1932, Clyman became the first foreign journalist in 11 years to get kicked out of the Soviet Union, allegedly for spreading lies.

But from there she went to Germany, to report on the rise of the Nazis.

Balan still needs to do a lot more research to find the articles that Clyman authored from Germany. He said that he has only been able to read two of them so far.

A report of Rhea Clymans plane crash in Amsterdam, 1938. (Public domain)

Clyman reported from Germany until 1938, when fled the country on a small airplane together with a few Jewish refugees. Unfortunately, as the plane came in for landing in Amsterdam, it crashed. Nearly half of the passengers were killed and Clyman broke her back though she somehow avoided paralysis.

She returned to North America, where she moved to New York and recorded her memoirs. She never married nor had children, and died in 1981.

Upon her death, Clymans memoir remained unpublished and Balan is hoping to find it. He is also trying to find out where she was buried. He located some of her relatives but they did not know where she was laid to rest, he said.

If we could find her memoirs that would be an exciting thing to see, that would be a goldmine, he said.

Balan recently gave a talk on Clyman at Limmud FSU in New York, the largest gathering of Russian-speaking Jews in North America. The talk was sponsored by the Ukrainian-Jewish Encounter, a Canadian nonprofit that aims to promote cooperation between Ukrainians and Jews. Launched by Canadian businessman James Temerty, the initiative aims to do away with negative feelings between the two peoples.

Jews have been living in Ukraine probably for 1,000 years, and certainly in large numbers since the 16th century, Balan said. If you take out the periods of the pogroms and the Holocaust, the rest of the time, Jews in many cases flourished in Ukraine.

American Communists attacking a group of Ukrainians protesting the Soviet-caused Holodomor famine in 1933, which killed 4 million Ukrainians. (Public domain)

The two peoples have more in common than they might realize the food, for one and they should learn more about each others culture, said Natalia Feduschak, the director of communications for the Ukrainian-Jewish Encounter.

Feduschak said that Clyman helps to bridge the gap between the two communities because she was a Jewish woman who wrote about the Ukrainian famine with great compassion and great understanding.

Because of World War II and the horrific events of that period, the communities find it difficult to communicate with one another, she said. But there are a lot of similarities.

Clockwise, from left: Rhea Clyman's photo in the 1933 Toronto Telegram; a 'Red Train' of carts taking first harvest of produce to Soviet government warehouses; starving children affected by the famine. (All photos public domain)

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How a female Jewish journalist alerted the world to Ukraine's silent starvation - The Times of Israel

Trump rolls back some of Obama’s openings to Cuba

President Trump on Friday rolled back some, but not all, of his predecessors historic opening to Cuba, making it more difficult to travel to and do business with the Communist-ruled island.

In a speech in Miamis Little Havana enclave, Trump said Cuban rulers were profiting from better relations with Washington but that ordinary Cuban citizens continued to be repressed.

Trump said he was completely canceling the terrible and misguided deal that President Obama forged in secret negotiations in 2014 with Pope Francis and other international leaders.

We will not be silent in the face of Communist oppression any longer," Trump said. Effective immediately, I am canceling the last administration's completely one-sided deal with Cuba."

Cuba's leaders on Friday night criticized Trump's hostile rhetoric and said his announcement signaled a return to the coercive methods of the past.

In a letter signed by Cuba's revolutionary government and published in Granma, the ruling party's official mouthpiece, the leaders said that Trumps actions contradict the majority support of American public opinion. It suggested Trump was influenced not by overall opinion polls but by the views of a minority of Cuban Americans who opposed Obamas moves to improve relations with Cuba.

Despite their obvious anger at Trumps attacks, the Cuban leaders did not threaten retaliatory measures. They said they would be willing to continue negotiating with the U.S., so long as it was via respectful dialogue.

The actual order Trump signed, however, was considerably more modest than the presidents sweeping rhetoric might suggest. His directive left key elements of Obamas overtures open: He did not close the U.S. embassy in Havana, nor did he completely block commerce.

In addition, the new restrictions will not take place immediately and are not expected to force businesses to unwind existing deals, an administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told reporters in a briefing Thursday.

John Kavulich, director of the Cuba Trade Organization, which tracks business with the island, said businesses will have 90 days to make deals before the American government shuts down.

The starter pistol has been fired, he said.

Despite those limitations, the new restrictions drew objections from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which said in a statement that Trumps moves actually limit the possibility for positive change on the island.

The main goal of the new regulations is to keep keep money out of the hands of Cubas military and intelligence services and empower the Cuban people, a White House official said.

The new rules include prohibitions on Americans spending money on businesses controlled by the military, which has a wide reach in the Cuban economy. That change would affect some proposed hotel projects in which Cuban entities controlled by the military would be partners.

In addition, rules on American travel to Cuba will be tightened, limiting casual tourism. But airlines will continue to be able to fly to Havana, and cruise ships will still dock at the islands ports.

Trumps speech, before an audience that included aging veterans of the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion an effort by CIA-backed Cuban exiles to overthrow Fidel Castros government was heavy with Cold War rhetoric and references to images, such as gunshots in the ocean breeze, that no longer exist in Cuba.

It amounted to an effort to partially return to the status quo from before December 2014, when President Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro announced they were reopening diplomatic ties after a half-century of hostility.

Soon, Americans could travel to Cuba and businesses, including the tourism industry and food-producing farm states, were involved in commercial deals.

But conservative members of Congress, especially those based here in south Florida, objected, saying that it was mostly the Communist government and Cuban military who were benefiting. Until Cubas human rights situation improved, they argued, deals with Cuba should be limited.

Floridas Republican Sen. Marco Rubio had lobbied Trump intensely to stick with his campaign pledge to roll back the opening to Cuba.

The timing and location of Trumps announcement raised some eyebrows. He came to Miami as his vice president and three Cabinet secretaries were hosting leaders of Mexico and Central America in a two-day conference on immigration and regional prosperity.

All of the visiting Latin Americans were among the hemispheres leaders who welcomed Obamas decision to recognize Havana. Until then, the United States was the only country in the world that continued to maintain a hostile position toward Cuba, and Obamas decision to reverse that gained enormous good will for the United States throughout the Western Hemisphere.

Trumps announcement is all but certain to anger Latin America and erode U.S. ability in the region, including Washingtons efforts to pressure Venezuelas abusive, leftist government.

The optics are not the best, said a senior international Latin American finance official in Miami for the conference. Like many diplomats, he spoke on condition of anonymity to talk about the Trump administration.

The entire region welcomed the United States normalization of relations with Cuba, said Cynthia Arnson, director of the Latin America program at the nonpartisan Wilson Center think tank in Washington. The hardening of policy can only add to the growing distance between Washington and the regions democracies.

National Security Council spokesman Michael Anton denied that the timing was aimed at Latin American leaders.

Theres nothing intentional about the timing. Its not a slap in the face," he told reporters on Air Force One as Trump flew to Miami.

"We hope we can get support from other Latin American leaders for this policy," Anton said. "This is a policy that favors the Cuban people over and against an oppressive regime.

But even among Cuban Americans here, some were dismayed.

Arsencio Acevedo, a Cuban who has lived in Miami for nearly 30 years, was critical of Trumps gesture.

We need communication, Acevedo, 48, who works as a waiter, said. It is communication that helps us all connect. Cut that off, and you cut off everything.

tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

For more on international affairs, follow @TracyKWilkinson on Twitter

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Trump rolls back some of Obama's openings to Cuba

Calling for civility, Ted Nugent explains why he once told Obama to … – Washington Post

Musician Ted Nugent is known for speaking his mind about the Second Amendment and hunting, butespecially onpoliticians. He once saidthen-Democratic presidential candidate BarackObama should suck my machine gun. When President Obama was running for reelection in 2012, the rocker said during the National Rifle Association convention that, If Barack Obama becomes the president in November, again, I will either be dead or in jail by this time next year. The statement attracted the attention of the Secret Service.

But after Wednesday'sshooting at a congressional baseball practice, Nugent has decided to be more selective with my rants and in my words.

At the tender age of 69, my wife has convinced me I just cant use those harsh terms, he said on the 77 WABC radio program Thursday. I cannot and will not and I encourage even my friends, slash, enemies on the left, in the Democrat and liberal world, that we have got to be civil to each other.

I'm not going to engage in that kind of hateful rhetoric anymore.

More recently his past comments about Obama and Hillary Clinton(Obama & Clinton, that's who. They should be tried for treason & hung.")wereinvoked as what some saw as the right's hypocritical outrage overimagesof Kathy Griffin holding a mask of a bloody, severed head in the likeness of President Trump.

Nugent'schange of heart comes as someRepublicans and Democrats have also called for more civil tone in the political discourse.(Meanwhile, the Internet's pro-Trump personalitiesblamedthe attack on liberals and the media).

Politicians in Washington responded to the attack on the Republican baseball team on June 14 with messages of grief, gratitude and unity. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)

President Trump called for national unity after Wednesday's shooting,winning praise from even his late night show criticsStephen Colbert, whothanked the presidentfor responding to this act of terror in a way that gives us hope, whatever our differences. (Trump would soon be back at tweeting aboutthe single greatest WITCH HUNT in American political history.")

At the Congressional Baseball Game Thursday evening, House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) told CNN thatWhat we're trying to do is tone down the rhetoric, lead by example and show people we can disagree with one another, we can have different ideas without being vitriolic, without going to such extremes. Standing next to Ryan, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said, Tonight we're all Team Scalise, referring to House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, who was shot during the attack and was reported to be in a critical condition.

Greg Gianforte, Montana's incoming congressman who had recently been convicted of assaulting a reporter, toldthe Associated Press that, Its important to make sure we reach out to all parties and hear their voice. I think the other parties have an obligation, as well, to be respectful and in that dialogue.

AndRep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.), whowas on the baseball field during the shooting,condemned what he called political, rhetorical terrorism practiced by both sides.

Is this Americas breaking point? he asked on CNN. Its my breaking point. Weve got to end this.

For Nugent, this isn't the first time he has talked about hislanguage.

In 2014, heapologized for calling President Obama a subhuman mongrel after a backlash that included criticism fromRepublican senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul.

I apologize for using the street-fighter terminology of subhuman mongrel instead of just using more understandable language, such as violator of his oath to the Constitution, the liar that he is. Following Thursday's radio interview, the rock guitarist went liveon a Facebook video tocontinue explaining his decision.

I'm not backing down jack squat, he said, but was taking actionso some idiot doesn't misinterpret that I'm recommending violence.

On Sunday, Nugent told"Fox & Friends" thathis machine gun statement "was a direct response to the liberal Democrats Obama and Clinton, et al to ban certain types of firearms, violating their oath to the Constitution and the Second Amendment.

That was a metaphor and nobody is too stupid not to know that, he said. "But the left is so dishonest that they have misrepresented that."

Asked if people on both sides of the aisle will follow his lead, Nugent saidthat he has "not seen any gesture whatsoever from the left."

It looks to me that they are going to burn down buildings if they disagree with your speech, and they're still going to turn over cars and attack people if they dont agree with you, he added.

Other conservatives have alsotried to place the onus on the left.

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.)pointed towhat he called an increasing hostility on the left.

Maybe this is a moment when everybody takes a step back, but there is no evidence of it.

And as The Post's Dan Balz wrote,the recent calls for a break from hostilities might not last.

Wednesdays shootings can act as a temporary circuit breaker to some of the hostilities, and Thursdays Congressional Baseball Game can become an emotional and poignant coming together. But will that be enough to prevent a swift return to the kind of debilitating political conflict that has become so accepted as the norm? History shows how difficult that could be.

This story has been updated.

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Calling for civility, Ted Nugent explains why he once told Obama to ... - Washington Post

Obama marks Father’s Day: ‘I’m most proud to be Sasha and Malia’s dad’ – The Hill (blog)

Former President Obama celebrated Fathers Day with a tweet honoring his daughters on Sunday.

Of all that I've done in my life, I'm most proud to be Sasha and Malia's dad. To all those lucky enough to be a dad, Happy Father's Day! the former president said, retweeting a picture former first lady Michelle ObamaMichelle Obama Obama marks Fathers Day: I'm most proud to be Sasha and Malia's dad Obamas invited to be honorary football coach at University of Michigan Overnight Healthcare: Trump calls House health bill 'mean' | Senate Dem bill would require ObamaCare hearing | ObamaCare insurer expands to new states MORE posted of the president and his daughters.

Of all that I've done in my life, I'm most proud to be Sasha and Malia's dad. To all those lucky enough to be a dad, Happy Father's Day! https://t.co/ya1YAJignC

Donald TrumpDonald TrumpOliver Stone: Trump has been boxed in by Russia investigation Former Obama aide on Cuba: Trump, GOP lawmakers dont believe in freedom Donald Trump Jr. celebrates Fathers Day MORE Jr. on Sunday also tweeted Fathers Day wishes to President Trump.

Thanks for everything you've taught us and for fighting everyday to #maga. We love you. #fathersday, he said.

Happy Father's Day dad. Thanks for everything you've taught us and for fighting everyday to #maga. We love you. #fathersday pic.twitter.com/EmJzKqNQPu

Donald Trump Jr. also pointed to a tweet from his father in 2013 that wished a happy Fathers Day to all, even the haters and the losers.

This one aged really well actually, Trump Jr. said.

This one aged really well actually. https://t.co/3dhj4Rxvg5

The president earlier in the morning tweeted about a Rasmussen poll and slammed the ongoing "witch hunt" FBI investigation into Russian meddling in the election and possible collusion between members of the Trump campaign and Moscow.

The new Rasmussen Poll, one of the most accurate in the 2016 Election, just out with a Trump 50% Approval Rating.That's higher than O's #'s!

The MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN agenda is doing very well despite the distraction of the Witch Hunt. Many new jobs, high business enthusiasm,..

...massive regulation cuts, 36 new legislative bills signed, great new S.C.Justice, and Infrastructure, Healthcare and Tax Cuts in works!

--This report was updated at 1:36 p.m.

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Obama marks Father's Day: 'I'm most proud to be Sasha and Malia's dad' - The Hill (blog)