Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Earth Alive Opens Door to Eastern Europe With Registration in Ukraine – Stockhouse

Earth Alive Opens Door to Eastern Europe With Registration in Ukraine

MONTREAL, QUEBEC--(Marketwired - June 6, 2017) - Earth Alive Clean Technologies Inc. (CSE:EAC)(CSE:EAC.CN)(CNSX:EAC) ("Earth Alive" or the "Company"), a leading Canadian Clean-Tech company, developer and manufacturer of state-of-the-art microbial technology-based products for sustainable agriculture and mining, is pleased to report that it has gained registration in Ukraine for the sale of its organic and patent-pending biofertilizer, Soil Activator.

Agriculture is a significant sector of Ukraine's economy, representing 14% of total GDP in 2015.(1) Miguel Monroy, Director of Business Affairs for Earth Alive, said, "The registration process was challenging, but Ukraine is a strategic starting point for Earth Alive in Eastern Europe. It has enormous potential for agricultural growth, and actively seeks to expand its productivity in sustainable ways."

Ukraine has 32.5 million hectares in arable crops,(2) which benefit from the country's rich soil resources. The main crops are wheat, sunflower and corn, and a significant 800,000 hectares are dedicated to fruit and vegetable production. Earth Alive's Chief Agronomist, Simon Neufeld, stated, "Soil Activator has a proven track record of increasing production and economic returns in a broad range of field and horticultural crops, including corn. Ukraine is perfectly positioned to benefit from Soil Activator as the country seeks to expand its agricultural output while protecting its soil and water resources."

Initial commercialization and distribution in Ukraine is underway, and product has been shipped to the region. Farm applications have already begun for the current growing season, including on-farm commercial tests in corn by a very large Ukrainian agroindustrial company.

Michael K. Warren, Chief Executive Officer, concluded, "Registration in Ukraine gives Earth Alive new visibility in the European market, and begins the company's expansion in this dynamic region."

About Earth Alive Clean Technologies:

Earth Alive aims to be a key player in world markets of environmentally sustainable industrial solutions. The company works with the latest innovations in microbial technology to formulate and patent innovative products that can tackle the most difficult industrial challenges, once only reserved to environmentally harmful chemicals and additives. The Company is focused on environmental sustainability in the agriculture industry, and dust control for the mining industry.

For additional company information, please visit: http://www.earthalivect.com

The CSE has neither approved nor disapproved the contents of this press release. The CSE does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Forward Looking Information

Except for statements of historical fact, this news release contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities law. Forward-looking statements are frequently characterized by words such as "plan", "expect", "project", "intend", "believe", "anticipate", "estimate" and other similar words, or statements that certain events or conditions "may" occur. Although Earth Alive believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, there can be no assurance that such expectations will prove to be correct. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results, performance or developments to differ materially from those contained in the statements. Except as required under applicable securities legislation, the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

(1) World Bank national accounts data, and OECD National Accounts data files. Online: http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NV.AGR.TOTL.ZS?locations=UA

(2) FAOSTAT. Online: http://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#country/230

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Earth Alive Opens Door to Eastern Europe With Registration in Ukraine - Stockhouse

Russia refuses payment to Council of Europe over Ukraine dispute – Vanguard

Russia on Tuesday announced its refusal to pay about 12.4 million dollars, a third of its annual payment to the Council of Europe due to restrictions imposed on it over the Ukraine conflict.

The annual financing is paid in stages.

The third remaining at the end of the year is not being transferred, the speaker of Russias lower house of parliament, Vyacheslav Volodin, said in comments carried by state media.

Russias delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, lost much of its fundamental authority, including its right to vote, in 2014 after Russia annexed neighbouring Ukraines Crimea region.

The Council of Europe, established to uphold human rights, democracy and rule of law in the continent, said Russia had repeatedly made similar threats before.

Today is not the first time that we are reading this in the Russian press; however, we cannot confirm that the Russian authorities have informed the Council of Europe, spokesperson Daniel Hltgen told dpa.

Russia annexed Crimea, the location of a major Russian naval base.

The Russian government also supported separatist rebellion in parts of Eastern Ukraine as retaliation for Ukraines ousting its pro-Russian president after protests calling for closer ties with the West.

Russia denounced the ouster as a Western-backed coup.

About 10,000 people had died in the conflict in eastern Ukraine, according to estimates by the United Nations.

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Russia refuses payment to Council of Europe over Ukraine dispute - Vanguard

Ukraine’s fight against TB is at risk from USAID cuts – Devex

Photo by: NEX Noticias de Ciencia/ CC BY-SA

A United States Agency for International Development-funded digital health program to help Ukraine manage its growing drug-resistant tuberculosis epidemic is a textbook example of effective foreign aid, according to health experts who worked on the project but the countrys fight against the disease is now at risk from looming cuts to U.S. development aid.

Ukraine has the second-highest TB burden in Europe, and one of the highest estimated numbers of multidrug resistant TB, or MRD-TB, cases in the world.

Started in 2008, e-TB Manager a web-based health technology for managing all the information needed for TB control has shown strong results and has now been adopted by government. Implemented by global health NGO Management Sciences for Health, it is the first digital health tool to be implemented nationwide.

However, the positive news comes just weeks after the U.S. government announced proposed cuts of around a thirdto foreign assistance spending, which include more than halving global health assistance delivered by USAID to Ukraine, and cutting the countrys overall aid budget by nearly 70 percent, according to a budget justification document.

TB experts and Ukrainian health professionals warned that such drastic cuts could jeopardize the progress of the digital health program, and others like it, as well as the countrys broader fight against MDR-TB.

This is a concrete example of how foreign aid works, Niranjan Konduri, a principal technical adviser forthe program, told Devex. The current administrations proposed cuts if enacted, could severely roll back gains made in Ukraine after more than seven years of international partnership.

Without digital health technology to support surveillance, diagnosis, medication adherence and patient care, Ukraines drug-resistant tuberculosis could be worse than it is, spreading across borders, he added.

The digital health system is part of a USAID-funded program calledSystems for Improved Access to Pharmaceuticals and Services.Due to finish this year, it has been worth $226 million over six years and in more than 20 countries.

USAID has been supporting projects to control TB in Ukraine since 2000, mostly through technical assistance to the Ministry of Health on TB detection, treatment and prevention.

A spokesperson told Devex that the quality of the existing paper-based information systems varied. TB control was hampered by weak information, tracking and reporting systems The e-TB Manager is an essential tool to properly register, enroll and monitor treatment of MDR-TB in Ukraine.

Two recent studies led by Konduri on the e-TB Manager program both in Ukraineand across nine other countries found positive results, including 81 percent of users, such as doctors, nurses and laboratory professionals, who agreed that the tool improved patient care; and nearly 70 percent who said it enhanced productivity.

At the time of the study in 2016, e-TB Manager in Ukraine had more than 1,300 active users in nearly 600 health facilities, and had recorded 6 million transactions. The number of TB cases recorded in the system nearly doubled from 120,000 to 230,000 over the course of three years.

In 2015, approximately 1.8 million people died from TB globally more than from malaria with most cases in India, Indonesia, China, Nigeria, Pakistan and South Africa. While global TB rates are in decline, the disease burden is now thought to be higher than health experts had previously estimated, and will require major increases in donor funding to control, according to the World Health Organizations 2016 TB report.

The bacterial infection can cause persistent coughing, fever and night sweats, but is usually curable. The WHO estimates that 49 million liveswere saved through TB diagnosis and treatment between 2000 and 2015.

In Ukraine, however, TB is especially dangerous due to rising levels of MDR-TB, which has a treatment success rate of less than 50 percent. Mortality rates are high due to underdiagnosis and poor treatment, as well as increasing numbers of people infected with both TB and HIV, the WHO report suggests.

We need to be scaling up global efforts on TB cutting funds seems like the most out of step response we could possibly come up with.

According to the first-ever National Drug Resistance survey, supported by USAID, MDR-TB accounted for about a quarter of newly diagnosed TB cases in Ukraine in 2013. Furthermore, in 2015, 14 percent of new MDR-TB patientshad extensively-drug-resistant TB, which requires even longer treatment and more expensive drugs.

Meeting these challenges will require further improvements in diagnosis and treatment, as well as access to new TB drugs, according to Olga Pavlova, former deputy director at the Ukrainian Center for Disease Controland who oversaw the nationwide introduction of e-TB Manager. Pavlova said such advances will prove difficult without ongoing USAID support.

Ukraine has a huge number of MDR-TB cases and no access to new drugs due to out of date regulations, she said.

Isaac Chikwanha, medical adviser on tuberculosis, HIV and hepatitis C at Mdecins Sans Frontires, which operates in Ukraine, said that progress in tackling TB is stalling, and that cuts will only exacerbate the problem.

We need to be scaling up global efforts on TB cutting funds seems like the most out of step response we could possibly come up with, he said.

A major obstacle in current efforts is that health workers in high-burden countries are missing 40 percent of suspected TB cases, Chikwanha explained. The fact that many TB programs are paper-based is part of the problem, since data collection can be patchy and sharing of information slow and inefficient.

Digitizing patient information systems through a system such as e-TB Manager can help address these problems, Konduri explained, since it enables doctors to keep better track of patients and to get a more complete picture of their medical history, something which was challenging with the old paper-based system.

The e-health system also speeds up the diagnosis and treatment timelines since laboratory results can be delivered virtually and sometimes immediately; and a patients complete medical history can be easily accessed electronically.

As a result of these improvements, one Ukrainian TB doctor reportedareduction of more than 50 percent in the time taken to initiate antiretroviral therapy among TB patients from 104 days to 48 days.

The real benefit of e-TB Manager is its ability to improve decision-making among doctors, enabling them to make faster and better informed diagnoses and treatment plans, Konduri said.

The program has proven so successful that in 2015, USAIDs SIAPS programand MSH handed the project over to the Ministry of Healths Centre for Disease Control(now known as the Public Health Center).It is the only example of a digital health tool being rolled out nationwide, Konduri said.

[e-TB Manager] is the only example of a digital health tool being rolled out nationwide.

This is one granular example of how things work; a fully institutionalized and scaled-up system it's not a pilot, its fully adopted, he said.

Pavlova, who now works for PATH Ukraine, said that due to the success of the program the country plans to introduce additional digital health systems.

Its a first step to implementation of a national e-health system in Ukraine all national institutions know about the lessons learned from e-TB Manager and so they are implementing new systems in HIV service, she said.

Furthermore, the roll out was achieved during a time of major political unrest, military conflict and socio-economic challenges, which are partly responsible for the increased TB levels in the country, Konduri said.

While USAID funding for the SIAPS project is winding down, it continues to support the countrys MDR-TB efforts through Challenge TB a project that is working to strengthen Ukraines national capacity in the fight against TB, improve services and introduce new medication.

Pavlova said Ukraine would suffer from major cuts in USAID funding.

Its not a good idea for us, because the U.S. government is the main donor in Ukraine and our main partner if [we] dont have this support I think we have a huge problem, not only in TB but in health and social areas in general, she said.

In the future we need to be more independent, but reducing financial support needs to be done slowly with a strategic plan for how Ukraine can scale-up responsibility in this area, she added.

Konduri agreed that proposed cuts would be devastating.

The current administration's proposed cuts in foreign aid areamong the highestfor Ukraine It would be disastrous, [especially] given so much progress [has been made], he said.

MSFs Chikwanha added a reminder that, despite the advances, cases of MDR-TB are continuing to spiral meaning that cuts would hit Ukraines health sector at a critical time.

The bottom line is funding cuts for TB will have an impact, he said.

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Ukraine's fight against TB is at risk from USAID cuts - Devex

Across the frontlines in Eastern Ukraine | Europe | DW | 05.06.2017 – Deutsche Welle

The critical phase of the war in Eastern Ukraine began around three years ago, in June 2014. The previously restrained Ukrainian army attempted to expel the Russian-ledarmed separatists. This was only partly successful. The frontline that resulted from the conflict that summer, which split the coal-mining area of Donbass into two parts, is still mostly in place today. Kyiv controls more than half of the areas of Donetsk and Luhansk; the rest is part of the so-called "Donetsk People's Republic" or DPR/DNR. What do people who live in these regions today think about the background to the conflict? Where do they see their future? The recently founded Centre for East European and International Studies (ZOiS) in Berlin went in search of the answers to these questions, talking to people on both sides of the frontline.

Security issues shape survey methods

The ZOiS took an uncommon approach since most of the Ukrainian opinion researchers only talk to people on the Kyiv controlled side of the Donbass. This has happened due to security reasons and perhaps also because of the idea that those living in the "People's Republic" would be too fearful to always tell the truth.

The Berlin researchers were also aware of the risk of bias. "No survey conducted in a war is going to be done under ideal circumstances," ZOiS director Gwendolyn Sasse tells DW. On the Kyiv side, the survey was conducted in person and in the occupied areas it was done over the phone. "I think a telephone survey has certain advantages, because people feel more secure," says Sasse. The drawback is that some questions have to be shortened. Overall, at the end of 2016 around 1,200 Eastern Ukrainians were surveyed.

United in rejecting Western integration

The results have shown that there are differences but no deep divisions in the thoughts of people living on the two sides. "In many aspects we found more similarities than one would have been able to guess from a Western perspective," says Sasse. Around one third of respondentsmaintained contact one to two times per week with relatives on the respective other side.

On both sides there is a mix of Russian and Ukrainian identities. However, one result of the war is thatwhen compared to citizens on the Kyiv side, people living in the "People's Republic" feel more Russian (26.1 versus3.4 percent).Conversely, one in five respondents living in Donbass - west of the dividing line - report that in the last three years their Ukrainian identity has been strengthened.Further to the east, in the separatist area, this result was only 8.5 percent.

In terms of foreign policy priorities, people in East Ukraine have been against Western integration for years. This has barely changed, according to the ZOiS survey. A large majority, around three-quarters, is against Ukraine joining the EU and NATO, long-term goals which Kyiv has been striving towards. However, the proportion of those who are for these goals is significantly higher on the Kyiv side. On the question of joining the EU, for example, the difference between the sides is 27.9 percent to 18.2 percent. Both sides were united in having a majority who hold a critical opinion of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko.

The status issue splits Donbass region

On certain issues, however, the ZOiS researchers have found significant differences. Almost half of the inhabitants of the "People's Republic" consider "Western interference" to be the cause of the war. About one third of the population perceives the war to be a "local reaction against the nationalist government." On the side, under Kyiv's control, 23.1 percenthold this opinion. Significantly more people (37.1 percent) blame Russia here.

Professor Gwendolyn Sasse of the Centre for East European and International Studies

The attitude towards the Minsk agreements, which would provide for an extensive autonomy of the separatist regions, differs widely. About 40 percentof Ukrainians in the areas that are under Kyiv's control would "tend to agree" to these agreements. Only half as many share this view in the separatist regions.

The issue of the future status of the separatist areas shows a particularly stark contrast in views. A clear majority of those living on the side that is controlled by Kyiv (64.7 percent) wants a restoration of the pre-war status, as opposed to less thanten percent of those living on the other side. About one third of the population on either side would prefer autonomy within Ukraine or Russia respectively.

Recommendations for Kiev and Moscow

When it comes to the question of its status, the Donbass region is "really divided," believes Sasse. According to her, this is an important message both to the people involved in the conflict and for those who are engaged in conflict resolution. On the whole the Berlin-based expert recommends the Ukrainian government "not to give up the occupied areas too easily". Yet Sasse warns that "on the other hand, Moscow should not assume that a further integration of the occupied areas will go smoothly", not least because "views and identities of the people there differ vastly, and many have not given up being part of Ukraine."

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Across the frontlines in Eastern Ukraine | Europe | DW | 05.06.2017 - Deutsche Welle

Ex-head of Ukraine library in Moscow Natalia Sharina guilty – BBC News


BBC News
Ex-head of Ukraine library in Moscow Natalia Sharina guilty
BBC News
The former head of a Ukrainian library in Moscow has been found guilty of extremism and embezzlement, in a case she says is politically motivated. Natalia Sharina was arrested in 2015 after a search of her Library of Ukrainian Literature found what ...
Chief of Moscow's Ukrainian library gets suspended sentenceWashington Post
Russia: Ex-Ukraine library boss convicted of inciting hatredeuronews
Russian Court Convicts Ukrainian Library Chief Of Inciting HatredRadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
Reuters UK
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Ex-head of Ukraine library in Moscow Natalia Sharina guilty - BBC News