LEAK: EU taxonomy draft leaves bioenergy and forestry off the hook
LEAK: EU taxonomy draft leaves bioenergy and forestry off the hook

The European Commission has decided to leave out agriculture but kept controversial criteria for bioenergy and forestry in the first batch of proposed implementing rules due to be presented on Wednesday (21 April) as part of the EU’s green finance taxonomy, EURACTIV has learned.

Draft implementing rules, seen by EURACTIV ahead of their announcement on Wednesday, spell out detailed criteria that economic activities must meet in order to be labelled as green investments in the EU.

Gas and nuclear power have proven the most contentious in the debate, with countries in southern and eastern Europe threatening to veto an earlier draft because it did not label gas as a “green” or “transition” investment.

Faced with a veto threat, the European Commission returned to the drawing board. The EU executive’s new strategy is to adopt a two-step approach, dealing with less controversial technologies like renewables as part of a first batch of implementing rules, while leaving gas and nuclear for a later decision by the European Parliament and EU member states.

Bioenergy ‘no longer labelled as transitional’

But although they leave out agriculture for now, the draft implementing rules do cover bioenergy and forestry. This is a big issue for Nordic countries, which rely on biomass for a large share of their energy needs.

On both counts the draft rules were considerably relaxed. On forestry, “changes were introduced to reduce complexity and burdens notably for smaller forest holdings” below 25 hectares, which will not be covered by the taxonomy requirements, according to a leaked proposal obtained by EURACTIV.

The European Commission also decided to “extend the time frame for demonstrating the climate benefits of forestry” and “rely more on existing sustainability criteria under the recast Renewable Energy Directive,” which considers biomass as inherently carbon neutral.

Moreover, “bioenergy is no longer labelled as transitional and the criteria for bioenergy were aligned more closely with applicable EU legislation,” the draft says.

Critics say the Commission decided to relax biomass sustainability criteria as part of an attempt to win support from Nordic countries over the draft implementing rules.

According to fresh statistics, Finland’s most-used energy sources in 2020 were forest-based biofuels which accounted for 28% of its total energy consumption, above oil and nuclear energy which stood at around 20%.

“I am critical of the forestry aspect,” said Pascal Canfin, a French centrist MEP who chairs the European Parliament’s environment committee.

Canfin says the 25 hectare threshold is too low because it leaves out two thirds of forestry holdings outside the taxonomy criteria. The minimum, he says, is to lower the threshold to 13 hectares, which corresponds to the average size of forest holdings in Europe.

According to the French lawmaker, the Commission has made the concession to Nordic countries in an attempt to win broader support for its taxonomy proposal, which is fiercely decried in eastern EU countries for its strict stance on natural gas.

“The Commission already faces enormous opposition from countries like Poland and the Czech Republic on the energy part. If in addition, it loses the support of Nordic countries, it loses its majority on taxonomy at the European Council. Its reasoning is pragmatic: it must avoid the construction of a blocking minority,” Canfin said.

For Canfin, it is not the Commission which is to blame, it is the governments of Sweden and Finland, which have lobbied hard to keep biomass criteria as low as possible.

“The pressure from Nordic countries, notably Sweden and Finland, has been colossal,” he told EURACTIV in an interview. What’s surprising, he added, is that in both countries, the Greens and Social Democrats are in power. “So we come to the rather bewildering conclusion that it is the Social Democrats and the Greens in Finland and Sweden who are weakening the taxonomy. Well done!”

According to Canfin, the Commission must confront Sweden and Finland by introducing tougher green criteria on forestry and bioenergy in its upcoming draft.

“Will the Green and Social Democratic governments of Sweden and Finland be ready to kill the taxonomy over it? This is the debate. For my part, I believe that the Commission should take this risk,” Canfin told EURACTIV in an interview.

A debate has been raging in Europe over the role biomass in the fight against climate change. While biomass is considered carbon neutral under EU law, scientists have warned policymakers that burning wood for electricity production can worsen climate change, depending on what sources of wood are used.

Bioenergy criteria to be updated later

In its draft taxonomy rules, the European Commission argues that bioenergy criteria under the taxonomy will be updated as soon as the EU revises its renewable energy directive, which will be up for a rewrite in June.

“Future developments in sustainability criteria for forestry will be taken into account in revisions of this Delegated Regulation,” the EU executive says.

But Sirpa Pietikäinen, a Finnish centre-right MEP, told EURACTIV that action must be taken now to curb the climate impact of forestry because trees are the only way to suck carbon from the atmosphere and they take time to regrow.

“What happens if you tighten the regulation after five years, and [biomass] gets withdrawn from the taxonomy’s sustainability criteria?” she said.

“We have 20 years to fix this. And if now we give green certificates to cement existing forestry practices, I’m just asking what is going to be the outcome,” Pietikäinen added.

“Some people will say I’m not fighting for my country. But you should be honest, this is not a nationalist game,” she said. “Finnish interests are being hijacked by some industries and then it is sold as national interest.”

> The full text of the draft proposal can be downloaded here: 1) Chapeau communication; 2) Impact assessment executive summary; 3) Delegated regulation; 4) Annex 1: Climate mitigation criteria; 5) Annex 2: Climate adaptation criteria.

[Edited by Josie Le Blond]

Harley-Davidson Smashed With 56% EU Tariff, Will Appeal
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BRUSSELS: The European Union resolved on Monday (Apr 19) to step up its influence in the Indo-Pacific region, using areas from security to health to protect its interests and counter China’s rising power, although the bloc insists its strategy is not against Beijing.

Led by France, Germany and the Netherlands, which first set out ways to deepen ties with countries such as India, Japan and Australia, the 27-member bloc wants to use the nascent plan to show Beijing that it is against the spread of authoritarianism.

The bloc “considers that the EU should reinforce its strategic focus, presence and actions in the Indo-Pacific … based on the promotion of democracy, rule of law, human rights and international law”, EU foreign ministers said in a statement. Diplomats said the plan was not “anti-China”.

The 10-page document will now be followed by a more detailed strategy in September, foreign ministers agreed at a video conference, saying they would seek to work with “like-minded partners” to uphold basic rights in the Indo-Pacific region.

The plan could mean a higher EU diplomatic profile on Indo-Pacific issues, more EU personnel and investment in the region and possibly a greater security presence such as dispatching ships through the South China Sea, or putting Europeans on Australian patrols, though all details have yet to be agreed.

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While not mentioning China in detail, the language in the EU statement is code for support of the United States under President Joe Biden in his approach to China, amid concern that Beijing is pursuing technological and military modernisation that threatens the West and its trading partners in Asia.

EU diplomats say countries in the Indo-Pacific want the EU to be active in the region to keep trade open and to ensure they are not left facing a choice between Beijing and Washington, whose relations are turning confrontational.

The EU statement, which follows similar plans by ex-EU member Britain, comes as European attitudes harden against China over its security crackdown in Hong Kong, treatment of Uighur Muslims, and the COVID-19 pandemic, first identified in China.

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“The EU will further develop partnerships and strengthen synergies with like-minded partners and relevant organisations in security and defence,” the EU statement said.

“This will include responding to challenges to international security, including maritime security.”

It is unclear how far the EU is willing to go on security. The bloc is hungry for new trade and sees the Indo-Pacific as offering potential.

It listed a commitment to seek free trade deals with Australia, Indonesia and New Zealand. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas has warned of the EU missing out, after China and other Asia-Pacific economies signed what could become the world’s largest free trade agreement from 2022.

The EU document also said the bloc wanted to sign an investment treaty with China that both sides agreed in principle late in 2020.

Some EU countries to miss April deadline for recovery plans
Some EU countries to miss April deadline for recovery plans

Some European Union governments will miss the April 30 deadline to submit their recovery plans to the European Commission, its Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis said on Friday, but they are still likely to submit the plans within a few weeks afterwards.

The delay in the submission of some of the national plans, which spell out how each government wants to spend its share of the EU’s 750 billion euro joint borrowing scheme, will not delay the scheme as a whole, Dombrovskis told a news conference.

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“Some Member States are nearly there and submitting their plans by the end of April is achievable. For others, it looks more difficult. Finalisation will require somewhat more work for a couple of more weeks,” Dombrovskis said.

The 27 national plans are blueprints for spending grants and loans that each EU country will get from the unprecedented joint borrowing by the European Commission to rebuild economies greener and more digital after the COVID-19 pandemic.

To get the money, each country has to earmark 37 per cent of the funds to reduce CO2 emissions and 20  per cent to make the economy better prepared for the digital age through investment and reforms that will get piecemeal financing from the EU until 2026.

It is the long time horizon of the investments and reforms, as well as the need to allocate the prescribed percentage of the cash to certain areas, that is challenging for governments.

“For a vast majority of Member States, plans are in very advanced stages and are going to be submitted either by end of April or maybe a in a next couple of weeks after the end of April,” he said.

A few weeks slippage in the submission of some plans will not derail the whole programme because for any of the grants or cheap EU loans to flow to governments, 27 national parliaments need to first ratify their own increased budget guarantees for the overall EU budget. These commitments are the ultimate security for the borrowing, ensuring it will be repaid.

This is likely to take longer than the preparation of the spending plans — so far up to 17 countries have ratified the increased guarantees, called the Own Resources Decision, and others were expected to do so soon.

But the process is held up in several countries for various reasons. For example, in Germany the constitutional court is probing if it is in line with German law, in Poland the decision is subject to domestic political infighting and the Netherlands is struggling to form a ruling coalition after elections.

Yet without all 27 national ratifications, the Commission cannot start borrowing and no government can get any funds.

“If the Own Resources Decision ratification is completed in all Member States in June, and we are confident that this is going to be the case, then we can, as European Commission, go to the markets and do the borrowing and make first disbursements in July,” Dombrovskis said.

The amount that EU governments can get up-front this year, before any of the investments and reforms start, is 13  per cent of their total share. Since most will want primarily the grants part of the funding, the total EU cash injection this year is likely to be around 44-45 billion euros.

EU mulls ban on AI-assisted mass surveillance
EU mulls ban on AI-assisted mass surveillance

Artificial intelligence, as well as its as-of-yet more commonplace subsect of machine learning, has not been without its fair share of dissenting voices, with concerns being raised around three key ethical issues: the implications on bias and discrimination, mass surveillance and the privacy of citizens, as well as the somewhat more metaphysical issue of simulating the human-like ability to judge a complex situation and act on it.

Earlier this week, a report from political journalism site Politico reported on a leaked proposal suggesting that the European Union is mulling the potential implementation of a wide-ranging piece of legislation which would effectively ban the use of artificial intelligence in certain applications and types of usage.

The main areas artificial intelligence may affect include the controversial topic of credit scores, as well as mass surveillance. This would provide a substantial differentiation between the European Union and the United States and China, where such applications of artificial technology are either in development or already in use.

The mass surveillance system in China was recently the centre of attention of activists and political analysts due to its application in Xinjiang for the monitoring of the Uyghur population. “The Uyghurs have long been under constant high-tech surveillance that tracks, analyses and records their every move and scours their personal communications for evidence of dissent,” Michael Chertoff and N. MacDonnell Ulsch wrote in a Washington Post article earlier this month. “Compounding this culture of surveillance is the evolution of artificial intelligence from a novelty designed to win games of chess against humans into a science now capable of facial recognition and individual profiling,” the article added.

In relation to the EU, the leaked proposal would include a mandate that all member states set up specialised committees for the specific assessment and evaluation of artificial intelligence systems with a high risk factor (i.e. whose application would be in a sensitive business or social sector).

A draft copy of the proposal, which has been reported on by numerous media publications, says the legislation would explicitly prevent the use of artificial intelligence technology for “indiscriminate surveillance, which would include the automated monitoring and tracking of people; prohibit the use of artificial intelligence applications whose aim it is to create social credit scores using a number of factors to determine a perceived level of trust and financial means; and require authorisation by a committee or other dedicated body to use remote biometric identification systems such as facial recognition in public locations.

The proposal would also entail the formulation of a special agency to deal with these affairs. The agency is tentatively called the European Artificial Intelligence Board and would be comprised of special agents representing each member state. These representatives would also be able to help the European Commission decide on which artificial intelligence systems should be designated as ‘high-risk’ and may also be able to facilitate certain changes to the proposed bans and limitations of AI usage.

Early reactions from analysts suggest that though this is a step in the right direction for the protection of privacy and other human rights in the EU, the current language used in the leaked version of the draft is vague and indeterminate enough to allow companies and organisations to circumvent it entirely or work through it.

“In my opinion, it represents the typical Brussels approach to new technology and innovation. When in doubt, regulate. Replete with a new database for registration of high risk AI systems (Title VIII). Quite a throwback to the days of the 95/46 DPD. And a very 1970s approach to tech regulation,” said Omer Tene, vice president of nonprofit IAPP (The International Association of Privacy Professionals).

“Annex II [of the leaked document] defines “high risk AI systems”. These systems are subject to the full thrust of the regulation. It’s broad – and includes AI systems used for acceptance to educational institutions and educational testing, recruitment to work, credit scoring, the criminal justice system and more. The key provision of the regulation is Article 4, which defines “prohibited AI practices”. It will cause great consternation because it’s vague and potentially all encompassing,” added Tene.

EU, US call on Georgia lawmakers to sign compromise pact
EU, US call on Georgia lawmakers to sign compromise pact

The EU and US jointly called on lawmakers in Georgia to sign on to a compromise agreement to resolve a protracted political crisis in the Caucasus country.

“The European Union and the United States call on all members of Georgia’s parliament to sign the agreement that European Council President (Charles) Michel will propose today (18 April),” the joint statement by spokespeople for EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell and the US State Department said.

The united EU-US front on the issue underlined growing consultation between Brussels and Washington on regions skirting Russia’s southern and western borders.

Georgia, an ex-Soviet country that sits to the east of Europe, has been in the grip of a crisis since parliamentary polls in October, which the opposition said were rigged to keep the ruling Georgian Dream party in power.

Opposition parties have demanded snap elections and refused to enter the newly elected parliament.

The crisis deepened in February with the arrest and trial of the leader of the main opposition grouping, Nika Melia, on accusations of fomenting violence during 2019 anti-government protests.

Georgia’s prime minister resigned and thousands of opposition supporters rallied in the capital Tbilisi in February to protest Melia’s arrest.

EU chief Michel has taken on an inconclusive mediation role between Georgia’s government and opposition to try to rein in the tensions and prevent a perceived backsliding on democracy commitments by the country.

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The second round of European Union-mediated talks between Georgia’s ruling party and the opposition failed Wednesday (31 March) to resolve a political impasse sparked by elections last year, an EU mediator said.

‘Courage’ needed

The EU-US statement said the compromise agreement to be unveiled was one that all Georgian lawmakers would be able to sign up to “in good faith”.

But it said they would need to demonstrate “courage” by backing it over partisan considerations.

The statement said the proposed reforms would bolster the independence of Georgia’s judiciary, improve electoral processes and contribute to “a parliament that can better reflect the voices of all people of Georgia”.

The proposed agreement, posted to the website of the European External Action Service headed by Borrell, stated its aims as helping Georgia meet challenges thrown up by the Covid pandemic and addressing its “security and stability interests in the midst of regional challenges”.

It commits signatories to, within a week, resolving cases of “perceived politicised justice” from the 2019 protests through amnesties or similar measures for convictions, and requiring more than a simple majority to lift parliamentary immunity.

“The parties acknowledge their differing assessment of the 2020 elections and agree to take up their parliamentary mandates and participate in future elections on the basis of the electoral reform agreed here,” it says.

It calls for “fully proportional” elections for parliament and “clear criteria” for ballot recounts, as well as allowing “trusted invited domestic and international experts” to review election disputes, among a raft of other proposals to be completed before local elections in October.

Early parliamentary elections should be called in 2022 if the Georgian Dream party scores less than 43% in the October polls, it says.

Power-sharing in parliament, under which opposition MPs would chair five committees, including key ones relating to either foreign relations, rights, or budget, is also set out.

The text also stipulates reforms to improve the judicial system with a pause on appointments to the supreme court until new legislation is passed ensuring better transparency, to be adopted within a year.

EIOPA issues Opinion on the supervision of use climate change risk scenarios in ORSA – Eiopa European Commission
EIOPA issues Opinion on the supervision of use climate change risk scenarios in ORSA – Eiopa European Commission

The European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) issued today an Opinion on the supervision of the use of climate change scenarios in the Own Risk and Solvency Assessment (ORSA) addressed to national supervisory authorities. In this Opinion EIOPA sets out expectations on the supervision of the integration of climate change risk scenarios by insurers in their ORSA. 

The (re)insurance industry will be impacted by climate change-related physical and transition risks. However, only a minority of insurers assess climate change risks in the ORSA using scenario analysis, usually limited to a short-term time horizon. Therefore, EIOPA considers it essential to foster a forward-looking management of these risks to ensure the long-term solvency and viability of the industry. 

National supervisory authorities should expect insurers to integrate climate change risks in their system of governance, risk-management system and ORSA, similar to all risks undertakings are or could be exposed to. In the ORSA, insurers should do an assessment to identify material climate change risk exposures and subject the material exposures to a risk assessment.

Climate change risks should be assessed not only in the short term but also in the long term using scenario analysis to inform the strategic planning and business strategy. Insurers should subject material climate change risks to at least two long-term climate scenarios, where appropriate:

  • a climate change risk scenario where the global temperature increase remains below 2°C, preferably no more than 1.5°C, in line with the EU commitments; and
  • a climate change risk scenario where the global temperature increase exceeds 2°C. 

The Opinion follows a risk-based and proportionate approach, recognising that methodologies are still developing and insurers need to gain experience. Insurers are expected to evolve the sophistication of the scenario analyses, taking into account the size, nature and complexity of their climate change risk exposures. The Opinion provides practical guidance on how to select and use climate change scenarios.

EIOPA expects national supervisors to collect qualitative and quantitative data to perform a supervisory review of the analysis of short and long-term climate change risks in the ORSA. Instruments for data collection should be the regular supervisory reporting, most notably the ORSA supervisory report. EIOPA will start monitoring the application of this Opinion by the national supervisory authorities two years after its publication.

Download the opinion

Background

EIOPA is mandated by Article 29(1)(a) of its Regulation to issue Opinions to national competent authorities to enhance supervisory convergence.  This Opinion is delivered on the basis of the Solvency II Directive, in particular in relation to Articles 41, 44, and 45, the Commission Delegated Regulation, in particular in relation to Articles 262 and 306 and EIOPA’s Guidelines on own risk and solvency assessment.

EU, US call on Georgia lawmakers to sign pact
EU, US call on Georgia lawmakers to sign pact

Brussels: The EU and US jointly called on lawmakers in Georgia to sign on to a compromise agreement to be proposed Sunday to resolve a protracted political crisis in the Caucasus country.

“The European Union and the United States call on all members of Georgia’s parliament to sign the agreement that European Council President (Charles) Michel will propose today,” the joint statement by spokespeople for EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell and the US State Department said. The united EU-US front on the issue underlined growing consultation between Brussels and Washington on regions skirting Russia’s southern and western borders.

Gomes welcomes new OACPS/EU partnership agreement
Gomes welcomes new OACPS/EU partnership agreement

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC):

Former secretary general of the African Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries, Dr Patrick Gomes, says “very tough negotiations will be necessary depending on the priorities of countries and regions” as he welcomes Thursday’s signing of a new partnership agreement with the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) and the European Union (EU).

The accord signed in Brussels marks the formal conclusion of the negotiations of the post Cotonou Agreement, setting the political, economic and sectorial cooperation framework for the next 20 years.

The Cotonou Agreement was signed in June 2000 in Cotonou, Benin’s largest city. It entered into force in 2003 and was subsequently revised in 2005 and 2010.

It had been regarded as the most comprehensive partnership agreement between developing countries and the EU. The fundamental principles of the Cotonou Agreement include equality of partners, global participation, dialogue and regionalisation. The agreement is re-examined every five years.

In a joint statement, the OACPS and the EU said that the new agreement will succeed the Cotonou Agreement once both sides complete their internal procedures for signature and conclusion, sets the scene for alliance-building and more coordinated actions on the world stage where the group’s impact can be significant to tackle some of the most acute global challenges.

Together, the EU and the members of the OACPS represent over 1.5 billion people and more than half of the seats at the United Nations.

PUBLIC DOCUMENT

Gomes, who stepped down as secretary general of the 79-member grouping in February this year, told the Caribbean Media Corporation that the initial text will now go to all the member states and can be treated as a public document to await a signing ceremony, possibly before the end of this year as the life of the Cotonou Agreement has been extended to December 31, 2021.

“After signing each country will follow their constitutional procedures to have the agreement ratified and after all EU members and 2/3 of ACP have ratified the Agreement will enter into force.”

Gomes said that in structure and focus on strategic priorities, the new agreement differs from the current Cotonou one that was signed in 2000.

“This structure has a general part – main body to which all signatories subscribe on the principles and provisions – but also three regional protocols – an African Regional Protocol, Caribbean and Pacific Regional Protocol,” he said, adding “it is meant to allow for common and also regional specificities in terms of priorities that that agreement will address”.

The former Guyanese-born diplomat said in the general part, there are six strategic priorities dealing with human rights, democracy and governance; peace and security; human and social development; inclusive sustainable economic growth and development, environmental sustainability and climate change; and migration and mobility.

“As you might say, priorities four and five are dealing with the knitty-gritty of “development as political economy processes and planning” which were sort of heart of previous “trade and development cooperation” by ACP and EU but now a more political emphasis is given to a partnership between the parties situated in the framework of the SDGs.

“Powerful attention is given to rule of law, governance, peace and security for people-centred and rights-based societies,” Gomes said.

He said climate change looms large and the basic thrust is for the joint force and common positions by this trans-regional grouping of countries from continents.

He noted that Africa, Americas (Caribbean), Asia-Pacific and Europe will wield influence in multilateral arenas, once common interests and mutual benefits can be derived.

“This also explains the new shift for regions in their own concerns to have room to implement what is more pressing. For instance, peace and security in Africa is vastly different from that of the Caribbean or Pacific.”

France Not Ruling Out New EU Sanctions Against Russia Over Navalny
France Not Ruling Out New EU Sanctions Against Russia Over Navalny

Le Drian noted that France is “extremely concerned” about the deteriorating health condition of Navalny.

“We have already taken measures in the EU, which Russia has criticized. We took action against specific persons, who were associated with this [Navalny’s arrest]. These have already been significant sanctions, but new ones may also be imposed”, Le Drian said on Sunday as aired by France 3 broadcaster.

At the same time, the minister noted that these sanctions do not interfere with the continuation of dialogue with Moscow.

In March, Brussels presented sanctions under its new global human rights sanctions regime, designating four Russian officials over their “roles in the arbitrary arrest, prosecution and sentencing of Alexey Navalny, as well as the repression of peaceful protests in connection with his unlawful treatment.” In a coordinated move hours later, the US imposed sanctions on seven senior Russian officials.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Moscow considered the new Western sanctions on Russia as interference in the country’s internal affairs. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that the relations with the EU were at a low point even before the new sanctions were introduced.

Navalny, who has been complaining about severe back and leg pain, went on a hunger strike at the end of March, after being denied a visit by a doctor of his own choice. Olga Mikhailova, his lawyer, says the 44-year-old is suffering from two spinal hernias. He has refused the treatment offered by the prison authorities.

According to the Russian Federal Penitentiary Service, Navalny’s health has been assessed as stable and satisfactory by medical professionals and he has been receiving all necessary care.

In January, Navalny returned to Moscow from Berlin after receiving medical treatment for his alleged poisoning. The opposition activist was arrested on arrival and referred to a court, which in early February rescinded his suspended sentence in the 2014 Yves Rocher fraud case over multiple probation breaches and replaced it with a 3.5-year term behind bars. A Moscow city court reinstated the ruling but reduced the sentence to 2.5 years.

Czech Republic to inform EU about alleged Russian link to 2014 explosion
Czech Republic to inform EU about alleged Russian link to 2014 explosion

Prague, Apr 18 (EFE).- The Czech Republic on Sunday said it was in contact with its European Union partners about an alleged Russian-backed sabotage attack against an ammunition depot in 2014.

Acting Foreign Minister Jan Hamacek tweeted: “I tasked our ambassadors at EU and NATO to inform our allies about the Vrbetice case.

“I will also speak about this at a meeting of EU foreign ministers on Monday,” he added, referring to the upcoming video conference between EU foreign affairs ministers to discuss the situation in Ukraine, among other issues.

The Czech government on Saturday confirmed it had expelled 18 Russian diplomats accused of being spies.

In October 2014, the Vrbetice depot was hit by a series of explosions that killed two people working at the site of the weapon stockpile.

Czech authorities this weekend said they suspected that Russian agents sabotaged the depot, which stored supplies of ammunition and weapons reportedly destined for the Ukrainian army, which at the time was fighting against pro-Russian separatists in the Donbas.

On Saturday, the Czech police released photos of two suspected members of Russian foreign intelligence (GRU). The photos matched those of two Russian men wanted in connection with the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the city of Salisbury, England, in 2018.

The police said those two Russian men entered the country in October 2014 using counterfeit passports.EFE

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UK, EU condemn sentencing of Jimmy Lai, other Hong Kong pro-democracy activists
UK, EU condemn sentencing of Jimmy Lai, other Hong Kong pro-democracy activists

LONDON: The United Kingdom and the European Union condemned the decision to sentence publishing tycoon Jimmy Lai and multiple pro-democracy figures to prison for their roles in the 2019 mass protests that rocked the city for a year.
As many as 10 prominent pro-democracy figures were sentenced on Friday in Hong Kong in two separate cases for their peaceful involvement in protests.
Those sentenced are Martin Lee, Albert Ho, Jimmy Lai, Margaret Ng, Cyd Ho, Lee Cheuk-yan, Leung Kwok-hung, Au Nok-hin, Leung Yiu-chung, and Yeung Sum.
Their sentences range from terms of imprisonment between 8 and 18 months, and suspended prison sentences from 8 to 12 months in five of the cases. These latest decisions follow the sentencing of Joshua Wong and Sze-yiu Koo on 13 April.
UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab in a tweet on Friday called for the targetting of pro-democracy demonstrators to stop by China.
“The Hong Kong authorities’ decision to target leading pro-democracy figures for prosecution must stop. We will continue to stand together with the people of Hong Kong,” Raab wrote in a tweet.
The UK Foreign Office on Friday said in a statement that the “right to peaceful protest is fundamental to Hong Kong’s way of life – protected in both the Joint Declaration and the Basic Law – and it should be upheld.”
The European Union on Friday said that the recent developments in Hong Kong call into question China’s will to uphold its international commitments, undermine trust, and impact EU-China relations.
“The lengthy imprisonment of some of the individuals for non-violent acts when exercising protected civic rights is a further sign of the continued diminution of the democratic space and erosion of fundamental freedoms in Hong Kong,” the spokesperson from the bloc said in a statement.
“The exercise of fundamental freedoms, including peaceful assembly, must be ensured, as guaranteed in the Hong Kong Basic Law and in the Sino-British Joint Declaration,” the spokesperson said.
This comes after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in a statement on Friday (local time) said: “The seven pro-democracy leaders – Martin Lee, Jimmy Lai, Albert Ho, Margaret Ng, Cyd Ho, Lee Cheuk-yan, and Leung Kwok-hung – participated in a peaceful assembly attended by 1.7 million Hong Kongers… The sentences handed down are incompatible with the non-violent nature of their actions.”
The US State Department spokesperson Ned Price on Thursday had condemned the conviction of seven activists who took part in anti-government protests in Hong Kong by the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities.
This subversion was made a criminally punishable offence in Hong Kong last year, under the Beijing-drafted national security law.
Meanwhile, Beijing believes the legislation criminalises activities related to terrorism, separatism, subversion of state power and collusion with foreign forces, while local pro-democracy activists and certain Western nations claim that the law undermines Hong Kong’s civil liberties and democratic freedoms.
Beijing was perturbed by violent anti-government protests in 2019 and has imposed the draconian national security law to take action against those who protested against the government.

Prague to Discuss Vrbetice Explosion Case With EU Counterparts on Monday
Prague to Discuss Vrbetice Explosion Case With EU Counterparts on Monday

“I have instructed our ambassadors at the EU and NATO to inform our allies about the Vrbetice case. I will also speak about it at the EU foreign ministers meeting on Monday”, Hamacek tweeted.

On Saturday, Prague announced that 18 Russian diplomats would be expelled from the country on suspicion of being special services officers.


©
REUTERS / DAVID W CERNY
A national flag of Russia flies on the Russian embassy in Prague, Czech Republic, March 26, 2018.

The tensions between Moscow and Prague escalated after Prime Minister Andrej Babis claimed the Russian special services were involved in the Vrbetice ammunition depot blast that killed two people in 2014. Russia stressed that such accusations were absurd and promised to respond in kind to the expulsion of diplomats.

At the same time, the Czech police told Sputnik it could not confirm the link between putting Russian nationals Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov on a wanted list and the explosion case.

EU to discuss alleged Russian link to 2014 blast in Czech Republic
EU to discuss alleged Russian link to 2014 blast in Czech Republic

Moscow reacted furiously on Sunday to Czech accusations that two Russian spies accused of a nerve agent poisoning in Britain in 2018 were behind an explosion at a Czech ammunition dump four years earlier, which killed two people.

Prague on Saturday expelled no fewer than 18 Russian diplomats, prompting Russia’s Foreign Ministry to vow on Sunday to “force the authors of this provocation to fully understand their responsibility for destroying the foundation of normal ties between our countries”.

The Czech Republic said it had informed NATO and European Union allies that it suspected Russia of causing the blast, and European Union foreign ministers were set to discuss the matter at their meeting on Monday.

The row is the biggest between Prague and Moscow since the end of decades of Soviet domination of eastern Europe in 1989.

It also adds to growing tensions between Russia and the West in general, raised in part by Russia’s military build-up on its Western borders and in Crimea, which Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014, after a surge in fighting between government and pro-Russian forces in Ukraine’s east.

Russia said Prague’s accusations were absurd as it had previously blamed the blast at Vrbetice, 300 km (210 miles) east of the capital, on the depot’s owners.

It called the expulsions “the continuation of a series of anti-Russian actions undertaken by the Czech Republic in recent years”, accusing Prague of “striving to please the United States against the backdrop of recent U.S. sanctions against Russia”.

ARMS SHIPMENT

Jan Hamacek, the Czech interior and acting foreign minister, said investigators believed the blast had been intended to occur in an arms shipment after it left the depot, probably headed for Bulgaria.

Czech police said they were looking for two men who travelled to the Czech Republic days before the blast under the names Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov.

Those names were the aliases used by the two Russian GRU military intelligence officers wanted by Britain for the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter with the Soviet-era nerve agent Novichok in the English city of Salisbury in 2018. The Skripals survived, but a member of the public died.

The Kremlin denied involvement in that incident, and the attackers remain at large. read more

“Police knew about the two people from the beginning,” Hamacek said, “but only found out when the Salisbury attack happened that they are members of the GRU, that Unit 29155.”

Hamacek said Prague would ask Moscow for assistance in questioning them, but did not expect it to cooperate.

The Czech investigative weekly Respekt reported on Saturday that according to police investigators, the arms shipment was destined for a Bulgarian trader believed to be supplying Ukraine at a time when Russian-backed separatists were fighting government forces in eastern Ukraine.

Respekt and Czech public radio named a Bulgarian arms dealer, a man whom Bulgarian prosecutors said Russian agents had tried and failed to kill in 2015.

The news website Seznamzpravy.cz said the arms shipment may also have been destined for Syrian rebels.

“DANGEROUS AND MALIGN”

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab tweeted that the Czechs “have exposed the lengths that the GRU will go to in their attempts to conduct dangerous and malign operations”.

A NATO official said the alliance would support the Czech Republic as it investigated Russia’s “malign activities”, which were part of a pattern of “dangerous behaviour”.

“Those responsible must be brought to justice,” added the official, who declined to be named.

Washington also offered Prague its support.

The United States imposed sanctions against Russia on Thursday for interfering in last year’s U.S. election, cyber hacking, bullying Ukraine and other actions, prompting Moscow to retaliate.

On Sunday, U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Washington had told Moscow “there will be consequences” if Alexei Navalny, the opposition figurehead who almost died last year after being given a toxin that Western experts say was Novichok, dies in prison, where he is on hunger strike. read more

The 2014 incident has resurfaced at an awkward time for Prague and Moscow.

The Czech Republic is planning to put the construction of a new nuclear power plant at its Dukovany complex out to tender.

Security services have demanded that Russia’s Rosatom be excluded as a security risk, while President Milos Zeman and other senior officials have been putting Russia’s case.

In a text message, Industry Minister Karel Havlicek, who was previously in favour of including Russia, told Reuters: “The probability that Rosatom will participate in the expansion of Dukovany is very low.”

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