Розділ: Повідомлення
У Житомирі розслідують смерть ув’язненого з ознаками побиття – ОГП
За даними слідства, фельдшер діагностував у в’язня «гостру серцеву недостатність», але судо-медичний експерт встановив, що до смерті призвели травми
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By Gromada | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Republicans May Leave the Democrats Holding the Bag on Raising the Debt Ceiling
As lawmakers on Capitol Hill struggle to advance a bipartisan bill to invest in the country’s critical infrastructure, the most powerful Republican in Washington signaled that his party’s cooperation with Democrats has limits.Specifically, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said on Wednesday that he does not expect members of his party to support a measure authorizing the government to borrow the money it will need to meet its obligations later this year.Because the amount of debt the U.S. Treasury can issue is capped by statute, whenever Congress approves spending that exceeds revenues – which it has done with every budget since 2001 – the country threatens to butt up against that limit, commonly known as the “debt ceiling.”The current national debt totals a jaw-dropping $28.5 trillion, or 26% more than the U.S. gross domestic product.Budget reconciliationIn an interview with Punchbowl News, published Wednesday, McConnell said, “I can’t imagine a single Republican in this environment that we’re in now – this free-for-all for taxes and spending – to vote to raise the debt limit.”Democrats, McConnell said, will have to take full responsibility for increasing the federal debt, suggesting that they do so using a process called “budget reconciliation,” which allows a bill to bypass the 60-vote margin in the Senate imposed by the filibuster.Later on Wednesday, South Dakota Sen. John Thune, the third-ranking Republican in the Senate, echoed McConnell, saying “I don’t think there’s a single Republican senator who views increasing the debt limit so that Democrats can expand government and spend massive amounts as something they in the end would want to support.”Congressional Democrats furiousDemocrats in Congress were quick to point out the misdirection inherent in McConnell and Thune’s statements. Many of the obligations that the Treasury will have to meet later this year, and which will require more borrowing, have nothing to do with legislation currently being considered in Congress. Instead, they stem from decisions made in the past, when Republicans held control of one or both chambers of Congress.In particular, Democrats pointed to tax cuts passed in the first half of the Trump administration – when Republicans controlled Congress – which severely reduced federal revenue. They also point out that the government’s initial response to the coronavirus pandemic while the Republicans were in charge of the White House and the Senate was also a driver of the debt.Calling McConnell’s position “shameless, cynical, and totally political,” Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Wednesday, “This debt is Trump debt. It’s COVID debt. And the bottom line is that leader McConnell should not be playing political games with the full faith and credit of the United States. Americans pay their debts.”Biden disappointedAsked about McConnell’s suggestion that Republicans would not support a debt limit increase, President Joe Biden pointed out that Democrats had twice voted for debt limit increases during his predecessor’s four years in office.“I was hoping that wouldn’t be the case. You know, for the last four years, they’ve just extended the debt limit,” Biden said.“The reason for the significant debt is because of their … tax cut,” he added. “And there are going to be a couple of very difficult decisions that are going to have to be made to get through the end of the year. And one of them is the debt limit and extending the debt. So, I don’t have an answer for you, but it’s – I hope we can get by it.”Serious businessIf the United States were to fail to pay its debts on time – whether that means interest payments on bonds, Social Security benefits checks, or government payrolls – the results could be catastrophic for both the U.S. and for the broader global economy.Debt issued by the Treasury is the closest thing to a risk-free asset that investors can purchase, and is used to benchmark any number of other assets in the capital markets. Were the value of those securities to be suddenly placed in doubt, there would be severe repercussions throughout the global economy.The enormity of the fallout from a U.S. default would be so profound that many assume that it will never be allowed to happen. But lawmakers have danced very close to the edge in the past. In 2011, when House Republicans battled with Democratic President Barack Obama over the federal debt, the bond rating firm Standard & Poor’s issued the first-ever downgrade of U.S. sovereign debt, sparking a major stock market sell-off.Some hope for cooperationNot everyone believes that McConnell and Senate Republicans will necessarily succeed in forcing Democrats to shoulder full responsibility for the debt limit increase.Marc Goldwein, senior vice president and senior policy director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said he believes that Democrats have at least a chance of persuading some Republicans to agree to a backdoor increase of the limit, which could be achieved with a vote to “suspend” it rather than increase it.“I wouldn’t rule out a bipartisan debt limit increase,” Goldwein said. “I think that’s the most likely option.” That could be achieved by attaching a suspension to the bipartisan infrastructure bill currently being written in the Senate, he said, or in a massive budget bill at the end of the fiscal year, assuming the Treasury doesn’t run out of money beforehand.Historical accidentThe very existence of the debt limit as a sticking point in U.S. politics is an accident of history. The limit was originally intended to make issuing debt easier – not more difficult. Congress used to be required to vote on every issuance of debt by the Treasury, a process that became unwieldy as the country and government grew larger.In 1917, with the country raising money via bond issuances to support its involvement in World War I, Congress gave blanket approval to all debt issuance up to a specific amount. It was only decades later that the debt ceiling became a tool of obstruction. However, as Goldwein points out, it’s a problem the country regularly brings upon itself.“So long as we keep borrowing money, we’re going to have to keep raising the debt limit or suspending it,” he said. “That’s been a reality in the United States for a very long time.”
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By Polityk | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
ДСНС ліквідовує наслідки негоди у низці областей: дві жертви у Бердянську та 13 знеструмлених міст і сіл
Продовжуються роботи з усунення підтоплень в Одесі та регіоні, а також на Херсонщині
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By Gromada | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
23 липня – що очікувати в цей день і що було в історії
23 липня в Токіо розпочнуться Олімпійські ігри-2020, які було перенесено на рік через пандемію
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By Gromada | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Biden Condemns Cuba for Crackdown on Freedom Protesters
U.S. President Joe Biden assailed the Cuban government Thursday for its crackdown on freedom protesters on the island nation and imposed sanctions on the head of the Cuban military and the internal security division that led the attacks on demonstrators.“I unequivocally condemn the mass detentions and sham trials that are unjustly sentencing to prison those who dared to speak out in an effort to intimidate and threaten the Cuban people into silence,” Biden said in announcing the sanctions.”The Cuban people have the same right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly as all people,” Biden said. “The United States stands with the brave Cubans who have taken to the streets to oppose 62 years of repression under a communist regime.”Biden’s rebuke of Cuba’s actions is an about-face for him. He had promised to try to ease relations with the country that is a mere 145 kilometers from the U.S. coastal state of Florida after former President Donald Trump had taken a tough stance against Cuba.The sanctions targeted Alvaro Lopez Miera, the Cuban minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, and the Cuban Ministry of the Interior’s Special National Brigade, also known as the Black Berets.The sanctions, imposed under the U.S. Global Magnitsky Act, freeze any of the Cubans’ assets under U.S. jurisdiction and prohibit travel to the U.S. As a practical effect, the action serves to publicly name and shame Cuban officials for the crackdown.U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken joined Biden in condemning the Cuban government’s response to the protests that started July 11. Hundreds of dissidents have been arrested in the most significant demonstrations in Cuba in decades. Many of the protesters remain out of touch with family members.“The actions of the Cuban security forces,” Blinken said, “lay bare the regime’s fear of its own people and unwillingness to meet their basic needs and aspirations.”He said Lopez Miera and the Special National Brigade “have been involved in suppressing the protests, including through physical violation and intimidation.”Biden said Thursday’s sanctions and condemnation of the government of President Miguel Diaz-Canel were “just the beginning – the United States will continue to sanction individuals responsible for oppression of the Cuban people.”“As we hold the Cuban regime accountable,” Biden said, “our support for the Cuban people is unwavering, and we are making sure Cuban Americans are a vital partner in our efforts to provide relief to suffering people on the island.”The U.S. leader said his administration is “working with civil society organizations and the private sector to provide internet access to the Cuban people that circumvents the regime’s censorship efforts.”In addition, Biden said the U.S. is reviewing its cash remittance policy to prevent theft of the money by Cuban officials. Expatriates have reported sending money to relatives in Cuba only to find that the government has pilfered it.Biden said the U.S. is committed to increasing the size of its embassy staff in Havana to provide consular services to Cubans after all but 10 U.S. diplomats there were withdrawn in 2017 and 2018. Numerous envoys in Havana had complained of sonic attacks that left them physically impaired.“Advancing human dignity and freedom is a top priority for my administration, and we will work closely with our partners throughout the region, including the Organization of American States, to pressure the regime to immediately release wrongfully detained political prisoners, restore internet access, and allow the Cuban people to enjoy their fundamental rights,” Biden said.
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By Polityk | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Абдуллу Ібрагімова заарештували на три доби за адмінстаттею після обшуку в Євпаторії – активісти
Ібрагімова засудили за публікацію символіки забороненої в Росії партії «Хізб ут-Тахрір» у 2013 році
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By Gromada | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Білорусь: до Груздиловича та Студзінської на шостий день арешту допустили адвокатів
Родичі та друзі досі не знають, чому журналістів затримали та у чому їх підозрюють
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By VilneSlovo | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Свобода слова
Росія: суд знову оштрафував Facebook, Twitter і Telegram за невидалення «забороненого контенту»
Загалом компанії мають виплатити понад 22 мільйони рублів
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By VilneSlovo | 07/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Свобода слова
В Угорщині розслідують ймовірне стеження за критиками уряду Орбана за допомогою програми Pegasus
Угорські опозиційні депутати та правозахисники раніше закликали провести розслідування після публікації розслідування про шпигунське програмне забезпечення
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By Gromada | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
АМКУ оштрафував цукрову компанію на 68 млн гривень за купівлю цукрозаводу без дозволу
За висновками комітету, компанія мала погодити купівлю активів Хоростківського цукрового заводу у 2016 році
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By Gromada | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
У ДПСУ звернули увагу на особливості в’їзду українців до Словаччини та Молдови
Тим часом у пункті пропуску для автомобільного сполучення «Чоп (Тиса)» з 22 липня «Укравтодор» розпочав ремонтні роботи на мосту через річку Тиса. До вересня будуть обмеження в русі
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By Gromada | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Уряд виділить кошти з резервного фонду на ремонт авіаційної техніки для цивільного захисту населення
Рішення ухвалили з метою ліквідації масштабних пожеж та повеней, а також для надання гуманітарної допомоги
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By Gromada | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
22 липня – що очікувати в цей день і що було в історії
На 22 липня запланована поїздка на лінію розмежування в зоні проведення ООС на Донбасі міністра зовнішньої економіки та закордонних справ Угорщини Петера Сіярто і міністра закордонних справ України Дмитра Кулеби
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By Gromada | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
US Infrastructure Bill Fails First Vote; Senate to Try Again
Senate Republicans rejected an effort Wednesday to begin debate on the big infrastructure deal that a bipartisan group of senators brokered with President Joe Biden. But supporters in both parties remained hopeful of a better chance soon.Democratic Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York had scheduled the procedural vote that he described as a step to “get the ball rolling” as talks progress. But Republicans mounted a filibuster, saying the bipartisan group needed more time to wrap up the deal and review the details. They sought a delay until Monday.”We have made significant progress and are close to a final agreement,” the informal group of 22 senators, Republicans and Democrats, said in a joint statement after the vote.They said they were working to “get this critical legislation right” and were optimistic they could finish up “in the coming days.”The nearly $1 trillion, five-year measure includes about $579 billion in new spending on roads, broadband and other public works projects — a first phase of Biden’s infrastructure agenda, to be followed by a much broader $3.5 trillion second measure from Democrats next month.The party-line vote was 51-49 against proceeding, far short of the 60 “yes” votes needed to get past the Republicans’ block. The Democratic leader switched his vote to “no” at the end, a procedural step that would allow him to move to reconsider.Six months after Biden took office, his signature “Build Back Better” campaign promise is at a key moment that will test the presidency and his hopes for a new era of bipartisan cooperation in Washington.’Blue-collar blueprint’Biden, who headed to Ohio later Wednesday to promote his economic policies, is calling his infrastructure agenda a “blue-collar blueprint for building an American economy back.” He has said Americans are overwhelmingly in support of his plan.Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., arrives to speak to reporters ahead of a test vote on a bipartisan infrastructure deal senators brokered with President Joe Biden, in Washington, July 21, 2021.However, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has said big spending is “the last thing American families need.”White House aides and the bipartisan group of senators have huddled privately every day since Sunday trying to wrap up the deal, which would be a first phase of an eventual $4 trillion-plus package of domestic outlays — not just for roads and bridges, but foundations of everyday life including child care, family tax breaks, education and an expansion of Medicare for seniors.The next steps are uncertain, but the bipartisan group insists it is close to a deal and expects to finish soon. The senators were joined for a private lunch ahead of the vote by the two leaders of the House’s Problem Solvers Caucus, a bipartisan group generally supportive of the effort.Senators from the Republican side asked to delay the vote, and 11 Republicans signed on to a letter to Schumer saying they would support moving forward with a yes vote on Monday, if certain details about the package are ready.Schumer said senators are in the fourth week of negotiations after reaching agreement on a broad framework for infrastructure spending with the White House. He said Wednesday’s vote was not meant to be a deadline for having every detail worked out.Debate before text”My colleagues are well aware that we often agree to move forward with debates on issues before we have the text in hand,” Schumer said. “We’ve done it twice this year already.”McConnell called the vote a “stunt” that would fail, but emphasized senators were “still negotiating in good faith across the aisle.””Around here, we typically write the bills before we vote on them,” he said.A core group of Republicans are interested in pursuing a more modest package of traditional highway and public works projects, about $600 billion in new funds, and say they just need more time to negotiate with their Democratic colleagues and the White House.Senator Todd Young was among the Republicans who signed the letter seeking the delay and said he was “cautiously optimistic” they can reach a bipartisan deal.Senators from the bipartisan group emerged upbeat Tuesday from another late-night negotiating session with Biden aides at the Capitol, saying a deal was within reach and a failed vote Wednesday would not be the end of the road.In fact, Republican Senator Bill Cassidy said the test vote Wednesday could be useful in helping to “advance and expedite” the process.Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., talks to reporters as he walks to the Senate chamber ahead of a test vote on a bipartisan infrastructure deal, on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 21, 2021.”We are so close,” said Democratic Senator Jon Tester.Biden has been in touch with Democrats and Republicans for several days, and his outreach will continue “until he has both pieces of legislation on his desk to sign them into law,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday.While Biden proposes paying for his proposals with a tax hike on corporations and wealthy Americans who earn more than $400,000 a year, the bipartisan group has been working almost around the clock to figure out a compromise way to pay for its package, having dashed ideas for boosting the gas tax drivers pay at the pump or strengthening the Internal Revenue Service to go after tax scofflaws.Pharmaceutical rebatesInstead, senators in the bipartisan group are considering rolling back a Trump-era rule on pharmaceutical rebates that could bring in some $170 billion to be used for infrastructure. They are also still haggling over public transit funds.Ten Republicans would have been needed in the evenly split Senate to join all 50 Democrats in reaching the 60-vote threshold required to advance the bill past a filibuster to formal consideration. Schumer can set another vote to proceed to the bill later.Many Republicans are wary of moving ahead with the first, relatively slim package, fearing it will pave the way for the broader $3.5 trillion effort Democrats are preparing to pass on their own under special budget rules that require only 51 votes. Vice President Kamala Harris can break a tie.Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been working to keep restless liberal Democrats in her chamber in line, as rank-and-file lawmakers grow impatient with the sluggish Senate pace.”Time’s a-wasting, I want to get this work done,” Representative Pramila Jayapal, chairwoman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told reporters Tuesday.Representative Peter DeFazio, chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, dismissed the Senate’s bipartisan effort as inadequate. He wants more robust spending on the transportation elements and said, “We want an opportunity to actually negotiate.”Democrats hope to show progress on that bill before lawmakers leave Washington for their recess in August.
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By Polityk | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Biden Aims to Sell Economic Agenda in Ohio Trip
President Joe Biden aimed to rev up support for his economic agenda with a visit to Cincinnati on Wednesday, where he visited a union training center ahead of a CNN town hall.The trip comes as the fate of his infrastructure proposal remains unclear after Senate Republicans rejected a $1 trillion blueprint in a key test vote Wednesday. A bipartisan group of 22 senators said in a joint statement after the vote that they were close to coming to terms on a deal and requested a delay until Monday.Biden expressed confidence in the outcome, telling reporters when asked if he would land a deal on infrastructure, “Yes, we will.”While lawmakers wrangle over the details of that proposal on Capitol Hill, Biden was expected to use the town hall, in part, to talk about the broad strokes of his economic vision, making the case that his nearly $4 trillion package is needed to rebuild the middle class and sustain the economic growth the country has seen during the first six months of his presidency.First, Biden toured the IBEW/NECA Electrical Training Center on the west side of Cincinnati. He got a chance to get an up-close look at trainees working their way through five-year apprenticeships to learn the ins-and-outs of the sort of skilled, well-paid union jobs that he says will be in higher demand if his plan comes to fruition.”There’s a reason why union workers are the best trained,” said Biden, as he met with apprentices.It’s his third trip to the state — one he lost by about 8 points in 2020, but one that remains pivotal to the Democratic Party’s political future and a key test of whether Biden’s economic proposals have the broad appeal the White House hopes.The state faces a heated Senate election next year with the retirement of Republican Rob Portman, who helped negotiate the infrastructure plan that now faces an uncertain future in the evenly split Senate.The president’s visit took him near the dangerously outdated Brent Spence Bridge — a chokepoint for trucks and emergency vehicles between Ohio and Kentucky that the past two presidents promised without success to replace. But Republicans are more focused on the increase in shootings and crime in Cincinnati, which they blame on Democrats, although there are a host of factors, including the coronavirus pandemic.Biden is likely to take questions on many of those issues during his Wednesday night town hall on CNN, at Mount St. Joseph University, a private Catholic college in Delhi Township, a western suburb of Cincinnati.
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By Polityk | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Trump Confidant Accused of Illegally Advancing UAE Interests
The Justice Department has accused Thomas Barrack, a longtime friend of former President Donald Trump and his 2017 inaugural committee chairman, of engaging in a wide-ranging scheme to favorably influence U.S. policy toward the United Arab Emirates without registering as a foreign agent as required by U.S. law. A seven-count indictment was handed down Tuesday against Barrack, 74, and two other associates, one American and the other a UAE national. Prosecutors allege that Barrack, who has known Trump since the 1980s, sought to influence him starting in April 2016, when Trump was campaigning for president, and extending through April 2018, during the first year-plus of Trump’s four-year term in the White House. The indictment against Barrack also accuses him of obstructing justice and making numerous false statements to federal law enforcement agents when they interviewed him on June 20, 2019. After Barrack was arrested Tuesday, his lawyer told U.S. news outlets that Barrack “has made himself voluntarily available to investigators from the outset. He is not guilty and will be pleading not guilty.” Members of the media wait outside federal court building after Thomas Barrack, a billionaire friend of Donald Trump who chaired the former president’s inaugural fund, is arrested, in Los Angeles, California, July 20, 2021.Acting Assistant Attorney General Mark Lesko of the Justice Department’s National Security Division said in a statement that Barrack and his co-defendants “repeatedly capitalized on Barrack’s friendships and access to a candidate who was eventually elected president, high-ranking campaign and government officials, and the American media to advance the policy goals of (the UAE) without disclosing their true allegiances.” Lesko said their conduct “is nothing short of a betrayal of those officials in the United States, including the former president. Through this indictment, we are putting everyone — regardless of their wealth or perceived political power — on notice that the Department of Justice will enforce the prohibition of this sort of undisclosed foreign influence.” Prosecutors allege that Barrack was an informal adviser to Trump during his 2016 campaign, chaired his inaugural committee and then “informally advised senior U.S. government officials on issues related to U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.” Barrack at the time was executive chairman of a global investment management firm headquartered in Los Angeles, while one of his co-defendants, Matthew Grimes, 27, reported directly to Barrack at the investment company. The third defendant was identified as Rashid Sultan Rashid Al Malik Alshahhi, 43, a UAE national who worked as a UAE agent. Prosecutors allege that Barrack and the others took several actions to advance UAE interests without registering with the U.S. government as foreign agents. They accuse Barrack in May 2016 of inserting language praising the UAE into a Trump campaign speech about U.S. energy policy. The prosecutors say that Barrack, either directly or through Grimes or Alshahhi, was repeatedly in contact with senior UAE leaders. The Justice Department alleges in a statement that Barrack and the others “sought and received direction and feedback, including talking points, from senior UAE officials in connection with national press appearances Barrack used to promote the interests of the UAE.” After one such public statement, Barrack emailed Alshahhi, saying, “I nailed it. . . for the home team,” referring to the UAE. On another occasion, according to the government, Barrack and Grimes sought advice from senior UAE officials before Barrack wrote an opinion piece for a national magazine in October 2016 and “removed certain language at the direction of senior UAE officials, as relayed by Alshahhi.” The government says that after Trump won the 2016 election, Barrack in December asked the UAE for a “wish list” of its short-term and longer-range goals it wanted from the incoming Trump administration. Prosecutors accuse Barrack, shortly after Trump took office, with providing Alshahhi with non-public information about the reaction of U.S. government officials after they held a White House meeting with senior UAE officials. The indictment alleges that in September 2017, Alshahhi told Barrack that the UAE was against a proposed summit in the U.S. concerning an ongoing dispute between Qatar, the UAE and other Middle Eastern governments. The Justice Department alleges that Barrack “sought to advise” Trump about the UAE stance and the summit never occurred. Throughout his representation of the UAE, prosecutors said Barrack used a dedicated cellphone and installed a secure messaging application so he could converse with top UAE officials. During Barrack’s 2019 interview with FBI agents, the government alleged that he lied repeatedly, including denying that Alshahhi had ever requested that he take any actions advancing UAE interests.
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By Polityk | 07/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Навчання «Козацька булава»: активна фаза і unique Borscht від Клопотенка
У «День культури» відомий шеф-кухар Євген Клопотенко поділився власним унікальним рецептом борщу
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By Gromada | 07/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
«Приватбанк» застерігає від нового шахрайства від його імені
Зловмисники обіцяють високий дохід за схемою, що нагадує фінансову піраміду, незаконно використовуючи логотип і айдентику банку
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By Gromada | 07/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Стало відомо, скількох людей засудили торік в Україні через жорстоке поводження з тваринами
За статтею 299 Кримінального кодексу України (Жорстоке поводження з тваринами – ред.) у 2020 році засуджено 35 осіб, заявили в ДСА
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By Gromada | 07/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Нацполіція збільшить кількість патрульних екіпажів на найбільш аварійних ділянках доріг України
У патрульній поліції заявили про активізацію роботи в напрямку контролю за дотриманням перевезення пасажирів автобусами
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By Gromada | 07/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Вперше в Україні громадянину повідомили про підозру у піратстві – ОГП
Наразі вирішується питання щодо обрання підозрюваному запобіжного заходу
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By Gromada | 07/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
21 липня – що очікувати в цей день і що було в історії
21 липня 1906 року народилася Олена Теліга, українська поетеса і громадська діячка (розстріляна нацистами у Бабиному Яру)
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By Gromada | 07/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Рахунки Білоруської асоціації журналістів заморожені, затримане подружжя істориків
Влада не навела причин для будь-якого з обшуків, а також для затримання Мастик та Губаревич
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By VilneSlovo | 07/20/2021 | Повідомлення, Свобода слова
Правозахисники визнали затриманих журналістів Радіо Свобода політв’язнями
Родичі та колеги все ще не знають, які звинувачення висунули журналістам
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By VilneSlovo | 07/20/2021 | Повідомлення, Свобода слова
Посольства західних країн вшанували пам’ять Шеремета в роковини вбивства
У посольствах вказують на те, що справа досі не розкрита, а вбивці не покарані
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By Gromada | 07/20/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Понеділкова злива не пошкодила інфраструктуру київського метрополітену – Макогон
«Всі роботи проводилися власними силами в межах робочих змін без додаткового штату»
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By Gromada | 07/20/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство

