Kamis, 03 Juni 2021

Roman Protasevich: Journalist appears on state television - BBC News

Roman Protasevich appears in an interview on state television
Belaruskaja Tele-Radio Campanija

Belarusian journalist Roman Protasevich, who was arrested in Minsk after being taken off a diverted flight last month, has appeared in a tearful interview on state television.

In the interview, he confessed to organising anti-government protests and praised President Alexander Lukashenko.

Mr Protasevich's family say the interview was conducted under duress.

The reporter, 26, was editor of the opposition Nexta channel on the Telegram messaging app until last year.

He was put on a list of "individuals involved in terrorist activity" last year.

Mass protests erupted across Belarus after long-time leader Alexander Lukashenko claimed victory in a 9 August presidential election widely condemned as rigged, and a crackdown followed.

The protests have been curbed and opposition leaders have been sent to prison or into exile.

What did he say?

In the interview broadcast on Thursday evening, Mr Protasevich admitted to attempting to topple Alexander Lukashenko and said that he was speaking to the television channel by choice.

He said that he had criticised President Lukashenko a lot but "began to understand that he was doing the right thing and I certainly respect him".

At the end of the interview, he burst into tears and said he hoped one day to marry and have children.

The journalist's father told AFP news agency that it pained him to watch the interview.

"I know my son very well and I believe that he would never say such things. They broke him and forced him to say what was needed," he said.

Thursday's interview was Mr Protasevich's third appearance on state television since he was detained.

In one interview, he said there was no use in the opposition calling for further street protests.

How was he arrested?

The journalist and his girlfriend Sofia Sapega were flying back to Lithuania, where they were both living, when their jet was made to land in Minsk over a fake bomb threat.

He faces serious charges. The charge of causing mass unrest can be punished by up to 15 years in jail. But terror offences carry higher sentences and as he was taken off the plane, passengers quoted him saying "I'll get the death penalty here".

Mr Protasevich and Ms Sapega were led away by police and later appeared in videos where they were shown making what appeared to be forced confessions to crimes against the Belarusian authorities.

Their arrests prompted the European Union to last month agree on sanctions on Belarus including banning the country's airlines from using the bloc's airspace and airports. Sanctions have also been placed on officials linked to the flight's diversion.

"We won't tolerate that one can try to play Russian roulette with the lives of innocent civilians," EU Council chief Charles Michel said.

Ursula von der Leyen, head of the European Commission, described the incident as "an attack on democracy".

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiMGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLWV1cm9wZS01NzM1MzQxM9IBNGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLWV1cm9wZS01NzM1MzQxMy5hbXA?oc=5

2021-06-04 00:53:26Z
52781642979698

Roman Protasevich: Dissident Belarusian journalist appears to praise President Alexander Lukashenko in new video - Sky News

Dissident journalist Roman Protasevich has been filmed appearing to praise Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko in a new video.

In the clip, recorded for Belarusian state-controlled TV, Mr Protasevich was asked whether he respected the president, to which he replied: "Absolutely."

Mr Protasevich, 26, said Mr Lukashenko has "acted like a man with balls of steel", despite the "pressure" of resistance movements like his.

The journalist, who was arrested last month after the Ryanair flight he was on was diverted, did not appear to be in good health in the clip.

It comes after an earlier video for the state-controlled broadcaster saw him claim he was set up by an unidentified associate.

Commenting on that clip, one of Mr Protasevich's associates said he was clearly speaking under duress.

It is not clear when the more recent interview was filmed and under what conditions.

More on Alexander Lukashenko

In it, he said: "I won't hide it, I criticised Alexander Grigoryevich [Lukashenko] a lot. Of course, because it seemed to be that there were reasons for it.

Roman Protasevich
Image: A map shows how the journalist's Ryanair flight was diverted to the Belarusian capital

"I've been a journalist my whole life, but the more I was getting involved in political work, the more I wanted to run away from it.

"And then I started to realise that many things Alexander Grigoryevich is criticised for are just attempts to pressure him.

"And that in many moments he acted like a man with balls of steel, despite all the pressure and so on."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

In a separate video Mr Protasevich claimed he was set up by an unidentified associate

Mr Protasevich, who worked for Poland-based online news service NEXTA, was detained by authorities in the Belarusian capital of Minsk on 23 May.

There was international outrage when his Ryanair flight - from Athens to Vilnius, Lithuania - was diverted to Belarus by air traffic controllers over claims of a bomb threat. There have been accusations it was a "state-sponsored hijacking" on the orders of Mr Lukashenko.

No bomb was found on board, but Mr Protasevich and his girlfriend Sofia Sapega were arrested.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko accused the West of waging a hybrid war against the country. Pic: AP
Image: Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko is often referred to as 'Europe's last dictator'. Pic: AP

Ms Sapega has since appeared in a video from prison where she confesses to running a channel that revealed personal data about Belarusian security officers.

Her boyfriend left Belarus in 2019 and has since become Mr Lukashenko's leading opponent.

As well as his work for the Polish news service, Mr Protasevich ran a popular channel on the messaging app Telegram that played a key role in organising anti-government protests last year.

Roman Protasevich being detained by police in Belarus in 2017 during a protest
Image: Roman Protasevich being detained by police in 2017 during a protest in Belarus

He was then charged with inciting mass disturbances, which could carry a prison sentence of up to 15 years.

Mr Lukashenko, who has ruled the ex-Soviet nation for more than 25 years, is often referred to as Europe's last dictator.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMikwFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9yb21hbi1wcm90YXNldmljaC1kaXNzaWRlbnQtYmVsYXJ1c2lhbi1qb3VybmFsaXN0LWFwcGVhcnMtdG8tcHJhaXNlLXByZXNpZGVudC1hbGV4YW5kZXItbHVrYXNoZW5rby1pbi1uZXctdmlkZW8tMTIzMjQzMjTSAZcBaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL3JvbWFuLXByb3Rhc2V2aWNoLWRpc3NpZGVudC1iZWxhcnVzaWFuLWpvdXJuYWxpc3QtYXBwZWFycy10by1wcmFpc2UtcHJlc2lkZW50LWFsZXhhbmRlci1sdWthc2hlbmtvLWluLW5ldy12aWRlby0xMjMyNDMyNA?oc=5

2021-06-03 21:57:02Z
52781642979698

‘No difference’: Palestinians react to Israeli coalition deal - Al Jazeera English

Many Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza have dismissed a change in the Israeli government, saying the nationalist leader due to replace Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would likely pursue the same right-wing agenda.

Naftali Bennett, the 49-year-old former head of Israel’s main West Bank settler organisation and ex-Netanyahu ally, would be the country’s new leader under a patchwork coalition.

Opposition and centrist leader Yair Lapid of Yesh Atid and Bennett declared on Wednesday night they had reached a deal to form a new government to unseat the incumbent Netanyahu after a 12-year run as prime minister.

Bassem al-Salhi, a representative of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), said the prime minister-designate was no less extreme than Netanyahu.

“He will make sure to express how extreme he is in the government,” he said.

Bennett has been a strong advocate of annexing parts of the West Bank that Israel captured and occupied in a 1967 war.

However, in recent days Bennett appeared to propose a continuation of the status quo, with some easing of conditions for Palestinians.

“My thinking in this context is to shrink the conflict. We will not resolve it. But wherever we can [improve conditions] – more crossing points, more quality of life, more business, more industry – we will do so.”

‘We need a serious change’

Hamas, the group which rules the besieged Gaza Strip, said it made no difference who governs Israel.

“Palestinians have seen dozens of Israeli governments throughout history, right, left, centre, as they call it. But all of them have been hostile when it comes to the rights of our Palestinian people and they all had hostile policies of expansionism,” spokesman Hazem Qassem said.

Sami Abou Shehadeh, leader of the Palestinian nationalist Balad Party, told Al Jazeera from occupied East Jerusalem the issue was not the “personality” of Netanyahu but the policies Israel pursues.

“What we need is a serious change in Israeli policies, not in the personalities. The situation was very bad before Netanyahu, and as long as Israel insists on its own policies, it will continue to being bad after Netanyahu. This is why we oppose this government [new coalition].”

Former member of the executive committee of the PLO Hanan Ashrawi said the Netanyahu years still had “built-in systems of racism, extremism, violence and lawlessness”.

“His former cohorts will maintain his legacy,” she tweeted.

Similar sentiments were voiced elsewhere.

“There is no difference between one Israeli leader and another,” Ahmed Rezik, 29, a government worker in Gaza, told Reuters news agency.

“They are good or bad for their nation. And when it comes to us, they are all bad, and they all refuse to give the Palestinians their rights and their land.”

The coalition agreement capped a March 23 election in which neither Netanyahu’s Likud party and its allies nor their opponents won a majority in the legislature. It was Israel’s fourth national ballot in two years.

The governing lineup comprises a patchwork of small and medium-sized parties from across the political spectrum

The deal includes the United Arab List, which would make it the first party of Palestinian citizens of Israel ever to be part of a governing coalition in Israel.

United Arab List’s leader Mansour Abbas has cast aside differences with Bennett, and said he hopes to improve conditions for Palestinian citizens who complain of discrimination and government neglect.

“We decided to join the government in order to change the balance of political forces in the country,” the 47-year-old said in a message to supporters after signing the coalition agreement.

Abbas’s party said the agreement includes the allocation of more than 53 billion shekels ($16bn) to improve infrastructure and combat violent crime.

It also includes provisions freezing demolition of homes built without permits in Palestinian villages and granting official status to Bedouin towns in the Negev Desert, a stronghold for support, the party said.

But he has been criticised in the West Bank and Gaza for siding with what they see as the enemy.

“What will he do when they ask him to vote on launching a new war on Gaza?” said Badri Karam, 21, in Gaza.

“Will he accept it, being a part of the killing of Palestinians?”

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiYmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDIxLzYvMy9uby1kaWZmZXJlbmNlLXBhbGVzdGluaWFucy1yZWFjdC10by1pc3JhZWxpLWNvYWxpdGlvbi1kZWFs0gFmaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYWxqYXplZXJhLmNvbS9hbXAvbmV3cy8yMDIxLzYvMy9uby1kaWZmZXJlbmNlLXBhbGVzdGluaWFucy1yZWFjdC10by1pc3JhZWxpLWNvYWxpdGlvbi1kZWFs?oc=5

2021-06-03 22:30:00Z
52781630473983

Portugal travel list: 'Let us go on holiday and live our lives' - BBC News

Kerry, Paul Modley and Rachel Richmond

News that Portugal will be taken off the government's green list of quarantine-free destinations from Tuesday has thrown travel plans for thousands into disarray. Some tell the BBC of cancelled holidays, wasted money and family visits postponed once again.

Kerry, a photographer from the Wirral, says her family - like many others - have had "the year from hell".

Her partner has been shielding for over a year due to an auto-immune disease, Kerry has had to nurse her mother through Covid-19 and a stroke, and her 18-month old son has hardly known a world without a pandemic.

She was just about to book a trip to Portugal, one of the few tourist destinations where quarantine-free travel was allowed, when the rules changed.

From 04:00 BST on Tuesday, it will join the amber list, meaning holidaymakers should not visit and arrivals must self-isolate for 10 days.

Kerry says: "This holiday was everything for us our first with our baby who has had no experiences in his first 18 months on this planet."

Kerry and her 18-month-old son
Family handout

Kerry says there are countries with low rates of infection but the government refuses to "let us holiday and live our life", even when many people are fully vaccinated.

Rachel Richmond, from Edinburgh, also expects to be fully vaccinated by the time of her two-week trip to Portugal in early July, booked just last week.

"What is the point of being vaccinated if you cannot go anywhere? It is so utterly frustrating and so unfair," she says.

She feels the government keeps "shifting the goalposts on travel", raising the hopes of people who follow the rules only to dash them a few weeks later.

'Travel not responsible'

Although travel to Portugal will still be legally permitted for people willing to quarantine on their return, some people - like Paul Modley and his partner, Tom Griffith, from London - say they are cancelling their trip.

"It doesn't feel responsible" to travel anyway, Paul says, adding: "Neither of us are really up for doing quarantine for 10 days when we come back."

Paul Modley and Tom Griffith
Paul Modley

The couple will lose £360 spent on PCR tests to travel. They do not yet know if the airline or accommodation provider will give them a refund.

Paul, 54, says he booked out of "hope" that they would be able to get away and relax after the stresses of the last 15 months.

The suspense of waiting to hear if they had a negative test had already meant it was "not the most relaxing start or preparation for a holiday."

But he says: "It was worth a punt."

'Plans in disarray'

For others, the news that the green list status might be revoked came when they were already in Portugal - in the case of Mervyn Dinnen, just as he landed at Faro airport in the Algarve from Gatwick.

It's not the first time he's experienced a travel U-turn from the UK government, having previously been in the Canary Islands in December when quarantine requirements were imposed.

Arriving on a plane more-or-less full of Britons to a hotel full of Britons, he says most people seem determined to make the most of their holiday.

British tourists on the beach in Portugal
Getty Images

"I had a lovely lunch, I've got a beer here, the sun is shining. I feel relaxed even though what's happened has completely thrown my plans into disarray," he says.

But he says the fact that thousands of football fans were able to travel to Portugal for the Champions League final on 29 May sent a signal that it was safe for others to make the trip and it was "frustrating" to see that change within a week.

Although Portugal is a major tourist destination with about 2.5 million UK visitors before the pandemic, it is not only holiday plans that are being disrupted.

Stephanie Price, from Burnley, has tried five times to visit her family in Portugal after originally booking in 2019, each time being forced to rearrange due to the pandemic.

"I have worked all through lockdown and was looking forward to getting away to see my family," she says.

She says she has had both vaccinations and the virus is "here to stay" so people should not be "confined to misery" without being able to travel.

Woman walking past a bar in Lisbon
Getty Images

Portugal's coronavirus infections are much higher in the north and centre than in southern regions such as the Algarve, she says, and the travel policy should reflect that.

Some people are refusing to let the change to the travel list stop them, however.

One man, who is due to fly from London to Portugal on Saturday to stay in an AirBnB, says he may consider rebooking for another destination - but the need for a negative test in the 72 hours before travel means the options are limited.

Instead, he tells the BBC he is "leaning towards" heading on the Portugal trip anyway "because it is still legal".

"Unless they say, you must not go, you will be fined if you go, we might well still go and just have to bear the additional costs of an extra PCR test and the fact that we have to quarantine," he says.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiJmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLTU3MzUxODA40gEqaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvdWstNTczNTE4MDguYW1w?oc=5

2021-06-03 18:36:57Z
52781640085513

Biden says he is sending 25m vaccine doses to countries ravaged by pandemic - Daily Mail

Biden announces he will distribute 25 million vaccine doses around the world to countries ravaged by the pandemic such as India and neighbors Canada and Mexico

  • President Joe Biden announced plan to send 25 million doses around world 
  • Almost 19 million COVID-19 shots will go to global COVAX facility 
  • That included 6 million doses for Latin America and the Caribbean 
  • Another 7 million for South and Southeast Asia and 5 million for Africa 
  • Critics said it was too little, too late 
  • Biden said aim was not to 'secure favors' but to 'save lives'
  • National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said US would retain control of where doses went 

The White House unveiled its plans for sharing unused COVID-19 vaccines with the world, freeing up 25 million shots in the first tranche for countries badly hit by the pandemic such as India and for neighbors Canada and Mexico.

The U.S. has said it will share 80 million doses by the end of June and on Thursday officials said they would retain control of where they go.

The new plan allocates three quarters of unused vaccines for the U.N.-backed COVAX global distribution system, sending some some 6 million to Latin America and the Caribbean, about 7 million to Asia and roughly 5 million to Africa.    

President Joe Biden said the U.S. was not sharing vaccinations to 'secure favors or extract concessions' as his administration announced where the first 25 million unused doses would be sent. The president has committed to sending 80 million doses overseas by the end of June

President Joe Biden said the U.S. was not sharing vaccinations to 'secure favors or extract concessions' as his administration announced where the first 25 million unused doses would be sent. The president has committed to sending 80 million doses overseas by the end of June

The plan delivers six million doses to South and Central America, five million to Africa and seven million to Asia, along with another six million that the Biden administration is sending to regional priorities and partners, including United Nations frontline staff

The plan delivers six million doses to South and Central America, five million to Africa and seven million to Asia, along with another six million that the Biden administration is sending to regional priorities and partners, including United Nations frontline staff

An elderly man with breathing difficulty due to coronavirus takes oxygen with the help of an oxygen mask at a COVID-19 care facility, inside Gurudwara Rakab Ganj (Sikh temple), in New Delhi, India. The country is one of the places singled out for vaccine doses by the White House

An elderly man with breathing difficulty due to coronavirus takes oxygen with the help of an oxygen mask at a COVID-19 care facility, inside Gurudwara Rakab Ganj (Sikh temple), in New Delhi, India. The country is one of the places singled out for vaccine doses by the White House

Where the first 25 million vaccine doses will be going  

Nearly 19 million will be shared through the global vaccine distribution system COVAX, with the following allocations:

Approximately 6 million for South and Central America to the following countries: Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Peru, Ecuador, Paraguay, Bolivia, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, Haiti, and other Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries, as well as the Dominican Republic.

Approximately 7 million for Asia to the following countries: India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Maldives, Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, Laos, Papua New Guinea, Taiwan, and the Pacific Islands.

Approximately 5 million for Africa to be shared with countries that will be selected in coordination with the African Union.

Another 6 million will be targeted toward regional priorities and partner recipients, including Mexico, Canada, and the Republic of Korea, West Bank and Gaza, Ukraine, Kosovo, Haiti, Georgia, Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, and Yemen, as well as for United Nations frontline workers.

 

As he made the announcement President Joe Biden said he would not be using the life-saving doses for diplomatic gain.

'We are sharing these doses not to secure favors or extract concessions,' he said.

'We are sharing these vaccines to save lives and to lead the world in bringing an end to the pandemic, with the power of our example and with our values.'

Critics said it was too little, too late and called on the administration to invest in manufacturing sites around the world. 

Developed nations have been accused of monopolizing vaccine production, protecting their own populations at the expense of poorer countries.

The U.S. ranks second only to China for vaccine production but was singled out for keeping almost its entire supply at home.

The result was a world waiting to see how the Biden administration would decide to share its doses.

The vast majority will be distributed by COVAX, a World Health Organization-backed program.

Another six million will go to what the White House described as 'regional priorities' and 'partner recipients' including Mexico, Canada, and the Republic of Korea, West Bank and Gaza, Ukraine, Kosovo, Haiti, Georgia, Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, and Yemen, as well as for United Nations frontline workers.

The Biden administration has said 25% of spare doses will be kept in reserve for emergencies.

'As long as this pandemic is raging anywhere in the world, the American people will still be vulnerable,' said Biden said.

'And the United States is committed to bringing the same urgency to international vaccination efforts that we have demonstrated at home.'

In a briefing, said National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the U.S would retain control of where the vaccines went.

U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the U.S. would stay in control of where the doses distributed through COVAX ultimately go

U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the U.S. would stay in control of where the doses distributed through COVAX ultimately go

'We're not seeking to extract concessions, we're not extorting, we're not imposing conditions the way that other countries who are providing doses are doing; we're doing none of those things,' he said.  

He added that Gaza had been picked out because of the recent crisis there.

'We're not asking anything of the people of Gaza and West Bank, but we feel that given what they are dealing with, in the situation on the ground there, it is only right and proper and good for the United States to actually allocate some doses to that country,' he said. 

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said via Twitter that he had offered his thanks to Vice President Kamala Harris in a phone call when he was informed that doses were on their way.

'I expressed our appreciation on behalf of the people of Mexico,' he said on Twitter.   

Campaigners demanding more help for poor nations said the announcement was a good step but should be followed with a deeper commitment. 

'The donation of these few doses is welcome but deeply insufficient, and no substitute for a plan of scale and urgency to end the pandemic,' Peter Maybarduk, director of Public Citizen’s Access to Medicines program. 

'The U.S. needs to do more, much more.'

Tom Hart, of the One Campaign, also welcomed the news but said the U.S. should accelerate plans to distribute AstraZeneca doses that have not yet been licensed by Washington.

'However, it’s disappointing to see delays in donating the 60 million AstraZeneca doses – which have been approved for emergency use by the World Health Organization and will go unused otherwise,' he said.

Biden announced in April that the U.S. would send the AstraZeneca vaccines overseas by July 4. However, problems at a manufacturing plant have delayed production. 

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMidWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtOTY0ODk4MS9CaWRlbi1zYXlzLXNlbmRpbmctMjVtLXZhY2NpbmUtZG9zZXMtY291bnRyaWVzLXJhdmFnZWQtcGFuZGVtaWMuaHRtbNIBeWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtOTY0ODk4MS9hbXAvQmlkZW4tc2F5cy1zZW5kaW5nLTI1bS12YWNjaW5lLWRvc2VzLWNvdW50cmllcy1yYXZhZ2VkLXBhbmRlbWljLmh0bWw?oc=5

2021-06-03 16:35:26Z
52781640425801

Late-night drama of Israel coalition talks designed to oust Netanyahu - Financial Times

The quick snapshot, taken on a parliamentary aide’s mobile phone, belies the drama behind an epochal moment in Israeli politics.

To the left, the former TV anchor Yair Lapid, 57, and leader of a centrist party that came second in Israel’s elections in March, perfectly coiffed despite weeks of frantic negotiations that he has spearheaded.

In the middle is Naftali Bennett, 49, an ultra nationalist rightwinger whose party has just six seats out of 120 in the Israeli parliament and who is poised to become prime minister.

And to the right the man analysts call the “star of the story”, 47-year old Mansour Abbas, the leader of an Islamist party for Israel’s Muslim minority, a genial smile on his face as he prepares to make history. His Arab party is the first in Israeli history to join a Zionist government.

With his final signature on a coalition deal, the three men pushed prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the man who has towered over Israel and the Middle East for decades, one step closer to his political demise. “You could feel it in the room, this tension — and then the relief,” said a person who watched the men sign just before midnight on Wednesday. “Unforgettable.”

The unlikely trio, backed by 61 members of parliament, will try within the week to pass a vote in parliament that would dethrone Netanyahu, 71, from his 12-year reign as Israeli premier.

The vote would make Bennett, an ultra nationalist who once described the Palestinian issue as “shrapnel in the butt”, and has had to deny leaked comments from a cabinet meeting that as an army commando “he had killed a lot of Arabs”, the first religious Jew to hold the prime minister’s office.

“The irony of such an ostensibly rightwing, hawkish politician leading a government that has centrists, left-wingers and even Arabs in it is pretty strong,” said Anshel Pfeffer, author of Bibi: The Turbulent Life and Times of Benjamin Netanyahu. “It shows you two things — the need felt by so many politicians to replace Netanyahu has become such a burning motivator, but also that Bennett is lot more pragmatic than his quotes would suggest.”

It is not clear yet that they will succeed or, if they do, how long they can hold the coalition together, or what such a disparate group can achieve. If they fail, the country faces a fifth election in two years, after the previous four failed to deliver a clear result.

If the vote passes, Netanyahu, a divisive leader who has split the Israeli public, will end up in opposition while simultaneously in the defendant’s chair for his ongoing trial for corruption. He denies all charges.

The photograph of the three men was on the front of nearly every newspaper — for those in the pro-Netanyahu camp, such as the ultraorthodox Jewish minority, one headline read “Faces of Shame”. One headline on Thursday morning read “Torch Bearer”, a play on Lapid’s surname, and a nod to his parliamentary agility — corralling eight parties into a single bloc, while sacrificing his own goals of becoming prime minister to convince Bennett to play ball. If the coalition holds, Lapid will become prime minister in two years’ time.

After a month of talks, interrupted by a two-week conflict with Palestinian militants Hamas that briefly scuppered all hope of a deal, Lapid called the Israeli president, Reuven Rivlin, just 38 minutes before Wednesday’s midnight deadline.

The president was at a football match in Jaffa, the mixed Arab-Jewish neighbourhood that had just two weeks ago been gripped by some of the worst communal violence in the country’s history. Get a vote scheduled and get it done quick, the president told Lapid, according to two people privy to the call.

The urgency is in part because Netanyahu has already begun to attack what he calls a “dangerous leftwing government”, painting the concessions made for Abbas’s support as a betrayal of Zionism.

“There is no overstating the historic breakthrough of having an Arab party helping to form a government in Israel — all the more important because the partnership is with a far-rightwing party,” said Dahlia Scheindlin, a pollster and adviser to Israeli parties who has worked on eight previous campaigns.

Abbas broke from the other parties that represent the Palestinian citizens of Israel, a fifth of the population, to leverage a role as tiebreaker. “Abbas really is the star of the story,” said Roni Rimon, a veteran political strategist who has worked with Netanyahu “And now, he has no choice but to make this work — if it doesn’t, he is also finished.”

Abbas’s demands, unchanged since Ra’am’s four seats in March elections left it kingmaker, were two-fold — that his party would be treated with respect, and his support would be rewarded with material benefits for Israel’s Muslim communities.

Those gains, negotiated with Lapid and Bennett until the last minute while Netanyahu kept calling his phone, include as much as $1.5bn a year for the Arab-dominated north and the official recognition of Bedouin villages in the Negev desert to stop their demolition.

Bennett “sold out the Negev to Ra’am”, Netanyahu said on Twitter on Thursday, before holding an emergency meeting with his allies to try to block the coalition.

Meanwhile, Lapid moved swiftly to vote in a new speaker of the Knesset — the current speaker, an ally of Netanyahu’s, could delay the vote until about mid-June. If successful, the vote — and an end to the drama — could be as early as Monday.

“The Israeli public is craving to see something that reflects partnership, a willingness to compromise, maturity and unity — in the past these were slogans, but now there is a desperate need for them,” Scheindlin said.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiP2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZ0LmNvbS9jb250ZW50LzdhMjQzYjRkLTRmMzEtNGM2Yy05NjNmLTcyMTY5OWJmNDg3MNIBAA?oc=5

2021-06-03 16:03:23Z
52781630473983

Roman Protasevich: Dissident Belarusian journalist claims he was 'set up' by associate after plane arrest - Sky News

A dissident journalist, held in custody in Belarus after being arrested when his Ryanair flight was diverted, has claimed in a new video that he was set up by an unidentified associate.

Roman Protasevich, 26, made his comments from prison during an hour-long TV programme on the Belarusian state-controlled ONT channel.

He was detained by authorities on 23 May after the plane travelling from Athens, Greece, to Vilnius, Lithuania, was diverted to Minsk by Belarusian flight controllers who cited a bomb threat.

No bomb was found on board after the landing, but he and his Russian girlfriend Sofia Sapega were arrested.

Roman Protasevich
Image: Roman Protasevich was on a flight to Lithuania before it was diverted to Minsk

The programme claimed Belarusian authorities were unaware he was on board when the plane was ordered to land in the capital.

Mr Protasevich said he had put a notice about his travel plans during a chat with associates 40 minutes before his departure.

He alleged that the bomb threat could have been issued by someone with whom he had a personal conflict.

More on Alexander Lukashenko

Mr Protasevich accused the associate - who he didn't name - of having links with opposition-leaning hackers who have attacked Belarusian official websites and issued bomb threats in the past.

"The first thing I thought was that I have been set up," he said.

"When the plane was on a landing path, I realised that it's useless to panic," Mr Protasevich said.

One of Mr Protasevich's associates said the dissident was clearly speaking under duress.

The journalist said that once the plane taxied to a parking spot, he described seeing heavily-armed special forces waiting.

Journalist Roman Protasevich and girlfriend Sofia Sapega have both appeared in detention videos
Image: Mr Protasevich and girlfriend Sofia Sapega have both appeared in detention videos after their arrests in May

"It was a dedicated SWAT unit - uniforms, flak jackets and weapons," he said.

Speaking in the ONT film, Mr Protasevich acknowledged the anti-government protests have fizzled out but argued that the opposition should wait until economic problems lead to broad public discontent.

"We need to wait until the economic situation worsens and people take to the street for a mug of soup, to put it bluntly," he said.

The journalist is shown saying that demonstrations against authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko are now pointless amid a tough crackdown.

Roman Protasevich being detained by police in Belarus in 2017 during a protest
Image: Mr Protasevich being detained by police in Belarus in 2017 during a protest

He suggested that the opposition waits for a more opportune moment.

The Ryanair flight's diversion last month outraged the European Union, which barred the Belarusian flag carrier from its skies.

European carriers were also told to avoid Belarusian airspace and drafted new sanctions against key sectors of the Belarusian economy.

Mr Lukashenko has ruled the ex-Soviet nation with an iron fist for more than a quarter of a century and accused the West of trying to "strangle" Belarus.

Mr Protasevich left Belarus in 2019 and has become a leading opponent of Mr Lukashenko.

He ran a popular channel on the Telegram messaging app that played a key role in organising anti-government protests.

He was charged with inciting mass disturbances - accusations that could lead to a 15-year prison sentence.

A day after his arrest, Mr Protasevich said he was confessing to staging mass disturbances in a video from the detention centre.

Subscribe to the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

His parents, who now live in Poland, said the confession seemed to be coerced.

In the ONT film, Mr Protasevich said he tried to stay away from his girlfriend after the landing, hoping that the authorities wouldn't arrest her.

Sofia Sapega didn't feature in the new TV programme, but she was shown in a video from prison last week, confessing to running a channel that revealed personal data about Belarusian security officers.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiigFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9yb21hbi1wcm90YXNldmljaC1kaXNzaWRlbnQtYmVsYXJ1c2lhbi1qb3VybmFsaXN0LWNsYWltcy1oZS13YXMtc2V0LXVwLWJ5LWFzc29jaWF0ZS1hZnRlci1wbGFuZS1hcnJlc3QtMTIzMjM5MDXSAY4BaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL3JvbWFuLXByb3Rhc2V2aWNoLWRpc3NpZGVudC1iZWxhcnVzaWFuLWpvdXJuYWxpc3QtY2xhaW1zLWhlLXdhcy1zZXQtdXAtYnktYXNzb2NpYXRlLWFmdGVyLXBsYW5lLWFycmVzdC0xMjMyMzkwNQ?oc=5

2021-06-03 15:11:37Z
52781642979698