Chi e' il successore della Merkel? Se riesce a vincere le elezioni ... un'altro che non ha mai lavorato in vita sua, ma dettera' legge a chi lavora e/o tenta di lavorare

 

  1. Armin Laschet

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    Armin Laschet

    Grundsteinlegung MiQua-7004 (cropped).jpg
    Laschet in 2018

    Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia
    Assumed office
    27 June 2017
    DeputyJoachim Stamp
    Preceded byHannelore Kraft
    Leader of the Christian Democratic Union
    Assumed office
    22 January 2021
    DeputyJens Spahn
    Thomas Strobl
    Volker Bouffier
    Julia Klöckner
    Silvia Breher
    General SecretaryPaul Ziemiak
    Preceded byAnnegret Kramp-Karrenbauer
    Leader of the Christian Democratic Union
    in North Rhine-Westphalia
    Assumed office
    20 June 2012
    DeputyRalph Brinkhaus
    Karl-Josef Laumann
    Jan Heinisch
    Ina Scharrenbach
    Elisabeth Winkelmeier-Becker
    General SecretaryBodo Löttgen
    Josef Hovenjürgen
    Preceded byNorbert Röttgen
    Deputy Leader of the
    Christian Democratic Union
    In office
    5 December 2012 – 16 January 2021
    LeaderAngela Merkel
    Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer
    Preceded byNorbert Röttgen
    Succeeded byJens Spahn
    Minister for Generations, Family, Women and Integration of North Rhine-Westphalia
    In office
    22 June 2005 – 15 July 2010
    Minister-PresidentJürgen Rüttgers
    Preceded byOffice established
    Succeeded byOffice abolished
    Member of the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia
    for Aachen II
    (CDU List; 2010–2017)
    Assumed office
    9 June 2010
    Preceded byDaniela Jansen (Aachen II)
    Member of the European Parliament
    In office
    20 July 1999 – 29 June 2005
    ConstituencyGermany
    Member of the Bundestag
    for Aachen I
    In office
    10 November 1994 – 26 October 1998
    Preceded byHans Stercken
    Succeeded byUlla Schmidt
    Personal details
    Born19 February 1961 (age 60)
    Aachen, West Germany
    Political partyChristian Democratic Union
    Spouse(s)
    (m. 1985)
    Children
    • Johannes
    • Eva
    • Julius
    Parents
    • Heinrich Laschet
    • Marcella Frings
    ResidenceBurtscheid
    Alma materUniversity of Munich
    University of Bonn
    Signature
    Website

    Armin Laschet (German pronunciation: [ˈaʁmiːn ˈlaʃət] (About this soundlisten); born 18 February 1961) is a German politician serving as Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia since 27 June 2017. On 16 January 2021, he was elected as Leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU).

    Laschet earned a law degree and worked as a journalist before and during his early political career. In 1994 he was elected to the German Bundestag and in 1999 he became a Member of the European Parliament. In 2005 he entered state politics in North Rhine-Westphalia as a member of the state government. As a cabinet minister he was known for his liberal views and good relations with the immigrant community, earning him the nickname "Turkish Armin". In 2012 he became leader of the state party, and he was elected Prime Minister of the state in 2017. He heads the Cabinet Laschet, consisting of his own CDU and the liberal FDP.

    On 16 January 2021, Laschet was elected leader of the CDU, winning 52.8% of delegates votes against Friedrich Merz in the second round of the contest.[1] The result of the election was certified by postal vote of the party conference's delegates with the final result announced on 22 January. It was confirmed on 20 April 2021 that he would be the CDU/CSU candidate for Chancellor of Germany, after rival Markus Söder conceded.[2]

    He was born to an observant Roman Catholic family of German-speaking Walloon origin; his father's parents were both of Belgian origin.[3] He is married to Susanne Malangré, whom he met in a Catholic children's choir when they were children and who is a member of a prominent Aachen political family of French-speaking Walloon origin.

    Background

    Early life and education

    Laschet was born in Burtscheid, a suburb of Aachen, about three kilometres from the Belgian and Dutch borders, to parents Heinrich Laschet and Marcella née Frings; he was raised in an observant Roman Catholic family.[4] His father was a mining engineer at a black coal mine and later became an elementary school teacher and headmaster.[5] The Laschet family is originally from Liège Province in Wallonia in modern Belgium where the family's ancestor Jacques (or Jacob) Laschet lived in Hergenrath in the Duchy of Limburg in the 18th century; his paternal grandfather Hubert Laschet (1899–1984) moved from Hergenrath to Aachen in the 1920s;[a] his paternal grandmother Hubertina Wetzels (1900–1979) had been born in Aachen to parents who had just moved there from Welkenraedt in Belgium.[6] Like many others in the tri-border area the Laschets had relatives across the national boundaries, who lived in Belgium, The Netherlands, Germany and Neutral Moresnet. Laschet maintains close personal ties to Belgium where members of the Laschet family still live.[3]

    He attended the Pius-Gymnasium in Aachen and studied law at the universities of Bonn and Munich, passing the first state examination in law in 1987. He studied journalism from 1986 to 1988. In Munich he became a member of K.D.St.V. Aenania München, a Catholic student fraternity that is member of the Cartellverband.

    Laschet speaks fluent French.[7]

    Laschet worked as a journalist and in the publishing industry from 1986 until 1991, among other things as Bonn correspondent for Bayerischer Rundfunk. He later served as editor-in-chief of the Catholic newspaper KirchenZeitung Aachen from 1991 until 1994. From 1995 to 1999, while also serving as a member of parliament, he was CEO of the Catholic publishing company Einhard-Verlag, which had previously been led by his father-in-law Heinrich Malangré.

    Family

    Laschet is married to his childhood sweetheart Susanne Malangré, whom he met as a child in a Catholic children's choir led by Susanne's father, prominent business executive Heinrich Malangré; they married in 1985.[8] The couple has two sons and a daughter.[7] The family resides in Aachen's Burtscheid district. His wife belongs to a prominent Aachen family of French-speaking Walloon origin and is the niece of CDU politician and lord mayor of Aachen Kurt Malangré; the Malangré family moved from Haine-Saint-Pierre in Belgium to Stolberg to establish a glass production business in the second half of the 19th century.[9] His son Johannes ("Joe") Laschet, who studied law, is a blogger and model, described as a fashion influencer on Instagram.[10][11]

    Political career

    Member of the German Bundestag, 1994–1998

    Following the 1994 national elections, Laschet became a member of the German Bundestag. He was on the Committee for Economic Cooperation and Development and on the Committee for European Union Affairs.

    Member of the European Parliament, 1999–2005

    As Member of the European Parliament, Laschet served on the Committee on Budgets between 1999 and 2001 and on the Committee on Foreign Affairs between 2002 and 2005. In the latter capacity, he served as the Parliament's rapporteur on relations between the EU and the United Nations.[12]

    Role in state politics

    Armin Laschet speaks at the CDU federal party conference in Cologne in 2014

    Under Minister-President (Prime Minister) Jürgen Rüttgers in North Rhine-Westphalia, Laschet served as State Minister for Generations, Family, Women and Integration from 2005 until 2010, and as State Minister for Federal Affairs, Europe and Media from 2010. In 2010, he unsuccessfully ran against Norbert Röttgen for the post of CDU chairman in the state.[13] When Röttgen resigned from that office in 2012, Laschet was elected as his successor. On 4 December 2012 he was elected as one of five deputy chairpersons of the national CDU party,[14] serving alongside Volker Bouffier, Julia Klöckner, Thomas Strobl and Ursula von der Leyen.

    Laschet currently serves as state MP in the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia and also chairs the CDU's state chapter (Landesverband). From 2014 until 2016, he was a member of the North Rhine-Westphalia Commission for Constitutional Reform, led by Rainer Bovermann.[15]

    In the negotiations to form a Grand Coalition of the Christian Democrats (CDU together with the Bavarian CSU) and the Social Democrats (SPD) following the 2013 federal elections, Laschet was part of the CDU/CSU delegation in the working group on energy policy, led by Peter Altmaier and Hannelore Kraft.

    In November 2015, Laschet visited the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan to learn more about the plight of Syrians fleeing the violence in the ongoing Syrian civil war that erupted in 2011.[16] Between March 2015 and January 2016, he chaired the Robert Bosch Expert Commission to Consider a Realignment of Refugee Policy, an expert group convened by the Robert Bosch Stiftung.[17]

    In November 2016, Laschet was elected leading candidate for the North Rhine-Westphalia state elections in May 2017.[18] He was a CDU delegate to the Federal Convention for the purpose of electing the President of Germany in 2017.[19]

    Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia, 2017–present

    Since 27 June 2017 Laschet has been the 11th Minister President of North Rhine-Westphalia (Cabinet Laschet). As one of his state's representatives at the Bundesrat, he serves on the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Defence Committee.

    CDU president and CDU/CSU joint candidate for chancellor

    Following Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer's announcement on 10 February 2020 that she would step down as CDU party leader before the end of 2020 and would not stand as a candidate for chancellor in the 2021 federal elections, Laschet announced at a national press conference on 25 February 2020 that he would run for the party presidency, and thus also for the chancellorship. He named Jens Spahn[20] as his vice-presidential candidate, with Friedrich Merz[21] and Norbert Röttgen[22] as his challengers.

    Polls subsequently showed voters rated Laschet's management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany's most populous state poorly.[23]

    The election of the new CDU party president, after several postponements due to the coronavirus epidemic, took place only at the two-day party congress in mid-January 2021, which was the first fully digital congress in the party's history. On the second day of the congress, 16 January 2021, Laschet won 38.42% of the votes in the first round and 52.79% in the second round. He thus became the new president of the CDU.[24][25]

    However, the strong intra-party divisions that were also evident in the vote could have led to a joint CDU/CSU chancellorship candidacy for Markus Söder, the president of the smaller Bavarian sister party, the CSU.[26] Polls conducted immediately before the party congress showed that 55 percent of voters considered Söder a good candidate for chancellor, while 80 percent of CDU/CSU supporters thought he was a good candidate, compared to only 27 percent and 32 percent respectively for Laschet.[27]

    Söder opted for a wait-and-see strategy, finally announcing at a press conference in Munich on 19 April 2021 that he would not delay the nomination of his candidate for chancellor as the federal elections approached, and that he and his party, the CSU, would therefore accept the decision of the CDU's "big sister" executive board meeting, which began that day, as binding on both him and his party, the CSU. Subsequently, following a late-night meeting of the CDU leadership in Berlin, it was announced that in a secret ballot, 77.5 percent of those present at the meeting had finally backed Laschet, compared to just 22.5 percent for Söder. Thus, it was a foregone conclusion that Armin Laschet would be in the running to become chancellor of the CDU/CSU coalition in September 2021.[28]

    Subsequently, Laschet tried to "channel" the far greater popularity of his biggest rival within the CDU by recruiting Merz to his campaign team, saying that he "belonged in the team" and that his economic and financial expertise would be crucial in helping them to overcome the huge challenge of the pandemic in a sustainable way.[29]

    After having been chosen as his party's candidate to succeed Merkel in the national elections, Laschet was initially seen as having made an uncertain start to his campaign[30] and faced calls to chart a more right-wing course to win back voters disenchanted by the incumbent coalition government. However, the party's win in the Saxony-Anhalt elections was later interpreted as a boost to Laschet.[31]

    Laschet presented the joint CDU/CSU election platform with Söder on 21 June 2021. In the programme, they stated that combating the pandemic, climate change and defending prosperity and freedom are global challenges, and that their goal is to create a Germany open to the world, which strives for both modernisation and green policies.[32]

    Political positions

    European integration

    Both Laschet and Ursula von der Leyen, shown here in 2015, were deputy leaders of the national CDU party. Von der Leyen would go on to become President of the European Commission in 2019

    On European integration, Laschet seeks to strengthen the European Union on issues such as fighting international terrorism and organized crime, as well as energy policy. He also wants to see the President of the European Commission be elected directly by European voters.[33]

    During the European debt crisis, Laschet called for an "open discussion" toward a broad solution to the debt crisis, of which Eurobonds could be a part.[34] He argued that a Greek exit from the Eurozone could trigger undesirable upheaval in southern Europe: "(An exit) could lead to instability in a NATO member state. Russia is standing ready with billions to help Greece in such a scenario."[35] In October 2011, he signed George Soros' open letter calling for more European Union involvement in the single currency turmoil.[36]

    In 2020 alone, Laschet met with French president Emmanuel Macron three times. Alongside Jens Spahn, Laschet was invited by Macron of France to attend the 2020 Bastille Day celebrations in Paris, in a sign of gratitude for their role in helping French citizens during the COVID-19 pandemic in France.[37] In an honour reserved for special guests, Macron invited Laschet into the Élysée Palace's gardens.[38]

    Social policy

    Laschet was a fierce defender of Chancellor Merkel's migration policies during the European migrant crisis of 2015.[39]

    In 2016, Laschet dismissed proposals for a so-called burqa ban as a "phony debate" and distraction from more pressing issues. However, his party later adopted this policy as a core issue.[40][41][42]

    Ahead of a parliamentary vote in June 2017, Laschet expressed his opposition against Germany's introduction of same-sex marriage.[43]

    In 2018, Laschet described the treehouses protesting the destruction of Hambach forest as "illegally occupied areas" and stated that RWE had the right to clear the forest. "The state government is there to ensure that the law that applies is enforced," he said during a talk show on German public broadcaster WDR.[44]

    Foreign policy

    Laschet considers Germany to be insufficiently prepared for global political challenges. In his view, the country lacks the will to pursue a foreign policy that is independent of other major powers such as Russia or the US. Laschet also hopes for more strategic thinking and action from the EU, saying it "must become fit for global politics."[45]

    In 2015, Laschet was criticised for not standing up for German interests when it was revealed that US intelligence agencies are illegally spying on German citizens and businesses.[46] German experts estimate that by the year 2000, American industrial espionage was already causing annual economic losses of at least €10 billion per year due to stolen inventions and development projects – the number having likely only risen since then due to the increase of digitisation. Despite these revelations, Laschet supported Angela Merkel's policy, which in leaked cables was revealed to be to "sit out" the pressure from the German public and Bundestag.[47]

    Laschet is considered by some critics as taking a soft stance on the government of President Vladimir Putin.[48][49] Noah Barkin, writing for Foreign Policy, points out that Laschet has voiced support for Nord Stream 2 and for a closer relationship with China and is against excluding Huawei from Germany's 5G network. However, Germany's Federal Office for Information Security has supported Laschet's position, saying that comprehensive investigations into Huawei's hardware and software have produced no evidence of wrongdoing and that an exclusion is unjustified.[50] Barkin further argues that Laschet has also been against "demonizing" Putin for the Russian annexation of Crimea.[51] At the same time, Laschet said that Germany should increase military spending and take on a greater share of military burdens within NATO. He argued that the Bundeswehr should take on more responsibility in Africa, around the Mediterranean and in Mali.[52]

    In 2018, Laschet cancelled his appearances at the Ruhrtriennale arts and music festival due to the festival allowing supporters of the BDS movement to perform.[53] In 2021, he pledged support for Israel: "We stand by Israel's side without reservation."[45]

    In 2013, Laschet criticised Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle's support for rebels in the civil war in Syria: "It is absurd that the same people we are fighting in Mali are being supported in Syria. It is the terrorist groups al-Nusra and al-Qaida, financed from Qatar and Saudi Arabia, who are introducing Sharia courts and fighting Syria's religious diversity".[54] In 2013, Laschet also criticised Westerwelle's demand to release former President Mohammed Mursi after the coup in Egypt in 2013, as minorities and Christians in particular had suffered under Mursi.[54]

    Other activities

    Corporate boards

    • RAG-Stiftung, Ex-Officio Member of the Board of Trustees (since 2017)[55]

    Non-profit organizations

    Notes


    1. Hergenrath was historically part of the Duchy of Limburg, one of the provinces of the Burgundian Netherlands. The duchy was multilingual, with Dutch, French, and German dialects spoken. The area was annexed by France at the end of the 18th century, then awarded to Prussia by the Congress of Vienna, and became part of Belgium after World War I. It is now part of the Belgian Liège Province and forms part of the German-speaking Community of Belgium.

    References


  2. Moulson, Geir (16 January 2021). "Pragmatic governor Laschet elected to lead Merkel's party". Associated Press. Retrieved 16 January 2021.

  3. Dillmann, Daniel (20 April 2021). "Markus Söder: "Kandidat der Herzen" verliert Machtkampf gegen Armin Laschet". Frankfurter Rundschau. Retrieved 21 April 2021.

  4. "Armin Laschet, nieuwe Duitse CDU-leider, heeft Belgische roots: 'Hij heeft nog altijd een nauwe band met ons land'" [Armin Laschet, new German CDU leader, has Belgian roots: 'He still has a close relationship with our country']. Nieuwsblad. Retrieved 18 January 2021.

  5. "Armin Laschet". Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands. 14 March 2013. Archived from the original on 18 January 2021. Retrieved 25 February 2020.

  6. Reisener, Thomas (14 May 2017). "Armin Laschet im Porträt: Der Mann für den zweiten Blick". RP Online (in German). Retrieved 17 January 2021.

  7. Bernhard Willems, "Die früheren Grundherren des Bereiches von Eupen", Ostbelgische Chronik, Vol. 2, 1949

  8. Karnitschnig, Matthew (25 February 2020). "The wannabe Merkels". Politico Europe. Retrieved 17 January 2021.

  9. "Armin Laschet: Immer unterwegs und meistens gut gelaunt". Aachener Nachrichten (in German). 18 May 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2021.

  10. Seeling, Hans: Wallonische Industriepioniere in Deutschland, Wahle 1983, p. 178

  11. "Joe Laschet auf Instagram: Der Ryan Gosling für Bonner". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Retrieved 18 January 2021.

  12. "Prime Minister's son lives in Bonn: Johannes Laschet works as blogger and model". General-Anzeiger. 4 February 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2021.

  13. David Cronin and Martin Banks (19 November 2003), Afghanistan drug trade still proving a tough nut to crack European Voice.

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  18. Robert Bosch Expert Commission to Consider a Realignment of Refugee Policy Robert Bosch Stiftung.

  19. Armin Laschet ist CDU-Spitzenkandidat in NRW Bild, 26 November 2017.

  20. Wahl der Mitglieder für die 16. Bundesversammlung Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia, decision of 14 December 2016.

  21. Leithäuser, Johannes; Wehner, Markus. "Als Team in die CDU-Spitze: Wie Laschet und Spahn ihre Mitbewerber unter Druck setzen". FAZ.NET (in German). ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 22 June 2021.

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  23. "Röttgen zu Bewerbung: „Es geht um die Zukunft der CDU"". FAZ.NET (in German). ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 22 June 2021.

  24. Paul Carrel (September 13, 2020), Would-be Merkel successor Laschet emboldened by local election win Reuters.

  25. SPIEGEL, DER. "Armin Laschet zum neuen CDU-Vorsitzenden gewählt". www.spiegel.de (in German). Retrieved 22 June 2021.

  26. Welle (www.dw.com), Deutsche, Merkels Getreuer - Armin Laschet ist neuer CDU-Chef | DW | 16.01.2021 (in German), retrieved 22 June 2021

  27. Online, FOCUS. "Nach Laschet-Wahl wird CDU nur unter einer Bedingung nach Söder als K-Kandidat rufen". FOCUS Online (in German). Retrieved 22 June 2021.

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  30. Burger, Reiner; Düsseldorf. "Laschet nominiert Merz: Ein Partner, um eigene Schwächen auszugleichen". FAZ.NET (in German). ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 22 June 2021.

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  32. Thomas Escritt (June 6, 2021), Conservative win in German state election boosts Laschet's chancellery hopes Reuters.

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  37. George Soros and 95 others (12 October 2011). "As concerned Europeans we urge Eurozone leaders to unite". ft.com. Financial Times. Retrieved 17 June 2012.

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La Merkel se ne va: che cosa e' cambiato in meglio in Europa dopo 20 anni di dominio assoluto della DC tedesca?

 

L’addio di Merkel
Cambierà tutto per
la Germania e l’Europa

Se ne va. Proprio quando sembrava che se la fosse cavata in extremis, grazie alla disperata rimonta del fido Volker Bouffier che in Assia è riuscito a contenere le perdite disastrose della CDU giusto per quel pochissimo che gli ha consentito (salvo sorprese) di conservare il posto di Ministerpräsident, Angela Merkel ha fatto il suo Grande Annuncio. Le previsioni di tutti, alla vigilia del voto in Assia, avevano legato la sua sorte all’esito nelle urne di Bouffier: se lui non ce l’avesse fatta, lei ne avrebbe tirato le conseguenze. Invece lui si è salvato, ma lei le conseguenze le ha tirate lo stesso. Lo ha fatto in due atti: prima ha fatto trapelare ai giornali la notizia che al congresso del partito a inizio dicembre non correrà per la presidenza del partito; poi ha annunciato, nel modo più ufficiale possibile, che alle prossime elezioni federali, nell’autunno del 2021, non si candiderà più alla cancelleria. Sarebbe stata la quinta volta.

Qualche ammalato di dietrologia potrebbe interpretare questo strano annuncio in due battute insinuando che la cancelliera abbia fatto filtrare la rinuncia alla guida del partito sperando in una sollevazione a suo favore che avrebbe potuto accompagnarla per la quinta volta alla cancelleria. E che solo dopo aver constatato che la sollevazione non c’era, nemmeno tra i suoi fedelissimi, si sarebbe decisa al passo più importante e più doloroso: la rinuncia al potere nel cuore d’Europa, al titolo di “donna più potente del mondo” e alla guida di un paese che certamente l’ha amata, fino a chiamarla “mammina”.

Una manovra, insomma? Tutto può essere: Frau Merkel è stata un genio della tattica politica e ha sempre manovrato benissimo quando si doveva liberare dei suoi (tanti) avversari interni.

E però appare più probabile l’ipotesi più semplice: Angela è stanca. Il potere logora, eccome. Ha sessantacinque anni e gli ultimi quindici li ha vissuti nel luogo in cui si concentravano tutti i problemi di un grande paese e di un intero continente. Lei non ha detto, come fanno molti in queste circostanze, continuerò a fare politica, a dare il mio contributo al paese. No. Mi ritiro, ha detto. Basta politica. Vita privata: quella che non ha avuto per così tanto tempo, salvo qualche scampolo ritagliato per un marito campione mondiale di discrezione, qualche amicizia non sbandierata, qualche vacanzetta insidiata da bande di cronisti assatanati.

Sarà banale dirlo, ma davvero con l’annuncio di Angie, altro nomignolo affettuoso che le è stato riservato dai suoi elettori, ieri è finita un’era della Germania e dell’Europa. Anche se dovesse restare alla cancelleria – ma a questo punto non è detto – per i tre anni che restano del suo mandato, Frau Merkel ha chiuso un ciclo politico che a buoni diritto porta il suo nome, nel bene e, soprattutto fuori della Germania, nel male. Nel male dove e quando alla sua figura sono state associate le scelte più controverse che hanno afflitto tanta parte dell’Europa: l’austerity, la disciplina di bilancio da imporre con le buone o con le cattive ai paesi della Dolce Vita troppo propensi a far debiti, le prepotenze d’un paese molto incline a guardare i vizi altrui e a sorvolare sui propri.

Questo stereotipo Angela Merkel se lo porterà con sé anche quando lascerà il bellissimo edificio del Bundeskanzleramt, disegnato dagli architetti Axel Schultes e Charlotte Franke simbolicamente spalancato alla vista di tutti sull’ansa della Sprea. C’è un pizzico di ingiustizia in questo giacché, a considerare bene le cose, i veri campioni assoluti del rigore tedesco da imporre a tutti non stavano alla cancelleria ma piuttosto alla Bundesbank, al ministero delle Finanze quando alla guida c’era l’eterno nemico di Angela Wolfgang Schäuble, nelle file della CDU e più ancora della CSU bavarese, tra gli alleati (quando lo erano) liberali della FDP. E, pesa dirlo, talvolta pure tra i socialdemocratici alleati nella große Koalition. Ma gli stereotipi sono stereotipi, non c’è spazio per le sfumature e i distinguo.

C’è un altro modo per cui questo addio segnerà la fine di un’epoca della vita della Germania e dell’Europa. Angela Dorothea Merkel, nata Kasner, incarna quella strana continuità tra due mondi che è, non senza contraddizioni e lacerazioni, l’esperienza, il vissuto collettivo della Germania che ha ritrovato l’unità. Come molti suoi connazionali, Angela è nata in un altro universo, nella DDR del socialismo reale, e in quel mondo è cresciuta, nella famiglia di un pastore evangelico che obbediva alle gerarchie della sua chiesa e alle disposizioni del regime. Non è stata certo una fanatica del regime, ma neppure una dissidente la ragazza Kasner: si è barcamenata, ha accettato i compromessi praticati all’epoca dalla grande maggioranza dei tedeschi che abitavano la “parte sbagliata” della Germania. Dicono che quando cadde il Muro di Berlino non se ne accorse subito perché era in piscina.

Alla vita politica Angela Kasner, che intanto aveva sposato un signor Merkel che le ha lasciato il nome ma del quale si sa pochissimo, è nata dopo l’unificazione della Germania. E a farla nascere è stato Helmut Kohl che era abbastanza furbo da capire che nella nuova classe dirigente bisognava cooptare quelli che in qualche modo interpretavano una continuità di vita senza rotture, un passaggio tra i mondi senza drammi, senza nostalgie e senza troppi rancori. I dissidenti, gli oppositori coraggiosi, tutti quelli che c’erano buoni motivi per pensare sarebbero stati la quota di classe dirigente che la DDR consegnava alla nuova Germania, scomparvero tutti rapidamente, uno dopo l’altro. Lei no. Lei fece carriera sotto l’ala protettrice del cancelliere dell’unità, fino al giorno in cui decise che era arrivato il momento di volare via dal nido e fulminò il suo mentore con un velenoso articolo di giornale inneggiante alla rottamazione dei “vecchi”.

Diciamolo: non fu un bel gesto. Ma all’epoca la “ragazzina”, come la chiamava Kohl prima con affetto e poi con disprezzo, si stava attrezzando per la scalata al potere e non era affatto tenera. Non lo fu neppure con Schäuble, il rivale potentissimo che sconfisse quando si arrivò al duello decisivo per la guida del partito.

Queste durezze si sono ammorbidite con il passare degli anni e con il consolidamento del potere. Se c’è una qualità che tutti riconoscono volentieri a questa signora tedesca che sempre meno è andata assomigliando a una dama di ferro è la diplomazia, la capacità di discutere ascoltando anche le ragioni degli altri. È veramente un tratto dell’anima o l’esercizio di una cinica furbizia nelle relazioni politiche?

Chissà. Però c’è stato un momento in cui l’aspetto per così dire “umano” del potere della cancelliera tedesca è venuto alla luce in un modo che è parso davvero sincero. È stato quando, nel momento più acuto della crisi dei profughi sulla via dei Balcani, ha avuto il coraggio di dire che i migranti andavano accolti, perché è un dovere e “ce la faremo”. Poi, si sa, sono successe tante altre cose e anche la politica del governo di Berlino verso l’immigrazione ha conosciuto ombre e qualche infamia (pur se è infinitamente più umana e più intelligente di quella italiana). Ma quel segnale è rimasto.

TOTALITARISMO DIGITALE SENZA LIMITI

 

Tara Reade: I thought I was a sexual assault survivor, but apparently Facebook thinks that makes me a ‘dangerous extremist’

Tara Reade: I thought I was a sexual assault survivor, but apparently Facebook thinks that makes me a ‘dangerous extremist’
The giants of Silicon Valley have allowed hordes of trolls to brand me a liar and blocked my content, but now Facebook themselves are branding me a ‘dangerous extremist’? Big tech censorship is out of control.

In 2019, after the media began their onslaught against me, I woke up to my friend texting me she had left me a present to cheer me up outside my door. It was a copy of Anna Karenina and a note to stay away from train tracks. I smiled at the joke.

No one wants to be notorious. There is a stark contrast between being famous and notorious. One can be famous for performance, work, or art. To be notorious for something that happened to you is a cold and lonely place to reside. The advent of the internet has brought a new level of mob participation on issues; some are paid, some are earnest, and some unhinged, but they may as well be running down the street with pitchforks, as the atmosphere created by such events is the same.

Also on rt.com Tara Reade: Assange’s shameful treatment shows just how the US exploits fear to silence dissent… as I found out, too

Online social media was called the Wild West until powerful elites decided to lasso some voices that were too loud and too truthful. Tech giants like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and others started sifting through content and systematically deplatforming voices that challenged the American empire, especially after the January 6 attack on the Capitol. 

The elites got nervous, apparently fearing some did not want some messy French version of democracy to spill the blood of the establishment on the streets. A fortress was erected around the Capitol, the National Guard deployed, and the media was virtually ordered to keep in lock step with establishment politicians; voices of dissent on right and left were threatened into silence. I never really understood why people wanted to defend another billionaire, Donald Trump, instead of the working class. The root of their actions that day remains a mystery. 

In the aftermath of the violence, elite members of both parties lamented the lives lost and ‘domestic terrorists’ were announced to be the public enemy. Members of Congress like Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (AOC) and POTUS urged people to report friends and family engaged in dangerous political extremism. 

In 2019 and 2020, I came forward to reveal my history with Joe Biden and what he did to me as a staffer. I was called many names by social media trolls and Biden supporters, including ‘slut’, ‘bitch’, a ‘Russian whore making all my money on my back’, a ‘liar’, and worse. There were death threats, a chorus of trolls chanting to lock me up, work lost, relationships ended, professional credibility destroyed. I lost my house and was generally shunned like some pariah. 

I pushed back by writing my book and giving interviews where the media allowed. During the election, Facebook suppressed my name as “election interference” – then when I tried to buy ads for an online book event I was not allowed, on the grounds of “interference with future legislation.” My assistant, activist, and supporter Avalon Clare tried to purchase social media ads, only to be blocked because my name, “Tara Reade,” was not allowed.

Avalon, an artist, runs my author Facebook page, as I gave up on that platform long ago – leaving it to the boomers, rabid Democrats, and scary older white women who foamed at the mouth at the mention of my name as they stridently screamed to protect Joe Biden. I was a ‘Russian apologist’, a ‘Bernie supporter’ not to be listened to or considered. I mean, Joe Biden’s campaign spent millions on public relations, so you get what you pay for like a good little capitalist, even if that is to let the powerful commit rape and walk away. 

The Department of Justice seized my social media information under sealed search warrants and empaneled a grand jury. My lawyer was unable to get further information, even though it was my information, as everything is still under seal. The only reason I know about this is a lawyer from Twitter called to tell me they’d received eight attempted search warrants and had to file motions to even let me know I was under scrutiny. Edward Snowden warned us about the loss of privacy and sacrificed his freedom to release the proof. Glenn Greenwald discussed the NSA’s wide net to gather information about American citizens recently with Tucker Carlson.   

Recently, one of my supporters tried to post an interview I did with Primo Podcast on Facebook.

After clicking to post, she was greeted with a warning that she may have been exposed to “harmful and extremist content” and my picture, along with a button in case she needed to “get support.”

RT

This is not new; many political voices have been censored. Noam Chomsky’s Facebook livestream was interrupted at the Progressive Summit in 2020. In his piece for Ceasefire, Harry Halpin wrote about the abrupt deplatforming of an online event.

As the Progressive International’s spokesperson stated:“We are deeply disappointed that Facebook is blocking people coming together across borders to confront humanity’s shared problems at the Progressive International’s launch Summit. We wanted to livestream today’s public events, which include keynote speeches from Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, Yanis Varoufakis and a panel discussion about anti-democratic lawfare in Latin America. We don’t know why Facebook is preventing people watching on its platform, but we strongly urge them to reverse its decision, allow our event to take place unhindered and commit to operate its content moderation in a transparent manner.” 

It never occurred to me that by simply telling the truth and discussing the sexual assault I endured at the hands of my former boss, who just now happens to be the most powerful man in the world, I would be labeled a ‘dangerous extremist’. I am not an insurgent, or even a Republican or Democrat. It is ironic that I’m considered ‘violent’ when, as an anti-imperialist, I espouse peace.

Also on rt.com Tara Reade: I told my story, but there are countless others too afraid of the Democrat protection machine to come forward

The method to silence any form of dissent rooted in truth is very old and deeply Machiavellian. Niccolo Machiavelli outlined in ‘The Prince’ (the politicians’ and oligarchs’ bible) how fear could be weaponized to coerce the masses into huddled silence. The Stalinesque cry to “report friends and family” echoes around social media, while the digital gulags wait to incarcerate any who question the status quo.

How we approach the next paradigm shift is important. We can choose to ignore these tech giants and innovate our own platforms, create our own space for voices to be heard with no corporate overlords. If we can unite our diversity to create and support, rather than destroy for profit, there may be a chance we can save our own humanity, one soul at a time.

La carcassa d'Italia

 

Pitone morto gettato via come un rifiuto: un imprenditore lo trova e dà l'allarme

Impossibile risalire al proprietario

Il pitone trovato questa mattina nella zona industriale di Collegno

La carcassa di un pitone reticolato lungo due metri è stata trovata nella mattinata di oggi, giovedì 16 gennaio 2020, è stata trovata in un sacchetto all'incrocio tra via Italia e strada Torino-Pianezza, nella zona industriale di Collegno.

A scoprirla è stato il titolare di un'officina della zona che ha subito chiamato la polizia locale. Gli agenti intervenuti hanno chiesto a loro volta l'intervento dei veterinari dell'Asl To3.

L'animale era sprovvisto di microchip. Chi se ne è liberato lo aveva probabilmente in casa senza averlo mai denunciato (cosa obbligatoria per legge) e dopo averlo acquistato chissà dove. Quando il pitone è morto, se ne è liberato come se fosse un rifiuto qualsiasi.

La carcassa verrà avviata all'incenerimento. Purtroppo, risalire al proprietario è pressoché impossibile.

"Non ho avuto nessuna paura quando ho visto il pitone, perché mi piacciono tutti gli animali - racconta l'imprenditore a TorinoToday -. Certamente, se fosse stato vivo, però, avrei usato maggiori accortezze".

pitone-via-italia-via-torino-pianezza-polizia-locale-collegno-200116-2

L'ultima magnata: come i partiti della seconda repubblica e i nemici internazionali dell'Italia si stanno sbranando cio' che resta della carcassa

 

Forza Italia, il big sotto anonimato: "Partito in liquidazione e carcassa a Matteo Salvini", Silvio Berlusconi sotto attacco

Sullo stesso argomento:
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"Noi con Giorgia Meloni e loro tutti insieme appassionatamente. Basta una donna forte per superare tanti maschi in difficoltà". Così alcuni esponenti di Fratelli d'Italia commentano la nuova svolta di Silvio Berlusconi sul partito unico del centrodestra, invocato nelle ultime ore. Fanno capire che la Meloni continuerà a non voler aderire al partito unitario, nonostante Berlusconi glielo abbia chiesto un'altra volta, perché "la solitudine fa la forza". Insofferente all'atteggiamento della leader di Fratelli d'Italia è anche Matteo Salvini, contrario alla corsa solitaria di Giorgia, che pare inarrestabile nei sondaggi. In Forza Italia, invece, sono convinti, scrive il Messaggero, "che la bomba del Cavaliere sta deflagrando. Nel corpaccione dei parlamentari c'è chi prova a minimizzare: Berlusconi dice partito unico ma con Giorgia ben sapendo che Giorgia non ci sarà. Quindi le sue parole vanno interpretate al contrario: niente partito unico'".

 

 

 

"Dobbiamo avviare un processo che cambi la politica profondamente", ha detto Berlusconi dopo la famosa riunione Zoom con gli eurodeputati. "Non sarà un'annessione di Forza Italia al Carroccio", dice a tutti Berlusconi che nel frattempo ha strappato alla Lega due eurodeputati eletti al Sud (la Vuolo e Carroppo) ma anche una cinquestelle, la Adinolfi. Molti sospettano che il suo annuncio sia più una iniziativa per togliere dal centro del progetto la federazione di Salvini, più che puntare realmente sul partito unico.

 

 

 


Uno dei big forzisti di Palazzo Madama racconta però lo stato attuale del partito: "Forza Italia è in liquidazione. Il presidente non vedeva l'ora di appioppare la carcassa a Salvini, che crede di usarla per rivaleggiare con la Meloni, e in cambio accadrà questo: dieci senatori e venti deputati, i fedelissimi del Cavaliere, dalla Bernini alla Ronzulli, da Tajani a Giacomoni, da Malan al forzista-leghista e via così, nella lista unitaria con posti assicurati e il resto torna a casa". Mentre alle orecchie di Salvini arrivano messaggi del tipo: "E noi, caro Matteo, che cosa facciamo? Regaliamo seggi sicuri al Nord ai protetti di Berlusconi quando non ne abbiamo neanche più per noi vista la riduzione del numero dei parlamentari?". Lo stesso Salvini, di fronte all'accelerazione berlusconiana, frena. Chi invece è contento, sono gli ex berluscones di Coraggio Italia. Spiega Osvaldo Napoli: "Berlusconi ci fa un favore, ora il cantiere moderato e europeista potrà volare. Bussano in tanti alla nostra porta, quelli che non vogliono morire leghisti".

Continua lo strangolamento dell'Italia da parte degli interessi strategici ed economici USA grazie alla debolezza del ministro di Maio

The United States-Italy Relationship & Transatlantic Unity

Washington, DC (STL.NewsThe US Department of State released the following Factsheet:

“Congratulations, Prime Minister Mario Draghi.  I look forward to working closely with you to deepen our strong bilateral relationship, cooperate during your leadership of the G20, and address global challenges from COVID to climate change.”

– President Joseph R. Biden, February 14, 2021

Secretary Antony J. Blinken will travel to Rome and Matera, Italy, June 27-29, where he will meet with Italian President Sergio Mattarella, Prime Minister Mario Draghi, and Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio to discuss the importance of Transatlantic unity and our strong bilateral relationship.  They will also discuss the economic and security ties that strengthen our enduring partnership with Italy.  Secretary Blinken will then co-chair the D-ISIS Ministerial with Foreign Minister Di Maio, before traveling to Matera to attend the G20 Foreign Affairs Ministerial Meeting.

The United States and Italy are Close Partners and Allies

  • The United States looks forward to strengthening the excellent cooperation between our two countries, both as NATO Allies and long-standing economic partners.
  • Our relationship is deep and enduring.  The United States established diplomatic relations with the Kingdom of Italy in 1861 and reaffirmed them in 1946 when Italy became a republic.  We have built a strong partnership based on common values and shared historical and familial bonds.
  • More than 20 million Americans proudly claim Italian heritage.  Throughout our history, Italian-Americans have greatly enriched the fabric of American life.
  • Italy and the United States share a commitment to the same values – democracy, human rights, the rule of law, security, and prosperity.
  • We welcome Italy’s focus on combatting the COVID-19 pandemic, tackling the climate crisis, and fostering a sustainable economic recovery during its G20 presidency this year.

Security Cooperation is at the Heart of Our Partnership

  • Italy is a key NATO Ally, a leader and guarantor of security in the international community, and a reliable partner.  Italy plays a crucial role in guaranteeing Transatlantic security, particularly in assuring NATO’s southern flank and through its participation in UN and NATO missions in Iraq, Kosovo, Lebanon, and Afghanistan.  Italy also plays an important role in marshaling international support for progress in Libya.
  • The U.S. military maintains a presence at five major military installations in Italy, where it is a welcoming host to more than 33,000 U.S. troops, Department of Defense civilians, and their family members.
  • Italy hosts the U.S. Navy’s 6th Fleet headquarters in Naples and NATO’s Joint Force Command outside of Naples in Lago Patria.
    The United States and Italy agree that we must do more jointly to address shared threats in the Mediterranean region and around the world. At the June 14 NATO Summit, President Biden and Prime Minister Draghi endorsed a series of proposals to revitalize NATO through the NATO 2030 initiative.  The United States and Italy also collaborate closely as part of the Global Coalition’s efforts to defeat ISIS. We look forward to continuing that work.

Economies and Workers Benefit from Our Close Economic and Educational Ties

  • The United States represents Italy’s largest non-EU export market. Our two-way trade in goods and services amounted to $80 billion last year.  Our relationship, which ranges from trade in consumer goods and agricultural products to cooperation in the defense industries, has spurred collaboration in fields outside the economic realm, including security and space technology.
  • As of 2019, Italy’s direct investment in the United States totaled $32.8 billion, while U.S. direct investment in Italy was $34.9 billion. As of 2018, U.S. jobs tied to Italian direct investment in the United States totaled 93,700, while 250,000 Italian jobs were tied to U.S. direct investment in Italy.
  • Italy is the second most popular destination for American study abroad students in the world, with more than 35,000 U.S. students studying there each year.  Italian students are also increasingly attracted to education exchange programs in the United States.  In the 2019/2020 academic year, more than 6,000 Italians chose to study at a U.S. college or university.
  • Since the establishment of the U.S.-Italy Fulbright Commission in 1948, approximately 14,000 Italian and American students, teachers, lecturers, and researchers have participated in the Fulbright international exchange program, enhancing scholarship through educational exchange.  The U.S.-Italy Fulbright Program has produced alumni who have had enduring impacts on their fields, including Italian Prime Ministers Giuliano Amato and Lamberto Dini, eight Nobel laureates, twelve Pulitzer Prize winners, and five MacArthur Foundation Fellows.

A di Maio gli italiani che stanno morendo di fame e di stenti a Matera gli fanno schifo, preferisce occuparsi di quelli dei PVS

 

G-20 talks in Italy yield pledge to fight hunger in Africa

  • Updated

MATERA, Italy (AP) — A meeting of foreign and development ministers from the Group of 20 nations Tuesday ended with agreement to boost efforts to fight growing hunger in the world, worsened by the pandemic, especially in Africa, as well as climate change effects.

But there were also notes of discord, with Germany and China taking jabs at each other over vaccine policy for developing countries.

Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio, who hosted the meeting, argued that assistance projects in Africa will also affect migration from the continent to Europe.

“The G-20 has the duty to sustain Africa in emerging from a difficult period,” he said at a closing news conference.

“We must do it in a way so that in Africa, people aren’t forced any more to abandon their country and their territory, and I don’t think anyone can carry out this battle alone,” said Di Maio, who announced that Italy would host a conference in October in Rome focused on Africa.

Di Maio said that hunger on the planet has been increasing since 2014 and warned that the COVID-19 pandemic could add another 100 million people to the ranks of the hungry and malnourished. "Clearly one of the first steps to build a better world is to make sure everyone is fed,'' he said.

The one-day gathering yielded the so-called Matera Declaration, a “call to action” on food security, nutrition and food systems. Matera is a picturesque southern hilltop city in Italy's underdeveloped Basilicata region hosting the talks.

In the declaration, the ministers concurred that “advancing these goals requires the collective and coordinated leadership and action at the global level and a people-centered approach,.”

"The G-20 is well positioned to provide such leadership, while promoting an inclusive approach with all stakeholders, private and public, and pursuing ambitious yet concrete and actionable programs,” the declaration reads.

The Group of 20 nations account for more than half the world's population and some 80% of its GDP.

The declaration also recognizes the need for "accelerating the adaptation of agriculture and food systems to climate change."'

“Beyond the differences and distances among some countries present at the G-20 table, we are all in agreement on climate change, sustainability, on the great issues that today can only be resolved with global cooperation,” Di Maio said.

But there were some sharp exchanges involving some of the major powers during the day.

Arriving, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said it was “important that we sit together in this round with countries like Russia and China, and that we openly address the fact that we do not think much of their vaccine diplomacy.”

Maas was referring to China and Russia providing or selling their own produced vaccines to less developed countries, although some European countries, including Hungary and San Marino, were eager to get the Russian Sputnik V vaccine. Some in the West believe China and Russia have been supplying their vaccines to poorer countries in order to bolster their power.

Neither China nor Russia sent their foreign ministers. China's minister, Wang Yi , addressed the meeting remotely and jabbed back at Maas.

China, he said, “has supplied more than 450 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines to 100 countries.” The Chinese minister took a swipe at Western nations, adding that countries able to supply vaccines ought to ”avoid restrictions on exports and excessive hording" of vaccines,

“To bring the pandemic to an end, we must get more vaccine to more places,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the gathering. “Multilateral cooperation will be key to stop this global health crisis.”

Blinken took the occasion to tout U.S. contributions to COVAX, the U.N.-backed program to get vaccines to needy nations, which include around 500 million Pfizer doses and 80 million other doses.

Germany's Maas signaled urgency. “I think the main thing now is to quickly create alternatives so that countries, regions like Africa, for example, are able to be supplied with more vaccine more quickly,” he told AP. He suggested focusing on providing supply chains as well as production facilities.

The decision earlier this year by President Joe Biden's administration to return to the climate change fight and help lead it has heartened advocates pressing for urgent tackling of climate change threats. Last year, under the Trump administration, the United States became the only country to leave the 2015 agreement.

———

D'Emilio reported from Rome.

di Maio preoccupato per quello che mangiano nei PVS, mentre glissa elegantemente sugli italiani all'estero ridotti alla fame dalle politiche sue e di Contedraghi

 

FAO Director-General urges G20: invest in rural areas and step up actions to eradicate hunger and poverty

G20, UN and partners adopt the Matera Declaration and call for more partners to join the Food Coalition


FAO Director-General with Italy’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Luigi Di Maio, at press conference, after G20 meetings in Matera.

29 June 2021, Matera - The Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, QU Dongyu, today urged Foreign Affairs and Development Ministers of G20 countries to make more investments in rural areas and double down on actions to eradicate hunger and poverty.

Qu made the appeal at the Italy-presided G20 Foreign Affairs and Development Ministers' meeting where - for the first time - food security and nutrition were at the centre of the agenda.

"Governments must refocus their energies and investment to rural areas. Agricultural sector is the solution to eradicate poverty and undernourishment while reducing unwanted migration," said Qu.

Eighty percent of the world's poorest, or 600 million people - more than Europe's entire population - live in rural areas, working in the agricultural sector, and yet go to bed hungry. Almost half of them are children under 15, with fewer opportunities for education and jobs than their peers in urban areas.

"Eradicating poverty and hunger doesn't have to be prohibitively expensive," said Qu.

He cited a recent modelling study by FAO and partners that found that if industrialized countries doubled their investment for 10 years and if poorer countries kept up with their investment to promote a series of low-cost interventions - such as in agricultural research and development, agricultural information and communications services, improvement of literacy for women and girls - and scaled up existing social protection programmes, this could help 500 million people escape from hunger. Moreover, an additional $39 billion to 50 billion per year is needed to end hunger by 2030, as envisaged by the second Sustainable Development Goal.

"Public, private, bilateral, multilateral and innovative forms of funding and partnerships are all needed to support the transformation of our economic and agri-food systems, particularly in low-income countries," stressed Qu.

FAO welcomes the G20 Presidency's decision to place food security and nutrition, COVID-19 response and recovery at the centre of the G20 meetings in Matera.

As the COVID-19 pandemic started, nearly one in ten people in the world were exposed to severe levels of food insecurity. The economic slow-down caused by the pandemic raises more concerns over global food security since the access to food by the poorest and most vulnerable is significantly affected by unemployment and income loss.

"I would like to commend the Government of Italy for its initiative with the Food Coalition, as a global alliance for coordination, our shared commitment in response to the pandemic," said Qu.

"In this historical joint meeting, FAO would like to call upon the G20 and its partners to renew their collective commitment and joint actions to eradicating hunger and poverty," concluded the FAO Director-General.

The Matera Declaration

The Foreign Affairs and Development Ministers' meeting culminated in the Matera Declaration on food security, nutrition and food systems. A call to action in the time of the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond - a declaration by the G20 Ministers, FAO and other UN agencies and partners.

In it, the signatories "agree to deliver on food security priorities by enhancing efforts in ensuring safe and adequate nutrition for all, ending all forms of malnutrition, preserving agrobiodiversity, as well as relying on science, innovation, advanced business practices and responsible behavior complementing traditional knowledge, local food culture and best practices in order to achieve SDG 2 targets".

Renewed calls for partners to join the Food Coalition

The G20 Foreign Affairs and Development Ministers and FAO - through the Matera Declaration - encouraged "partners and stakeholders to collaborate with or join the Food Coalition launched by FAO whose goal is to build a global alliance to trigger coordinated action in response to COVID-19, with a focus on the thematic priorities identified in this Matera Declaration around food security, nutrition and food systems, and to mobilize political, financial, policy and technical support based on needs and demands of developing countries, with a focus on smallholder farmers, women and youth."

Proposed by the Government of Italy and led by FAO, the Food Coalition is a multi-stakeholder, multi-sectoral mechanism that aims to mobilize political, financial and technical assistance in support of countries affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Today FAO is launching "Food Coalition - Call for proposals" encouraging all its Members to join efforts and submit proposals offering their support in response to needs on the ground.

A number of FAO Members and non-state actors with the technical support of FAO have already taken steps to build cross-county coalitions around priority topics such as: reducing food loss and waste; transforming agri-food systems; improving farmers' access to markets and credits; adopting the One Health approach - all with the aim of responding to concrete needs and demands on the ground.

The Matera Declaration also called for the promotion of a science-based holistic One Health approach - which recognises the strong links between humans, animals and the environment and the need to tackle global health threats holistically.

In addition, the signatories of the Declaration committed to leveraging opportunities such as the 2021 UN Food Systems' Summit - described as having the "potential to improve the sustainability of food systems" - and to explore existing initiatives, including the Global Network against Food Crisis (an international alliance of the UN, the EU, governmental and non-governmental agencies working to tackle food crises together, founded by EU, FAO and WFP in 2016) to reach the objectives of the Matera Declaration.

Note to editors:

The FAO Director-General's address at the G20 Foreign Affairs and Development Ministers' meeting is available here.

The FAO Director General and the G20 Presidency, Italy's Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Luigi Di Maio, will deliver statements at the end of the meetings today to the media highlighting needs and actions to eradicate hunger and poverty. This can be followed live here, starting from around 20.00, Italy time.

di Maio preoccupato per quello che mangiano nei PVS, mentre glissa elegantemente sugli italiani all'estero ridotti alla fame dalle politiche sue e di Contedraghi

 

The G20 wants to “reduce the gap between the world’s north and south” – EURACTIV.de

Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio said the Matera Declaration on Food Security, adopted by the G20, aims to increase investments in the richest countries in order to achieve “stable results in the medium term” in the fight against world hunger. Document “Teacher”.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, more than 840 million people are currently at risk of not getting enough food this decade. Another 100 million have lost their jobs and income due to COVID-19.

“Our plan reinforces the role of the Food Alliance launched by Italy within the Food and Agriculture Organization and is in line with Italy’s strategy to confront global crises exacerbated by the pandemic,” Di Maio commented. He highlighted “United Nations leadership” as “the cornerstone of an effective multilateral system”.

On the topic of climate change and the environment, he added: “Through the United Nations Conferences on Climate (COP26) and Biodiversity (COP15), we have a unique opportunity to implement the Paris Agreements by making ambitious short-term commitments and supporting the goal of climate neutrality that we strive for in 2050.” .

Italy wanted to adequately fulfill its role as the current G20 Presidency and as a close partner of the United Kingdom at COP26. For example, a special climate official will soon be appointed, as the USA and UK have already done, according to Di Maio.

In closing, the Minister stressed that “beyond the differences and differences at the G20 table, we all agree that we must work together on climate change in order to make our societies sustainable.”

“Award-winning music trailblazer. Gamer. Lifelong alcohol enthusiast. Thinker. Passionate analyst.”

di Maio prosegue imperterrito la sua politica di genocidio degli italiani all'estero: meglio importare asilanti che fare tornare gli italiani che gli potrebbero fare il culo

 

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Italian FM calls for ensuring humanitarian access to crisis zones

Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio on Wednesday called on developed countries to take steps to ensure humanitarian access to crisis zones

Italian Foreign Minister, Lugi Di Maio
Lugi Di Maio, Italian Foreign Minister

Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio on Wednesday called on developed countries to take steps to ensure humanitarian access to crisis zones.

He made the remarks at special ministerial talks which were attended by representatives from the Group of 20 (G20) countries and organised in collaboration with the Rome-based World Food Program (WFP).

The coronavirus crisis shed light on the need for wealthy countries to take steps to help those in need in poor and developing countries, said the minister from the southern Italian city of Brindisi.

The coronavirus pandemic could add another 100 million people to the global ranks of the hungry and malnourished, he said.

"One of the first steps to building a better world is to make sure everyone is fed," the minister added.

WFP Executive Director David Beasley said via social media that the world has "a window of opportunity to prevent famine, mass migration, and destabilization."

Beasley also called for wealthy countries to dedicate more resources to the effort.

In the "Matera Declaration," a joint statement released Tuesday at the end of a G20 foreign and development ministers meeting, the world's 20 biggest economies said they "recognize that poverty alleviation, food security, and sustainable food systems, are key to ending hunger, encouraging social cohesion and community development, reducing socio-economic inequalities both between and within countries..."

The talks represented an important phase of the process for rethinking the global economic system to help it better withstand blows like the one from the coronavirus pandemic, said Roberto Race, co-founder of think tank Competere.

"This is just a first step but there are some promising signs," Race told Xinhua, expressing hope that the meeting would represent a "relaunch for multilateralism" after the impacts of the pandemic.

"Ministers highlighted many important priorities," said Gian Franco Gallo, a political affairs analyst with ABS Securities.

"But the only way for an ambitious meeting like this one to make a difference will be: the promises and goals are followed by concrete action. We will know the value of the meeting only in the coming months or years," Gallo told Xinhua.

Singapore dismette la politica dei lockdown e della conta degli infetti: Il piano di vaccinazione mondiale sta per finire.

 

Singapore wants to stop counting Covid cases. Its roadmap could be a model for other countries

Helen Regan, CNN • Updated 30th June 2021
 
(CNN) — As countries around the Asia-Pacific region tighten restrictions once again to curb potential breakouts of the Delta coronavirus variant, Singapore has laid out a new vision for life to return to normal.
The roadmap, proposed by three members of Singapore's Covid-19 task force, would scrap lockdowns and mass contact tracing and allow for a return to quarantine-free travel and the resumption of large gatherings. It would even stop counting the daily Covid cases.
The proposal is a radical departure from the so-called "zero transmission" model adopted by several countries and territories -- including rival Asian business hub Hong Kong -- which have so far proved successful at avoiding large outbreaks.
But this "zero transmission" model, which requires stringent, often punishing quarantine measures, will be almost impossible to maintain as new variants spread, and long term is simply not sustainable, the task force members claim. Instead, they say living with Covid can be done.
"The bad news is that Covid-19 may never go away. The good news is that it is possible to live normally with it in our midst," said Singapore's Trade Minister Gan Kim Yong, Finance Minister Lawrence Wong and Health Minister Ong Ye Kung, in an op-ed in the Straits Times last week.
"We can turn the pandemic into something much less threatening, like influenza, hand, foot and mouth disease, or chickenpox, and get on with our lives."
It's a bold plan that could become a template for other countries looking to return to normal life and resume travel and tourism -- and offer hope for frustrated residents eager to get their lives back on track after 18 months of pandemic restrictions.

How they'll do it

The key for a lighter approach to the pandemic? High vaccination rates.
Singapore is on track for two-thirds of its population to have received their first vaccine dose by early July, and aims to fully vaccinate that figure by August 9.
"Vaccines are highly effective in reducing the risk of infection as well as transmission. Even if you are infected, vaccines will help prevent severe Covid-19 symptoms," the ministers said.
As more people get vaccinated, the way Singapore monitors daily Covid-19 infection numbers will change. Following a path similar to how it tracks influenza infections, Singapore will monitor those who fall seriously sick or how many are in intensive care units. Infected people will be allowed to recover at home.
"We will worry less about the health care system being overwhelmed," they said.
With new, potentially more contagious variants posing a concern around the world, the minsters said booster shots may be needed in the future and suggested a "multi-year vaccination program" be established.
While testing and surveillance will still be needed, they propose conducting tests in specific scenarios such as ahead of large social events, or when traveling back from abroad, rather than to track and quarantine close contacts.
To do this, the ministers say faster and easier methods of testing will be rolled out as PCR tests take too long to provide results. Other methods "in the pipeline" include breathalysers that take about one to two minutes to produce results.
In time, more treatments will become available for Covid-19. Already, the ministers point to therapeutics that are effective in treating the critically ill, and quicken recovery, as well as reducing severity of illness and deaths.
They also say citizens will be urged to practice "social responsibility" such as good hygiene and staying away from crowds when feeling unwell to reduce transmission rates.
"With vaccination, testing, treatment and social responsibility, it may mean that in the near future, when someone gets Covid-19, our response can be very different from now," the ministers said.

Other countries remain cautious

Singapore had been held up as a success story in controlling the virus, thanks to strict border controls, instituting quarantines and contact tracing as well as rules on social gatherings and mask wearing.
It managed to contain earlier outbreaks, including a peak of cases in April last year. In May, a small cluster of cases was connected to Changi Airport employees, prompting tighter curbs.
The city-state of 5.7 million people has been averaging about 18 cases a day in the past month and has recorded just 36 deaths since the pandemic started, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Its new approach is a departure from other places that have been successful at managing the pandemic but have comparatively low vaccination rates and have recently reimposed tougher restrictions.
A variant of the Covid-19 virus known as the Delta variant, first identified in India, is spreading rapidly in some regions and on track to become the dominant virus strain globally, health experts warn. CNN's Michael Holmes reports.
Several Australian states put their capital cities -- home to around 10.2 million people -- into lockdown on Monday over concerns the Delta strain could spark significant outbreaks.
Australia was celebrated for its initial response to the Covid-19 pandemic, but vaccine rates are low. Australia has fully vaccinated nearly 5% of its population, compared with more than 46% in the United States and 48% in the UK, according to Our World in Data.
New Zealand said it was considering making masks compulsory at high alert levels and halted a quarantine-free travel bubble with neighboring Australia following an outbreak of the Delta variant.
And financial center Hong Kong, where vaccine hesitancy is high and only 21% of the population has been fully vaccinated, announced it will suspend passenger flights from the United Kingdom from July 1, over rising cases of the Delta variant there.
Meanwhile, mainland China may have administered more than 1 billion Covid-19 vaccine doses, but it is thinking about keeping its borders shut for another year. The southern city of Guangzhou, a major international travel hub, is planning on building a huge quarantine center with 5,000 rooms to house travelers and Covid-19 close contacts over fears of the Delta variant's spread, according to state-run newspaper Global Times.

Lettera aperta al signor Luigi di Maio, deputato del Popolo Italiano

ZZZ, 04.07.2020 C.A. deputato Luigi di Maio sia nella sua funzione di deputato sia nella sua funzione di ministro degli esteri ...