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MEPs set to change late payment plans

April 2, 2020 | News | No Comments

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MEPs set to change late payment plans

Commission’s intention to impose a flat-rate penalty on authorities that pay late is deemed ‘excessive’.

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1/20/10, 10:06 PM CET

Updated 4/12/14, 6:58 PM CET

The European Parliament is expected to make major changes to  European Commission plans for  penalising public authorities that pay their contractors late.

German socialist MEP Barbara Weiler, who is leading the Parliament’s work on the dossier, said MEPs regarded as excessive the Commission’s intention to impose a 5% flat-rate penalty on authorities that pay late. The Parliament was considering what she described as a more effective scheme, with a graduated fee starting perhaps as low as 1%, and increasing in line with the length of the delay.

“I’m sure we will decide together on a lower percentage or a step-by-step approach,” Weiler said.

Impetus

Günter Verheugen, the European commissioner for enterprise and industry, has described his proposal, under which the 5% fee would apply once a 30-day deadline for payments had passed, as “an important impetus to overcoming the economic crisis”.

Weiler also warned that public services such as hospitals could be put at a disadvantage to rivals in the private sector. While the Parliament’s political groups had “not yet decided” how to resolve this, MEPs did not want to give private companies an advantage or to discriminate, she said.

The Parliament’s internal market committee will discuss the proposal in a public hearing with local authorities on 26 January. Weiler plans to deliver her draft report on 4 February, allowing it to be debated in the committee on 23 February.

Erik Sonntag of BusinessEurope said he saw “a great deal of pragmatism” in Weiler’s approach. “We have always questioned the Commission proposal’s realism,” he said. “We hope that the Council [of Ministers] will now show a similarly constructive approach.”

Authors:
Jim Brunsden 

C’est la ministre zimbabwéenne de l’Information, Monica Mutsvangwa, qui a annoncé le décès de l’artiste dans un hôpital de la capitale Harare, le 23 janvier 2019. “Nous avons perdu une icône”, a aussitôt tweeté le député Temba Mliswa, élu de la circonscription où le musicien avait ouvert une école de musique,” j’écris au président pour qu’il en fasse un héros national pour sa contribution à l’industrie de la musique, des arts et de la culture.“Fier d’être zimbabwéen”Sans savoir encore si le pouvoir accèdera à cette demande, la classe politique a en tout cas momentanément mis de côté les querelles pour rendre hommage à l’artiste, alors que la situation sociale est très tendue à travers tout le pays après l’annonce de la hausse du prix de l’essence. 

Repose en paix Oliver MtukudziSi quelqu’un m’a jamais rendu fier d’être #zimbabwéen, c’est bien toi. Merci de nous avoir fait plaisir si longtemps, en particulier pendant les jours les plus sombres“, a écrit le sénateur de l’opposition David Coltart.Mtukudzi a commencé à se produire en 1977 avec Thomas Mapfumo, un autre artiste à succès dont la musique de protestation reste populaire aujourd’hui.Une pique envers Robert Mugabe ?Avec sa voix enrouée, Tuku a gagné un large public à travers l’Afrique et au-delà. La plupart du temps, il évitait les sujets politiques dans ses chansons et préférait évoquer les difficultés de la vie quotidienne. Mais en 2001, sa chanson Wasakara, qu’on a pu traduire par You are old (Vous êtes vieux), extraite de l’album Bvuma (Tolérance), classé au palmarès des charts, a été interprétée par beaucoup comme faisant référence à Robert Mugabe, alors autoritaire président du Zimbabwe à 77 ans. En mars 2003, Mtukudzi a fait la couverture du magazine Time intitulée The People’s Voice, qui mettait en avant les musiciens du pays chantant pour le changement. Sa musique a traversé des générations, et plus tard, il a chanté des duos avec de jeunes musiciens, dont certains formés dans son centre artistique de Norton, près de Harare.L’hommage d’une ministre sud-africaineIl a produit des chansons avec le groupe sud-africain Black Mambazo ainsi qu’avec Hugh Masekela, le trompettiste et chanteur connu comme le “père du jazz sud-africain”, qui a utilisé sa musique dans la lutte contre l’apartheid et est décédé en 2018.”Depuis les profondeurs de Harare, sa carrière s’est épanouie comme une fleur de lys de flamme et son génie artistique nous a réunis dans les bons moments et nous a redonné espoir au moment des heures les plus sombres“, a tweeté Nathi Mthethwa, ministre des Arts et de la Culture d’Afrique du Sud.Click Here: geelong cats guernsey 2019

Créé en 1939, Ebano, l’ancien organe de presse de la puissance coloniale espagnole, vit une nouvelle transformation. Le média, devenu gouvernemental avec l’indépendance du pays, sera publié tous les jours. Il est ainsi le premier quotidien de Guinée équatoriale puisqu’aucun journal papier ne paraissait auparavant à cette fréquence.Un journal déjà censuréEn Guinée équatoriale, en plus du quotidien Ebano, il existe trois journaux privés mensuels. Des médias sous le contrôle total du pouvoir en place. En août 2017, “les autorités avaient donné l’ordre de retirer de la vente Ebano et de brûler tous les exemplaires”, selon Reporters sans Frontières. Ce journal gouvernemental avait interviewé un journaliste indépendant, Samuel Obiang Mbana, qui dénonçait les conditions de travail de la presse dans le pays.Un tirage à 100 exemplairesDans ce pays d’Afrique centrale où la liberté de presse est inexistante, le quotidien gouvernemental Ebano ne risque pas de susciter le débat ou de provoquer des polémiques. Bien que quotidienne, sa publication restera discrète avec un tirage ne dépassant pas les 100 exemplaires. Le journal est financé par le gouvernement équato-guinéen et c’est le ministre “de l’Information, de la Presse et de la Radio” qui nomme le rédacteur en chef.La Guinée équatoriale figure à la 171e place du Classement mondial de la liberté de la presse établi par l’organisation Reporters sans Frontières qui recense 180 pays. Le petit Etat pétrolier de 1,2 millions d’abitants est depuis 40 ans dirigé par le président Teodoro Obiang Nguema qui a été réélu en 2016 avec 93,7% des suffrages.

Suite à la catastrophe du 14 août dernier qui avait fait 43 morts, une soixantaine de personnes préparaient depuis des mois l’opération de démantelage du pont de Gênes (Italie). Les travaux ont finalement démarré vendredi 8 février. Il faudra des semaines, dès à présent, pour mener à bien cette opération. La fin des travaux sur le pont Morandi est prévue, au mieux, pour le mois d’avril. “J’ai vu naître ce pont dans les années 1960, j’y suis particulièrement attaché, mais depuis que la catastrophe est arrivée, c’est comme si j’avais perdu un fils”, témoigne un habitant du quartier.Un nouveau pont pour 2020Après la déconstruction des restes de l’ancien pont, le chantier pourra enfin démarrer. Le projet a été officiellement retenu par la ville : le nouveau pont comptera notamment 43 lampadaires pour rendre hommage aux victimes de l’accident. La livraison du nouvel édifice n’interviendra cependant pas avant l’été 2020.Le JT

  • JT de 13h du vendredi 8 février 2019 L’intégrale

Les autres sujets du JT

  • 1

    Santé : les médecins contestent l’idée de consultation plus rapides

  • 2

    Affaire Benalla : le couple frappé par Alexandre Benalla jugé à Paris

  • 3

    Venezuela : l’aide humanitaire est arrivée à la frontière

  • 4

    Entreprises : le fléau des vols de carburants

  • 5

    Entreprises : plus de 17 000 cas de cambriolages chaque année

  • 6

    Maintien de l’ordre : la désescalade, la technique allemande

  • 7

    Budget : les stations thermales d’Occitanie pointées du doigt

  • 8

    Cures thermales : 600 000 adeptes en 2018

  • 9

    Couches lavables : quand les maternités passent au vert

  • 10

    Réduction des déchets : des familles relèvent le défi

  • 11

    Pôle magnétique : le Nord déboussolé

  • 12

    Savoie : une station de ski sauvée par des bénévoles

  • 13

    Feuilleton : une vie en haut des cimes (5/5)

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Billions of euros released for energy projects

Gas and electricity projects to receive €2.3bn from the European economic recovery package.

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The European Commission announced today (4 March) that it will provide €2.3 billion to help fund 43 pipeline and electricity projects across Europe.

Günter Oettinger, the European commissioner for energy, said the plans will help the EU’s 27 member states lessen their dependence on Russian gas and oil imports, and help them to forge better energy network ties and markets within Europe.

“We have selected key projects which will help create a more integrated energy network in Europe, ensuring flexible energy flows across member states’ borders,” Oettinger said.

The spending announced today is part of a €4bn ‘economic recovery package’ approved by EU member states last year. The money, which must be spent over the next 18 months, is in part intended to avert the risk that the financial crisis could delay important, long-term infrastructure projects.

In December, the Commission announced that a first tranche of funds from the recovery package, totalling €1.5bn, would be spent on co-financed offshore wind farms and carbon-capture projects.

The majority of the second tranche of funding – €1.39bn of the €2.3bn – will be spent on 31 gas pipeline projects, including €200 million for the development of the Nabucco pipeline, which will run for 3,300 kilometres from the Caspian region, through Turkey to Europe. The aim is to jump-start construction of the €8bn pipeline.

Oettinger said Nabucco would be the “centre of attention” of his work during his term.

Another €910m is earmarked for 12 electricity interconnection projects. The focus is on connecting the EU’s three Baltic member states to energy grids in western Europe. Ireland and Malta will also be connected to the mainland.

Authors:
Constant Brand 

The Blaugrana skipper has lashed out at figures inside the club trying to discredit the players, suggesting that a civil war is edging ever closer

During his solitary season as Barcelona coach, Bobby Robson regularly used to ask himself, “Do I need this in my life?”

The affable Englishman had naively presumed that his job was to merely “try to win football matches. I didn’t come for this political battle.”

But that’s what Barcelona was, and remains: a colossal political battle.

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“Football here… is about power, about the necessity of winning,” Robson told author Jimmy Burns. “It’s about this city and about Catalonia. The army cannot be defeated…”

The army, as Robson saw it, was the press, the key tool in influencing public opinion.

Essentially, whoever controlled the press, controlled the club.

Perception, therefore, is key. Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu knows that. As does Lionel Messi.

Which is why the two most important figures at Camp Nou presently find themselves on the opposite sides of a battle for control of the narrative surrounding the Barca players’ salary cut.

On Monday, it was announced that Messi and his colleagues had agreed to wage reductions of up to 70 per cent in order to limit their club’s losses during the Covid-19 crisis, which has caused a suspension of all footballing activity in Spain – one of the European countries worst affected by the pandemic.

In addition, the captain revealed that the players would “also make contributions so that club employees can collect 100 per cent of their salary while this situation lasts.”

This was a massive and noble gesture on the part of the Blaugrana squad, one that should not be overlooked.

However, there is no denying that the most significant part of Messi’s announcement was the pointed reference he made to articles printed in recent days claiming that the players were reluctant to agree to the salary cut.

The Argentine not only dismissed the veracity of the stories, he also, far more significantly, claimed that they had come out of Camp Nou.

“It didn’t surprise us that inside the club there are some trying to put us under the microscope and pressure us into doing something that we were always clear we would do,” Messi wrote.

This was an extremely significant development in the relationship between the dressing room and the boardroom, which has been in decline since Neymar’s transfer to Paris Saint-Germain in 2017.

The failed attempt to bring the Brazilian attacker back to Barcelona last summer also heightened the tension between the club’s most influential players and their president, as the Blaugrana didn’t have sufficient funds to make the deal happen, given their €120 million outlay on Antoine Griezmann earlier in the window.

There was a suspicion in the dressing room that Bartomeu didn’t want to re-sign Neymar; he merely wanted to be seen trying to re-sign the forward.

Speculation that one thing was being said in public and another in the boardroom only intensified when Cadena SER claimed in February that Barca had hired a public relations company to “protect” Bartomeu’s reputation via social media accounts and “erode” the image of his enemies, including former players, election candidates and even Messi.

Bartomeu acknowledged that Barca had indeed employed I3 Ventures – who were tied to one of the social media accounts mentioned in Cadena SER’s expose – to “monitor different areas of the club online” but insisted that the allegations that the company had been hired to discredit anyone were “totally false”.

He nonetheless terminated the club’s working relationship with I3 Ventures. That was never going to kill the story – or lessen the tension.

Messi had reacted cautiously to the whole affair.

“It’s weird that something like this happens, but we will have to wait to see if it is true or not,” he told Mundo Deportivo.

Tellingly, Messi demonstrated no such restraint in his wage cut statement.

By saying that the players were “unsurprised” by the media coverage, he clearly feels that there are figures within the club who are surreptitiously trying to cast the players in an unfavourable light and has evidently had enough of the perceived behind-the-scenes skulduggery by making his frustrations known publicly.

Bartomeu, for his part, was quick to support Messi’s assertion that the skipper and his colleagues had always intended to cut their wages for the good of the club.

“He told me from day one that this reduction had to be made,” the president told Sport.

“Perhaps [the players] have been frustrated by things said by people inside and outside the club, who do not have all the information.

“But the negotiations were carried out only by Oscar Grau and me, and we have not said anything.”

When asked by Catalunya Radio who was responsible for the leaks, Bartomeu replied, “I don’t know.”

What we do know, though, is that what should have been a positive news story championing the unity of the club has instead exposed the deep divisions at its very core.

This season alone, Gerard Pique has criticised Barca’s pre-season schedule, Sergio Busquets has questioned the club’s transfer strategy, Arturo Vidal has threatened legal action over unpaid bonuses, and Messi has clashed with technical director Eric Abidal over allegations that some players didn’t try hard enough under former coach Ernesto Valverde, who was sacked by Bartomeu even though no replacement had been lined up.

Hardly surprising, then, that in the first home game after the PR company scandal, chants of “Bartomeu, resign!” rang out around Camp Nou.

The pressure on the president has only intensified this week and there have already been calls for the 2021 election to be brought forward to this summer.

Bartomeu is unable to seek a third term but he has repeatedly spoken of his desire to see out the final year of his tenure.

Consequently, another political battle is brewing at Barcelona. And Bartomeu and Messi are already fighting for control of the army that cannot be defeated.

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Budgets committee agrees to extra staff

April 1, 2020 | News | No Comments

Budgets committee agrees to extra staff

Parliament to hire 150 extra staff and MEP allowances for assistants to get a boost.

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Updated

The European Parliament’s leadership, the bureau, has reached an agreement with its budgets committee to go ahead with plans to hire 150 extra staff and boost MEPs’ monthly allowances for assistants by €1,500.

The new posts would be paid for from the Parliament’s 2010 revised budget, which was given final approval by the budgets committee yesterday (10 February) after weeks of negotiation with the Parliament’s leadership. This year’s budget is set at €1.6 billion.

Yesterday’s (10 February) agreement will see the Parliament keep within 20% of the total administrative budget of the EU institutions. The MEPs agreed to cut €4 million from the Parliament’s building reserve to keep within the spending cap.

Full backing needed

The proposed budget still needs the backing of the full Parliament, which is expected at the next plenary session in Brussels later this month, officials said. After that the budget will be put to the European Commission, which will include it in the EU’s total 2010 budget.

Parliament officials said that the extra staff were needed to help the legislature cope with its expanded role under the Lisbon treaty.

“The entry into force of the Lisbon treaty will have an impact, directly or indirectly, on the entire range of [Parliament] services,” said a draft paper on the budget provisions.

Technical expertise

The 150 extra staff – split 75 for the political groups’ secretariats and 75 for the general secretariat – are needed, MEPs claim, to help advise them and provide technical expertise in areas where the Parliament will now hold more powers.

Allowances for assistants

The increase in the allowances for assistants, from €17,540 to €19,040 per month, is supposed to help MEPs cover the costs of employing extra office help. The plan is to start hiring new staff in May.

Authors:
Constant Brand 

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