Thursday, February 27, 2014

339.Reino Unido:Mulher em coma mandada procurar trabalho!

Cartesiano na Inspeção médica


Ainda não tivemos tempo de ler o artigo.  Mas isto parece bastante caricato da paranóia que circula no Governo Britânico de David Cameron,    numa onda diabólica e populista, demonizando os doentes e  tudo quanto é vulnerável, passando pelos desempregados, imigrantes, pessoas a viver nas migalhas dos subsídios sociais, os Europeus, on não Europeus, os comunistas, os não comunistas :--

Não deve de haver ninguém de quem os Tories gostem além dos banqueiros.

Segundo o artigo infra, uma empresa contratada  pelo governo para encontrar trabalho aos doentes andava a assediar e ameaçar uma paciente maníco-depressiva  que lhe cortavam o subsídio de subsistência. conseguiram forçá-la a frequentar  um programa para encontrar trabalho.

Mas  a saúde mental da paciente da infeliz entrou em parafuso e caíu em estado de coma há dois meses.  Mesmo assim, em estado de coma devido ao assédio, esses serviços continuavam com cartas a dizer-lhe para procurar trabalho.

O caso subiu a escândalo mediático tendo já o mnistro para os deficiente pedido desculpa.

 SHAME ON YOU!

 Vocês estão feitos ao bife aí no Reino Unido enquanto não puserem esses tipo fora da governação para sempre!



Rochdale coma woman Sheila Holt told to 'find work'

Mike Penning Minister Mike Penning apologised to the family of Sheila Holt
An "unreserved apology" had been issued by the government to the family of a woman who was sent a letter encouraging her to find work even though she has been in a coma for two months.
Speaking in the Commons, the Minister for Disabled People Mike Penning said things had clearly "gone wrong".
Sheila Holt, from Rochdale, was invited to "intensive job-focused activity".
Rochdale MP Simon Danczuk said the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) was hounding disabled people.
Sheila Holt's case was highlighted by Mr Danczuk during a debate on the effects of welfare reform on the sick and disabled.
Mr Danczuk said: "Sheila has suffered from severe bipolar [disorder] since childhood and regularly has traumatic experiences.
"She has not been in employment since she was 16 years old.
However she was pushed into the Work Programme before Christmas and she was finding it extremely difficult."
He said members of her family repeatedly informed Seetec, a contractor carrying out work capability assessments for the DWP, that she was not well "but they continued to get harassed by those organisations".
'Threatening her' Ms Holt's father Ken said her last job was 27 years ago and last year she was forced to go on a job-seeking course for eight days.
After each day she became more and more agitated until she "cracked" her father said, and was hospitalised following a "manic episode".
But while in hospital she suffered a heart attack on 17 December last year and is still in a coma after suffering brain damage.
He said: "If they had left her alone she would not be in this condition. They were threatening her with cuts and she needs the benefits.
"I just believe it's all wrong, you should be chasing the people who are fit, get them to work, not them that are not fit. It's outrageous."
Mr Penning said: "I apologise, unreservedly, to the family as the minister responsible.
"The family have every right to be aggrieved and I hope she makes a full recovery."

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  • keith gillespieArrest warrant for ex-footballer

    A warrant is issued for the arrest of the former Manchester United and Northern Ireland international footballer Keith Gillespie.

338. Chancellor Merkell address UK Parliament

Cartesian in politicks


Germany's Angela Merkel addressing UK Parliament

LIVE: Angela Merkel speech in UK parliament

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel has hailed Germany's "close partnership" with the UK in an historic address to both Houses of Parliament.
But she said those hoping for her to back EU treaty reform - or the opposite - would be "in for a disappointment".
She began her remarks in English before delivering the main part of her speech in German.
David Cameron is pulling out all the stops as he sees the German leader as crucial to his aims in Europe.
Angela Merkel addresses members of both houses of the UK parliament The speech was anticipated by all sides of the UK EU debate
He is hoping to persuade Mrs Merkel to accept the need for EU treaty changes that would allow him to return powers from Brussels before a promised referendum on Britain's EU membership in 2017.
The Guardian reported on Wednesday that Berlin was prepared to offer "limited opt-outs" to the UK over its future compliance with existing EU directives and to make sure some other regulations were more flexibly enforced.
David Cameron with Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg UK PM David Cameron, right, awaits the speech with opposition leader Ed Miliband, left, and deputy PM Nick Clegg, centre.
The newspaper said it was a sign of the lengths that Germany was willing to go to to ensure the UK remained a member of the EU amid fears in Europe that a referendum could lead to British withdrawal.
But the BBC's Berlin Correspondent Stephen Evans said sources close to Mrs Merkel were playing down expectations of new proposals for the kind of changes British Conservatives wanted to see.

“Start Quote

She may well agree to concessions to Britain - but not immediately”
One Merkel adviser said: "Those expecting a thunderbolt in the speech will be disappointed."
Instead, Mrs Merkel will offer warm words about Britain and her desire to keep the country in the EU. But, says Evans, people close to the German leader are also expressing dismay that, as they see it, the British government has not come to them to spell out what changes it wants.
Although not an official state visit - Mrs Merkel is not head of state - the trip has been planned for months, with both governments aware of its political significance at a time of looming change in Europe.
Mrs Merkel is expected to speak for half an hour, in German, in front of an invited audience of dignitaries in the Palace of Westminster, including MPs, peers, diplomats, business and cultural leaders.
General Charles de Gaulle and his wife Yvonne
Leaders previously accorded the honour of addressing both House of Parliament include French Presidents Charles de Gaulle, pictured above, Valery Giscard d'Estaing and Francois Mitterrand, US presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, the Tibetan opposition leader the Dalai Lama, Burmese politician Aung San Suu Kyi and former Russian president Boris Yeltsin - click here for a full list.
Mrs Merkel's predecessor, Willy Brandt, addressed both chambers in 1970.
'Not a priority' After Thursday's address, Chancellor Merkel will meet a delegation of MPs and peers before having a working lunch with the prime minister at Downing Street.
The two centre-right leaders, both of whom govern in a coalition with other parties, will hold a press conference in which Mrs Merkel is likely to be pressed on whether she will support the UK's call for future treaty change in the EU.
David Cameron has said that if the Conservatives win the 2015 election, he will seek to renegotiate the terms of the UK's membership of the European Union and put the outcome to an in-out referendum of the British people in 2017.
But he faces a battle to convince leaders of other EU member states to agree to the treaty changes he will need, with French President Francois Hollande recently telling the prime minister, on a one-day visit to the UK, that it was "not a priority".
Mr Cameron is seen as having a warmer relationship with Mrs Merkel than Mr Hollande, although Berlin was angered by his decision to veto a fiscal compact in December 2011 in response to the eurozone debt crisis.
The prime minister and his wife Samantha visited the German chancellor's country residence last April, following a visit made by Mrs Merkel and her husband to Chequers in 2010.
The leader of Mr Cameron's junior coalition partners, the Lib Dem Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, and opposition leader Ed Miliband, who both oppose calls for a referendum and who have warned that Conservative calls for a root-and-branch renegotiation will alienate EU leaders, will hold separate meetings with Mrs Merkel.
The German chancellor will round off the day by having tea at Buckingham Palace.

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Wednesday, February 26, 2014

337. Prisão Perpétua para Assassinos


Cartesiano Juiz

Os dois assassinos tresloucados  que cruelmente chacinaram o soldado Rigby em Woolwich recebem penas de prisão perpétua.


Então estavam à espera de quê?  Que os mandassem de férias para as Bahamas!

Estes sacanas mataram o homem quando este nem estava em zona de guerra, não estava fazendo mal a ninguém e estava desarmado. Primeiro atropelaram-no com um automóvel, e depois quando o infeliz já jazia gravemente ferido no chão, um cobardola deles cortou-lhe o pescocço com um cutelo de talhante! 

Estes tontos da mola agora que ponham olhos detrás da cabeça, se não quiserem também acordar   com o gargalo cortado por outro recluso, o qual se sentiu insultado com animais desses ao lado  a respirar o mesmo ar na mesma prisão.

Obrigado por os terem fechado detrás das grades para sempre, porque monstros desses não fazem aí falta nenhuma no Reino Unido. 

E se conseguirem identificar  mais gente endiabrada desse tipo, mêtam-nos lá também na grelha antes de fazerem mal a alguém, e deixem-nos lá apodrecer, de joelhos a rezar e pedir perdão.



Lee Rigby murder: Adebolajo and Adebowale jailed

June Kelly reports on the sentencing of Lee Rigby's killers
Michael Adebolajo has been given a whole-life term and Michael Adebowale has been jailed for a minimum of 45 years for murdering Fusilier Lee Rigby.
Adebolajo, 29, and Adebowale, 22, drove into Fusilier Rigby with a car before hacking him to death in Woolwich, south-east London, in May last year.
The judge, Mr Justice Sweeney, said Adebolajo's was one of those "rare cases" warranting a whole-life term.
The pair were absent during sentencing after a fracas in the dock.
As Mr Justice Sweeney began to sentence the men they started shouting and scuffling with court security guards. They had to be forced to the ground and were removed from court.
Fusilier Rigby's family sobbed as Adebolajo shouted "Allahu Akbar", and Adebowale called out "that's a lie" as the judge told them their extremist views were "a betrayal of Islam".
One relative needed medical treatment after the outbursts. The judge later apologised for the fact that the family had to witness what happened in the dock.
Fusilier Lee Rigby Fusilier Lee Rigby was wearing a Help for Heroes hooded top when he was murdered
Sentencing the killers in their absence, the judge said they had been convicted on "overwhelming" evidence of the "barbaric" murder of Fusilier Rigby.
The British Muslim converts had "butchered" the 25-year-old soldier, he said.
Adebolajo was the leader of the "joint enterprise", the judge said, but Adebowale played his part "enthusiastically".
Mr Justice Sweeney said the pair carried out the murder "in a way that would generate maximum media coverage".
"He had done absolutely nothing to deserve what you did to him", the judge said. The pair created "a bloodbath", he went on.
"You both gloried in what you had done", said the judge.
"Your sickening and pitiful conduct was in stark contrast to the women at the scene who tended to Lee Rigby's body and challenged what you had done."
Det Insp Pete Sparks, on behalf of Lee Rigby's family: "We feel that no other sentence would have been acceptable"
Speaking outside court, Det Insp Pete Sparks, police liaison officer for Fusilier Rigby's family, read a short statement on behalf of the family saying "no other sentence would have been acceptable".

Callum May and Jane Peel at the Old Bailey

Mr Justice Sweeney was not far into his sentencing remarks in Court 2 of the Old Bailey when trouble erupted in the high-security glass dock.
"You were radicalised and each became an extremist - espousing a cause and views which, as has been said elsewhere, are a betrayal of Islam and of the peaceful Muslim communities who give so much to our country," the judge was telling the defendants.
"It's a lie!" shouted Adebowale from the dock. "It's not a betrayal of Islam! You and America will never be safe"
Nine security guards did their best to stifle the outburst, piling onto the men, and lifting Adebolajo into the air.
From the bench, the judge indicated with a downturned finger that the murderers should be removed form court.
His case was a rare one, where not only was the seriousness exceptionally high but the requirements of just punishment and retribution made a whole-life term the just penalty, he said.
But the judge said Adebowale had played a lesser role in the murder of Lee Rigby. His age and his mental health were also given as reasons for his 45-year minimum term.
"We feel satisfied that justice has been served for Lee", the statement said.
Sue Hemming, head of special crime and counter terrorism at the Crown Prosecution Service, said Adebolajo and Adebowale had "revelled in one of the most appalling terrorist murders I have seen".
"Not only was the attack brutal and calculated; it was also designed to advance extremist views", she said.
Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Cressida Dick said the sentences reflected the "true horror" of Fusilier Rigby's murder.
Earlier, Fusilier Rigby's wife Rebecca said her young child would grow up and see images "no son should have to endure".
Her statement was one of those from Fusilier Rigby's family, read out by prosecutor Richard Whittam QC.
Mrs Rigby said she had accepted her husband's life would be at risk when he was deployed to Afghanistan, but not when he was in the UK.
She said: "When you wave someone off you accept that there is a chance you will never see them again. You do not expect to see this on the streets of the UK."
The court also heard part of a statement from the soldier's stepfather, Ian Rigby.
He said: "After all he'd been through in Afghanistan, all Lee was doing was walking through London. After seeing the television, you just can't comprehend it."
Adebolajo and Adebowale faced whole-life jail terms after a Court of Appeal ruling last week upheld judges' right to jail the most serious offenders in England and Wales for the rest of their lives.
However, counsel for Adebolajo, David Gottlieb, had warned an indeterminate sentence would "create a martyr".
Mr Gottlieb said Adebolajo was "not so depraved or wicked that he is incapable of redemption", saying the murder "shares the characteristics of a religiously aggravated crime".
Lee Rigby's uncle Ray Dutton: "For him to be killed in the way he was, that was horrendous"
He said that Adebolajo intended to die and still believed he should be put to death.
Adebolajo had claimed he was a "soldier of Allah" and the killing was an act of war.
However, Mr Justice Sweeney rejected his mitigation, saying Adebolajo has "no real prospect of rehabilitation".
Counsel for Michael Adebowale, Abbas Lakha QC, told the court the killing was "horrific" but was not a case "where the offending is so exceptionally high that Mr Adebowale must be kept in prison for his life".
He said: "The right and proper sentence is one which does leave open the possibility of release in the future. Any other sentence would be inhuman."
Addressing Adebowale, the judge said: "I am persuaded that the combination of your lesser role, your age and your pre‐existing and continuing mental condition mean that it is not appropriate in your case to impose a whole-life term."
Lee Rigby's stepfather Ian Rigby, his mother Lyn Rigby, and his sisters, Sara McClure and Chelsea Rigby, arrive at the Old Bailey Lee Rigby's stepfather Ian Rigby, his mother Lyn Rigby, and his sisters, Sara McClure and Chelsea Rigby, arrive at the Old Bailey
Fusilier Rigby, from Middleton, Greater Manchester, was murdered as he returned to his barracks in Woolwich, south-east London on 22 May 2013. He died of multiple cut and stab wounds.
Arrests Adebolajo and Adebowale drove into Fusilier Rigby at 30 to 40mph, before dragging him into the road and attacking him with knives and attempting to decapitate him with a meat cleaver.
Outside court, three people were arrested as far-right protesters gathered while the pair were being sentenced.
Supporters of the British National Party and the English Defence League gathered around makeshift gallows constructed in the street and held placards calling for the capital punishment to be restored.
Protestors cheered when the sentences were announced.
A City of London Police spokesman said two men were arrested, one on suspicion of actual bodily harm and one for affray.
A woman was arrested on suspicion of being drunk and disorderly.
Rebecca Rigby, the widow of murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby, arriving at the Old Bailey Rebecca Rigby, widow of murdered Fusilier Rigby, said "you do not expect to see this on the streets of the UK"
Police and protestors demonstrate outside the Old Bailey Police confirmed two men were arrested, one on suspicion of actual bodily harm and one for affray, outside the Old Bailey

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Lee Rigby verdict

Murder in Woolwich


Tuesday, February 25, 2014

336. Sistem de Gestão Da Educção no Eino Unido Esbarrou!


Cartesiano Gestor


Logo elaboraremos sobre este assunto.

Leia já o artigo em Inglês saber o que se passa na Educação no Reino Unido e evitar os mesmos erros. Ainda não lemos artigo, mas já pensamos em atropelos graves. Só pode.


E-Act chain loses control of 10 academy schools

Academy schools

Total number in England

3,657
(1 Feb 2014)
55%
of secondaries
  • Academies are independent state-funded schools
  • Funded direct from central government, rather than local authority
  • First set up by Labour to help struggling schools, but scheme since opened to all
PA

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One of the biggest chains of academies in England is to be stripped of control of 10 schools.
The decision was made after Ofsted inspectors raised serious concerns about the performance of some of the E-Act schools.
It will remain in control of the further 24 academies in its chain.
A Department for Education spokesman said officials were working with E-Act to find different sponsors for the schools.
The spokesman said it had urged the academy provider to reduce its number of academies, but the decision was taken by E-Act.
Chris Keates, leader of the Nasuwt teachers' union said: "This 'pass the parcel' strategy is no way to treat children, staff and schools or to support school improvement."
Financial investigation
The Department for Education has so far not confirmed the identity of the schools, saying it was for E-Act to tell parents.
Sir Michael WilshawSir Michael Wilshaw wants academy chains to be open to the scrutiny of Ofsted
But they are believed to include Trent Valley, Sherwood, Dartmouth, Forest, Leeds East and Leeds West academies.
Nick Hindmarsh, head of Dartmouth Academy in Devon said that his school is improving and about to move into new buildings next term - and that this dispute over the sponsor was a "huge distraction".

Analysis

Academies are now the most typical secondary schools in England, 55% of the state sector.
The most recent figures show there are 1,787 such state-funded, autonomous, secondary schools.
And most of these - forgive the jargon - are "converter" academies, which are usually successful, stand-alone schools, operating independently outside of local authority control.
But this latest row is about another type of academy, "sponsored" academies, where a school has an outside sponsor to help raise standards or where they are part of a chain of academies.
E-Act is one of these academy providers, responsible for running, until now 34 schools. They're a kind of non-geographic education authority, operating as a not-for-profit trust.
These academy chains, rather than their schools, have been a source of conflict.
If a school does not feel the chain is providing a good service, there is no mechanism for a school to swap to another provider.
And a key dispute is over whether academy chains can be inspected in the same way as a local authority.
Ofsted chief Sir Michael Wilshaw has made no secret that he thinks they should be open to such scrutiny. At present, individual academies can be inspected, but not the chains that run them.
His argument is that it's no good just inspecting problems with the fruit if you're not allowed to take a good look at the tree.
The problems were about the sponsor and not the school, he argued, and that it would be "business as usual" for the school.
An official statement from E-Act said it was working with the DfE to "identify where we are best placed to make a significant difference to our academies".
A source close to E-Act said that the schools being removed from its control were not being chosen because of poor performance.
Instead it reflects where E-Act are less able to support schools - including factors such as their geographical spread across the country.
The decision will mean that E-Act will lose control of about a third of its academies.
Such sponsored academies are state funded, but are part of chains run by academy providers.
Academy providers are not-for-profit trusts that run groups of schools. More than 50% of secondary schools in England are now academies.
The decision to remove these schools from E-Act follows recent inspections of almost half of their schools by the Ofsted watchdog.
'Extravagant expenses'
The academy provider faced heavy criticism last year in a report from the financial inspectorate, the Education Funding Agency, which warned of a culture of extravagant expenses.
The decision to limit E-Act is likely to raise further questions about the oversight of academy schools and the chains which run some of them.
The Ofsted chief Sir Michael Wilshaw has said that academy chains should be open to the scrutiny of Ofsted inspections - in the same way that local authority services can be inspected.
Jonathan SimonsMr Simons wants data on sponsor performance to be available
Jonathan Simons, head of education at the Policy Exchange think-tank, also says "it is vital that academy chains be inspected by Ofsted, and that data on sponsor performance should be available for scrutiny".
But he says it would be "wrong to use this case to call for schools to remain under local authority control" when academies were helping to raise standards.
A Department for Education spokesman said that Ofsted already can "inspect a number of academy schools from the same chain in one batch if they wish".
"As we have seen with E-Act, these arrangements already allow underperformance in academy chains to be swiftly identified and addressed. This shows the present system is working, allowing both individual schools and academy chains to be held effectively to account.
"We welcome E-Act's decision to hand over a number of their academies to new sponsors.
"We hope this will mean E-Act can focus on raising standards in their remaining schools."
Shadow Education Secretary Tristram Hunt said: "Michael Gove is allowing underperformance to go unchecked in academy schools and free schools.
"The complete lack of oversight has meant poor standards of education are allowed to set in. Michael Gove is refusing to take the action that is needed to prevent standards slipping."

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Sunday, February 23, 2014

335. Yulia Tymoshenko da prisão política para presidente

Cartesiano visionário
Nampula, 23 de Fevereiro de 2014

E óbvio que a Yulia será brevemente colocada no poder na Ucrânia. A história tem alguns casos destes: da masmorras da prisão para o lugar supremo da Nação.

Queríamos primeiro agradecer às centenas de leitores que temos na Ucrânia pela fidelidade ao nosso Blog. Deve de haver por aí muita gente a falar a língua Lusitana. Somos mais lidos na Ucrânia do que em Portuga. Aqui somos praticamente desconhecidos. É pena. 

Um grande abraço amigo  para vocês aí na Ucrânia.  Como conhecem a filosofia deste Blog: Liberdade e Democracia. Nós estamos, na nossa postura de revolucionários das mentes,  na barricadas com os manifestantes na Praca da Independência.


A maré está do lado da revolta contra a manápula dos Russos sobre a Ucrânia. E quando a maré está a subir ninguém a consegue parar. É melhor desviarem-se, fugir como já fez o Presidente da Ucrânia. Ninguém sabe onde ele está escondido. Nos pensamos que estará prestes a pirar-se para  Rússia. Sentiu o fogo no traseiro e pirou-se dali para fora antes que o degolassem lá. Depois da matança de  centenas de manifestantes que ordenou ou consentiu, a posição do Vìctor é de perdente e insustentável. Fez sugisse.

Nós não advogamos a Ucrânia a derrubar as pontes de ligação à Rússia, mas afirmamos que a Ucrânia terá mais liberdade e maturidade como membro da União Europeia.

O problema grave da Rússia é de ter sempre agido com um braço de ferro sobre os vizinhos. são brutos e não tem feito  intervenções de modo subtil. Tem agido como colonizadores, agressivos, e punitivos quando contrariados.

Os Americanos tem sido mais raposas, agem mais  suavemente na maior parte dos casos, são menos visíveis, mas os interesses deles também estão sempre em primeiro lugar  defendem-nos, a bem ou a mal. Saiem unilateralmente das convenções internacionais que não lhes agradem e até podem rescindir contratos quando já não lhes são favoráveis. Isto não é lindo.

O historial Russo também tem  sido  agressivo e traiçoeiro contra os vizinhos  (Os Polacos podem confirmar quando os Russos incentivaram a revolta dos Polacos contra os Nazis, prometendo ajuda e não ajudaram. Deixaram chacinar os insurgentes para eles depois entrarem na Polónia sem resistencia. Maquiavelismo aplicado a letra. O massacre de Katyn na Polóna também é uma chaga que terão de na pele até ao fim dos tempos. Portanto não façam mais maluquerias deste tipo).

Não é segredo para ninguém  aquela sujeira que a Russia fez nos nos paises que ocupou depois da Segunda Grande Guerra Mundial. Impuseram presidentes fantoches e esses países ´mergulharam quase todos num subdesenvolvimento incrível.

Tanto a Rússia como a América e outros terão de compreender  e come;ar a tratar os outros países como parceiros, e perder essa ideia estúpida de querer dominar o outro e "patronizing". Muitos países já tem hoje maturidade suficiente para decidirem democraticamente sobre o seus próprios destinos, políticos e sociais.

A Rússia está presentemente a compreender, esperemos que sim, que o modelo antigo, repressivo, gasto, já não funciona. Têm de upgrade  a Memória RAM e substituir  os Hard drives por Solid Disk State no cérebro deles, modernizarem-se e arquivar o Principe  Maquiavel.

O Reino Unido também anda agora a scaremongering os Escoceses porque estes não se sentem bem no Reino Unido. Até dizem que lhes bloqueiam a adesão à União Europeia, quando eles nunca fariam isso caso a Escócia votasse este ano pela independência no referendo.

Ainda melhor, a escócia já está na União Europeia e nem nunca de lá saíria no caso de se tornar independente. Nem o Reino Unido nem qualquer outro país da União jamais votaria a expulsão da Escócia, pela simples razão que esta Grande Nação obdece a 200 por centro aos critérios de adesão há muito tempo. São muito desenvolvidos nas ciências, engenherias, artes e ainda por cima, são uma nação que bastante tem contribuído com o seu humansmo no progresso mundial.

Por outro lado, é este governo do Partido Conservador que anda a lançar essas ameaças, mas todos vocês aí já sabem que nas próximas eleições, esse partido Conservador vai ser posto na rua por muito tempo, e não terá voto na matéria sobre a Escócia na União Europeia. 

Também não sabemos qual é o problema desse Partido do Governo Cameron sobre a não aceitação da Escócia na Europa, quando eles querem sair da União Europeia. São quase 30 países membros da União Europeia e só o Governo atual do Reino Unido levanta problemas. Portanto o problema não está na Europa, mas sim no Governo Britânico.

Diga-se de passagem que ninguém os obrigou a aderir à União e tiverem de requerer duas vezes para lá meterem os pés. E a porta da entrada é a mesma da saída. Mas eles quando agarrarem juízo e forem colocados diante da realidade, nós aqui em Nampula temos a certeza que o Reino Unido nunca saírá na União Europeia.

Resumindo e concluindo, uma das razões do conflito na Ucrânia é porque este país não quer mais ser um vassalo da Rússia e quer aderir à União Europeia como país livre das garras seja de que  país for, e participar, contribuir, dar e receber, na União Europeia como parceiro e ao mesmo nível dos outros países membros. Serão certamente bem-vindos na União nestas condições de igualdade.

Até seria no interesse da Rússia de aderir também à União Europeia por várias razões. A curto prazo, isso ajudaria a democratizar o país e erradicar esses poderes oligárquicos que por lá abundam.  Vejam bem onde a Rússia chegou! 

A longo prazo, a Rússia também precisa da Europa e a Europa precisa da Rússia por razões de travar e dissuadir outros blocos de se tornarem agressivos e diabólicos. Não elaboramos sobre o assunto porque os aficionados já compreenderam.

Já dissemos neste blog que a Rússia não é um país subdesenvolvido, é um país moderno e sempre foi uma nação de alta cultura e de gente idealista, progressista e revolucionária.  Passa agora por uma fase transitória. Certamente que essas forças democráticas bem presentes na Rússia acabarão por triunfar  e restabelecer a democracia igual à dos países da União Europa. 


 Sigam o exemplo de   Portugal na 

REVOLUÇÃO DOS CRAVOS! QUE GRANDE LIÇÃO DE SABEDORIA E HUMANISMO PARA O MUNDO INTEIRO! O POVO ADERIU EM MASSA AO DERRUBAMENTO DOS FASCIMO NAUSEABUNDO E COLOCOU CRAVOS NOS CANOS DAS ESPINGARDAS DOS MILITARES.  PRATICAMENTE NÃO FORAM DISPARADOS DISPARADOS TIROS CONTRA NINGUÉM!

During the Portuguese Revolution in 1974 against fascism, the people stuffed the machine guns of the military with carnations! No bullets were shot! Virtually nobody was killed! Instead, the people took  to the streets, joined the military, hugged  them and danced! What a wisdom and lesson of humanism of this GREAT NATION  to the world!

Por fim, pedimos a todos os deuses que protejam so povo da Ucrânia das balas mortíferas disparadas por gente diabólica. 

Tenham juízo na bola porque  é uma vergonha andarem por aí a  matar gente.
Fiquem em paz.

VIVA A UCRÂNIA   EM LIBERDADE!





 



Ukraine ex-PM Tymoshenko calls for protests to continue


Yulia Tymoshenko told the crowd that "heroes never die"
Ukrainian former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko has urged opposition supporters in Kiev's Independence Square to continue their protests.
Ms Tymoshenko, who has a back injury, addressed crowds from a wheelchair after being freed from detention.
"Until you finish this job... nobody has the right to leave," she said.
Her speech came at the end of a dramatic day that saw President Viktor Yanukovych removed by MPs and fleeing Kiev, but refusing to stand down.
Ms Tymoshenko broke down in tears as she told cheering supporters late on Saturday: "You are heroes.

Yulia Tymoshenko

  • 1960 - Born in Dnipropetrovsk, eastern Ukraine
  • 1990s - runs United Energy Systems of Ukraine and makes a fortune
  • 2004 - "Orange Revolution" protests led by Tymoshenko and ally Viktor Yushchenko defeat Viktor Yanukovych
  • 2005 - Tymoshenko becomes PM but relations sour with President Yushchenko
  • 2010 - Yanukovych beats her in presidential election
  • 2011 - Jailed for for abuse of power
  • February 2014 - Freed after three months of anti-government protests
"Because nobody could... do what you have done," she said. "We've eliminated this cancer, this tumour."
But while she was hailed by many in the audience, she does not enjoy universal support among the opposition, says the BBC's David Stern in Kiev.
Before she went into prison in 2011, her popularity ratings were dropping and many Ukrainians blame her in part for the chaos of the post-Orange Revolution years, or see her as a member of Ukraine's corrupt elite.
Dozens of people walked away in disgust when she appeared on the stage, the BBC's Tim Wilcox in Independence Square reports.
A vote by parliament on Friday paved the way for her release.

Duncan Crawford on mixed reactions in the crowd as Tymoshenko spoke
She was sentenced to seven years in jail after a controversial verdict on her actions as prime minister.
Earlier on Saturday, she left the hospital in the eastern city of Kharkiv, where she had been held under prison guard, and flew to Kiev.
She told journalists at Kiev airport that those behind violence "must be punished", the Interfax agency reports.
The health ministry says 88 people are now known to have been killed since 18 February.
Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko is welcomed by supporters upon her arrival at the airport in KievMs Tymoshenko was greeted by supporters on her arrival in Kiev
The former Ukrainian Prime Minister is greeted by supporters shortly after being freedThe former Ukrainian Prime Minister is greeted by supporters shortly after being freed
Ecstatic crowds greet Ms Tymoshenko as she is driven from prisonThe BBC's Yuri Maloveryan watched ecstatic crowds greet Ms Tymoshenko as she was driven from prison
Opposition seize control
Ukraine's parliament voted on Saturday to remove President Yanukovych and hold a presidential election on 25 May.
The parliamentary vote came after police stopped guarding presidential buildings, allowing protesters into the presidential country residence outside Kiev, and parliament made new high-level appointments.
Mr Yanukovych said events in Kiev were a "coup" and vowed not to stand down.
He compared the actions of the opposition to the rise to power of the Nazis in 1930s Germany and claimed MPs from his party had been "beaten, pelted with stones and intimidated".
The opposition is now in effective control of the capital Kiev, with Mr Yanukovych's last known whereabouts in Kharkiv after travelling there late on Friday night.

At the scene

Ukrainians on both sides of the East-West divide have long known about corruption at the heart of government.
But as protesters entered Mr Yanukovych's sprawling palatial compound on the outskirts of Kiev, no-one, it seems, expected this amount of gold and marble. As they wandered about the tennis courts, and the underground boxing ring, several were heard to remark: "So this is where all the money went."
There were ostriches, peacocks and grouse. An aviary, perhaps, or a zoo - as there were deer and wild boar too. But then they saw the floating banqueting hall, complete with vodka bottles emblazoned with the president's face. This was no zoo, but a meat-larder on legs - each animal destined for the pot.
This sudden display of exaggerated opulence has revealed the extent to which the president and his entourage have been getting rich at the expense of the country. It could prove a unifying factor.
Media reports have quoted Ukrainian officials as saying Mr Yanukovych was stopped by border police while attempting to fly to Russia aboard a private plane.
Fiery orator
Ms Tymoshenko's release has been a key demand of the protest movement.
The glamorous, fiery orator who helped lead the Orange Revolution - Ukraine's revolt against a controversial election in 2004 - was convicted of criminally exceeding her powers when she agreed a gas deal with Russia which was seen to have disadvantaged Ukraine.
She has always insisted the charges were untrue, inspired by Mr Yanukovych, the man she helped oust in 2004 who returned to defeat her in the 2010 presidential election.
Her release was one of the conditions of the EU-Ukraine trade pact that President Yanukovych rejected last year - triggering the protests that led to the current crisis.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso welcomed Ms Tymoshenko's release, calling it "essential for a democratic Ukraine".
The US also hailed the move. "We continue to urge an end to violence by all sides and a focus on peaceful, democratic dialogue,'' White House spokesman Jay Carney said in a statement.
In a telephone conversation with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, US Secretary of State John Kerry noted the "peaceful atmosphere" prevailing in Kiev after the departure of President Yanukovych, officials said.

Crowds entered the grounds of President Yanukovych's country house
In April 2013 the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Ms Tymoshenko's pre-trial detention had been "arbitrary and unlawful", though the judges did not rule on the legality of her actual conviction for the 2009 gas deal.
They did not explicitly support her claim that her detention was politically motivated, nor did they accept her allegations of physical maltreatment and medical neglect in prison.
A pact signed on Friday by Mr Yanukovych and opposition leaders now seems to have been overtaken by events.
It called for the restoration of the 2004 constitution and the formation of a national unity government.
The agreement failed to end the protests huge crowds remaining in Independence Square on Saturday calling for Mr Yanukovych's resignation.
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