Saturday, 6 November 2021

Orban’s uniting Europe’s Right. That’s a problem for Brussels

 

Orban’s uniting Europe’s Right. That’s a problem for Brussels


Orban’s uniting Europe’s Right. That’s a problem for Brussels
Hungary’s President Viktor Orban has long been a stone in Brussels’ shoe, but a dispute over funding for his Trump-style southern border wall could see him become even more problematic for Ursula von der Leyen and her Eurocrats.

As if the European Union did not have enough problems with its disputes over Brexit and arguments with Poland. Now up pops Hungarian PM Viktor Orban like an inconvenient jack-in-the-box to throw yet more fuel on the roaring fire of discontent.

Orban’s latest gripe with Brussels, and to be fair there are many, is that the bloc is refusing to reimburse Hungary for the construction of a wall on its southern border. The Hungarian government sanctioned the building of the wall back in 2015, as a response to the migrant crisis that was engulfing Europe. The initial intention was to prevent Hungary being used as a corridor for the deluge of migrants attempting to make their way west.

At the time, the Hungarian government made it clear to the migrants that those who did not intend on claiming asylum in Hungary could not use the country as a stepping stone to wealthier parts of Europe. Unsurprisingly, as a result, the number of migrants making their way into Hungary was drastically cut.

However, it has been an expensive project. The building and maintenance of the 523-kilometre wall, which stretches along the Serbian and Croatian border, has cost the Hungarian taxpayer around 600 billion forints (€1.67 billion). Nevertheless, it has been successful and this year alone 92,000 illegal border crossings have been prevented.

Orban knows that this number is likely to rise in the near future when the mass of people who escaped Afghanistan following America’s farcical withdrawal make their way to Europe. Many of them will attempt to reunite with family who have already successfully settled on the continent, mainly in Germany and Austria.    

Orban also has another incentive to maintain the wall, as Covid is transmitting faster in Hungary than anywhere else in the world. An influx of untested, un-jabbed, migrants will only increase the already heavy Covid burden on his country. He is therefore doubly determined to prevent history repeating itself.  

What annoys Orban most is that he knows the vast majority of the migrants do not want to stay in Hungary and are only using his country as a stepping stone to the richer West. He therefore views the border fence as a project that has benefitted the whole of the EU, and not just his own country.

There are a few other European leaders who are grateful for the firm action Hungary has taken. For example, the outgoing Czech PM Andrej Babiš recently said “Viktor Orban should be thanked for building the fence,” as opposed to being castigated for it.

Brussels, however, takes the opposing view and a fortnight ago the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said “there is a longstanding view in the European Commission and in the European Parliament that there will be no funding of barbed wire and walls.”

Today, Orban hit back and has threatened to open a corridor through Hungary so the would-be migrants can, in future, “march up to Austria, Germany and Sweden.” If Orban is true to his word and does open a route for the migrants to make their way west, then Brussels could be forced into a rethink, as it cannot afford another migrant crisis.

One thing is for certain, another huge influx of migrants will only lead to the rise of the Right and more Euroscepticism in member states. Most western capitals are aware of this, which is why they have put the brakes on inviting the western Balkan states into the bloc, much to the consternation of Orban and numerous central European leaders.

Moreover, Orban is seeking to increase his influence within the EU’s institutions by putting together a supergroup of Eurosceptics in the European Parliament. Earlier this week, he had a virtual meeting with Polish PM Mateusz Morawiecki, who is also at loggerheads with the EU, and former Italian deputy PM Matteo Salvini, about forming a new group in the European Parliament.

These talks have been ongoing since March, and in July sixteen European political parties, including Marine Le Pen’s National Rally, signed a declaration stating that “the EU is becoming more and more a tool of radical forces that would like to carry out a cultural, religious transformation and ultimately a nationless construction of Europe, aiming to create … a European Superstate.”

If Orban manages to bring these forces together, which is easier said than done, then he could potentially have the second-largest grouping in the European Parliament. If the Right does manage to unite, then it would significantly alter the dynamic of the EU and go some way to curtailing many of its excesses. 

In many ways, Orban holds all the cards in his latest dispute with Brussels. If the EU does not cough up the cash for the wall, the Hungarian PM can simply open his borders, usher the migrants into Austria and Germany, and then point the finger directly at Brussels. This will inevitably result in a rise of Euroscepticism and in particular the parties of the Right. And it is for that reason alone I predict that the EU will be forced to blink first.

https://www.rt.com/op-ed/539489-viktor-orban-unite-right-europe/

Is this the world's heaviest potato? New Zealand couple accidentally grow a titanic tuber

 

Is this the world's heaviest potato? New Zealand couple accidentally grow a titanic tuber



 A couple in New Zealand may have grown the world's largest potato without even trying.
Colin and Donna Craig-Brown, from Ngāhinapōuri in the country's Waikato region, found the tuber growing in their garden when they were getting ready for the spring planting season.
"It was literally one of nature's pleasant surprises," Colin Craig-Brown told CNN affiliate Radio New Zealand. "Had no idea it was growing there, and I don't know how long he was there, because I was walking over the top of him all last cucumber season."
The spud, named "Doug" by the couple, may be the largest in the world, weighing in at a whopping 7.9 kilograms (17.4 pounds). The current record is held by British vegetable grower Peter Glazebrook, who registered a potato weighing 4.98 kilograms (just under 10 pounds) in 2011.
Although the Craig-Browns are still waiting for an update from the Guinness Book of World Records, Doug has already lost a kilogram in the freezer, where he is staying for the meantime.
"He's happy in the freezer," Craig-Brown told Radio New Zealand's Jesse Mulligan. "Pull him out every now and then chuck him in the sunshine and let him see the outside world."
However, Doug's existence itself was initially a bit of a shock, as the couple didn't set out to grow a giant potato at all -- and his appearance is also rather peculiar, with Craig-Brown describing him as a "nasty-looking thing."
"I didn't know what he was till I jammed the garden fork into him and dragged him out of the ground and gave him a bit of a scratch and a poke and tasted him," Craig-Brown said.


The large potato sits on a toy truck at Donna and Colin Craig-Browns home.

The interest in Doug has been huge and somewhat unexpected, leading to a "crazy" week for the Craig-Browns.
"Once we'd dug him up and everybody had a look and a poke and a fiddle and a squeeze and all that sort of thing, we showed him around and put him on Facebook, it just went a little bit silly," Craig-Brown said. "They call it viral."
Once Doug's celebrity dies down, the plan is to turn him into some vodka, in a move Colin says is a "fitting departure."
"We'll have a wake for him and we'll all toast Doug with the vodka that I'm going to make out of him," he said.
https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/giant-potato-garden-plant-record-heavy-scli-intl/index.html

Friday, 5 November 2021

World News: Russian secret agent found dead outside Berlin embassy - report

 

Russian secret agent found dead outside Berlin embassy - report


Security sources said it was unclear how the diplomat had fallen and what had caused his death.



People rest at the east side Gallery in Berlin, Germany March 17, 2020 (photo credit: MICHELE TANTUSSI/REUTERS)

People rest at the east side Gallery in Berlin, Germany March 17, 2020
(photo credit: MICHELE TANTUSSI/REUTERS)


German security services believe that a man found dead in a street outside the Russian embassy in Berlin last month was an undercover agent of Russia's FSB intelligence service, Der Spiegel reported on Friday.

The 35-year-old man's body was found early on Oct. 19, the magazine said. It said, citing security sources, that the man had fallen from an upper floor at the embassy.

Berlin police declined to comment and directed all questions to public prosecutors, who were not immediately available for comment. The discovery of a body outside the Russian diplomatic mission has not been reported previously.

The Russian FSB headquarters at Lubyanka Square in Moscow ( formerly the KGB headquarters )

Security sources told the magazine it was unclear how the diplomat had fallen and what had caused his death. The Russian embassy had not agreed to an autopsy, Der Spiegel said.

The man, who has not been named, was officially listed as an embassy second secretary, the magazine said. He was also related by family to a Russia-based senior officer of the FSB's second directorate, which deals with anti-terrorism.

A MiG-29 fighter jet performs a manoeuvre as the Russian national flag flies in the foreground (credit: REUTERS)

A MiG-29 fighter jet performs a manoeuvre as the Russian national flag flies in the foreground (credit: REUTERS)

Der Spiegel quoted the Russian embassy saying the incident was a "tragic accident" on which it would not comment "for ethical reasons." The embassy did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the Spiegel report.

A German Foreign Ministry spokesman told a regular news briefing on Friday that the German government was aware of the death of a Russian diplomat in Berlin but could not give any details.



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Wreckage of Ancient Greek Trading Ship discovered under Aegean

Ancient shipwreck dating back 2,500 years is discovered beneath Aegean Sea: Vessel was crammed with hundreds of pieces pottery and indicates there was developed trade in the region at the time

  • A marine survey of the Aegean sea revealed an ancient shipwreck and its treasure that sank 2,500 years ago
  • Scientists investigated the scene and found hundreds of amphoras, tall ancient Greek jars with two handles and a long neck
  • The ship is completely covered in the jars; scientists are working on a 3D reconstruction of the sunken vessel 

The remains of an ancient ship that sank 2,500 years ago near the island of Kythera, Greece was discovered during a marine survey for the Crete-Peloponnese subsea interconnection, the Independent Power Transmission Operator (IPTO) announced on Thursday.

During the survey of the Aegean Sea, which took place in 2019, IPTO stumbled upon hundreds of amphoras – tall ancient Greek jars with two handles and a long neck – that led them to the sunken cargo ship.

The remains sat 728 feet below the water's surface, between  Neapolis, a small town in Greece, and Kythera, and indicates there may have a developed trade in the region during the time period.

The ship's deck is covered with the ancient jars that originated from Corfu, Skopelos and Chios – islands surrounding Greece.

Scientists with the Hellenic Center for Marine Research used their oceanographic ship 'Aegean' equipped with a submarine remote control vehicle, known as the MAX ROVER, to investigate the ship and its treasures, which was conducted in September.

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During the survey of the Aegena Sea, which took place in 2019, IPTO stumbled upon hundreds of amphoras, tall ancient Greek jars with two handles and a long neck, that led them to the sunken cargo ship

During the survey of the Aegena Sea, which took place in 2019, IPTO stumbled upon hundreds of amphoras, tall ancient Greek jars with two handles and a long neck, that led them to the sunken cargo ship

Using their underwater technology, the team also found clay vessels from Chios, three pithos, a set of table vessels including a flat-bottomed table amphora, as well as a fish panel and two skyphids at the shipwreck site. 

Researchers are working on a three-dimensional image of the shipwreck that is expected to give a clearer view of the size of the vessel and the volume of its cargo.

Another ancient Greek shipwreck was discovered in 2018 at the bottom of the Black Sea and was deemed the oldest intact every to be discovered in the body of water.

The 75-foot-long Greek trading vessel was found lying whole with its mast, rudders and rowing benches after more than 2,400 years.

The remains sat 728 below the water's surface, between Neapolis and Cythera, and indicates there may have a developed trade in the region during the time period

The remains sat 728 below the water's surface, between Neapolis and Cythera, and indicates there may have a developed trade in the region during the time period

Using their underwater technology, the team also found clay vessels from Chios, three pithos, a set of table vessels including a flat-bottomed table amphora, as well as a fish panel and two skyphids at the shipwreck site

Using their underwater technology, the team also found clay vessels from Chios, three pithos, a set of table vessels including a flat-bottomed table amphora, as well as a fish panel and two skyphids at the shipwreck site

It was found in a well known 'shipwreck graveyard' that has already revealed over 60 other vessels. 

During the most recent exploration in late 2017, the team discovered what has now been confirmed as the world’s ‘oldest intact shipwreck’ – a Greek trading vessel design previously only seen on the side of ancient Greek pottery such as the ‘Siren Vase’ in the British Museum.

The ship, found 1.3 miles under the surface, could shed new light on the ancient Greek tale of Odysseus tying himself to a mast to avoid being tempted by sirens.

Prior to this discovery, ancient ships had only been found in fragments with the oldest more than 3,000 years old.

Another ancient Greek shipwreck was discovered in 2018 at the bottom of the Black Sea and was deemed the oldest intact every to be discovered in the body of water. The 75-foot-long Greek trading vessel was found lying whole with its mast, rudders and rowing benches after more than 2,400 years

Another ancient Greek shipwreck was discovered in 2018 at the bottom of the Black Sea and was deemed the oldest intact every to be discovered in the body of water. The 75-foot-long Greek trading vessel was found lying whole with its mast, rudders and rowing benches after more than 2,400 years

The team from the Black Sea Maritime Archaeological Project said the find also revealed how far from the shore ancient Greek traders could travel.

Jon Adams, the project’s chief scientist, told The Times the ship probably sank in a storm, with the crew unable to bail water in time to save it.

It was chiefly used for trading but Adams believes it may have been involved in ‘a little bit of raiding’ of coastal cities.

The ship, according to the scientist, was probably based at one of the ancient Greek settlements on what is now the Bulgarian coast.