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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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US sanction against Russian engineering firm Power Machines is against WTO rules, company claims

power machines
© Power_Machines / Twitter
The inclusion of the Russian power engineering firm Power Machines in the extended list of the US sanctions against Russia is illegal and contradicts the regulations of the World Trade Organization (WTO), the company says.

The US Treasury Department has extended the list of Russian individuals and companies subject to sanctions imposed on Moscow over the Ukraine crisis. The list includes those allegedly involved in delivering Siemens turbines to Crimea. The peninsula in the Black Sea has been under international sanctions after breaking away from Ukraine and joining Russia in 2014.

Among the companies accused of working in Crimea is Power Machines, which has been cooperating with Siemens on the production of turbines, as well as the Technopromexport engineering company (part of the Rostec State Corporation), which is building two power plants in Crimea.

Cardboard Box

More Alaskans are turning to the state for health care and food, prompting concerns over costs and sustainability of programs

alaska food pantry
© Loren Holmes / Alaska Dispatch News
Volunteers bag potatoes at the Food Bank of Alaska’s Mobile Food Pantry last year. More than 100 households received perishable food at the biweekly event.
Tens of thousands of people have turned to the government for health care and food amid Alaska's recession, prompting questions from state lawmakers about the sustainability of those safety-net programs.

Gov. Bill Walker's administration projects 240,000 people to be enrolled in the Medicaid health-care program next year, up from 163,000 in 2015. And 101,000 Alaskans were receiving food stamps in September, up from 72,000 a year earlier, according to preliminary federal data.

The federal government covers most of the cost of Alaska's food stamp program.

But Medicaid - supported by both the state and federal governments - is one of the biggest line-items in Alaska's budget, at about $700 million. And some conservative lawmakers say they're worried about the growth in enrollment.

In total, the program covers nearly one-third of the state's population.

"It's going to eat us alive if we don't manage it," said Soldotna Republican Sen. Peter Micciche, who oversees the state health department's budget for the Senate.

Oscar

And the award for having the most virtue signalling hypocrites in one building goes to...the Grammys!

Piers Morgan Grammy Awards
There was no doubting the highlight of last night's Grammys.

It came when Kesha gave an emotional performance of her single "Praying", about the alleged sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of her former producer 'Dr Luke' Gottwald.

She was introduced by Janelle Monae who delivered a powerful speech to the star-studded audience.

'We say time's up for pay inequality, discrimination or harassment of any kind,' Monae declared, 'and the abuse of power.'

Then Kesha appeared on stage with a host of other female stars including Cindy Lauper and Camila Cabello.

Flashlight

Lab calls into question integrity of WADA doping kits that can be manually opened

doping kits
© Arnd Wiegmann / Reuters
The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has launched an investigation into a "potential integrity issue" relating to its drug-testing bottles after a German lab complained that they could be manually opened if frozen.

The WADA-accredited laboratory in Cologne, Germany informed the agency on January 19 that the latest 'BEREG-KIT Geneva' drug-testing bottles, which were introduced last September, "may potentially be susceptible to manual opening 'upon freezing' of a sample.'"

Swiss technology company Berlinger Special AG, a manufacturer of the BEREG-KIT Geneva security bottles, was asked by WADA to clarify the issue and conduct additional tests to ensure the integrity of the kits, the agency confirmed on Sunday.

"On January 27, Berlinger advised WADA that, acting on the protocol received from the Cologne laboratory, they carried out tests on the BEREG-KIT Geneva and were unable to replicate the issue when the security bottles were handled per the product's instructions for use," WADA said in a statement published on its website.

Eye 2

Finsbury Park mosque attacker tells court he picked target only after a plot to assassinate Jeremy Corbyn failed

corbyn
© Joel Goodman / www.globallookpress.com
Darren Osborne, the suspected Finsbury Park mosque attacker, picked his target only after a failed plot to attack Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, a court has heard.

Osborne and two accomplices, named in court as 'Terry' and 'Dave,' wanted to attack Corbyn at the Al Quds Day march, Osborne told Woolwich Crown Court. The Labour leader did not attend the demonstration leading Osborn to change his plans.

When asked if he wanted to kill Corbyn, Osborne replied: "Oh, yeah. It would be one less terrorist on our streets," according to the Independent.

Osborne added: "If Sadiq Khan had been there it would have been even better, it would have been like winning the lottery."

Better Earth

Muslims have lived peacefully in Russia for centuries so what is the West doing wrong?

putin muslim cleric
Vladimir Putin said that Russia will "definitely support" Islamic education via "major state universities" in a meeting with top Muslim clergy in Kazan, RT reports.

I can already hear some voices gasping, but rest assured, this is still Putin, the traditional Russian Orthodox man, who in some publications is portrayed as a communist, and likewise in others as a Czarist, in some as an anti-immigration nationalist, while in others as a friend to Chechnya. We have already covered how a variety of ideologies each like to claim Putin as being of their school of thought, when in reality Putin is far more moderate than people realize.

Putin tries not to divide people into sectarian or ethnic lines, but rather to unite the entire country for the greater good of the whole. Before we explain what this support of Muslim education means in the context of Russian culture, let us first listen to Putin's words in full before immediately taking our favorite soundbites and appropriating him to justify our cause.

Comment: See: Also see:


Eye 1

Sex-streaming giant Pornhub will collect private data on all its UK users under new law

woman on bed
© Global Look Press
A sex-streaming giant has announced that it will collect data on anyone accessing its porn stash - but will not record their sexual preferences.

MindGeek - the biggest internet pornography company in the world - will collect information, including users' addresses and ages, under new age-verification laws.

The new Digital Economy Act means that anyone accessing porn must prove they are old enough - over 18 in the UK. Firms are currently scrambling to figure out how they will verify ages and could demand the collection of card data or ID documents.

MindGeek, the firm behind adult websites PornHub, YouPorn and RedTube, is not being ordered to store the additional information but bosses plan to do so. The company, which also owns pornography production studios including Brazzers, will use a verification system called AgeID by which a user can create a login and use a third-party mechanism to prove they're over 18. MindGeek will then charge other pornography sites to use its solution.

Bullseye

Austrian energy firm exec: Russia brings security of gas supply to Europe

natural gas
© Reuters
The European Union needs a reliable source of natural gas, and Russian state company Gazprom's Nord Stream 2 pipeline project is what Europe needs, according to an executive of Austria's oil and gas company, OMV.

"Security of gas supply is crucial, and Gazprom brings it," said OMV's member of the executive board Manfred Leitner speaking before the European Gas Conference in Vienna on Tuesday.

"It means gas to heat houses, schools, hospitals and for European energy. The gas comes safely and at an affordable price," Leitner said.

Leitner urged to stop being skeptical about Russia, given that the European gas production has been declining.

No Entry

Iraqi migrants don't want to be forcibly repatriated to Iraq, and Baghdad doesn't want them either

iraqi migrants
© REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer
Iraqi migrants Ibrahim, his wife, Ashty, their children, Mandy (L) and Muhammad (R), pose outside their caravan in the "New Jungle" makeshift camp as unseasonably cool temperatures arrive in Calais, northern France, Oct. 15, 2015.
Iraqi Ivan Sahda Moshi has been hiding at a friend's house in Gothenburg, Sweden, since Dec. 1, 2017, as a decree has been issued by Sweden to forcibly return him to Iraq. "I hope that my case is looked over again this year," Moshi told Al-Monitor. Moshi, who fled Iraq in 2007 seeking asylum in Sweden, belongs to a Christian family, all of whom have fled Iraq to different countries. He fears going back, as militias threatened to kill him due to his work with US forces, not to mention that Christians are a threatened minority in Iraq.

On Jan. 10, Abdul Bari Zebari, the head of parliament's Foreign Relations Committee, indicated that the European Union is intending to forcibly return Iraqi immigrants whose asylum requests have been rejected back to Iraq. He called upon the Iraqi government to not accept any negotiations with the European Union concerning forcibly returning Iraqi immigrants, as he suggests that returning them should be voluntary, not compulsory.

In a similar case to Moshi's, Hassan Amer, whose asylum request has been rejected by Austrian authorities, had to submit an appeal against his rejection before Vienna courts to obtain a new hearing session where he will talk about the circumstances on which he submitted his request for asylum.

Cardboard Box

Woman ordered a hat on Amazon and was accidentally sent illegal cancer drug from Ukraine

Woman shopping on laptop
© Getty
Online shopping is a wonderful thing.

You can get pretty much anything delivered to your front door in just a few days.

It's especially helpful when the item you're after is a tad unusual, and not something you'll find on the shelves in Asda or Wilkos.

Unsurprising Meagan Day's search for a felt sauna hat led her online, and she quickly found the perfect one.

Simple.