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Російська делегація в ООН влаштувала демарш Грібаускайте

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Новини, публікації, інсайдерська інформація про економічні, політичні, культурні та суспільні процеси в Україні та світі.
Представники Російської Федерації демонстративно покинули зал засідань Генеральної Асамблеї ООН перед виступом президента Литви Далі Грібаускайте. Грібаускайте стала 14-м за рахунком оратором у вівторок, 19 вересня, пише ZN. UA. Під час свого виступу президент Литви наголосила, що російські навчання в Білорусі “Запад-2017” є відпрацюванням сценарію нападу РФ на своїх сусідів.
Нагадаємо, з 14 по 20 вересня на семи полігонах Беларусі та трьох полігонах РФ проходять спільні російсько-білоруські військові навчання “Запад-2017”. Аналітики НАТО говорять про те, що РФ під виглядом навчань “Запад-2017” перекидає танки і бронетехніку до західних кордонів. З початку серпня зафіксовано переміщення російської військової техніки вздовж всієї європейської кордону РФ – від Балтійського до Чорного моря. У міністерстві оборони Білорусі відзначили виключно оборонний характер навчань і пообіцяли, що всі російські військові, що беруть у них участь, залишать білоруську територію до 30 вересня.

© Source: http://www.theinsider.ua/politics/59c1839d4b26c/
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Макрон на Генассамблее ООН потребовал от России выполнять "Минск": президент Франции возмущен, что боевики "Л/ДНР" не прекращают огонь на Донбассе

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Президент Французской Республики Эммануэль Макрон заявил, что официальный Париж не намерен отворачиваться от проблем Киева и будет продолжать диалог с Россией по прекращению военных действий на востоке Украины.
Про это извещает “Диалог. UA”.
Политик заявил, что Москве необходимо обеспечить эффективное прекращение огня в Украине. Чтобы это сделать, ее марионеточные “республики” должны в полной мере выполнить принятые Россией обязательства.
Такое заявление сделал глава Франции на 72-й сессии Генеральной ассамблеи Организации Объединенных Наций.
“На востоке Украины нам нужно следить за выполнением принятых обязательств. Это даст нам возможность эффективно урегулировать прекращение обстрелов, постепенно, как мы это уже делали вместе с Германией. Все стороны конфликта обязаны полностью придерживаться международных стандартов, чтобы в конечном результате выйти на окончание конфликта”, – отметил он.
Он отметил, что Франция отказывается от любой эскалации конфликта и “не отворачивается от диалога”.
Напомним, до этого “Диалог. UA” упоминал: жена Макрона пообещала следить за делом Сущенко в России.

© Source: https://www.dialog.ua/news/131367_1505853524
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Генсек ООН закликав вирішити кризу навколо КНДР політичними методами

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Генеральний секретар Організації Об’єднаних Націй (ООН) Антоніу Гутерріш заявив, що криза, яка виникла через ракетні випробування керівництвом Північної Кореї, необхідно вирішувати виключно політичними методами
Генеральний секретар Організації Об’єднаних Націй (ООН) Антоніу Гутерріш заявив, що криза, яка виникла через ракетні випробування керівництвом Північної Кореї, необхідно вирішувати виключно політичними методами.
Він закликав світових лідерів не робити заяв, які можуть привести до “фатального непорозуміння”, та не допустити війни через кризу навколо КНДР, передає DW .
“Використання ядерної зброї має бути немислимим. Навіть загрозу його застосування ніколи не можна терпіти. Але по всьому світу страх застосування ядерної зброї сьогодні на найвищому рівні починаючи з завершення Холодної війни”, – заявив Гутерріш.
Раніше президент США Дональд Трамп заявив про готовність США “повністю знищити” Північну Корею.
Нагадаємо, що 15 вересня Рада безпеки ООН одноголосно зажадала від КНДР припинити випробування зброї.
Перед цим 11 вересня всі 15 держав – членів РБ ООН, включаючи Росію й Китай, схвалили новий проект резолюції щодо введення додаткових санкцій проти КНДР.
Всі новини про кризу навколо КНДР читайте в спецтемі НВ.

© Source: http://nv.ua/ukr/world/geopolitics/gensek-oon-zaklikav-virishiti-krizu-navkolo-kndr-politichnimi-metodami-1879646.html
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Disgraced union president’s lawyers claim $20K in cash was gambling winnings

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Lawyers for indicted ex-correction union president Norman Seabrook are claiming that more than $20,000 in cash found locked in his bedroom safe wasn’t a bribe…
Lawyers for indicted ex-correction union president Norman Seabrook are claiming that more than $20,000 in cash found locked in his bedroom safe wasn’t a bribe — it was gambling earnings.
“The vast majority of the money, $22,350, was seized from a safe in the master bedroom,” Seabrook’s lawyer’s Paul Shechtman and Maggie Lynaugh write in an attempt to bar the jury from hearing about the cash.
“Notably, at the same time, the government seized three Mohegan Sun gambling receipts — one dated Jan. 28,2015, for $7,000; another dated May 13,2015, for $6,000; and a third dated Sept. 30,2015, for $7,500.”
Seabrook will stand trial in October, on accusations he accepted $60,000 in kickbacks in exchange for investing $20 million from union pensions in a since-closed hedge fund.
The lawyers go on to argue the government can’t prove the nearly $29,000 in cash was from Jona Rechnitz or hedge funder Murray Huberfeld.
Rechnitz is expected to testify for the prosecution that he personally handed Seabrook the $60,000 bribe, from Huberfeld.
“To be sure, the agents also found a Ferragamo bag, matching the one that Rechnitz gave to Mr. Seabrook, but the cash was not in or near the bag,” the papers read.
The judge has yet to rule on the motion.

© Source: http://nypost.com/2017/09/19/disgraced-union-presidents-lawyers-claim-20k-in-cash-was-gambling-winnings/
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U. S.-Cuba commission meets for first time during Trump administration

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U. S.-Cuba Commission meets for first time under Trump
The United States and Cuba held their sixth Bilateral Commission meeting — the first since President Donald Trump has been in office — and it wasn’t exactly cordial.
In a statement following the meeting, the Cuban delegation said it protested “the disrespectful, unacceptable and meddling statements made by President Donald Trump in his address to the U. N. General Assembly” at the same time the two sides were meeting in Washington.
The Cuban delegation, led by Josefina Vidal, Cuba’s chief negotiator during the opening toward Cuba under former President Barack Obama, noted the commission was meeting against the backdrop of a “reversal” in Cuba-U. S. relations. Trump announced a new policy for Cuba June 16 that will make it more difficult for Americans to travel to the island and limit U. S. commercial dealings with Cuba.
The Cuban side said it “placed on record its rejection of measures designed to intensify the U. S. blockade [its term for the embargo] and to interfere with Cuban internal affairs.” It also objected to “the use of confrontational rhetoric and the political manipulation of the human rights issue as a pretext to justify U. S. policies.”
Cuba also addressed a series of mysterious incidents that have harmed the health of U. S. diplomats and their families in Havana — in some cases causing permanent hearing loss or concussions. Some investigators have talked of a possible “sonic attack.”
“Cuba has never perpetrated nor will it ever perpetrate actions of this nature, and has never permitted nor will it ever permit any third-party use of its territory for this purpose,” the Cuban statement said. It also noted that Cuban authorities have a “keen interest” in clarifying what happened to the diplomats.
The commission was set up during the Obama administration to discuss areas of mutual interest between the two countries, and had met five times previously since the United States and Cuba reestablished diplomatic relations in July 2015.
By contrast, the previous meeting, last Dec. 7, was a comparative love fest with the sides noting achievements in U. S.-Cuba relations, including signing 11 non-binding agreements on health, the environment, counter narcotics and other areas of cooperation.
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© Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/cuba/article174249471.html
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Bracing for Category 5 Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico Video

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Puerto Rico’s governor called the storm “the biggest and potentially most catastrophic hurricane to hit Puerto Rico in a century.”
Maria, now a Category 1 hurricane, is expected to become a “dangerous major hurricane” over the U. S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico by the middle of the week as a separate hurricane heads for the Northeast Coast.

© Source: http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/video/bracing-category-hurricane-maria-puerto-rico-49963000
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Останні незалежні члени ради "Нафтогазу" звільняються

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Останні незалежні члени наглядової ради НАК “Нафтогаз” залишають свої посади. Новини України, Новини політики, Реформи, Нафтогаз – Телеканал новин 24
Останні незалежні члени наглядової ради НАК “Нафтогаз” залишають свої посади.
Про це йдеться у повідомленні прес-служби компанії.
Пол Ворвік та Маркус Річардс вирішили піти з компанії через згортання реформ з боку уряду.
Жодна з дій, які перебувають під контролем уряду, не була виконана. Навпаки, рівень політичного втручання у роботу “Нафтогазу” продовжує зростати і став, на жаль, очевидною нормою, – зазначили у листі.
Також у зверненні йдеться про те, що “протягом останніх п’яти місяців не сталось жодних суттєвих зрушень вперед” у сфері здійснення реформ, які б якісно вплинули на роботу “Нафтогазу”.
Завтра, 20 вересня, у Києві на цю тему проведуть брифінг.

© Source: http://24tv.ua/ostanni_nezalezhni_chleni_radi_naftogazu_zvilnyayutsya_n866491
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Mexico quake death toll rises to 106

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The powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake that hit Mexico City and nearby regions on Tuesday killed at least 106 people, according to a preliminary coun
The powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake that hit Mexico City and nearby regions on Tuesday killed at least 106 people, according to a preliminary count compiled from local officials’ initial reports.
Mexico City recorded 30 deaths, but it was the state of Morelos that had the worst fatality count at this time— 42. Morelos is located directly south of the city.
Puebla, a town southeast of the capital, registered 26 deaths, while Mexico state, which lies just to the west, had eight deaths.
Authorities expect the number of killed could still rise, as rescue crews and volunteers continue to dig into the rubble of 29 collapsed buildings in Mexico City, which is home to 20 million inhabitants.
The disaster occurred exactly 32 years after a quake rocked Mexico City in 1985 that killed 10,000 people.
/kga

© Source: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/931926/mexico-earthquake-death-toll
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St. Louis protest police accused of controversial 'kettling' tactics

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Demonstrators have taken to the streets of St. Louis to protest the recent not-guilty verdict in the case of a former police officer accused in a fatal shooting.
Kettling is a term used to describe a crowd control technique where police or security forces surround a group with a cordon of officers — sometimes in riot gear — and physically restrict it to a specific area.
It is used to “control access to the location and decide how to allow people to leave, perhaps through a predetermined spot,” the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, a CNN news-gathering partner, reported.
The term comes from a German word meaning cauldron.
Dick Odenthal, a retired Los Angeles County sheriff’s captain, said he and his colleagues never used that specific term during his career from 1928 to 2000. But he said it appears to apply to an effort to arrest people in violent and unruly groups who refuse to obey police orders to disperse. In some circumstances, law enforcement officers make an “arrest circle,” surrounding people and giving them an opportunity to leave. If they refuse, they can be taken into custody.
“We just called it an arrest technique,” he said.
Why do police use it as a tactic?
Police use kettling as a way to contain crowds who are committing crimes — or are ignoring police orders to disperse.
CNN affiliate the St. Louis Post-Dispatch said police on Sunday moved to box in “about 100 people at a busy downtown intersection and arrest them for failing to disperse.”
The police action came after “several windows were broken and concrete planters and trash cans overturned,” the newspaper said.
David Klinger, a professor of criminology and criminal justice at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, said at issue is how mass arrests are carried out. Police officers understand First Amendment rights and peaceful protest, but when people engage in illegal activity, police respond, Klinger said.
A commander can order the use of force from a distance, such as the firing of a chemical irritant like tear gas — or order a small cadre of police officers to arrest anyone who, for example, is hurling rocks or bottles at police, he said.
Police can also order those people to disperse. If they don’t do so in a reasonable amount of time and the projectiles continue, police can encircle that group of protesters and arrest them. “They are defying a lawful order,” he said. “if you are there you are subject to arrest.”
St. Louis Metropolitan Police spokeswoman Schron Y. Jackson, when asked if police used kettling in the disturbances, said, “officers responded to the location where protesters gathered. The geographical layout of the area, and not a technique, dictated how tactics were deployed. “
What do opponents claim is wrong about kettling?
Some St. Louis protesters claimed that police roughed them up during the arrests and that a group was targeted for the actions of a few.
People quoted by the Post-Dispatch cited “excessive force and chemical spray on people” who weren’t among the protesters, including people who were trying to go home and members of the media.
A Post-Dispatch reporter wrote about getting roughed up in the kettle, getting knocked down, pinned and pepper-sprayed.
“We have to separate the tactic of mass arrest from inappropriate use of force when implementing that tactic,” Klinger said.
Odenthal said every use of force needs to be investigated and looked at for its propriety. “If we used force, we had to justify it,” he said.
Where have police used kettling?
The technique has been employed in the United States, Canada and Europe, according to news accounts.
Its use in the US came up in June, when the American Civil Liberties Union of the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit against the district and others over police behavior on Inauguration Day. Police were accused of “using excessive force, denying arrested people food, water, and access to toilets, and invasive bodily searches of protesters exercising their First Amendment rights “
The ACLU said a “small number” of protesters “caused property damage.”
“In response to the vandalism, MPD officers employed a controversial crowd-control tactic known as ‘kettling,’ where officers corralled more than 200 protesters — including many who had broken no laws — by trapping and detaining them for several hours before formally arresting them,” the ACLU said in a news release.
“Officers also deployed nonlethal crowd-control devices — including pepper spray, tear gas, flash-bang grenades, concussion grenades, and smoke flares — upon protesters and others both on the street and inside the kettle, without warning or threat of harm to officers or other members of the public.”
In the suit, the plantiffs are described as a photojournalist who covered the demonstrations and a legal observer. “Each of them suffered one or more of the constitutional, statutory, and common law violations,” the ACLU said.
What should demonstrators do?
Scott Michelman, the senior staff attorney for the ACLU of the District of Columbia, said in the Washington case, police “did not have reason to believe a substantial number of the people they kettled” had committed any crime.
“They needed to go after specific people and not conduct a mass sweep,” he said. “The police can’t just kettle people because they think it would help control the crowd. They need to have specific probable cause.”
He said laws differ state by state and if a state has a law saying police have a right to make mass arrests after of groups who’ve been warned to disperse, police would be in their rights to do so. “Assuming there is a law on failing to disperse and following a police order, I suspect everyone in that group would be subject to probable cause,” he said.
Michelman said obeying police orders to disperse would be a smart move.
“It’s generally safer and more prudent to comply with police orders and challenge the legality of those orders later,” he said. The alternative is risking arrest and an escalation of the street confrontations.
The Washington Post in June quoted the police department’s lead spokesman, Dustin Sternbeck, as saying that on Inauguration Day, “there were thousands of individuals who exercised their constitutional right to peacefully assemble and speak out for their cause. Unfortunately there was another group of individuals who chose to engage in criminal acts, destroying property and hurling projectiles, injuring at least six officers.”
He is quoted as saying that “suspects were arrested and that ‘the bulk of them are pending prosecution after being indicted by a grand jury.’ He also added that “allegations of misconduct will be fully investigated.”

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Slight gains in US stocks lift Dow, S&P, Nasdaq to new highs

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By ALEX VEIGA AP Business Writer Wall Street capped a day of mostly listless trading Tuesday with a slight gain, good enough to lift the major U. S. stock indexes to another…
Wall Street capped a day of mostly listless trading Tuesday with a slight gain, good enough to lift the major U. S. stock indexes to another set of all-time highs.
Banks, insurers and other financial companies led the gainers. Technology companies also helped lift the market. Health care stocks lagged the most, pulling down insurers, hospital operators and other companies as a Republican effort to repeal President Barack Obama’s health care law appeared to gain momentum. Oil prices fell.
Trading was subdued overall as investors looked ahead to Wednesday, when the Federal Reserve was expected to deliver an update on the central bank’s view of the economy and the timing of its plans to raise interest rates and shrink its bond holdings.
“People are still, as they usually are the day before a Fed announcement, kind of in a wait-and-see mode,” said Lindsey Bell, investment strategist at CFRA Research.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 2.78 points, or 0.1 percent, to 2,506.65. The index, regarded as the broadest measure of the stock market, has hit a record high three days in a row.
The Dow Jones industrial average gained 39.45 points, or 0.2 percent, to 22,370.80. The average is on a six-day streak of new highs.
The Nasdaq composite added 6.68 points, or 0.1 percent, to 6,461.32. The tech-heavy index also notched a new high, its first since last Wednesday.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks declined 0.68 points, or 0.1 percent, to 1,440.40.
The major stock indexes wavered in early trading, but recovered to hold their small gains by afternoon. Investors sized up new economic data that showed the pace of U. S. home construction slowed in August due to a steep drop in apartment construction. A separate report on business confidence showed CEO optimism reached its highest level since early 2014.
Mostly, though, investors were focused on what the Fed will have to say on Wednesday.
Forecasters expect the Fed to leave interest rates unchanged and stick to plans to raise rates in December. But traders will be listening for word on whether the central bank is ready to begin shrinking its multitrillion-dollar stockpile of bonds.
Such a move would allow the Fed to effectively raise interest rates without touching its key short-term rate, known as the federal funds rate, said Phil Blancato, CEO of Ladenburg Thalmann Asset Management.
“That’s the most important aspect here,” Blancato said. “That does have an impact on the bond market, and you see the bond market going slightly higher here over the last two days.”
Bond prices fell Tuesday, sending the yield on the 10-year Treasury note up to 2.25 percent from 2.23 percent late Monday.
Speculation that the Fed will announce plans to unwind its bond portfolio helped lift shares in banks and other financial companies. Such a move by the Fed would likely push long-term interest rates up. Banks benefit from higher rates, which can translate into higher profits from lending money. U. S. Bancorp added 78 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $53.16. Wells Fargo & Co. rose 65 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $53.36.
Progressive gained 2.9 percent after the insurer reported lower-than-expected losses from Hurricane Harvey. The company is the second insurer to report losses related to the hurricane, which battered Texas and Louisiana last month, that were far less than financial analysts expected. Progressive shares rose $1.32 to $47.63.
Technology stocks were also among the big movers. The sector is the biggest gainer this year, up 26 percent. NetApp climbed $1.08, or 2.7 percent, to $41.71.
Several health insurers and hospital operators were trading lower after top Senate Republicans said Tuesday that their last-ditch effort to overhaul the Affordable Care Act is gaining momentum.
Envision Healthcare sank $4.56, or 9.6 percent, to $43.11. Humana slid $8.41, or 3.4 percent, to $240.04. Centene, which administers Medicaid programs and sells health plans to the ACA’s exchanges, lost $4.80, or 5.1 percent, to $89.78.
Investors welcomed news that Post Holdings, maker of cereals such as Honey Bunches of Oats and Fruity Pebbles, agreed to acquire Bob Evans Farms in a deal worth about $1.53 billion.
Shares in Bob Evans, a maker of refrigerated side dishes, gained $4.48, or 6.1 percent, to $77.41. Post added 52 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $86.36.
Traders were less enthused by word that the Federal Trade Commission signed off on a deal for Walgreens Boots Alliance to buy 2,186 Rite Aid stores for $5.19 billion. That amounts to a much smaller deal than the companies originally sought when Walgreens pushed to buy Rite Aid. The companies abandoned that deal following opposition from regulators. Rite Aid shares lost 33 cents, or 12.1 percent, to $2.40. Walgreens slid $1.39, or 1.7 percent, to $81.21.
Energy futures closed lower.
Benchmark U. S. crude fell 43 cents, or 0.9 percent, to settle at $49.48 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, used to price international oils, gave up 34 cents, or 0.6 percent, to close at $55.14 a barrel in London.
Wholesale gasoline slid 1 cent to $1.66 a gallon. Heating oil fell 1 cent to $1.77 a gallon. Natural gas declined 2 cents to $3.12 per 1,000 cubic feet.
In metals trading, gold slipped 20 cents to $1,310.60 an ounce. Silver gained 12 cents to $17.28 an ounce. Copper held steady at $2.97 a pound.
The dollar rose to 111.50 yen from 111.47 yen on Monday. The euro strengthened to $1.1997 from $1.1953.
Global shares were mixed Tuesday.
In Europe, Germany’s DAX was flat, while France’s CAC 40 rose 0.2 percent. The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares gained 0.3 percent. In Asia, Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 added nearly 2.0 percent coming off a national holiday on Monday. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 edged down 0.1 percent, while South Korea’s Kospi lost nearly 0.1 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell nearly 0.4 percent.
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© Source: http://www.cbs46.com/story/36401249/slight-gains-in-us-stocks-lift-dow-sp-nasdaq-to-new-highs
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