Tag: Donald Trump

  • EU to increase support for bloc’s defence research programme

    EU to increase support for bloc’s defence research programme

    The European Union’s executive is ready to increase support for the bloc’s first ever defence research programme, a top EU official said.

    Industry Commissioner Elzbieta Bienkowska told Reuters that following a 90-million-euro pilot investment from the EU’s common budget for  2017 to 2019, the European Commission is proposing 500 million euros (563 million dollars) for the 2019 to 2020 period that could rise to one billion euros a year from 2021.

    “European citizens see security as the number one thing that Europe should provide to them, so it’s time to propose this,” Bienkowska said in an interview.

    She said that with Britain, one of EU’s leading military powers, leaving the bloc, ideas for common EU defence are gathering pace in the wake of Islamic attacks in Western Europe.

    Europeans are also worried about U.S. commitment to NATO under President Donald Trump.

    Under the proposal unveiled on Wednesday, at least three firms and two member states would have to submit a joint project to be eligible for financing from the EU budget.

    Bienkowska said if agreed by governments and the European Parliament, the EU budget would put up 20 percent of the costs of developing prototypes.

    “The prototype phase is the riskiest one and it is very important to have incentives from the European budget to prepare common projects,” she added.

    A European drone is often cited as an example of how EU funding can help get projects underway.

    Bienkowska said she also hoped to see cyber projects from smaller firms and innovative startups.

    She said she wants negotiations and legislative work between the Commission, member states and the European Parliament to finalise by the end of 2018.

    The EU’s political capital Brussels hopes it can turn the tables on Brexit, an unprecedented setback in 60 years of European integration, by moving ahead with closer defense and security cooperation, which London had long blocked.

    The EU, where most governments are also NATO allies, have also come under increased pressure from Trump, who last month scolded the Europeans for failing to spend enough on their own defence.

    Though Bienkowska said work on promoting more security and defense cooperation in the EU has started two years ago, she admitted Europe’s unease about Trump gives it additional momentum: “All developments in the United States will make our cooperation (in Europe) stronger.”

    “We will work more closely in the European Union, what we want to achieve is to have a stronger European defense and a stronger NATO.”

    Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and its subsequent backing for militias fighting Kiev troops in the industrial east of the former Soviet republic also add to the bloc’s security concerns.

    The EU estimates it loses up to a 100 billion euros a year on duplication, leaving it with far fewer capabilities than the United States.

    Years of defence cuts have worsened the issue as national governments jealously protect their own firms.

    According to EU analysis, Europe has 37 types of armored personal carriers and 12 types of tanker aircraft compared to nine and four respectively in the United States.

    “Up until now, member states were doing things completely separately, without any cooperation. I want to appeal to the member states to think about common projects, because the money will be there,” Bienkowska said.

    For the future, Bienkowska is mulling a common European defense bond for joint purchases from 2021, though she said no decisions had yet been taken.

    Italy is a proponent of issuing joint EU debt, as well as exempting various types of spending from budget deficit limits.

    Germany, on the other hand, which is the bloc’s largest economy and key power, is opposed to both these approaches.

  • UAE bans expressions of sympathy toward Qatar

    UAE bans expressions of sympathy toward Qatar

    The United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Wednesday banned people from publishing expressions of sympathy toward Qatar and will punish offenders with a jail term of up to 15 years.

    The UAE, along with several other powerful Arab states, severed diplomatic ties with fellow Gulf state Qatar on Monday over its alleged support for Islamist groups and Iran. Qatar denies the accusations.

    U.S. President Donald Trump took sides in the deep rift in the Arab world on Tuesday, praising Middle East countries’ actions against Qatar, but later spoke by phone with Saudi King Salman and stressed the need for Gulf unity.

    UAE Attorney-General Hamad Al-Shamsi announced the ban.

    Al-Shamsi said: “strict and firm action will be taken against anyone who shows sympathy or any form of bias toward Qatar, or against anyone who objects to the position of the UAE, whether it be through the means of social media, or any type of written, visual or verbal form.”

    On top of a possible jail term, offenders would also be hit with a fine of at least 500,000 dirhams, the newspaper said, citing a statement to Arabic-language media.

    Since the diplomatic row erupted, slogans against and in support of Qatar have been among the top topics discussed on Twitter in Arabic, which is a hugely popular medium of expression in the Arab world, particularly in Saudi Arabia.

    Newspapers and television channels in the region have also been engaged in a war of words over Qatar’s role.

  • UN rights chief calls out uncooperative council members

    UN rights chief calls out uncooperative council members

    A number of countries that sit on the UN Human Rights Council are not cooperating with international experts who want to shed light on abuses, UN rights chief Zeid Al-Hussein said Tuesday in Geneva.

    Zeid’s unusual finger-pointing at the start of a UN Human Rights Council session came shortly before a highly anticipated address by the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, to the 47-member body.

    The U.S. administration of President Donald Trump has been reviewing its future engagement with the council, and Haley was expected to lay out Washington’s criticism and reform demands.

    Zeid called out members such as Venezuela, Egypt, Nigeria and the Philippines for blocking multiple UN expert visits to these human rights hot spots.

    “Most astonishingly, in spite of having been elected to this council in 2015, Burundi continues to commit some of the most serious human rights violations dealt with by this council,” Al-Hussein said.

    Al-Hussein said China has let in rights monitors but they have not been able to move freely.

    Washington has questioned the legitimacy of the UN rights council, pointing not only at serious violations committed by some members, but also at the council’s strong focus on Israel and its occupation of Palestinian territory.

    In his speech, the human rights chief made a point of highlighting the suffering that both Palestinians and Israelis have had to endure in their conflict.

    “Maintain the occupation, and for both peoples there will only be a prolongation of immense pain,” he said.

    NAN reports that the U.S. threatened to withdraw from the UN Human Rights Council unless reforms are ushered in including the removal of what it sees as an “anti-Israel bias”, diplomats and activists said.

    U.S. Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, who holds cabinet rank in President Donald Trump’s administration, said on Friday that Washington would decide on whether to withdraw from the Council after its three-week session in Geneva ends this month.

    Under Trump, Washington has broken with decades of U.S. foreign policy by turning away from multilateralism.

    His decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement last week drew criticism from governments around the world.

    The Council’s critical stance of Israel has been a major sticking point for its ally the U.S.
    Washington boycotted the body for three years under President George W. Bush before rejoining under Barack Obama in 2009.

  • U.S envoys resigns over Trump decision to quit climate pact

    U.S envoys resigns over Trump decision to quit climate pact

    The acting U.S. ambassador to China has resigned over President Donald Trump’s decision to leave the Paris climate accord.

    China expert and former journalist John Pomfret also wrote on Twitter that the charge d’affaires at the U.S. embassy, David Rank, had personally informed embassy staff of his decision.

    A U.S. embassy spokeswoman would only confirm that Rank had made a “personal decision.”

    “We appreciate his years of dedicated service to the State Department,” she added.

    Rank has worked in the US foreign service for 27 years.

    He was acting ambassador while the embassy awaits the arrival of Trump appointee Terry Branstad at the end of June.

    NAN reports that on June 1, Trump announced during a speech at the White House Rose Garden that he had decided to pull out of the landmark climate deal, in part because it would not reduce global temperatures fast enough to have a significant impact.

    Trump said: “even if the Paris Agreement were implemented in full, with total compliance from all nations, it is estimated it would only produce a two-tenths of one degree Celsius reduction in global temperature by the year 2100.

    “Tiny, tiny amount.”

    Trump said he would “terminate” U.S. obligations to the Green Climate Fund, a main arm of UN climate funds, saying Washington had already paid one billion dollars and that “many other nations haven’t spent anything, and many of them will never pay one dime”.

  • Attackers plow van into London crowd and stab revelers, kill seven

    Attackers plow van into London crowd and stab revelers, kill seven

    Assailants drove a van into pedestrians at high speed on London Bridge on Saturday night before stabbing revellers on nearby streets, killing at least seven people and wounding dozens.

    Police suspect it was a terrorist attack.

    Armed police rushed to the scene and within eight minutes of receiving the first emergency call shortly after 10 pm local time had shot dead the three male attackers in the Borough Market area near the bridge.

    At least 48 people were injured in the attack – the third to hit Britain in less than three months – which came days ahead of a parliamentary election on Thursday.

    The ruling Conservative Party, opposition Labour Party and the Scottish National Party all suspended national campaigning on Sunday.

    “I can confirm that the terrible incident in London is being treated as a potential act of terrorism,” Prime Minister Theresa May said in a statement as events unfolded.

    Flags were flying at half-mast over her Downing Street residence on Sunday morning.

    London Bridge is a major transport hub and nearby Borough Market is a fashionable warren of alleyways packed with bars and restaurants which is always bustling on a Saturday night.

    The area remained cordoned off on Sunday, with train stations closed while forensic investigators could be seen working on the bridge, where buses and taxis stood abandoned.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the latest attack to hit Britain and Europe.

    Less than two weeks ago, a suicide bomber killed 22 people, including children, at a pop concert by U.S. singer Ariana Grande in Manchester in northern England.

    In March, in a similar attack to Saturday’s, a man killed five people after driving into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge in central London.

    Grande and other acts were due to give a benefit concert at Manchester’s Old Trafford cricket ground on Sunday evening to raise funds for victims of the concert bombing and their families. The event was being prepared amid tight security.

    The three attackers had been wearing what looked like explosive vests that were later found to have been hoaxes.

    The BBC showed a photograph of two possible attackers shot by police, one of whom had canisters strapped to his body.

    Hours after the attack the area remained sealed off and patrolled by armed police and counter-terrorism officers.

    The London Ambulance Service said 48 people had been taken to five hospitals across the city and a number of others had been treated at the scene for minor injuries.

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan said some of those who had been injured were in a critical condition.

    Khan said the official threat level in Britain remained at severe, meaning an attack is highly likely. It had been raised to critical after the Manchester attack, then lowered again days later.

    The mayor also said he did not think Thursday’s election should be postponed because of events in London.

    “One of the things that we can do is show that we aren’t going to be cowed, is by voting on Thursday and making sure that we understand the importance of our democracy, our civil liberties and our human rights,” Khan said.

    Roy Smith, a police officer, who was at the scene during the unfolding emergency, expressed his shock on Twitter.

    “Started shift taking photos with children playing on the South Bank. Ended it giving CPR to innocent victims attacked at London Bridge,” he wrote, adding a broken heart emoji.

    Witnesses described a white van careering into pedestrians on the bridge.

    “It looked like he was aiming for groups of people,” Mark Roberts, 53, a management consultant, told Reuters.

    He saw at least six people on the ground after the van veered on and off the pavement. “It was horrendous,” he said.

    A taxi driver told the BBC that three men got out of the van with long knives and “went randomly along Borough High Street stabbing people.”

    Witnesses described people running into a bar to seek shelter.

    “People started running and screaming, and the van crashes into the railing behind. We went towards Borough Market and everyone went inside (the bar),” one witness, who gave his name as Brian, 32, told Reuters.

    Another witness, who declined to be named, his white top covered in blood, described a scene of panic in the bar.

    “They hit the emergency alarm. There was a line of people going down to the emergency exit. And then people started screaming coming back up,” the 31-year-old said.

    “Around the corner there was a guy with a stab wound on his neck … There was a doctor in the pub and she helped him. They put pressure on the stab wound.”

    BBC radio said witnesses saw people throwing tables and chairs at the attackers to protect themselves.

    The BBC showed dozens of people being escorted to safety through a police cordon with their hands on their heads. Islamic State, losing territory in Syria and Iraq to an advance backed by a U.S-led coalition, sent out a call on instant messaging service Telegram early on Saturday urging its followers to launch attacks with trucks, knives and guns against “Crusaders” during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

    British Prime Minister May was due to chair a meeting of the government’s Cobra security committee later on Sunday.

    U.S. President Donald Trump took to Twitter to offer U.S. help to Britain.

    The White House said he had been briefed on the incidents by his national security team. German Chancellor Angela Merkel issued a statement expressing her sympathy.

    “Today, we are united across all borders in horror and sadness, but equally in determination. I stress for Germany: in the fight against all forms of terrorism, we stand firmly and decisively at the side of Great Britain,” she said.

    French president Emmanuel Macron said on Twitter that “France is standing more than ever side by side with the UK”.

    Two French nationals were among those injured in the London attack, Macron’s office said in a statement.

    Australia also said two of its citizens were caught up in the attack and that one was in hospital.

    The Manchester bombing on May 22 was the deadliest attack in Britain since July 2005, when four British Muslim suicide bombers killed 52 people in coordinated attacks on London’s transport network.

  • London attacks: U.S. adopts extra security measures

    London attacks: U.S. adopts extra security measures

    President Donald Trump has called for vigilance and what he termed “extra level of safety” following the multiple terrorist attacks in London on Saturday night.

    Trump was briefed of the incident by the National Security Adviser, Herbert McMaster, according to the White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.

    The terror incidents reportedly left unconfirmed number of people dead and injured after van ploughs into pedestrians on London Bridge and Borough Market.

    A third incident at Vauxhall, was, however said to be an isolated attack unconnected with the two other terror attacks.

    Trump tweeted shortly after the attacks: “We need to be smart, vigilant and tough.

    “We need the courts to give us back our rights.

    “We need the Travel Ban as an extra level of safety!

    “Whatever the United States can do to help out in London and the U. K., we will be there – WE ARE WITH YOU. GOD BLESS!”

    The New York Police Department (NYPD) Counter-terrorism bureau said it was “deploying officers to heavily-travelled pedestrian locations across the city”.

    NYPD spokesman Peter Donald said: “We’re monitoring the situation in London and we’re in touch with British authorities”.

    NYPD said on its Twitter handle on that: “There are no specific, credible threats to NYC.

    “Go about your Sat. night, NYPD cops are protecting you. Our prayers are with all in London”.

    The U.S. Department of State also said: “We stand ready to provide all possible consular assistance should we become aware of any affected U.S. citizen.

    “We strongly encourage U.S. citizens in the United Kingdom to directly contact concerned family members in the United States to advise them of  your safety”.

    British Prime Minister Theresa May had earlier confirmed the attack as potential acts of terrorism.

    “Following updates from police and security officials, I can confirm that the terrible incident in London is being treated as a potential act of terrorism.

    “This is a fast moving investigation. I want to express my huge gratitude to the police and emergency services who are on the scene.

    “Our thoughts are with all those who are caught up in this tragic event”.

  • How world leaders are learning  to handle Donald Trump

    How world leaders are learning to handle Donald Trump

    THE world leaders who met with Donald Trump on his Grand Tour of the Middle East and Europe over the last nine days may not have read Judah Grunstein’s essay in World Politics Review earlier this month, “How To Play the U.S. PresidentAnd Win,” but if not, their instincts and intelligence services gave them a good steer.
    How else to explain Trump’s impression, apparently sincere, that the journey was a triumph? “Trip has been very successful. We made and saved the USA many billions of dollars and millions of jobs” he tweeted as he landed Friday in Sicily on the last stop of his journey, and, on Saturday as he took off: “Just left the #G7Summit. Had great meetings on everything, especially on trade where…. we push for the removal of all trade-distorting practices….to foster a truly level playing field.”
    In fact, earlier in Saudi Arabia and Israel, he opened the door to deepening and ever deadlier involvement in the Middle East, with the potential that either of those countriestails that have been trying like hell for many years to wag the American dogwill start a war with Iran that Trump will feel he has to try to finish.
    At the Vatican, in Brussels, and at the G7, while off-the-record comments chronicled a litany of contempt by his counterparts, and photographers captured images of a scowling pope, a downcast British Prime Minister Theresa May, a head-faking French President Emmanuel Macron, by and large the leaders seemed to be ignoring Trump’s schoolboy bully demeanor and execrable etiquette.
    They got what they could get on a variety of subjects, listened to his bluster, let him pontificate about terrorism, his favorite theme, and agreed to let him ponder for another week at least the U.S. commitment to the Paris accord on climate change, as if he’d just begun to find out what’s involved and what’s at stake. Which may be the case:
    Trump “came here to learn,” his economic advisor Gary Cohn told reporters at the G7 summit in Taormina, Sicily. “He came here to get smart. His views are evolving… exactly as they should be.”
    All the other leaders were presumed to be smart before they took office. Every one of Trump’s counterparts, even 39-year-old French presidential ingenue Macron, have years more experience in government than he does. All have better manners. And, all were playing by what we might call Grunstein’s Rules:
    Come bearing gifts: Trump wants people to believe, and probably wants to believe himself, that he will always get the better of any negotiation, and always in the cause of “America first!”
    So, as Grunstein says, “the most important thing a savvy world leader should bring to [a] first meeting or interaction with Trump is an initial token concession.” China’s leader, Xi Jinping, set the standard for this, promising deals already arranged under the Obama administration, or vowing currency concessions over chocolate cake at Mar-a-lago that already are being rescinded.
    The Saudis offered rather more substantial payouts: hundreds of billions of dollars supposed to be invested in American arms and American infrastructure, but such promises have proved evanescent in the past. And of course they come with a quid pro quo: the demonization of Iran and the Shia; the willful obliviousness to the role of Sunni fundamentalism aiding and abetting al Qaeda and the so-called Islamic State.
    In many cases, says Grunstein, who is the editor in chief of the Paris-based World Politics Review, the largess directed at Trump need not be so grand, “Window dressing will do, preferably something that can be expressed in 140 characters.”
    Keep It Simple, Stupid: “The KISS acronym here serves a dual purpose,” writes Grunstein in a particularly biting paragraph. “Trump is notoriously detail-averse and unabashedly uninformed. So visiting leaders should not expect a deep understanding of the relevant issues, or even a superficial familiarity with them, nor should they seek to engage him on a granular level of policy.
    Instead, they should focus on building a personal rapport. Trump’s confident and narcissistic public persona hides deep insecurities and a brittle ego. Whereas Barack Obama famously avoided personal connections with most of his fellow world leaders, Trump seems to crave their acceptance, to the point of clinging to imagined friendships with them. Obama was all business, man; Trump is a businessman, but a needy one in search of affection.”
    This rule was followed as rigorously as possible by virtually all the leaders Trump met, including the pope. He even emerged from his meeting with Macron, who defeated Trump’s favorite in the French elections, seeming to think they had gotten along famously.
    It’s complicated: The new American president has said pretty frankly in a number of interviews that all this foreign policy stuff that looked so simple from the outside of the tent, is a whole lot more delicate and dangerous when you’re really in the thick of it. He’s also discovered, as Grunstein writes, that the United States actually needs the cooperation of a wide range of countries to achieve its objectives.
    “So once the gift-giving and rapport-building are out of the way, a smart leader will find an opportune moment to explain the reality of the situation, highlighting how much he or she wants to help out, but how difficult that actually is.”
    This seems to have been the process at work on the issue of NATO “dues,” which are not dues to the organization at all, but targets for domestic defense spending as a portion of gross domestic product. Even addressing the other leaders in Brussels, after what must have been many briefings about this, Trump seemed to think this issue could be described as if it were tardy membership fees at one of his golf clubs.
    The other leaders listened, vowed to make their 2 percent of GDP targets by 2024, as they had committed to do when Barack Obama was president, and hoped that Trump’s views would continue to “evolve” enough to save the most important strategic alliance the United States has.
    Climate change was the other “explainer,” with Pope Francis trying to get Trump to recognize the obvious validity of climate science and the need to act on its rational conclusions. (Americans may be surprised to know how much more faith in science the pope has than POTUS, but there you go.) And the message was reiterated at Taormina by the leaders of Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Canada, and the United Kingdom, whose final communique was a united show of support for the Paris accord.
    Trump told them as he told the pope, that he’d think about it. Evolving. Evolving …
    Work the refs: Grunstein suggests the American president’s outrageous ad libs and Twitter storms “are Trump’s way of working off steam, and it’s a mistake to respond to them directly or even to take them that seriously. Smart leaders will instead find the influencers in Trump’s entourage and the relevant arguments most likely to shape his opinion, and make their case with them. This means getting creative; anyone who is still calling the relevant desk at the State Department hasn’t been paying attention.”
    Son-in-law Jared Kushner would be an obvious go-to guy. (And that’s obviously what the Russians figured.) And it was not for nothing that German Chancellor Angela Merkel invited presidential daughter Ivanka Trump to a conference in Berlin a few weeks ago.
    Work the phones: “Refusing to buckle in the face of Trump’s threats is easier when it is presented to him as a common position. This is likely to become more effective with time, as Trump seems to be realizing that a zero-sum pursuit of his America First agenda is actually a recipe for an America Alone world.”
    Viz the climate change declaration by the G6 up again the American G1.
    “The entire discussion about climate was very difficult, if not to say very dissatisfying,” Merkel said as Trump flew off. “There are no indications whether the United States will stay in the Paris Agreement or not.”
    But the Big Six were not about to back down. As Macron told the French weekly newspaper Journal du Dimanche, alluding to his now famous death-grip photo op with Trump in Brussels, “My handshake with him, it wasn’t innocent.” Tweaking Grunstein’s rule one, Macron said, “You have to show you’re not going to make little concessions, even symbolic ones, but not play them up too much in the media either.”
    As the JDD noted, those white knuckles and that look straight into the eyes of POTUS were conscious markers. “Donald Trump, the Turkish president, or the Russian president operate in the context of power relationships, and that doesn’t bother me. I don’t believe in diplomacy based on public invective, but in bilateral dialogues I don’t let anything pass. That’s how you make yourself respected.”
    So the six held firm: “The United States of America is in the process of reviewing its policies on climate change and on the Paris Agreement and thus is not in a position to join the consensus on these topics,” read the final communique out of Taormina.
    “Understanding this process, the heads of state and of government of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom and the presidents of the European Council and of the European Commission reaffirm their strong commitment to swiftly implement the Paris Agreement,” it added.
    The bottom line on the G6 side was basically, “We understand you Mr. President, but you need to understand us. You need a little time? Okay. But every move you make tells us we’re going to have to learn to get along without you.”
    This was also the gist of an extraordinarily vituperative editorial in Germany’s Der Spiegel late in the week, which argued that Trump is a danger to the world and has to go, but probably won’t.

    The only alternative: “The international community wakes up and finds a way to circumvent the White House and free itself of its dependence on the U.S.”
    Manage expectations: “Forestalling radical upheaval,” writes Grunstein, “is about the best any world leader can realistically hope for. Trump is temperamentally volatile and capricious, and would be hard-pressed to focus his attention long enough to reach major deals that require steady leadership and patient stewardship.
    Moreover, as a weak president who has had difficulty passing legislation despite enjoying a majority in both houses of Congress, he cannot be counted upon to deliver anything that requires congressional approval. That means that key areas of cooperation and major landmark deals are likely to stall during his presidency. Instead, avoiding worst-case scenarios should be considered a major victory.”
    “Following these simple steps will allow any world leader to emerge smiling from a meeting with Trump,” Grunstein wrote in a particularly prescient conclusion. “Unfortunately, it will be a smile of relief rather than satisfaction. Real progress will be hard to come by, and any victories will likely be Pyrrhicfor the United States and the world.”

  • Merkel: Paris climate pact needed for sake of Mother Earth

    Merkel: Paris climate pact needed for sake of Mother Earth

    Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday pledged Germany’s continued commitment to the Paris climate agreement in the wake of U.S. President Donald Trump’s withdrawal, saying the deal was a “cornerstone” of attempts to stop global warming.

    Merkel, one of the strongest advocates of the global pact to curb emissions of gases that speed climate change, said there was no turning back from the path that began with the 1997 Kyoto climate protocol and led to 2015’s Paris deal.

    “The decision of the U.S. to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement is very regrettable, and I’m expressing myself in a very reserved way when I say that,” she said, adding that the deal was needed to protect the environment.

    “We need this Paris agreement to preserve our Creation,” she said – a rare use of religious imagery by Merkel, a pastor’s daughter who is usually intensely private about her faith. “Nothing can or will stop us from doing that,” she added.

    Trump’s decision would not stop those who feel committed to protecting the planet, she said: “On the contrary, in Germany, in Europe and in the world, we will join forces to take on and successfully tackle big challenges facing humanity.”

    She said the agreement, which Trump rejected because he said it would impose “unfair” costs on U.S. industry, would ultimately result in more prosperity and greater opportunities for the world.

    “To everyone for whom the future of our planet is important, I say let’s continue down this path so we’re successful for our Mother Earth,” she said.

    German industry associations also criticised Trump’s decision to withdraw from the climate deal, warning that the move would harm the global economy and lead to market distortions.

    Germany’s DIHK Chambers of Commerce and the VDMA engineering industry association warned that U.S. companies could gain short-term advantages by Trump’s decision.

    “Climate protection can be pushed forward in an effective and competetion-friendly way only by all states,” said DIHK President Eric Schweitzer.

    Schweitzer said other countries should stick to their commitments, but warned that attempting to compensate for the U.S. withdrawal by other countries redoubling their commitments would be self-defeating.

     

  • Trump’s withdrawal from climate pledges ‘detrimental’ for Africa

    Trump’s withdrawal from climate pledges ‘detrimental’ for Africa

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to abandon the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement was going to be “detrimental” for Africa, environmental activists and politicians said Friday.

    “It will now be much harder to protect people on the African continent from the effects of climate change,” World Wide Fund for Nature South Africa researcher Jaco Toit told dpa.

    The withdrawal from the accord by the world’s second-biggest carbon polluter jeopardizes financing for mitigation and control efforts across the African continent, according to du Toit.

    “We hope that other countries will jump in to make up for the shortfall,” the researcher said.

    The former president of Ghana, John Mahama, who was instrumental in garnering support for the 2015 pact, said “Trump’s decision … comes from a truly misinformed position.”

    “The world becomes a truly unpredictable place when such global treaties can be reversed by the electoral decision of one nation,” Mahama warned.

    Trump’s administration had “turned its back” on Africa, lamented Greenpeace Africa executive director Njeri Kabeberi.

    “The millions of people living on the African continent are on the frontlines of climate change, and it is critical that polluters are held accountable for the suffering and injustice global warming is already inflicting,” said Kabeberi.

    The African Union meanwhile promised to keep up its “strong commitment to full implementation of the Paris agreement,” in spite of the US’ withdrawal from the pact.

    Climate analytics researchers warn that climate change will have serious repercussions in Africa, including extreme heat waves, lack of rainfall and shrinking water resources, with negative consequences for agricultural production and fisheries.

    Experts expect an increase of the already high rates of undernutrition and infectious disease, flash flooding and food price increases across the continent.

  • Trump’s withdrawal from Paris Climate Accord a ‘great disappointment’ – UN

    Trump’s withdrawal from Paris Climate Accord a ‘great disappointment’ – UN

    The UN says the decision by the United States to withdraw from Paris Agreement on Climate Change is a disappointment for global efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote global security.

    Stéphane Dujarric, the Spokesman for the Secretary-General, told the media at the UN Headquarters in New York, shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump announced his country’s withdrawal from the Agreement.

    “The Paris Agreement was adopted by all nations in the world in 2015 because they recognise the immense harm that climate change is already causing and the enormous opportunity that climate action presents.

    “It offers a meaningful yet flexible framework for action by all countries,” Dujarric said.

    He added that the Secretary-General António Guterres remained confident that cities, states and businesses within the U.S., along with other countries, would continue to demonstrate vision and leadership.

    According to him, this can be done by working for the low-carbon and resilient economic growth that will create quality jobs and markets for 21st century prosperity.

    “It is crucial that the United States remain a leader on environmental issues,” the spokesman for the Secretary-General noted.

    Dujarric also said that the Secretary-General looked forward to engaging with the U.S. Government and all actors in the country and around the world to build the sustainable future on which the future generations depend.

    Trump had promised to make his decision known this week on the Paris Climate Agreement, which as at May, 195 members of UN Framework Convention on Climate Change had signed and 147 had ratified.

    In a nationwide broadcast, Trump announced: “to fulfil my solemn duty to protect America and its citizens, the United States will withdraw from the Paris Climate Accord but begin negotiations to re-enter our way into Paris Accord.

    “Or in really entirely new transaction or terms that are fair to the United States, its businesses, its workers, its people and its tax payers.

    “So, we are getting out but we will start to negotiate and we would see if we could make a deal that is fair and if we can, that’s great and if we can’t, that’s fine.

    “As President, I can put no other consideration before the wellbeing of the American citizens. The Paris Climate Accord is simply the latest example of Washington entering into an agreement that disadvantages the United States.

    “For the exclusive benefits of other countries, leaving American workers, who I love, and tax payers to observe the cost in terms of job loss, low wages, shattered factories and vastly diminished economic production.

    “Thus, as of today, the United States would cease all implementation of the non-binding Paris Accord and the draconian financial and economic burdens the agreement imposes on our country.

    “This includes ending the implementation of the nationally determined contributions and very importantly, the Green Climate Fund, which is costing the United States a vast fortune.”

    According to him, compliant with the terms of the Paris Accord and the onerous energy restriction that is placed on the U.S. can cost America as much as 2.7 million job loss by 2025.