Kamis, 02 Juni 2022

Turkey makes formal request to UN to change name to Turkiye - Sky News

Turkey has made a formal request to the United Nations for its name to be changed to Turkiye.

The move is seen as a push by the government in Ankara to disassociate its name from the bird turkey and some negative connotations associated with it.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu sent a letter to the United Nations to formally request the name change, a state-run news agency has reported.

The Anadolu Agency said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, confirmed receipt of the letter late on Wednesday.

The agency quoted Mr Dujarric as saying that the name change had become effective "from the moment" the letter was received.

The government have been pushing for the country to be recognised as Turkiye (pronounced tur-key-YAY) as it is spelt and pronounced in Turkish since December. It is the name the country called itself when it gained independence in 1923.

They say the new name better represents Turkish culture and values, allowing them to determine how the country is seen.

More on Turkey

Turkish ministers started using it in official documents last year and "Made in Turkey" on exported products has also been ordered to change to "Made in Türkiye".

Read more:
Inflation in Turkey hits 70% in April
Ukraine war: Turkey would not be 'favourable' to Finland and Sweden joining NATO says President Erdogan

TRT World, a Turkish news channel, explained in an article earlier this year that googling "turkey" shows a "muddled set of images, articles and dictionary definitions" that confuses the country with the "bird native to North America".

It added, the Cambridge dictionary defines Turkey as "something that fails badly" or "stupid or silly person".

Earlier this year the Turkish government released a promotional video showing tourists from around the world saying "Hello Turkiye" at famous destinations.

The Turkish presidency's directorate of communications said it launched the campaign "to promote more effectively the use of 'Turkiye' as the country's national and international name on international platforms".

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2022-06-02 16:33:08Z
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Rabu, 01 Juni 2022

Ukraine's troops retreat from besieged city of Sievierodonetsk - Financial Times

Ukraine is evacuating its troops from Sievierodonetsk, the besieged eastern city that is now 70 per cent controlled by Russian forces, after suffering heavy losses.

Serhiy Haidai, governor of the eastern Luhansk region, on Wednesday said Ukrainian forces had partly retreated from the provincial capital amid heavy shelling and fierce street battles.

“This is not a betrayal,” he wrote in a post on Telegram, but part of a retreat “to more advantageous, pre-prepared positions” while awaiting “western weapons and preparing for de-occupation”.

Russian forces entered the largely evacuated and bombed out Sievierodonetsk earlier this week after being held back for about two months by Ukrainian fighters.

President Volodymyr Zelensky has said Ukraine could lose up to 100 soldiers a day defending the country’s eastern region, just over three month’s into Russia’s full-scale invasion.

Analysts at the Institute for the Study of War, a US think-tank, called the decision to retreat “strategically sound, however painful”.

They said “Ukraine must husband its more limited resources and focus on regaining critical terrain”, such as by “continuing successful Ukrainian counteroffensives in Kherson”, a Russian-occupied city in the south of the country.

Haidai said an undisclosed number of Ukrainian troops had retreated westwards across the Siverskyi Donetsk river to Sievierodonetsk’s sister city, Lysychansk. For weeks they had been the last two remaining Ukrainian-held strongholds in the Luhansk region, which along with Donetsk makes up the far eastern Donbas.

A Ukrainian soldier attempts to salvage weaponry from a Russian tank in the Siverskyi Donetsk river
A Ukrainian soldier attempts to salvage weaponry from a Russian tank in the Siverskyi Donetsk river © Ivor Prickett/New York Times/Redux/eyevine

News of the Sievierodonetsk retreat came hours after the US announced that it would supply Ukraine with long-range rocket systems, part of its recently approved $40bn assistance package.

Ukraine has long pleaded for such systems, arguing that they are necessary to hold ground and launch counter offensives. The newly supplied US rockets are longer range and more powerful than the howitzers, lethal drones and handheld anti-tank and anti-air missiles western countries have supplied so far.

“Our president has said many times, had we received these weapons before the situation would be different with less occupied regions in the hands of Russia today,” Yuriy Sak, an adviser to Ukraine’s defence minister, told the Financial Times.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Wednesday the US decision to send more weapons to Kyiv amounted to “pouring oil on the fire”. But he declined to say how Russia would respond should Ukraine fire US rockets into Russian territory.

A senior EU official said the US long-range missiles could be deployed against Russian warships in the Black Sea as they threaten the ports of Odesa and Mykolayiv, which are in range of sea-launched Russian missiles.

US officials said Kyiv had pledged not to use long-range rockets supplied by Washington for strikes on Russian soil.

Germany’s chancellor Olaf Scholz on Wednesday said Berlin would supply Ukraine with IRIS-T air defence systems, which are more powerful equipment than he has previously pledged.

Speaking on Tuesday, Zelensky said: “If our steps or operations to de-occupy this or that region cost tens of thousands of our dead people, we will wait for appropriate weapons to save as many of our people as possible.”

After pulling back from its attempt to capture Ukraine’s capital Kyiv and north-eastern regions at the start of the war, Russia has in the past two months concentrated most of its forces on the Donbas and on holding occupied southern coastal regions, which together account for about 20 per cent of Ukrainian territory.

Ukrainian forces still control parts of Donetsk to the west of Sievierodonetsk, but Russian forces are closing in on key cities and Kyiv’s army last month retreated from some previously held towns such as Svitlodarsk.

Additional reporting by Valentina Pop in Brussels and John Paul Rathbone in London

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2022-06-01 12:48:10Z
1434542424

Senin, 30 Mei 2022

EU leaders agree plan for partial Russian oil ban - Financial Times

EU leaders agreed to a partial ban on Russian oil imports, while exempting a key supply route to win the support of Hungary, as they seek ways of punishing Vladimir Putin for his war on Ukraine.

The embargo will include oil and petroleum products but will exempt crude delivered by pipeline to Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, diplomats said.

The deal, which came at a late-night summit in Brussels on Monday, should pave the way for EU agreement on a heavily delayed sixth package of sanctions that also includes measures hitting Russian banks and further individuals.

Charles Michel, president of the European Council of member states, hailed the deal in a tweet, saying that it was “cutting a huge source of financing for [Russia’s] war machine” and would deliver “maximum pressure on Russia to end the war”.

But the agreement was won only after weeks of haggling between member states, and at a cost of significant concessions offered to Hungary and its neighbours, as capitals weighed the rising economic costs of multiple rounds of sanctions on Russia.

Olaf Scholz, Germany’s chancellor, said the deal proved that the EU was united. He added: “We have agreed on further far-reaching sanctions against Russia. There will be an embargo on the majority of Russian oil imports.”

Capitals have not settled how long any carve-out of Russian oil supplied via pipeline would last.

The ban will include seaborne oil purchases, which cover about two-thirds of Europe’s imports from Russia. In addition, pledges from Germany and Poland to stop oil imports via the northern part of the Druzhba (Friendship) pipeline are expected to take coverage of the ban to 90 per cent by the end of the year.

Keeping pipelines out of any embargo has been a key demand of Hungary, which has argued that a ban would put its economy at risk, given its reliance on Russian crude. Viktor Orbán, Hungary’s prime minister, also secured measures to ensure that Budapest can still obtain Russian oil from other sources if there was an “accident” with Druzhba, which crosses Ukraine.

Map showing the Druzhba pipeline

The partial ban risks distorting competition in the EU oil market, with refineries connected to pipelines from Russia enjoying a price advantage. The price of Russian oil has fallen to a huge discount as European traders have shunned the country’s seaborne crude since the invasion of Ukraine.

If exports via Druzhba are at the pipeline’s maximum capacity of 750,000 barrels a day, it would help Russia earn in the region of $2bn a month from EU buyers.

Russian Urals crude is trading at about $93 a barrel, compared with $120 for Brent, the international oil benchmark. While Russian oil delivered via Druzhba may not carry such a big discount, depending on how contracts are structured, Hungarian oil group Mol has said it has enjoyed “skyrocketing” margins for its refineries since March because of the “widening Brent-Ural spread”.

EU diplomats said there would be a ban on the resale of refined products made from Russian crude as part of efforts to minimise market distortions, with some countries enjoying a longer phase-in period. There will also be a prohibition on offering services, including the financing of oil shipments, diplomats said.

Volumes shipped via Druzhba have actually increased since Russia invaded Ukraine, with buyers in the EU taking advantage of the large discounts or to stock up ahead of any embargo.

Argus, an energy-price reporting agency, said that while seaborne shipments from Russia to Europe had fallen by 500,000 b/d, Druzhba shipments had risen by 100,000 b/d in April compared with January and were expected to increase again in May. Hungary has increased shipments by 65,000 b/d, while Poland has imported an additional 130,000 b/d, helping to more than offset declines elsewhere.

The sanctions package includes the ejection of Sberbank from the Swift messaging system as well as restrictions on more state-owned Russian broadcasters and a new round of asset freezes and travel bans on individuals.

Brussels proposed an embargo on buying Russian oil in early May, underlining the EU’s difficulties in finding a way to increase its punishment on Moscow for its war on Ukraine while not damaging parts of the European economy that depend on Russian energy. The EU has already banned Russian coal but exempted gas from sanctions.

However, Gazprom, the Russian state-owned energy company, has cut supplies to Poland, the Netherlands and Bulgaria for refusing to pay for gas in roubles.

Additional reporting by Victor Mallet in Brussels, Eleni Varvitsioti in Athens, and David Sheppard in London

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2022-05-30 23:16:32Z
1443529807

EU leaders agree plan for partial Russian oil ban - Financial Times

EU leaders at a summit struck a deal on an oil embargo against Russia that exempts a key supply route — a concession aimed at appeasing Hungary, which has been blocking the sanctions for nearly a month.

The embargo will include oil and petroleum products but will crucially allow a temporary exemption for crude delivered by pipeline, according to diplomats.

Capitals have not agreed how long any carve-out of oil supplied via pipeline would last. Keeping pipelines out of any embargo has been a key demand of Hungary, which has argued that a ban would put its economy at risk given its reliance on crude delivered by the Druzhba (Friendship) pipeline from Russia.

On his way into the Brussels summit on Monday, Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orbán insisted on guarantees that Budapest could still access Russian oil from other sources if there was an “accident” with Druzhba, which crosses Ukraine.

Baltic leaders, who have been pushing for an oil embargo, called for leaders to rally round a deal.

Kaja Kallas, Estonia’s prime minister, said it was “up to everybody’s moral compass how to proceed with this”, while Arturs Kariņš, her Latvian counterpart, asked Orbán to look at the big picture: “It’s going to cost us more, but it’s only money. The Ukrainians are paying with their lives.”

Map showing the Druzhba pipeline

Asked whether he believed there was any possibility of a compromise to help end the war, Kariņš said: “The right compromise is for Russia to lose the war.”

An embargo solely on seaborne oil purchases would cover about two-thirds of Europe’s imports from Russia.

A move to ban only Russian seaborne crude also risks distorting competition in the EU oil market, with refineries connected to pipelines from Russia enjoying a big advantage. The price of Russian oil has fallen to a huge discount as European traders have shunned the country’s seaborne crude since the invasion of Ukraine.

If exports via Druzhba are at the pipeline’s maximum capacity of 750,000 barrels a day, it would help Russia earn in the region of $2bn a month from EU buyers.

Russian Urals crude is trading at about $93 a barrel, compared with $120 for Brent, the international oil benchmark. While Russian oil delivered via Druzhba may not carry such a big discount, depending on how contracts are structured, Hungarian oil group Mol has said it has enjoyed “skyrocketing” margins for its refineries since March because of the “widening Brent-Ural spread”.

According to draft legislation seen by the Financial Times, the ban will include a restriction on re-exporting Russian oil to other member states and a prohibition of services including the financing of oil shipments. The Czech Republic prime minister, Petr Fiala, has asked for a longer exemption for his country, which is mainly supplied with refined oil products from neighbouring Slovakia.

Germany has two refineries served by the Druzhba pipeline and takes about 50 per cent of what it supplies. Poland takes 16 per cent, Slovakia 13.5 per cent, Hungary and Slovenia a combined 11 per cent and the Czech Republic 9.5 per cent, according to IHS Markit, a unit of S&P Global.

Volumes shipped via Druzhba have actually increased since Russia invaded Ukraine, with buyers in the EU looking to take advantage of the large discounts or to stock up ahead of any embargo.

Argus, an energy-price reporting agency, said that while seaborne shipments from Russia to Europe had fallen by 500,000 b/d, Druzhba shipments had risen by 100,000 b/d in April compared with January and were expected to increase again in May. Hungary has increased shipments by 65,000 b/d while Poland has imported an additional 130,000 b/d, helping to more than offset declines elsewhere.

The fact that refineries connected to pipelines from Russia will enjoy a huge competitive advantage as a result of the EU’s planned sanctions could have the perverse effect of benefiting Rosneft, the Russian state oil company. It owns 54 per cent of the Schwedt refinery in eastern Germany which is directly connected to the Druzhba pipeline.

Any final deal on the sixth sanctions package would need to be approved by all 27 member states. Alongside a partial oil ban, the package would include the ejection of Sberbank from the Swift messaging system as well as restrictions on more state-owned Russian broadcasters and a new round of asset freezes and travel bans on individuals.

Brussels proposed an embargo on buying Russian oil in early May, underlining the EU’s difficulties in finding a way to extend punishments on Moscow for its war on Ukraine while not damaging parts of the European economy that depend on Russian energy. The EU has already banned Russian coal but exempted gas from sanctions.

Additional reporting by Victor Mallet in Brussels, Eleni Varvitsioti in Athens and Marton Dunai in Budapest

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2022-05-30 21:51:07Z
1443529807

EU seeks to close ranks around plan for partial Russian oil ban - Financial Times

EU leaders at a summit are struggling to agree an oil embargo against Russia that exempts a key supply route — a concession aimed at appeasing Hungary, which has been blocking the sanctions for nearly a month.

The watered-down embargo will include oil and petroleum products but will crucially allow a “temporary” exemption for crude delivered by pipeline, according to draft conclusions seen by the Financial Times.

The conclusions are still subject to change and diplomats have not agreed how long any carve-out of oil supplied via pipeline would last.

Keeping pipelines out of any embargo has been a key demand of Hungary, which has argued that a ban would put its economy at risk given its reliance on crude delivered by the Druzhba (Friendship) pipeline from Russia.

But on his way into the Brussels summit on Monday, Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán insisted there still was no deal and that he wanted guarantees Budapest could still access Russian oil from other sources if there was an “accident” with Druzhba, which crosses Ukraine.

Map showing the Druzhba pipeline

He also accused the European Commission of “irresponsible” behaviour in failing to ensure security of supply for Hungary in its proposals.

Baltic leaders, who have been pushing for an oil embargo, stood in stark contrast to Orbán — paving the way for potential acrimonious discussions during the leaders’ dinner.

Kaja Kallas, Estonian prime minister, said it was “up to everybody’s moral compass how to proceed with this”, while Arturs Kariņš, her Latvian counterpart, asked Orbán to look at the big picture: “It’s going to cost us more, but it’s only money. The Ukrainians are paying with their lives.” Asked whether he believed there was any possibility of a compromise to help end the war, Kariņš said: “The right compromise is for Russia to lose the war.”

Arriving at the summit, Ursula von der Leyen, the commission president, said she had “low” expectations that the outstanding differences over the terms of the oil embargo would be resolved in the coming 48 hours, but they could be settled thereafter.

An embargo solely on seaborne oil purchases would cover about two-thirds of Europe’s imports from Russia.

A move to ban only Russian seaborne crude also risks distorting competition in the EU oil market, with refineries connected to pipelines from Russia enjoying a big advantage. The price of Russian oil has fallen to a huge discount as European traders have shunned the country’s seaborne crude since the invasion of Ukraine.

If exports via Druzhba are at the pipeline’s maximum capacity of 750,000 barrels a day, it would help Russia earn in the region of $2bn a month from EU buyers.

Russian Urals crude is trading at about $93 a barrel compared with $120 for Brent, the international oil benchmark. While Russian oil delivered via Druzhba may not carry such a big discount, depending on how contracts are structured, Hungarian oil group MOL has said it has enjoyed “skyrocketing” margins for its refineries since March owing to the “widening Brent-Ural spread”.

The draft summit conclusions say ministers need to ensure a “level playing field” for oil purchases.

According to draft legislation seen by the FT, the ban will include a restriction on re-exporting Russian oil to other member states and a prohibition of services including the financing of oil shipments.

Brussels proposed an embargo on buying Russian oil in early May, underlining the EU’s difficulties in finding a way to extend punishments on Moscow for its war on Ukraine while not damaging parts of the European economy that depend on Russian energy. The EU has already banned Russian coal but exempted gas from sanctions.

Germany has two refineries served by the Druzhba pipeline and takes about 50 per cent of what it supplies. Poland takes 16 per cent, Slovakia 13.5 per cent, Hungary and Slovenia a combined 11 per cent and the Czech Republic 9.5 per cent, according to IHS Markit, a unit of S&P Global.

Volumes shipped via Druzhba have actually increased since Russia invaded Ukraine, with buyers in the EU looking to take advantage of the large discounts or to stock up ahead of any embargo.

Argus, an energy-price reporting agency, said that while seaborne shipments from Russia to Europe had fallen by 500,000 b/d, Druzhba shipments had risen by 100,000 b/d in April compared with January and were expected to increase again in May. Hungary has increased shipments by 65,000 b/d while Poland has imported an additional 130,000 b/d, helping to more than offset declines elsewhere.

The fact that refineries connected to pipelines from Russia will enjoy a huge competitive advantage as a result of the EU’s planned sanctions could have the perverse effect of benefiting Rosneft, the Russian state oil company. It owns 54 per cent of the Schwedt refinery in eastern Germany which is directly connected to the Druzhba pipeline.

Any final deal on the sixth sanctions package would need to be approved by all 27 member states. Alongside a partial oil ban, the package would include the ejection of Sberbank from the Swift messaging system as well as restrictions on more state-owned Russian broadcasters and a new round of asset freezes and travel bans on individuals.

One EU diplomat said it was vital to maintain bloc unity and progress on the sanctions package. “Is there an agreement on an embargo on oil? Yes. Is there an agreement it will be in two phases? Yes. Is there an agreement on a date? It is more complicated. We will keep working on the package.”

Additional reporting by Victor Mallet in Brussels, Eleni Varvitsioti in Athens and Marton Dunai in Budapest

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2022-05-30 16:22:37Z
1443529807

Mona Lisa attacked with cake by 'man dressed as old lady in wheelchair' - Sky News

A person seemingly disguised as an old woman in a wheelchair has staged an attack on the Mona Lisa.

Video shared online shows the world's most famous artwork with what witnesses suggested was cake smeared across the glass case protecting it.

Bystanders said a "man dressed as an old lady" jumped out of a wheelchair at the Louvre in Paris before attempting to smash the protective glass in front of the Leonardo da Vinci painting.

One witness said the person then proceeded to "smear cake on the glass and throw roses everywhere before being tackled by security".

Separate footage shows the person suspected of being responsible telling bystanders in French: "Think of the planet… there are people who are destroying the planet, think about that … That's why I did it."

Apparently wearing lipstick and a wig, the person is then escorted away by security. It was unclear what action, if any, they now face.

A history of Mona Lisa incidents

  • The painting was stolen in 1911 by a museum employee, an event which increased the painting's international fame
  • A vandal hurled acid at the painting in 1950, damaging the artwork and causing it to be kept behind glass ever since
  • In 2009, a Russian woman angry at not being able to get French citizenship threw a ceramic cup at it, smashing the cup but not harming the glass or the painting

It is not thought that the painting, considered an archetypal masterpiece of the Italian Renaissance, was damaged.

The Louvre has been contacted for comment.

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2022-05-30 10:18:45Z
1451646412

Live news updates: Street battles break out in eastern Ukrainian city as Russian troops advance - Financial Times

This week many of us will be getting an early holiday season as a bulge in anniversaries means an uptick in public rest days across the world.

If you are reading this in the US, you are already immersed in the long Memorial day weekend with tomorrow’s commemoration of those who have given their life in military service.

On other years, the last Monday of May would also be a day off in the UK, linked to the Christian festival of Pentecost, or Whitsun as the Church of England calls it. But this year, the day off has been moved to Thursday and Brits have been handed an extra public holiday on Friday to commemorate Queen Elizabeth’s 70 years as British head of state — perhaps by heading to the cinema.

On Thursday, Italians will commemorate the founding of their modern state with fireworks and parades on National Republic day.

Then there is the Dragon Boat Festival, the traditional Chinese holiday held on the fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese calendar — this year that will be this Friday. However, due to the pandemic, many of the actual dragon boat races scheduled worldwide will be cancelled or held under restrictions.

Whatever you feel about the point of these public holidays, they have an additional poignancy this year given the debate about working hours. The greater flexibility needed to get things done during pandemic lockdowns has led many to question the rigidity of nine-to-five working, five days a week, about whether we need to blend our home and work life better or move to a four-day week — as tech business WANdisco has already done.

Economic data

It is a fairly full week for economic data with both inflation and unemployment data for the eurozone countries, on Tuesday and Wednesday respectively, plus the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book on US economic conditions on Wednesday, and US unemployment data on Friday.

Companies

So-called dollar stores in the US have tended to trade resiliently during economic downturns and that will probably be the message from variety discounter B&M this week.

Analysts expect sales and profits for the year to the end of March to be below last year’s record levels as shopping habits normalise and costs rise. But, as my colleague Jonathan Eley notes, the company’s scale and its direct-sourcing operation in Asia will help it keep prices below those of more conventional rivals as incomes come under pressure.

These are likely to be the last set of full-year results for chief executive Simon Arora, who together with brother Bobby took B&M from a small chain of tatty shops in north-west England to an estate of almost 700 UK stores and a place in the FTSE 100. He surprised the market in April by announcing plans to retire.

Read the full week ahead calendar here

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2022-05-30 09:18:38Z
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