Clipping Internacional – 27.01.2021

Argentina e Chile querem construir um cabo óptico submarino para Oceania e Ásia

– Putin fala com Biden sobre importância da normalização das relações bilaterais entre Rússia e EUA

– Dois homens foram extraditados da Austrália para os Estados Unidos para enfrentar acusações por seus supostos papéis em um esquema para roubar centenas de milhares de usuários de telefones celulares em mais de US$ 50 milhões por serviços indesejados de mensagens de texto

– Ministro da Defesa do Japão nega alegações sobre acordo secreto com militares dos EUA

– Caças F-35 israelenses são vistos sobrevoando o céu do Líbano

– Principal general de Israel disse nesta terça-feira (26) que seus militares estavam renovando seus planos operacionais contra o Irã e que qualquer retorno dos EUA a um acordo nuclear de 2015 com Teerã seria “errado”.

– Caças de Taiwan realizam exercícios após última incursão da China

Israel proíbe voos internacionais por uma semana para evitar variantes do coronavírus; governo fechou o maior aeroporto internacional do país, nos arredores de Tel Aviv, desde a 0h desta terça-feira (26); nenhum voo comercial internacional pode desembarcar em Israel ou embarcar para o exterior

– Suprimento de oxigênio em hospital referência para atendimento da covid-19 na região de Lisboa, Portugal, falha, e governo admite pedir ajuda internacional

Canadá divulgará mais medidas para restringir viagens ao exterior; país em breve tornará as viagens ao exterior mais difíceis em uma tentativa de reprimir o coronavírus, disse o primeiro-ministro Justin Trudeau nesta terça-feira (26) sem dar detalhes, o que levou as principais províncias a exigirem ação

União Europeia ameaça barrar exportação de vacinas enquanto demanda europeia não for suprida

Peru mobiliza militares até a fronteira com o Equador para impedir entrada de migrantes; governo peruano justifica fechamento de fronteiras pela pandemia de Covid-19

China doa testes de covid-19 e ventiladores à Bolívia

Putin vs Navalny, what’s the score?

By Transparency International

Russian President Vladimir Putin won’t say his fiercest critic Alexey Navalny’s name in public but the two men made global headlines this week – together. 

On Sunday night, the Berlin-Moscow flight bringing Navalny home after his five-month stay in Germany was unexpectedly diverted to a different airport where the police detained him upon arrival.  

Our colleagues at Transparency International Russia called out the authorities for repressive measures against the opposition leader and anti-corruption activist, urging them “to be guided not by considerations of political expediency, but by the principles of justice and the rule of law.” 

Image: Konstantin Lenkov / Shutterstock. On 21 August 2020, a protester in St. Petersburg stands with a poster that reads ‘One for all and all for one.’

Many world leaders were also quick to condemn Navalny’s arrest and called for his immediate release.  

But he will be kept in jail at least for a month, already missing a hearing dedicated to his poisoning at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Absent, too, was the Russian government who, despite an invitation, did not send a representative to this hearing.  

Russian government has also warned against country-wide demonstrations planned for Saturday, detaining some of the members of Navalny’s team yesterday.  

Last summer, Navalny’s poisoning by what’s confirmed to have been a deadly nerve agent Novichok sent shockwaves around the world.  

While recuperating in Germany, Navalny joined the Bellingcat team in investigating his murder attempt. The findings implicated Russian security services both in the poisoning and its subsequent cover-up.  

And, as it turned out this week, Navalny was involved in at least one other big project during his stay in Germany.  

On Tuesday, Navalny’s team dropped a bombshell investigation into a secretive estate on the Black Sea coast allegedly owned by none other than President Putin himself. A two-hour-long accompanying video has already been viewed more than 58 million times on YouTube.  

The investigation details suspicions that proceeds of corruption may have built ‘Putin’s palace’, which is estimated to have already cost US$1.35 billion. 

Image: Putin’s ‘palace’, as seen on the video released by Navalny’s team on YouTube

The President’s spokesperson has dismissed the allegations as ‘nonsense’ but what will Russian people make of it? 

A few weeks ago, Transparency International Russia’s public opinion poll showed that 44 per cent of Russian citizens believe corruption is widespread at the highest levels of their government. These results are not too different from the findings of our Global Corruption Barometer 2016, where 38 per cent of Russians said government officials are the most corrupt.  

The extent of high-level corruption in Russia has also been documented by exposés such as the Troika Laundromat, a 2019 investigation by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project. At the risk of sounding like an old record – which is also how Russian government spokesperson has described Navalny’s latest investigation – here’s another reminder: Russia consistently receives poor scores on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI).  

On the 2019 CPI, the country scored 28 out of 100, where 0 is highly corrupt and 100 is very clean. The score is less than the average score for the Eastern Europe and Central Asia region.

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