DynamicWP DEMO » Europe http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo This is a test website to demonstrate WordPress themesThu, 06 May 2010 08:17:24 +0000en-UShourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5Berlusconi’s scarlet fever http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/berlusconis-scarlet-fever/ http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/berlusconis-scarlet-fever/#commentsFri, 30 Oct 2009 13:48:54 +0000rezahttp://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/?p=52silvio-berlusconi_speakingMost people who contract a serious illness take to their beds and try to sleep it off – but not Silvio Berlusconi.

The Italian Prime Minister, suffering from a case of scarlet fever, was so incensed by a political talk show earlier this week that he shrugged off his condition to phone in and register his disgust.

The item that roused the premier’s ire was a discussion of his legal troubles on the Ballarò talk show on Tuesday night. Berlusconi, whose relations with the Italian media have long been bombastic, made the surprise call to let rip at the “communist judges” who had hours earlier upheld a conviction against British lawyer David Mills for accepting a $600,000 (£365,000) bribe to lie in court on his behalf.

The tirade, greeted by a mixture of boos and cheers by the studio audience, was remarkable even by Berlusconi’s standards. After a rant at the judges, the sickly premier launching a further spectacular diatribe against the show and RAI state television, which produces it.

“The anomaly in Italy is not Silvio Berlusconi,” he said, “but the communist prosecutors and communist judges of Milan who have attacked Berlusconi in every way possible.”

But despite his intervention, the Prime Minister’s legal troubles look unlikely to go away. Now the Constitutional Court has stripped him of his immunity from prosecution, he faces prosecution over his alleged role in the Mills bribery affair – and another unrelated corruption trial is due to resume on 16 November.

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Jacques Chirac to stand trial http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/jacques-chirac-to-stand-trial/ http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/jacques-chirac-to-stand-trial/#commentsFri, 30 Oct 2009 13:47:34 +0000rezahttp://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/?p=50jackues_CHIRACFormer French President Jacques Chirac has been ordered to stand trial in an alleged corruption scandal dating back to his tenure as Paris mayor, a judicial official said today.

A magistrate has ordered Chirac to stand trial on charges of “embezzlement” and “breach of trust,” the official said on condition of anonymity because the case is ongoing.

The investigating magistrate, Xaviere Simeoni, has been probing whether people in Chirac’s circle were given sham jobs as advisers and paid by Paris City Hall, even though they weren’t working for it.

Chirac’s office said in a statement that he was “serene, and determined to prove in court that none of the jobs still being debated were fake.” A prosecutor can still appeal the decision.

Suspicions of corruption and nepotism, mostly dating from his time as mayor, dogged Chirac’s presidency. Chirac was mayor of Paris from 1977-95 and president of France from 1995 until May 16, 2007.

But while judges closed in on those in Chirac’s circle — his former Prime Minister Alain Juppe was convicted of party financing irregularities in 2004 — Chirac long used his presidential immunity to keep investigators at arm’s length.

After Chirac left the presidency and no longer had immunity, a judge filed preliminary embezzlement charges against him in 2007. Chirac’s statement Friday acknowledging the decision to send him to court said he was not above the law.

The prosecutor’s office had requested that the case against Chirac be dropped. That request said investigations turned up no proof of willful wrongdoing, and also said that the statute of limitations had expired on many of the events in question.

But the judge did not follow that recommendation.

Today, the judge said the breach of trust charges dated back to the period before 1994, while the embezzlement charges dated from March 1994 to May 1995 — when he was sworn in as chief of state

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Support for Blair http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/support-for-blair-crumbles-despite-pms-rescue-mission/ http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/support-for-blair-crumbles-despite-pms-rescue-mission/#commentsFri, 30 Oct 2009 12:57:04 +0000rezahttp://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/?p=41tony-blairTony Blair’s prospects of becoming the first EU President were fading last night despite a last-minute plea from Gordon Brown to Europe’s leaders to “get real” and back his predecessor for the post.

A succession of countries cast doubt on Mr Blair’s chances of winning enough support to be nominated as the first President of the European Council as a two-day EU summit opened in Brussels.

France and Germany, who could hold the key to the selection of the new President, also appeared to be cooling in their earlier enthusiasm for Mr Blair’s candidacy.

However, the prospect was growing of the United Kingdom landing the consolation prize of the new post of EU High Representative – effectively its Foreign Minister – with a surprise new British contender emerging for the position. The former cabinet minister Baroness Cathy Ashton, the European trade commissioner, is being championed for the job by both EU diplomats and David Miliband, the British Foreign Secretary.

After Mr Brown’s Eurostar train arrived in Brussels, the Prime Minister travelled straight to a meeting of European socialist leaders to press the case for Mr Blair. He argued that Mr Blair was an excellent negotiator and a passionate pro-European. Mr Brown told them: “You need to get real – this is a unique opportunity to get a strong, progressive politician to be the President of the council.”

Germany’s Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported last night that during the meeting, Gordon Brown engaged in a shouting match over Blair’s candidacy with Martin Schultz, the leader of the Socialist group in the European Parliament.

Shultz has been campaigning against Blair for weeks. He opposes his appointment because of his support for the Iraq war and his decisions not to introduce the Euro in Britain and to keep the country out of the Schengen agreement, which in effect creates a borderless zone between 25 European countries.

Following the meeting of Social Democrat leaders, the Sueddeutsche described Blair’s chances of obtaining the job as “about zero”, adding: “Blair is out of the running. Nobody wants to give him that job.” Angela Merkel was said to be “not particularly ethusiastic” about his candidature.

Later Mr Brown insisted at a press conference: ‘The European agenda for the next five years will be jobs, growth, climate change and world trade. That is the long-term agenda and Tony Blair is well-placed for that.” But the Prime Minister, who disclosed that he had spoken to Mr Blair this week, acknowledged that other candidates would also emerge once the Lisbon Treaty is finally ratified by the Czech Republic, the final nation to endorse the document.

UK diplomatic sources acknowledged that Mr Blair’s chances are waning rapidly, pointing out that the majority of countries in the EU now had centre-right governments who would not instinctively support him. They told The Independent that they had gone into bat for Mr Blair with their “eyes wide open” about his chances of success, but had taken the stance because they believed it would be in Britain’s and Europe’s interests to have him in the job.

Yesterday Spain, previously viewed as a backer of Blair, dealt a blow to his prospects when Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero said: “We socialists aspire to the post of High Representative.” His comments would appear to rule out a candidate from a left-leaning background also landing the top job.

With the powers of the new President still to be defined, Denmark, Finland and Ireland joined the Benelux countries yesterday by declaring that the President should take a largely behind-the-scenes role rather than acting as a world statesman. That position, which is gaining growing support, would also rule out Mr Blair.

Meanwhile, Herman van Rompuy, the Prime Minister of Belgium who is also in the running, echoed widely held objections to the idea of an internationally known politician taking the post. “The future of the EU does not depend on one person, it depends on someone who will help it operate better,” he said. Asked whether he would block Mr Blair’s candidacy, he shrugged and added: “We do not have a veto right.”

Jean Asselborn, the Deputy Prime Minister of Luxembourg – whose Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker is another of Mr Blair’s rivals – said, in an interview with ITV’s News at Ten: “There is a link and there will remain a link for the coming generation between Iraq, [President George] Bush and Tony Blair. Sometimes in politics you have to show that you can bring things together and not divide them. There are better candidates than Tony Blair.”

Support for the Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende appeared to grow yesterday when officials revealed that the Dutch are cranking up their lobbying campaign in Brussels. Their a move was rewarded with the backing of numerous Christian Democrats, including the Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, who said Balkenende would be a “good candidate”. The Italians were previously regarded as Mr Blair’s staunchest advocates. The Dutch PM has refused to enter into speculation over his future, telling his parliament yesterday: “I have not yet been asked and I am busy with other issues right now.”

Meanwhile, EU leaders last night agreed a deal that they hope will smooth the way towards the Czech Republic becoming the last country to sign the Lisbon Treaty. During a working dinner they accepted a Czech demand for an opt-out from a human rights charter attached to the treaty. Fredrik Reinfeldt, the Swedish Prime Minister, said there had been no discussion of candidates for the presidency.

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'); } // ]]> ]]> http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/support-for-blair-crumbles-despite-pms-rescue-mission/feed/11Brown hails ‘breakthrough’ in climate talks http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/brown-hails-breakthrough-in-climate-talks/ http://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/one-world/europe/brown-hails-breakthrough-in-climate-talks/#commentsFri, 30 Oct 2009 12:52:42 +0000rezahttp://www.dynamicwp.net/demo/?p=36tropical-stormGordon Brown declared a “breakthrough” in climate change talks today as EU leaders named the price of tackling carbon emissions.

Subject to formal endorsement in summit conclusions being prepared in Brussels, Europe has agreed to make a conditional offer to the rest of the world at global environment negotiations in Copenhagen in December.

The move is a victory for the Prime Minister, who yesterday warned the summit that failure to include figures would risk the breakdown of the UN talks.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the financial cost should not be included in the EU’s proposed package of ambitious climate change targets – at least not until other nations signal their readiness to pay their share.

But the summit text puts a 100 billion euros-a-year (£89.6bn) price on curbing global warming by 2020, of which annual public funding is estimated at 22-50bn euros.(£19.7bn – £44.8bn.)

The EU’s combined share of that would be between 7-10bn euros (£6.2bn – £8.96bn) a year by 2020.

UK officials say that, subject to the “conditional offer” being accepted in Copenhagen, the UK share of the EU contribution would work out at about £1bn a year by 2020.

Mr Brown had wanted a narrower range of 30-40bn euros (£26.8bn – £35.8bn) as the global public funding estimate to keeping global warming below a two degree rise, but, to bring Ms Merkel on board, he accepted the need for a looser range of figures.

“I think that this is a breakthrough that takes us forward to Copenhagen and makes a Copenhagen agreement possible.” said the Prime Minister.

“Europe is making three conditional offers – money on the table, saying we will do everything we can to make a climate change agreement happen, and help for developing countries into that agreement.

“Now we want other countries to respond to what we’re doing.

“I think developing countries can now say they are ready to cut their emissions substantially over the next few years.”

Mr Brown also wants to up the ante by pressing the world to start making financial contributions to the climate change costs earlier than the planned start-date of 2013.

Additional figures added to the EU offer today call for global pre-2013 spending on climate change of 5-7bn euros (£4.5bn – £6.2bn).

A UK government official said: “All of this is conditional on other countries putting in their fair share”.

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