Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Iranian wrestlers pocket 3 more medals at Ukraine championships – Press TV

The 21st edition of Outstanding Ukrainian Wrestlers and Coaches Memorial began in Kiev, Ukraine on March 2, and finished on March 4, 2017.

Iranian wrestlers have continued to feature praiseworthy performances at the 21st edition of Outstanding Ukrainian Wrestlers and Coaches Memorial, and scooped more honor to boostthe Islamic Republics medal count toeight.

Irans freestyle wrestler Payman Biabani overcame representatives from the host nation and Romania in his first two contests of the 61-kilogram weight class at the Palace of Sports in the Ukrainian capital city of Kiev on Saturday.

He, however, lost to an opponent from Azerbaijan 3-9 in the semi-final round and had to participate in therepechage round. He defeated 29-year-old Bulgarian wrestler Vladimir Dubov and won the bronze.

Hamed Rashidi picked up a silver medal for the Iranian team in the 70-kilogram division, and Saeed Qiyasi settled for the 86-kilogram bronze.

Earlier in the tournament, Iranian freestyle wrestlerReza Atari had received a bronze medal in the 57-kilogram weight category. Reza Afzaliand Hossein Shahbazigot a gold and bronze medal in the 74-kilogram and 97-kilogram sections respectively.

Moreover, Iranian Greco-Roman wrestler Shirzad Beheshti pocketed a silver medal for the Islamic Republic in the 59-kilogram class.

Farshad Belfakkeh was awarded the gold medal in the 71-kilogram class, and clinched the title.

The 21st edition of Outstanding Ukrainian Wrestlers and Coaches Memorial began in Kiev, Ukraine, on March 2, and finished on March 4, 2017.

The tournament brought together dozens of freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestlers from various countries, namely Algeria, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Brazil, China, the Czech Republic, France, Hungary, India, Iran, Japan, Mongolia, Romania, South Korea, Sweden, Tunisia, Turkey and the United States.

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Iranian wrestlers pocket 3 more medals at Ukraine championships - Press TV

UK’s Boris Johnson to Talk Syria, Ukraine in Moscow Visit – Newsweek

Britain's foreign minister Boris Johnson will go to Moscow in the coming weeks to discuss the differences between the two countries over Syria and Ukraine, the Foreign Office said on Saturday, in the first such visit in five years.

Britain backed sanctions against Russia in response to its annexation of Crimea in 2014, and the countries have clashed on other issues, including Russia's support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the civil war in his country.

Britain's Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson speaks during a news briefing after a meeting with Ukraine's Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin and Poland's Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski in Kiev, Ukraine, March 1. Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters

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However, Johnson has accepted the invitation from counterpart Sergei Lavrov and the British government said that it was "clear that the UK will engage with Russia where it is in our national interest to do so.

"Discussions will focus on the UK-Russia relationship and current international issues including Syria and Ukraine, where we continue to have significant differences," a Foreign and Commonwealth spokeswoman said.

"This is not a return to business as usual, and the Foreign Secretary will continue to be robust on those issues where we differ."

As well as disagreement over Ukraine and Syria, Britain has accused Russia of hacking, with Britain's defense minister saying that Russia "weaponizes misinformation." The Kremlin calls the hacking allegations "baseless."

The last UK foreign minister to visit Moscow was William Hague in 2012, the Foreign Office said, adding that details of the exact timing of Johnson's trip would be confirmed in due course.

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UK's Boris Johnson to Talk Syria, Ukraine in Moscow Visit - Newsweek

Fake: Ukraine’s Currency Market Will Collapse Without Transfers from Russia – StopFake.org

Russian media are rife with stories that the State Duma is poised to ban all money transfers to Ukraine without opening an account. The proposed law affects Ukrainian migrants working in Russia who send remittances back home. One publication cites an economist who claims that without these remittances, the Ukrainian currency market will collapse.

According to Oleksander Okhrymenko, the economist predicting Ukraines collapse, last year Ukrainian migrants transferred 7 billion dollars to Ukraine and saved the countrys currency market. Some 3 billion of those funds came from Russia, he claims.

Website screenshot vz.ru

Narodnyi Korrespondent, Voyennoye Obozrenye, Novorossia Inform, Russkyi Puls and other Russian internet sites disseminated this fake story.

Website screenshot bank.gov.ua

According to the National Bank of Ukraine in 2016 2.5 billion dollars was transferred to Ukraine, not the 7 billion that Okhrymenko claims. In 2015 Ukrainian migrants transferred 1.2 billion to their home country.

Website screenshot iom.org.ua

According to the International Organization for Migration remittances make up some 2-5% of Ukraines GDP.

Website screenshot iom.org.ua

While Russia remains the most popular destination for Ukrainian economic migrants, neighboring EU countries are growing more attractive. Poland, which in 2006 attracted 6% of Ukrainian migrants, in 2015 drew 30%.

Russian media are fond of quoting Oleksander Okhrymenko as he has frequently predicted doomsday scenarios for the Ukrainian economy. He predicted the currency black market would bring down Ukraines economy in 2016 and that the Ukrainian housing market would implode this winter.

Last year Ukraines economy grew by some 1.5% despite a war being waged in the east of the country.

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Fake: Ukraine's Currency Market Will Collapse Without Transfers from Russia - StopFake.org

As Ukraine railroad blockade continues, tension simmers on both sides of the tracks – Fox News

It has been almost a month since Ukrainian nationalists began preventing coal shipments from the breakaway republics in the eastern part of the country by choking off all railroad traffic in what they are calling a blockade.

The so-called blockaders are a relatively new movement in the turbulent eastern European nation, but have quickly become a flashpoint in the ongoing conflict in eastern Ukraine between government forces and separatist rebels. The clashes have killed more than 9,800 people since April 2014.

The main goal of the blockade, which is strongly supported by Ukrainian nationalist circles, is to break all ties with Ukraines industrial base and force the financing of the Moscow-backed breakaway regions and their 3 million or so inhabitants onto an already weakened Russian economy.

"We are proud that the blockade has hit the pockets of the occupiers. We should call it a war and stop ... all trade with the occupied territories," parliament member Semen Semenchenko, a blockade advocate, told The Associated Press.

The blockade has seriously disrupted trade on both sides, cutting off much of the coal shipments to government-controlled territory and impeding shipments from the mills and factories that are the east's economic backbone. It has also led a mine and a steel plant in the separatist region to shut down. Economists speculate the move will greatly disturb the half a million jobs and $3.5 billion in revenue from steel exports in the east that depend on the coal trains.

The area around the blockade has also been the scene of bloody violence, with battles breaking out between armed activists and those seeking to commandeer the trains.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko's government has spoken out against the blockade, saying it hurts ordinary Ukrainians in the rest of the country by cutting off coal shipments from separatist regions and creating power shortages. However, it has taken no action to break it, fearing to challenge the nationalist groups.

The rebel leader in the Donetsk section of eastern Ukraine, Alexander Zakharchenko, told local media on Wednesday that in retaliation for Kiev's blockade, the rebels have taken over the management of 40 factories and coal mines. They include those owned by tycoon Rinat Akhmetov, who is regarded as Ukraine's richest person and whose foundation has been the largest provider of humanitarian aid to a war-battered population.

His Metinvest holding company announced last week that it had stopped operations at a steel mill and a coal mine because of the blockade. Stopping all of the company's operations could throw 20,000 people out of work, Metinvest said.

Akhmetov's foundation said in a statement that its work in the region was paralyzed after rebels blocked access to Akhmetov's Shakhtar FC arena in Donetsk, which hosted the 2012 European soccer championships and now serves as a warehouse for relief efforts.

The foundation said it has given away more than 11 million food packages to local residents. The separatists do not allow Ukrainian aid in, and in recent months have barred virtually all international organizations from operating there.

Russia has been delivering aid to the rebel-controlled east too, but some of the deliveries have ended up in the fighters' hands. Unlike Akhmetov's food packages, Russian aid is not distributed directly to the people.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that because of the blockade, the rebel authorities "hardly had any other choice" than to seize the businesses.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Wednesday that Moscow is concerned about a worsening humanitarian situation in the east and pledged that it "will do its best to contribute to de-escalation" in the area.

The Minsk agreement, a 2015 cease-fire pact that has been consistently violated, envisions the rebel-held Donetsk and Luhansk regions remaining in Ukraine, although with expanded local powers. But a recent surge in fighting, the blockade and Russia's decision last month to recognize passports and other documents issued by the rebels have threatened the goal of reintegrating the regions into Ukraine.

As it seeks to establish warmer ties with Russia, the White House so far has remained quiet in regards to the blockade and President Trump has so far provided no update on his oft-repeated ambition of closer cooperation with Moscow.

It's a goal Trump has stuck to despite allegations by U.S. intelligence agencies that the Kremlin meddled in the presidential election.

The Associated press contributed to this report.

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As Ukraine railroad blockade continues, tension simmers on both sides of the tracks - Fox News

Campaign adviser changes story and now contradicts Trump, says Donald ordered Ukraine change at RNC – Daily Kos

Heres where it is getting prickly for Donald Trump. J.D. Gordon did an interview with CNN reporter Jim Acosta and Gordons comments directly contradict Donald Trumps statementin that Stephanopoulosinterview:

Gordon's remarks represent a dramatic shift from previous comments, and they come as Attorney General Jeff Sessions faces intensescrutiny over two previously undisclosed meetingswith Russia's ambassador to the US one of which was timed to the convention.

In January, Gordon told Business Insider that he "never left" his "assigned side table" nor spoke publicly at the GOP national security subcommittee meeting, where the amendment which originally called for "providing lethal defense weapons" to the Ukrainian army to fend off Russian-backed separatists was read aloud, debated, and ultimately watered down to "providing appropriate assistance" to Ukraine.

According to CNN's Jim Acosta, however, Gordon said that at the RNC he and others "advocated for the GOP platform to include language against arming Ukrainians against pro-Russian rebels" because "this was in line with Trump's views, expressed at a March national security meeting at the unfinished Trump hotel" in Washington, DC.

"Gordon says Trump said at the meeting ... that he didn't want to go to 'World War Three' over Ukraine," Acosta said.

Emphasis added. They were directed to do so at a meeting with Donald Trump himself. And who presided over that meeting? Attorney General Jeff Sessions:

Well, well, well. And while Gordon denied the Russians did anything in return, it cannot go unnoticed that the very same week all this went down, Wikileaks released the Russian hacked DNC emails.

See Jim Acostas excellent report below:

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Campaign adviser changes story and now contradicts Trump, says Donald ordered Ukraine change at RNC - Daily Kos