Archive for the ‘European Union’ Category

Nigeria: European Union Names Ebola Coordinator

European Union foreign ministers agreed Monday to appoint an Ebola coordinator to bring together resources and funding to tackle the deadly disease before it becomes a global disaster.

"My colleagues all agree that the idea of an Ebola coordinator is a good one," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters after a meeting with EU counterparts in Luxembourg.

"The person will be named in the coming days," added Fabius.

The coordinator will be based at the EU's Emergency Response Coordination Centre in Brussels.

The leaders of the 28 EU nations will meet on Thursday and Friday at a summit in Brussels where Ebola will be a major concern, having taken more than 4,500 lives in the worst affected west African countries, while also showing up in the United States and Europe.

The EU move comes three days after US President Barack Obama named attorney Ron Klain as the new White House "Ebola czar" to coordinate the US response to the outbreak.

With a fatality rate running at 70 percent and no known cure or vaccine, world leaders are rushing to get ahead of Ebola before it can establish a foothold outside Africa.

Appointing an EU coordinator is an important step "because everybody has to be on board to fight this epidemic," Fabius said.

The mounting death toll in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea is cause for grave concern, with the "figures rising... exponentially", he added.

Earlier Monday, the World Health Organization declared Nigeria - Africa's most populous country - Ebola-free, showing what can be done if action is taken promptly.

Read the original:
Nigeria: European Union Names Ebola Coordinator

Europe Vows to Step Up Aid for Ebola Crisis

PARIS

European Union foreign ministers have called for more money, more coordination and more health workers on the ground to respond to the Ebola crisis in West Africa. EU leaders will consider a pledging goal of $1.27 billion for Ebola when they meet later this week.

In a statement following their meeting Monday in Brussels, European Union foreign ministers called for a "united, coordinated and increased effort" to contain the Ebola outbreak, which has killed more than 4,500 people to date - most of them in West Africa.

European foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton spoke to reporters after the meeting.

"[We] recognize that Ebola represents an unprecedented crisis that requires an unprecedented response," she said. "We've already seen the pledging of the EU and its member states of over 500 million euros in assistance to the fight against Ebola and recognize the need to make an increased effort in close cooperation with the United Nations."

The goal today: doubling that assistance to about $1.27 billion. European Union leaders will discuss reaching that target when they meet later this week.

The foreign ministers also agreed on the need to boost the numbers of European health workers sent to the most affected African countries. One option is to set up a pool of volunteer experts, with guarantees they will be provided appropriate care if needed.

And Ashton said the EU was considering appointing an 'Ebola czar' of sorts, to coordinate the bloc's response.

"What I'm very keen is that we've worked out precisely what they're going to do, what their terms of reference will be," she said. "And as I said at the meeting is that we need to do that swiftly, because this is a situation that requires now a fast response."

With several Ebola cases so far in Europe, the 28-member bloc also wants to boost its own defenses against the virus. But the ministers rejected barring flights from West Africa as a way to stop Ebola's spread. However, France, Belgium and Britain have established airport screening procedures for incoming flights from the region.

Read this article:
Europe Vows to Step Up Aid for Ebola Crisis

EU drops investigation into Chinese telecoms

European Union and Chinese government strike a deal to end an investigation into whether Chinese telecom equipment makers, including Huawei and ZTE, received illegal subsidies.

Imports of Chinese telecom equipment into the EU are worth over 1 billion euros a year, according to the EU. JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/Getty Images

The European Union and the Chinese government have settled a year-long dispute over the possibility of Chinese telecommunications companies receiving illegal subsidies to compete more effectively in Europe.

The EU and China met at a regular Joint Committee over the weekend and discussed issues the EU had raised about Chinese telecommunications companies, including whether equipment makers Huawei and ZTE had received illegal subsidies. Last year, the EU launched an investigation to determine whether certain European companies and Chinese companies worked together to bring telecommunications gear to their markets at a cheaper price. The investigation focused on equipment carriers need to build out mobile networks and provide wireless service, and not consumer equipment, such as phones and modems.

The investigation ended with an "amicable" settlement between the countries.

"The EU pursues every opportunity to level out the playing field for our companies by engaging with our strategic partners including China," said Karel De Gucht, EU trade commissioner, in a statement on Monday. "The concerns that have led us to launch the case last May can now be addressed in a systematic and regular dialogue between the two sides for the benefit of our industry."

Huawei and ZTE provide telecommunications equipment to countries across the Euro zone, and imports of Chinese telecom gear into the EU are worth over 1 billion euros a year, according to the EU. While the two companies have seen their telecommunications equipment largely banned from the US due to concerns it could be used by the Chinese government to spy on companies and individuals, Huawei and ZTE have grown fast in the EU.

The European Union was especially concerned with Huawei's meteoric growth in the European telecoms market, according to a document obtained by Reuters. In 2006, the company held just 2.5 percent share. As of this writing, its market share is at 25 percent and growing fast.

The EU argued that the only way Huawei could have grown so rapidly is through its subsidies. Huawei, however, said it has received no illegal subsidies and believes its success is partly due to cheaper pricing and partly due to its products.

Under the terms of the deal signed between China and the EU, an independent body will monitor the telecoms networks market to ensure no illegal activity is ongoing. European companies can also access China's standard-setting body and all firms will receive equal treatment in competitive bids, said the EU.

Read the original post:
EU drops investigation into Chinese telecoms

European Union defends lifting sanctions on Sri Lankan rebels

Colombo, Oct 21 (IANS): The European Union (EU) Tuesday said that lifting sanctions imposed on Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels is not a political decision taken by the EU but a legal ruling of a court.

Over the past few days, Sri Lanka has been accusing the EU of lifting its sanctions on the rebels as part of a political move against the Colombo government, Xinhua reported.

The General Court of the EU annulled measures taken against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) last week, which listed the Sri Lankan rebel group as a terrorist organisation and froze its funds.

However, the court allows the freezing of Tamil Tiger funds to be maintained for three more months.

The court also ruled that the EU law on the prevention of terrorism can apply in situations of armed conflict under international humanitarian law thereby rejecting a claim made by the Tamil Tigers.

The LTTE waged a three-decade war in Sri Lanka, fighting for a separate homeland. They were militarily defeated by the Sri Lankan government in 2009.

Stay updated wherever you go with Daijiworld.com and Daijiworld 24X7 tv channel mobile apps. CLICK HERE to download it for your device. (available on Android and IOS)

Read the original:
European Union defends lifting sanctions on Sri Lankan rebels

EU Drops Probe Into Chinese Mobile-Telecom Gear Makers

The European Union dropped an anti-subsidy investigation into Chinese makers of equipment for mobile telecommunications networks after the two sides reached a settlement.

EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht and Chinese Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng came to an amicable settlement on the issue over the weekend, the EU said today in a statement. The probe had threatened to affect Chinese telecom-equipment manufacturers such as Huawei Technologies Co. and ZTE Corp.

The concerns that have led us to launch the case can now be addressed in a systematic and regular dialogue between the two sides for the benefit of our industry, De Gucht said. In March, the EU closed a related anti-dumping investigation of the same industry. The inquiries covered EU imports of more than 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion) a year.

The settlement came after EU President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Barroso met with Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang at a summit in Milan last week. The EU and China hope to finalize negotiations as early as possible on a bilateral investment agreement, they said on Oct. 15.

Under the telecom-gear settlement, an independent body will monitor the Chinese and EU telecom-networks markets, the EU said today. The accord also includes equal treatment of companies bidding for publicly funded research and development projects.

With this settlement, we have much better and fairer competition and conditions for European companies that we used to have before, De Gucht spokesman Wojtek Talko told reporters in Brussels. He said the issue of export credits will be discussed in a working group, but there was no agreement on dropping it.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jones Hayden in Brussels at jhayden1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Crawford at acrawford6@bloomberg.net Eddie Buckle, Fergal OBrien

Press spacebar to pause and continue. Press esc to stop.

Visit link:
EU Drops Probe Into Chinese Mobile-Telecom Gear Makers