Tag Archives: pledges

Hollywood Condemn Hamas Attacks, Disney Pledges $2 Million for Relief in Israel – U.S. News – Haaretz

  1. Hollywood Condemn Hamas Attacks, Disney Pledges $2 Million for Relief in Israel – U.S. News Haaretz
  2. “No Justification For The Murder & Kidnapping Of Civilians,” SAG-AFTRA Says In Response To Hamas Attack On Israel Deadline
  3. Dana Walden Sends Staff-Wide Memo at Disney Reflecting on ‘Worst Attack On the Jewish People Since the Holocaust’ Variety
  4. Comcast Donating $2M to Support Humanitarian Relief Amid Israel Crisis Hollywood Reporter
  5. Donny Deutsch Implores Companies, Celebrities to Denounce Antisemitism: ‘Silence Isn’t Leading’ (Exclusive) Yahoo Entertainment
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Finland Pipeline Damage: NATO Pledges Response If Sabotage – Bloomberg

  1. Finland Pipeline Damage: NATO Pledges Response If Sabotage Bloomberg
  2. Baltic gas pipeline leak ‘likely caused by external activity’ says Finland’s president euronews
  3. Estonia launches investigation into underwater communications cable malfunction -PM Reuters
  4. If attack on Alliance’s critical infrastructure is deliberate, there will be a decisive response – NATO Yahoo News
  5. FTSE 100 posts third best day of 2023 as bond selloff eases; gas prices jump after Balticconnector pipe leak – as it happened The Guardian
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Blinken pledges aid after Morocco earthquake, defends G20 statement on Ukraine war – ABC News

  1. Blinken pledges aid after Morocco earthquake, defends G20 statement on Ukraine war ABC News
  2. Start your week smart: Morocco earthquake, Mark Meadows, Georgia grand jury, G20 Summit, Nancy Pelosi CNN
  3. Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Jonathan Karl of ABC This Week – United States Department of State Department of State
  4. The National | Morocco earthquake rescue, Canadian killed in Ukraine, Secret warship mission CBC.ca
  5. Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Jake Tapper of CNN’s State of the Union – United States Department of State Department of State
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America’s Top Hostage Envoy Pledges to Secure Evan Gershkovich’s Release From Russian Prison – The Wall Street Journal

  1. America’s Top Hostage Envoy Pledges to Secure Evan Gershkovich’s Release From Russian Prison The Wall Street Journal
  2. Evan Gershkovich declared ‘unlawfully detained’ as Biden admin goes on ‘full-court press’ for his release Fox News
  3. Russia-Ukraine war live: Kremlin denies Putin personally approved Evan Gershkovich arrest; Norway expels 15 Russian diplomats The Guardian
  4. The Guardian view on Russia’s hostage-taking: free Evan Gershkovich The Guardian
  5. Before Evan Gershkovich, Nicholas Daniloff Was the Last U.S. Reporter Accused of Espionage by Moscow The Wall Street Journal
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`Will cut every cent sent to enemies`: Nikki Haley pledges to stop all aid for Pak, China – WION

  1. `Will cut every cent sent to enemies`: Nikki Haley pledges to stop all aid for Pak, China WION
  2. Nikki Haley vows to cut foreign aid to China, Pakistan if voted to power The Hindu
  3. Nikki Haley says if voted to power, she will cut foreign aid to countries like China & Pakistan which hate America Times of India
  4. ‘Pakistan in the pocket of China…’: US presidential hopeful Nikki Haley calls for foreign aid cuts | Mint Mint
  5. Will cut every cent in foreign aid: GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley pledges to cut billions in foreign aid to Pakistan, China The Tribune India
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GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley pledges to cut billions in foreign aid to China, other US adversaries – Fox News

  1. GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley pledges to cut billions in foreign aid to China, other US adversaries Fox News
  2. `Will cut every cent sent to enemies`: Nikki Haley pledges to stop all aid for Pak, China WION
  3. Will cut every cent in foreign aid: GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley pledges to cut billions in foreign aid to Pakistan, China The Tribune India
  4. Nikki Haley vows to cut foreign aid to China, Pakistan if voted to power The Hindu
  5. ‘Pakistan in the pocket of China…’: US presidential hopeful Nikki Haley calls for foreign aid cuts | Mint Mint
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European Central Bank raises rates by 50 basis points, pledges further hike in March

Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank speaks at an event.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The European Central Bank on Thursday confirmed expectations of a 50 basis point interest rate increase, taking its key rate to 2.5%.

In a statement, it pledged to “stay the course in raising interest rates significantly at a steady pace” and, in unusually firm language, said it intended to hike by another 50 basis points in March.

It said keeping rates at restrictive levels would control price rises by dampening demand and keeping inflation expectations under constrained. Decisions at future meetings will be data-dependent, it added.

The move follows four hikes in 2022 which brought euro zone rates out of negative territory for the first time since 2014.

Euro zone inflation fell for the third straight month in January, flash figures published Wednesday showed, but headline inflation remained high at 8.5%. Core inflation, which excludes energy and food, was flat at 5.2%.

Attention now turns to Thursday’s speech and press conference by Lagarde, which begins at 2:45 p.m. Frankfurt time, for an indication of the central bank’s latest outlook on the economy and further details of its plans for hiking and quantitative tightening.

In December, it announced that from March it would begin to reduce its 5 trillion euro ($5.49 trillion) balance sheet by 15 billion euros per month on average until the end of June 2023.

On Thursday, it said that in line with current practice it would continue partial reinvestments of its maturing debt.

“The remaining reinvestment amounts will be allocated proportionally to the share of redemptions across each constituent programme of the APP (Asset Purchase Programme) and, under the public sector purchase programme (PSPP), to the share of redemptions of each jurisdiction and across national and supranational issuers,” its statement said.

This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.

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Ukraine says US and German tank pledges ‘only the beginning’ and calls for fighter jets | Ukraine

Commitments from the United States and Germany to send advanced battle tanks to counter Russian aggression has been hailed as “only the beginning” by a senior official in Ukraine, who said hundreds of tanks were needed, as Kyiv renewed its calls for fighter jets.

Andriy Yermak, the head of Ukraine’s presidential administration, made the comments as President Volodymyr Zelenskiy praised the decision by western allies, urging them to provide large quantities of tanks quickly.

“The key now is speed and volumes. Speed in training our forces, speed in supplying tanks to Ukraine. The numbers in tank support,” he said in his nightly video address on Wednesday.

Moment Volodymyr Zelenskiy learns Germany approved sending tanks to Ukraine during interview – video

Joe Biden approved sending 31 M1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, after weeks of speculation. The reversal of the US’s position came after Germany confirmed it would make 14 of its Leopard 2A6 tanks available to Ukraine, and give partner countries its permission to re-export other tanks.

Berlin’s decision unlocks offers by Finland, Spain, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland and Norway to provide Ukraine with their own German-manufactured Leopards.

Zelenskiy celebrated the “extremely good news”, describing the US decision to send Abrams as a “very powerful step”. “There is a tank coalition. There is a decision to launch the supply of tanks for our defence. Modern tanks,” he said.

Leopard 2 inventories of European and Nato countries

Western officials believe the provision of 100 tanks could be enough to make the difference in terms of holding ground in the event of a Russian spring offensive and then retaking territory. The first instalment of Leopard 2 tanks is expected to arrive in three months.

Zelenskiy also said he had spoken to Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenberg and called for supplies of long-range missiles and aircraft to add to the commitments by the United States and Germany.

Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba said he had also spoken to Poland’s foreign minister, Zbigniew Rau, about fighter jets, a request that has been repeatedly put to Nato allies without success.

Yuriy Sak, who advises Ukraine’s defence minister, Oleksiy Reznikov, said fighter jets would be “the next big hurdle”. “If we get them, the advantages on the battlefield will be just immense,” he said. “It’s not just F-16s. Fourth generation aircraft, this is what we want.”

Previous calls for US-made jets have not borne fruit, but the Dutch government recently said it would consider transferring some of its 50 planes in coordination with allies. Ukraine has until now received only Soviet-era planes and spare parts for its air force.

Image of Geram Leopard A26

In public statements, Washington and Berlin had denied any connection between their respective decisions on whether to send tanks, although media reports said German officials had made clear in private that the Leopards were conditional on the US making a similar commitment.

Berlin’s hesitant stance on the battle tank question had caused disquiet among its western allies, and puzzlement in Germany in recent days. Critics in Scholz’s own governing coalition accused his chancellory of being paralysed by inner-party conflicts.

Scholz said in a statement: “This decision follows our well-known line of supporting Ukraine to the best of our ability. We are acting in a closely coordinated manner internationally.”

Russia denounced the American and German initiatives as “a rather disastrous plan”. Dmitry Peskov, a Kremlin spokesperson, said: “The main thing is, this is a completely obvious overestimation of the potential [this] would add to the armed forces of Ukraine. It is yet another fallacy, a rather profound one.”

Others reacted with more fury; Sergei Nechayev, Moscow’s ambassador to Germany, said: “This extremely dangerous decision takes the conflict to a new level of confrontation.”

In making the announcement to send 31 Abrams tanks, Biden said, “There is no offensive threat to Russia.”

“Putin expected Europe and the United States to weaken our resolve,” the president said in the Roosevelt Room at the White House. “He expected our support for Ukraine to crumble with time. He was wrong … These tanks are further evidence of our enduring, unflagging commitment to Ukraine and our confidence in the skill of the Ukrainian forces.”

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Ukraine pledges sweeping personnel changes as allies jostle over tanks

  • Zelenskiy promises changes amid corruption scandal
  • Poland says it is planning to send Leopard tanks to Ukraine
  • Germany hints at tank export approval as allies apply pressure

KYIV, Jan 24 (Reuters) – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said personnel changes were being carried out at senior and lower levels, following the most high-profile graft allegations since Russia’s invasion that threaten to dampen Western enthusiasm for the Kyiv government.

Reports of a fresh scandal in Ukraine, which has a long history of shaky governance, come as European countries bicker over giving Kyiv German-made Leopard 2 tanks – the workhorse of armies across Europe that Ukraine says it needs to break through Russian lines and recapture territory.

“There are already personnel decisions – some today, some tomorrow – regarding officials at various levels in ministries and other central government structures, as well as in the regions and in law enforcement,” Zelenskiy said in his nightly video address on Monday.

Zelenskiy, who did not identify the officials to be replaced, said his plans included toughening oversight on travelling abroad for official assignments.

Several Ukrainian media outlets have reported that cabinet ministers and senior officials could be sacked imminently.

On Sunday, anti-corruption police said they had detained the deputy infrastructure minister on suspicion of receiving a $400,000 kickback over the import of generators last September, an allegation the minister denies.

A newspaper investigation accused the Defence Ministry of overpaying suppliers for soldiers’ food. The supplier has said it made a technical mistake and no money had changed hands.

David Arakhamia, head of Zelenskiy’s Servant of the People party, said officials should “focus on the war, help victims, cut bureaucracy and stop dubious business”.

“We’re definitely going to be jailing actively this spring. If the humane approach doesn’t work, we’ll do it in line with martial law,” he said.

‘SPRING WILL BE DECISIVE’

On the battlefront, front lines have been largely frozen in place for two months despite heavy losses on both sides.

Ukraine says Western tanks would give its ground troops the firepower to break Russian defensive lines and resume their advance. But Western allies have been unable to reach an agreement on arming Kyiv with tanks, wary of moves that could cause Moscow to escalate.

Berlin, which must approve Leopard re-exports, has said it is willing to act quickly if there is a consensus among allies.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, whose country borders Ukraine, said Warsaw would seek permission to send Leopard tanks to Kyiv and was trying to get others on board.

Germany is not blocking the re-export of Leopard tanks to Ukraine, the European Union’s top diplomat said on Monday.

American lawmakers have pressed their government to export M1 Abrams battle tanks to Ukraine, saying even a symbolic number would help push European allies to do the same.

Britain has said it will supply 14 Challenger 2 tanks. French President Emmanuel Macron said he did not rule out the possibility of sending Leclerc tanks.

Moscow sought to apply its own pressure.

“All countries which take part, directly or indirectly, in pumping weapons into Ukraine and in raising its technological level bear responsibility” for continuing the conflict, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.

Ukraine and Russia are both believed to be planning spring offensives to break the deadlock in what has become a war of attrition in eastern and southern Ukraine.

“If the major Russian offensive planned for this time fails, it will be the ruin of Russia and Putin,” Vadym Skibitsky, deputy head of Ukraine’s military intelligence, said in an interview with news site Delfi.

One person was killed and two injured in Russian shelling of a residential district of the town of Chasiv Yar on Monday that damaged at least nine high-rise buildings, Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of Donetsk region, said on Telegram.

“The Russians are deliberately terrorizing and killing the civilian population. And they will pay dearly for this,” he said.

Reuters could not independently verify battlefield reports.

‘ACTING AGAINST THE WEST’

In the 11 months since invading Ukraine, Russia has shifted its rhetoric on the war from an operation to “denazify” and “demilitarise” its neighbour to casting it as defence against an aggressive West. Kyiv and its Western allies call it an unprovoked act of aggression.

On Monday, the new general in charge of Russia’s military operations in Ukraine warned that modern Russia had never seen such “intensity of military hostilities”, forcing it to carry out offensive operations.

“Our country and its armed forces are today acting against the entire collective West,” Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov told the news website Argumenty i Fakty.

Military reforms, announced mid-January, could be adjusted to respond to threats to Russia’s security, which include Sweden and Finland’s aspirations to join NATO and “the use of Ukraine as a tool for waging a hybrid war against our country,” he said.

Ukraine imposed sanctions on 22 Russians associated with the Russian Orthodox Church for what President Zelenskiy said was their support of genocide under the cloak of religion.

Reporting by Reuters bureaus; writing by Costas Pitas and Himani Sarkar; Editing by Stephen Coates

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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China pledges ‘final victory’ over COVID as outbreak raises global alarm

  • Virus spreading fast in China after policy U-turn
  • Japan latest country requiring tests from China arrivals
  • EU meeting to discuss China travel policy
  • WHO seeking data from Chinese scientists

BEIJING, Jan 4 (Reuters) – Global health officials tried to determine the facts of China’s raging COVID-19 outbreak and how to prevent a further spread as the government’s mouthpiece newspaper on Wednesday rallied citizens for a “final victory” over the virus.

China’s axing of its stringent virus curbs last month has unleashed COVID on a 1.4 billion population that has little natural immunity having been shielded from the virus since it emerged in its Wuhan city three years ago.

Funeral homes have reported a spike in demand for their services, hospitals are packed with patients, and international health experts predict at least one million deaths in China this year.

But officially, China has reported a small number of COVID deaths since the policy U-turn and has played down concerns about a disease that it was previously at pains to eradicate through mass lockdowns even as the rest of the world opened up.

“China and the Chinese people will surely win the final victory against the epidemic,” Chinese Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said in an editorial, rebutting criticism of its tough anti-virus regime that triggered historic protests late last year.

As it now dismantles those restrictions, China has been particularly critical of decisions by some countries to impose a requirement for a COVID test on its citizens, saying they are unreasonable and lack scientific basis.

Japan became the latest country to mandate pre-departure COVID testing for travellers from China, following similar measures by the United States, Britain, South Korea and others.

Health officials from the 27-member European Union are due to meet on Wednesday to discuss a coordinated response to China travel. Most European Union countries favour pre-departure COVID testing for visitors from China.

China, which has been largely shut off from the world since the pandemic began in late 2019, will stop requiring inbound travellers to quarantine from Jan. 8. But it will still demand that arriving passengers get tested before they begin their journeys.

DOUBT ON DATA

Meanwhile, World Health Organization officials met Chinese scientists on Tuesday amid concern over the accuracy of China’s data on the spread and evolution of its outbreak.

The U.N. agency had invited the scientists to present detailed data on viral sequencing and to share data on hospitalizations, deaths and vaccinations.

The WHO would release information about the talks later, probably at a Wednesday briefing, its spokesperson said. The spokesperson earlier said the agency expected a “detailed discussion” about circulating variants in China, and globally.

Last month, Reuters reported that the WHO had not received data from China on new COVID hospitalisations since Beijing’s policy shift, prompting some health experts to question whether it might be concealing the extent of its outbreak.

China reported five new COVID-19 deaths for Tuesday, compared with three a day earlier, bringing the official death toll to 5,258, very low by global standards.

But the toll is widely believed to be much higher. British-based health data firm Airfinity has said about 9,000 people in China are probably dying each day from COVID.

There were chaotic scenes at Shanghai’s Zhongshan hospital where patients, many of them elderly, jostled for space on Tuesday in packed halls between makeshift beds where people used oxygen ventilators and got intravenous drips.

With COVID disruptions slowing China’s $17 trillion economy to its lowest growth in nearly half a century, investors are now hoping policymakers will intervene to counter the slide.

China’s yuan hovered at a four-month high against the dollar on Wednesday, after its finance minister pledged to step up fiscal expansion this year, days after the central bank said it would implement more policy support for the economy.

BOOKING BOOM

Despite some countries imposing restrictions on Chinese visitors, interest in outbound travel from the world’s most populous country is cranking up, state media reported.

Bookings for international flights from China have risen by 145% year-on-year in recent days, the government-run China Daily newspaper reported, citing data from travel platform Trip.com.

The number of international flights to and from China is still a fraction of pre-COVID levels. The government has said it will increase flights and make it easier for people to travel abroad.

Thailand, a major destination for Chinese tourists, is expecting at least five million Chinese arrivals this year, its tourism authority said on Tuesday.

More than 11 million Chinese tourists visited Thailand in 2019, nearly a third of its total visitors.

But there are already signs that an increase in travel from China could pose problems abroad.

South Korea, which began testing travellers from China for COVID on Monday, said more than a fifth of the test results were positive.

Authorities there were hunting on Wednesday for one Chinese national who tested positive but went missing while awaiting quarantine. The person, who was not identified, could face up to a year in prison or fines of 10 million won ($7,840).

Reporting by Bernard Orr and Liz Lee in Beijing and Brenda Goh in Shanghai, Hyonhee Shin in Seoul and Kantaro Komiya in Tokyo; Writing by John Geddie; Editing by Robert Birsel

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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