Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine applies to Europe rights court over alleged targeted assassinations by Russia – JURIST

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) announced on Tuesday that Ukraine has lodged an application against Russia alleging breach of right to life through Russias State-authorised targeted assassinations of opponents of Russia.

Ukraine claims that these assassination operations were performed outside of armed conflict situations against perceived opponents of the Russian Federation, in Russia and other Council of Europe member states. They further allege that Russia has failed to investigate these assassinations and deliberately thwarted efforts to find the individuals responsible. These actions, Ukraine claims, amount to a violation of Article 2, the right to life, of the European Convention of Human Rights.

This is the ninth application lodged by Ukraine against Russia, with four currently pending before the EHCR. Previous applications involved the detention of Ukrainian nationals in Russia, amounting to numerous violations of Convention rights, and the crash of a Malaysian Airlines flight in Eastern Ukraine.

Following an application, the court must notify Russia and invite them to submit written observations.

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Ukraine applies to Europe rights court over alleged targeted assassinations by Russia - JURIST

OSCE Chairperson-in-Office reminds that Crimea is Ukraine – Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

The Russia-Ukraine armed conflict must be settled with full respect for Ukraine's sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity within its internationally recognized borders, including Crimea.

"As a Chair, Sweden recognizes the vital importance of the Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine. We will seek to contribute to the ongoing efforts of the Normandy format and the Trilateral Contact Group to find a sustainable solution to the conflict. This must be done in line with the OSCE principles and commitments in full respect for the sovereignty, territorial integrity, unity and independence of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders, including the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol," OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sweden, Ann Linde said at a joint session of the three General Committees of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly on Thursday.

Linde also pointed out that the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine "is mandated to have safe and secure access without restriction throughout Ukraine." She stressed that the SMM must be provided with "conditions necessary for the implementation of its mandate."

Ann Linde's statement was made in response to a question from the head of the Verkhovna Rada delegation to the OSCE PA, Mykyta Poturayev, who asked why the OSCE still has not joined the UN and UNESCO in remote monitoring of the situation in the temporarily occupied Crimea and reminded that the SMM mandate covers the entire territory of Ukraine, including Crimea.

The 20th Winter Meeting of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly is taking place on 24-26 February 2021 in a virtual format with the participation of about 270 parliamentarians, as well as high-ranking representatives of the OSCE participating states. The issue of Russias aggression against Ukraine and the temporary occupation of Crimea remains one of the main topics of speeches of members of parliaments of the OSCE participating states.

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OSCE Chairperson-in-Office reminds that Crimea is Ukraine - Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

Ukraine: Imposition of new set of Sanctions Affecting Chinese Investors, Media Companies and other parties – GlobalComplianceNews

The Sanctions Decisions target the following parties:

The Sanctions Decisions impose the following restrictions:

The sanctions imposed against TV channels 112 TV, Zik, Newsone and the Media Companies additionally prohibit:

The full list of legal entities and individuals subject to sanctions is set forth in the annexes to the Sanctions Decisions.Any counterparty dealing with entities or individuals on the sanctions lists must carefully assess the exact scope of the sanctions applicable to a particular transaction and the implications of dealing with such entities and individuals.

1Presidential Decree No. 29/2021 dated 28 January 2021 On the Decision of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine dated 28 January 2021 On Amending the Decision of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine dated 14 December 2020 enacted by Presidential Decree No. 564-27 dated 14 December 2020, effective from 30 January 2021.Presidential Decree No. 36/2021 dated 29 January 2021 On the Decision of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine dated 29 January 2021 On Imposing Personal Special Economic and Other Restrictive Measures (Sanctions),effective from 2 February 2021.Presidential Decree No. 43/2021 dated 2 February 2021 On the Decision of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine dated 2 February 2021 On Imposing Personal Special Economic and Other Restrictive Measures (Sanctions),effective from 4 February 2021.

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Ukraine: Imposition of new set of Sanctions Affecting Chinese Investors, Media Companies and other parties - GlobalComplianceNews

Should Ukraine have identified airliner threat before MH17 loss? – Flightglobal

If theres a country that understands the unintentional threat to commercial aircraft from a missile launch, its Ukraine. Its own air defence forces shot down a Russian Tupolev Tu-154 during a military exercise despite the advantages of discipline, training and peacetime just 13 years before Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was destroyed by a surface-to-air missile over conflict-scarred Donetsk.

Theres a stark aspect of the Flight Safety Foundations inquiry into the lead-up to MH17s destruction which deserves more attention than the headline declaration that it did not find sufficient facts to indicate Ukrainian officials were properly aware of a threat to civil aircraft.

Its analysis examined whether such a threat could have been theoretically assessed, and drew up a foresight matrix looking at the factors capability, intent, command and control, and the possibility of unintentional attack which collectively might have given rise to a risk to aircraft operating at cruise altitudes above the war zone in the east.

For almost all the individual elements within these factors, the Foundation assigned a high risk value, based on the reasonable assumptions that the separatists involved in the conflict would be irregular forces, without an organised reporting channel, having no protocol for authorising a missile attack, and a marginal ability to differentiate civil aircraft from military.

With so few safeguards standing in the way of a potential attack, this essentially meant judging the risk to MH17 or any other civil flight depended heavily on knowing whether the separatists did or did not have access to powerful high-altitude weapons.

This makes the risk assessment extremely sensitive to information about such a capability, says the analysis, and should be considered as a probability range rather than a binary yes-or-no. To put it in terms of the well-known aviation risk model: guess the size of the hole in the final slice of Swiss cheese.

Its reputation tarnished by the Tu-154 debacle, Ukraines defence ministry would have appreciated the danger posed by rag-tag rebels engaged in real combat. The countrys security and defence council had also openly floated the possibility that a Russian surface-to-air missile system, such as the Pantsir, might have brought down a military Antonov An-26 just three days before the downing of MH17. It hadnt but thats not the point.

From a hundred rabbits you cant make a horse, remarks investigator Porfiry Petrovich in Dostoevskys Crime and Punishment. A hundred suspicions dont make a proof.

This is important in a legal context, of course, but commercial aviation is an industry in which safety thresholds are measured against billion-to-one improbabilities. Suspicion is often enough; witness the tidal-wave grounding of the Boeing 737 Max, driven at that stage by precaution rather than evidence.

The Dutch Safety Board, which carried out the original investigation into the MH17 attack, believed there was sufficient reason to close the upper airspace through which the aircraft was fatally permitted to travel.

Apportioning blame is out of the Safety Boards remit. The Foundation inquiry had not set out to convict or exonerate Ukraine, and the Dutch government is unlikely to rethink its view that pursuing a liability case is futile.

But if so much of the potential risk to MH17 hinged on the remote chance that combatants in a lawless war zone who considered aircraft as legitimate targets might source the capability to inflict damage beyond their assumed means, the authorities of a country which, in the face of all odds, accidentally shot down a Tu-154 should really have expected the unexpected.

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Should Ukraine have identified airliner threat before MH17 loss? - Flightglobal

Egypt keen to cooperate with Ukraine in transferring technology, boosting investments: FM – Egypttoday

FILE - Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry - Reuters/Amr Dalsh

CAIRO 25 February 2021: Egypts Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry on Thursday expressed to his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, the keenness to continue cooperation with Ukraine in transferring technology and boosting Ukrainian investments in Egypt.

In a phone call, Shoukry affirmed Egypts willingness to continue developing and deepening the cooperation with Ukraine in political, economic, and agricultural fields as well as trade.

The two ministers highlighted the importance of discussing the means of benefiting from the two countries experience in combating the coronavirus pandemic and easing its social and economic implications.

The ministers have expressed satisfaction of the level of ongoing coordination between Egypt and Ukraine and said they look forward to holding the next session of bilateral consultations during this year.

Shoukry hailed the ongoing flow of Ukrainian tourists to Egypt, causing Ukraine to rank 1st in Egypts tourism record in 2020 in terms of the number of tourists.

This comes in light of the strict precautionary measures Egypt takes against coronavirus, in light of Ukraines decision to resume charter flights to South Sinai and the Red Sea governorates in Egypt.

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Egypt keen to cooperate with Ukraine in transferring technology, boosting investments: FM - Egypttoday