СБУ повідомила про підозру голові парламенту Чечні через формування загонів «кадирівців» 

Даудову повідомили про підозру в пособництві агресивній війні, діям для зміни кордонів України, а також виправдовуванні російської агресії

Greece Welcomes Return of Chinese Travelers 

With the peak tourism season setting in, Greece is bracing for a record number of arrivals and is welcoming back Chinese tourists. The warm feelings follow a period of discontent due to COVID-19 pandemic restrictions placed on travelers from China for the past three years, and other issues.

On the cobblestone streets of Athens, tavern owner Spiros Bairaktaris opens his arms wide open, welcoming news of what is already called the Chinese return.

He says, “We await them with great love, from the bottom of our hearts. We want to host them, to feed them, to offer all our services.”

All restaurants here, he says, are aching for their return.

While groups of Chinese travelers are just starting to trickle in, Greece expects the number to surge through the summer, exceeding the roughly 200,000 who visited the country ahead of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In recent months, a flurry of meetings between Greek and Chinese officials has helped ease visa restrictions. Direct flights have resumed, but also increased in number and locations in a strategy to boost inflows of travelers from China,

Tourism accounts for more than a quarter of Greece’s economic earnings. And with forecasts predicting more than 30 million travelers this summer, business and officials here say that the Chinese return will help stoke the engines of this country’s lackluster economy after a decade-long recession and the pandemic.

“In the past, we have seen that average spending from our friends from China was even double [that of] European travelers to Greece,” said Sofia Zacharaki, the deputy tourism minister.

Such sweeping feelings of welcome and enthusiasm are new.

Just five years ago and ahead of the pandemic, many businesses and locals said they upset with what they called an over-saturation of Chinese travelers. Greeks pointed to what they say was an over-commercialization of mass Chinese weddings against iconic sunsets on popular islands like Santorini.

They also say that on Santorini and other islands, law enforcement, garbage collection and other services were overstretched… due to the influx of mainly Chinese visitors. Concerns were also raised about reckless construction as the host islands sought to accommodate the visitors.

And many locals began fearing that Chinese and other visitors were posing threats to social cohesion.

Whether such deep-rooted concerns will creep up again remains unclear.

For now, though, restaurant menus are being translated into Mandarin, shops are being festooned with Chinese flags and hotel employees, are learning Mandarin.

 

 

Ексдепутатка шведського парламенту долучилася до ЗСУ – ексклюзивне інтерв’ю Радіо Свобода

Керолін вже готується до відправлення на передову, хоча минулі 15 років пов’язувала своє життя винятково із політикою у рідній країні

German Government, Unions Reach Pay Deal for Public Workers 

German government officials and labor unions have reached a pay deal for more than 2.5 million public-sector workers, ending a lengthy dispute and heading off the possibility of disruptive all-out strikes.

The ver.di union had pressed for hefty raises as Germany, like many other countries, grapples with high inflation. Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said as the deal was announced around midnight Sunday that “we accommodated the unions as far as we could responsibly do in a difficult budget situation.”

The deal entails tax-free one-time payments totaling 3,000 euros ($3,300) per employee, with the first 1,240 euros coming in June and monthly payments of 220 euros following until February. In March, regular monthly pay for all will be increased by 200 euros, followed by a salary increase of 5.5% — with a minimum raise of 340 euros per month assured. The deal runs through to the end of 2024.

Ver.di originally sought a one-year deal with a raise of 10.5%. The deal was reached on the basis of a proposal by arbitrators who were called in after talks broke down last month.

Ver.di chair Frank Werneke said that “we went to our pain threshold with the decision to make this compromise.” He said that the raises in regular pay next year will amount to an increase of over 11% for most employees of federal and municipal governments.

The union has staged frequent walkouts over recent months to underline its demands, with local transport, hospitals and other public services hit.

Germany’s annual inflation rate has declined from the levels it reached late last year but is still high. It stood at 7.4% in March.

The past few months have seen plenty of other tense pay negotiations in Europe’s biggest economy, some of which have yet to be concluded. In a joint show of strength, ver.di and the EVG union — which represents many railway workers — staged a one-day strike last month that paralyzed much of the country’s transport network.

EVG, whose members walked off the job again on Friday, is seeking a 12% raise and has rejected the idea of negotiating a deal based on the arbitration proposal that helped resolve the public workers’ dispute. The next round of talks is set for Tuesday.

And ver.di is still in a dispute with Germany’s airport security companies association over pay and conditions for security staff. In the latest of a string of walkouts, it has called on security workers at Berlin Airport to walk out on Monday. The airport says there will no departures all day.

 US Supreme Court Upholds Abortion Pill Access for Now

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday preserved access to the abortion drug mifepristone while a lawsuit challenging the use of the drug plays out in lower courts.

The high court issued a brief on Friday evening granting emergency requests from the Biden administration and the drug’s manufacturer, Danco Laboratories, to continue to allow women to access the drug. The ruling puts on hold a preliminary injunction from a federal judge in Texas, who earlier this month ordered restrictions on the abortion drug.

Two justices on the nine-member court — conservatives Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito — dissented from the decision.

The court had set a deadline for itself of midnight Friday to either approve the Biden administration’s request — to keep the drug available while the administration challenges a lower court ruling — or allow limited access to the drug to take effect.

The lower court ruling in question was issued April 7 by a federal judge in Texas after a coalition of anti-abortion groups and doctors argued the U.S. drug regulator, the Food and Drug Administration, improperly approved mifepristone in 2000 and did not fully assess its risks and benefits.

The ruling, which strictly limits availability of the drug, was appealed, and while an appeals court halted a portion of the ruling that would have invalidated the FDA approval, it left the limits on the drug’s availability in place.

The case is expected to be further appealed and could eventually end up being decided by the Supreme Court. Friday’s high court ruling makes it likely that access to mifepristone will continue at least into next year as the appeals play out.

Used in half of all abortions in US

Mifepristone is used in about half of all abortions nationwide. It has been used by as many as 5 million women since it was first approved in 2000, and major medical organizations say it has a strong safety record. The drug is also commonly used to help manage miscarriages.

Currently, the drug can be used by women to end pregnancies in the first 10 weeks, without a surgical procedure. It is available through the mail without an in-person visit to a doctor.

At the time the lower court ruling was made restricting access to the drug, President Joe Biden said in a statement the judge substituted his own judgment for that of the FDA, the expert agency responsible for approving drugs.

Biden said if the ruling is allowed to stand, “there will be virtually no prescription approved by the FDA that would be safe from these kinds of political, ideological attacks.”

Fight follows reversal of Roe v. Wade

The judge who made the ruling, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, was appointed by former President Donald Trump, as were the judges on the appeals court that maintained limits on the availability of the drug.

The fight over mifepristone comes after the conservative majority on the Supreme Court last year overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide. The court ruled it is now up to individual states to decide whether abortion should be legal or not.

The FDA has in recent years made it easier to use mifepristone, including in 2016 approving its use to 10 weeks of pregnancy, up from seven, and in 2021 allowing it to be distributed by mail in states that allow access.

Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse.

Після вибуху у Бєлгороді Данілов наголосив на важливості надання Україні далекобійної зброї

Секретар Ради національної безпеки і оборони Олексій Данілов заявив, що учорашній вибух бомби у російському Бєлгороді є черговим актом ескалації з боку РФ, а тому Україна має отримати далекобійну зброю, щоб локалізувати російські провокації.

«Бєлгород. Російська окупаційна армія продовжує провокаційні обстріли власних міст з метою залякування цивільного населення і нагнітання ескалації. Лише надання Україні далекобійної зброї дасть можливість локалізувати джерело московитських провокацій на етапі планування та підготовки до пуску», – написав Данілов у твітері.

Вчора потужний вибух стався у прикордонному Бєлгороді. Міноборони Росії повідомило, що впала авіабомба з російського літака Су-34, що пролітав над містом. Пошкоджено будинки. Губернатор Бєлгородської області В’ячеслав Гладков заявив про двох постраждалих.

Влада прикордонних з Україною російських регіонів – Білгородської, Брянської та Курської областей – регулярно повідомляє про обстріли, внаслідок яких є руйнування та жертви. Москва стверджує, що атаки ведуться з українського боку. Київ обстріли не коментує.

У Комітеті ВР з нацбезпеки і оборони вважають, що вступ до НАТО не має залежати від успіху контрнаступу

Проведення контрнаступу ЗСУ не може бути умовою для вступу України у НАТО, заявила народна депутатка, членкиня парламентського Комітету з питань нацбезпеки, оборони та розвідки Соломія Бобровська в ефірі «Свобода.Ранок» (проєкт Радіо Свобода).

«Це недоречно ставити ключовою умовою щодо вступу у НАТО. Завжди питання контрнаступу – це питання сил і засобів. І, коли ці засоби будуть вже на полі бою, тоді ми можемо говорити про якийсь контрнаступ… З «голими руками», коли йде щільний артобстріл, килимне винищування міст, територій чи позицій – це просто несерйозно до обговорення. Відповідно, це не може бути причиною для відтягування політичної відповіді для України, коли Україна вступить в Альянс», – сказала Бобровська.

При цьому вона зазначила, що для союзників України справді важливо бачити контрнаступ, бо це результат їхньої підтримки. Разом з тим ці два питання – вступ України до НАТО і проведення контрнаступу – слід відділяти, каже Бобровська.

«Контрнаступ – це наші внутрішні справи, разом з підтримкою союзників. Але НАТО – це трошки інша вже ланка. І, мені видається, що Україна за крайній рік великої війни повністю довела фактичну спроможність для політичного рішення (вступу у НАТО – ред.)», – сказала депутатка.

Напередодні в Києві з візитом перебував генеральний секретар НАТО Єнс Столтенберґ. Він висловив впевненість, що майбутнє України – в НАТО, і повна відповідність стандартам Альянсу допоможе цього досягнути. За його словами, також у НАТО фокусуються на потребах України після війни.

Президент України Володимир Зеленський 30 вересня повідомив, що Україна подає заявку на вступ до НАТО за пришвидшеною процедурою.