2014-03-23 Maidan Kiev Ukraine SDV 1342 – Video
2014-03-23 Maidan Kiev Ukraine SDV 1342
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2014-03-23 Maidan Kiev Ukraine SDV 1342
Christian Service Ecumenical.
By: tomsquirks
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UN chief Ban Ki-moon #39;deeply concerned #39; over Ukraine-Russia tensions
drudgereport UN chief Ban Ki-moon has told Vladimir Putin that he #39;s deeply concerned about the crisis between Russia and Ukraine. Ban met Putin in Moscow, as...
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UN chief Ban Ki-moon 'deeply concerned' over Ukraine-Russia tensions - Video
Ukraine Crisis Leading To Global Economic Reset
drudgereport Listen to The Fabian Calvo Podcast - Enlightenment - Education - Entrepreneurship As Crimea was declaring its independence from Ukraine on Monda...
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Ukraine is hoping the United Nations General Assembly will adopt a resolution later this week reaffirming the country's unity and territorial integrity and underscoring that the referendum that led to Crimea's annexation by Russia "has no validity."
The draft resolution, circulated Monday to the 193 assembly members and obtained by The Associated Press, never mentions Russia by name but calls on all countries not to recognize "any alteration of the status" of Crimea.
It also urges all parties to pursue a peaceful resolution of the situation in Ukraine, "refrain from unilateral actions and inflammatory rhetoric that may increase tensions, and to engage fully with international mediation efforts."
The General Assembly's resolutions are not legally binding but they reflect world opinion, and Ukraine will be looking for a strong "yes" vote to show Russia's international isolation.
The U.N.'s most powerful body, the Security Council, has been blocked from taking any action because Russia, has veto power as one of its five permanent members. Even so, the 15-member council has held eight meetings on Ukraine, as Western powers strive to keep up the pressure on Moscow.
On March 15, Russia vetoed a council resolution declaring the referendum on Crimea illegal. Supporters of the U.S.-sponsored resolution expected the veto but went ahead with the vote to show the strength of opposition to Russia's takeover of Crimea. Thirteen council members voted in favor of the resolution. China, Russia's usual ally on the Security Council, abstained rather than joining Russia in voting "no."
Unlike the council, the General Assembly has no vetoes.
Crimea has been at the center of Europe's greatest geopolitical crisis since the end of the Cold War. Russian troops took over the Ukrainian peninsula, where Russia's Black Sea fleet is based, and Moscow officially annexed Crimea following a referendum last week.
The upheaval in Crimea is the fallout of months of anti-government protests and outbursts of violence that led to the ouster of Ukraine's pro-Russia president, Viktor Yanukovych, who fled last month.
The U.S. and European Union have denounced Moscow's action as illegal.
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KIEV, Ukraine (AP) A hairstyling business closes four salons rather than deal with crooked officials. An independent salesman hustling paint from the trunk of his car faces a $5 million tax penalty. A humble crafts stall gives up after taxes increase ten-fold overnight.
That's the world of small business in Ukraine a tangled thicket of bribe-hungry government inspectors and complicated, unpredictable regulations.
Reducing graft and red tape are set to be part of the conditions Ukraine will face in exchange for an international financial rescue package. Officials in Kiev are expected to wrap up talks with the International Monetary Fund as soon as Tuesday.
Yet it will take some doing. Ukraine's culture of corruption and bureaucracy is deeply entrenched.
Take the story of Aleksey Antonyuk, who runs a hairstyling, marketing and publishing company in Kiev.
He was part of the first wave of Ukrainian entrepreneurs in the waning days of the Soviet Union, setting up a hair salon with one stylist. He expanded that to a company that employed 200 people at its peak. He branched out into media, publishing a stack of glossy magazine on hair and makeup, and offered marketing services, training courses and hairstyling competitions.
The trouble began when his business grew large enough to register as a limited liability corporation. That means he needed to install cash registers and with those came government inspectors eager to find evidence of rule-breaking.
"It's like honey for flies," said Antonyuk, a tall, slim 48-year-old, in an interview at his offices in a nondescript Soviet-era building away from the bustle of Kiev's city center.
The inspectors found something wrong at every turn a register a few coins short, the safe in the wrong place. It was either a large fine or bribe to ensure a smaller one. The going bribe rate is the equivalent of $100 for small, recurring matters, and $2,000 for yearly inspections.
Meanwhile, competitors had a simpler model: renting salon chairs to independent stylists, who didn't declare any income at all.
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