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Irish citizens will get COVID-19 vaccination portal in 2-3 weeks

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 08:03
Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin told Irish parliament on Wednesday that a website allowing Irish citizens to register for the COVID-19 vaccine will be available in two to three weeks. “The data is much stronger for the second quarter for...
Categories: European Union

Report prompts backlash after finding UK not ‘institutionally racist’

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 08:03
A government report commissioned in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests last summer has received a mixed reaction after concluding that the UK “no longer” has a problem with institutional racism. The Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities,...
Categories: European Union

France goes into third COVID-19 lockdown

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 08:03
The latest restriction measures, which have been in force since 10 March in 19 French departments, will be extended to the whole country on Saturday for a four-week period. In addition to the 7 pm curfew already in place, non-essential...
Categories: European Union

German official calls for Nord Stream 2 postponement

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 08:02
Germany’s Transatlantic Coordinator Peter Beyer on Wednesday called for a construction moratorium on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in a bid to repair transatlantic relations. “The project is a serious stumbling block for the restart of transatlantic relations,” Beyer told...
Categories: European Union

EU urged to keep ‘low-carbon fuels’ out of renewable energy mix

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 08:00
A group of 88 lawmakers in the European Parliament have joined environmental NGOs and the renewable energy industry to demand the exclusion of low-carbon fossil fuels from the upcoming revision of the EU’s Renewable Energy Directive.
Categories: European Union

On his last day with the Commission, Barnier says Brexit reality starts hitting

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:49
The European Union's former Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, said on Wednesday (31 March) the reality of Britain's decision to leave the bloc was only now being felt, years after the British 2016 referendum on membership.
Categories: European Union

50 years on, little hope for a new ping pong diplomacy

Ideas on Europe Blog - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:44

The most emblematic example of how sport is used as an icebreaker in international relations is no doubt the visit, between 10 and 17 April 1971, of nine American table tennis players to the People’s Republic of China, an event known worldwide as ‘ping pong diplomacy’.

(Screenshot from History Pod)

A lot has been said and written about this remarkable initiative that prudently paved the way for the opening on diplomatic relations between the USA and the PRC and allowed to envisage the presidential visit of Richard Nixon, who travelled to China less than a year later.

As Stuart Murray puts it in his 2018 theory of Sports Diplomacy, this landmark case study perfectly illustrates ‘the power of sport to transcend diplomatic estrangement’ (p. 74). He is right: sport can celebrate humanistic values in a highly accessible, immediately understandable message, while keeping ideological divisions below the carpet.

50 years later: diplomatic estrangement 2.0

Almost ironically, the fiftieth anniversary of this masterpiece of diplomatic craftsmanship happens to fall into a period of a new ‘diplomatic estrangement’ , unexpected in both its suddenness and intensity, and following a period of three decades of consistent deepening of economic and political ties between China and what must well be called ‘the West’.

The bipolar configuration that seems to emerge has prompted a lot of talk in the media about a new ‘Cold War’, but the metaphor is misleading. If my memory serves me well, there was not the slightest hint at economic interdependence between the two opposing sides at the time when I was stationed as a Bundeswehr Cold War soldier in Bavaria in the early eighties, guarding a forest full of Pershing missiles pointing east. And there was a solid conviction that the West simply was stronger than its ideological opponent, simply because it had universal values of democracy, human rights, or the rule of law on its side.

Today, both on the economic and ideological level, China is setting the agenda. As leading sinologists have shown, China has successfully entered the competition about semantics in an effort to re-define key concepts of politics and diplomacy. As a result, there is no such thing anymore as universal values, but only Western concepts of neo-colonial intent that the rest of world would do well to reject. And as leading economists never tire of reminding us, China will overtake the US as the world’s leading economy (in GDP, at least) by 2030 at the latest.

In 2021, the tensions, the rhetoric, and the susceptibilities on either side are such that the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, signed in a hurry at the end of the German Council presidency in December (and deemed insufficient in terms of reciprocity, sustainability, and human rights) has good chances of not being ratified. Which in turn would no doubt further deepen the rift.

Could a new sport diplomacy help?

While many in Europe feel it’s time to stand firm and push back the PRC’s current aggressive ‘wolf-warrior’ approach to international relations, there are also good reasons to argue in favour of a pacification of EU/US-China relations. Sooner or later, there will be a need of a face-saving area in which careful rapprochement is imaginable again. I would not be surprised if culture in general, and sport in particular, were floated as non-conflictual communication channels capable of highlighting commonalities rather than antagonisms.

Alas, this time around, sport diplomacy does not seem to be in a position to do its soothing work.

This is paradoxical, since, if anything, it has significantly grown in importance over recent decades. A number of nation-states (including the US, China and EU member states) are implementing full-fledged sport diplomacy strategies in support of their foreign policy objectives.

Even a non-state actor as the European Union has discovered sport’s potential for its external relations since article 165 of the Lisbon Treaty kindly granted it a competence in the field. The ERASMUS+ programme allows to reach neighbouring countries in numerous grassroots projects, involving a flurry of civil society organisations. And under the previous Commission, sport was explicitly added to the “high-level EU-China people-to-people dialogue”, with the aim of reinforcing (much needed) mutual understanding and trust.

At the same time, rather than an icebreaker, sport seems to work like a freezer in relations with the PRC. As episodes likes Mesut Özil’s removal from social media and video games in China or the temporary fallout between the NBA and Chinese television have illustrated, sport has itself become a political minefield.

In Germany, following a wish expressed by Angela Merkel and Xi Jinping, the football association arranged for the Chinese under-20 national team to be integrated into a regular regional championship (comparable to League Two in England), with the aim to help them progress in contact with European football. But the first fixture in November 2017 ended in a diplomatic scandal because of the presence of six peaceful pro-Tibet activists among the four hundred spectators in a Mainz neighbourhood. And since the German FA did not want to apologise for a harmless, spontaneous use of the freedom of expression, the project was stopped.

Instead of calls for a new ping pong diplomacy, what can be heard are calls for boycotting the Winter Olympics in Beijing next February. They are not likely to be followed by any of the national sports delegations, but their very existence and audibility are a good reminder of sport diplomacy’s flip side, where the refusal to engage in sporting encounters becomes a negative diplomatic tool in its own right (as Simon Rofe’s edited volume on Sport and Diplomacy illustrates in several case studies in it’s third part).

The ping pong diplomacy of 1971 deserves to be celebrated as a landmark of China’s long march back into the international diplomatic community. In the 21st century, sport diplomacy, despite being a helpful foreign policy tool in many configurations, will hardly be able to do the trick again in the West’s relations with the PRC.

 

The post 50 years on, little hope for a new ping pong diplomacy appeared first on Ideas on Europe.

Categories: European Union

Spain’s central bank urges extension of temporary lay-off schemes

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:31
Spain's Central Bank has recommended the extension of temporary lay-off schemes known as ERTEs for employees in economic sectors worst-hit by the pandemic, in particular tourism. EURACTIV's partner EFE reports.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Britain calls itself a 'model' society on race

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:24
British society is a "model for other white-majority countries", according to a report by 'the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities', a government body, ordered in the wake of last year's 'Black Lives Matter' protests. "We no longer see a Britain where the system is deliberately rigged against ethnic minorities," the commission said. But the report was "another total [government] whitewash", the opposition Labour Party said.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Macron orders third nationwide lockdown in France

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:23
President Emmanuel Macron ordered France into its third national lockdown and said schools would close for three weeks as he sought to push back a third wave of Covid-19 infections that threatens to overwhelm hospitals, Reuters writes. With the death toll nearing 100,000, and intensive-care units in the hardest-hit regions at breaking point, Macron was forced to abandon his goal of keeping the country open to protect the economy.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Macron, Merkel, and Putin hold talks on 'Sputnik V' jab

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:20
The leaders of France, Germany, and Russia have held a conference call on rolling out purchases, supplies, and production of Russia's 'Sputnik V' vaccine in the EU, according to the Kremlin. The conversation, on Tuesday, came after The Lancet, a leading medical journal, said the Russian jab was safe and effective. But the EU regulator, the European Medicines Agency in Amsterdam, is still carrying out tests prior to approval.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] EU to sanction eight Iranians for rights abuses

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:17
The EU is set to sanction eight Iranian leaders of the Basij militia and the police and three entities for human rights abuses, the first such measures since 2013, Reuters writes. The EU will impose travel bans and asset freezes, diplomats said, and their names will be published next week, when the sanctions take effect. "Those responsible for serious rights violations must know there are consequences," an EU diplomat said.
Categories: European Union

Jailed Kremlin critic Navalny goes on hunger strike

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:14
Jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny on Wednesday (31 March) said he is launching a hunger strike to demand proper medical treatment for severe back pain and numbness in his legs.
Categories: European Union

Vulnerable adult victims of hate crime struggle to file complaints

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:12
Portugal's minister of justice has said the main difficulty for vulnerable adult victims of hate crime or gender violence in Europe lies in making a complaint to the formal instances, as "fear" is the main barrier to overcome.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Austria poised to order one million Sputnik vaccines

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:07
Austria is likely to order a million doses of the Russian Sputnik V vaccine next week, Reuters reported. "We are in the final metres and a Sputnik order can probably be placed next week," Kurz said in a statement published on Wednesday, after his meeting with Russia's ambassador to Austria. The agreement would involve 300,000 doses to be delivered in April, 500,000 in May and 200,000 in early June.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] UN: French airstrike killed 19 civilians at Mali wedding

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:07
A French air strike in January killed 19 civilians and three armed men at a wedding in the remote desert of central Mali, United Nations investigators said - contradicting France's account that only Islamist militants were hit, Reuters reports. France immediately rejected the findings. France has more than 5,000 troops in Mali and neighbouring countries to battle groups linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Italian navy captain arrested on 'spying' for Russia

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:06
An Italian captain of a frigate, plus a Russian who was accredited at their embassy, have been accused of "serious crimes tied to spying and state security", according to Reuters. Ansa news agency said Nato documents were among the files that the Italian had handed over, raising potential security worries for other members of the Western military alliance. The Italian captain was arrested, while two Russian diplomats were expelled.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] EMA: No proven causal link between clots and AstraZeneca

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:06
The European Medicine Agency insisted on Wednesday that the AstraZeneca vaccine's benefits outweigh the risks, but acknowledged that people should be aware of the "remote possibility" of rare blood clots occurring, Reuters reported. "A causal link with the vaccine is not proven, but is possible and further analysis is continuing," the EU drug agency said. The statement comes after several countries limited the jab use for certain vulnerable groups.
Categories: European Union

A circular economy for textiles to design out waste and pollution

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:05
Europe has an opportunity to use the textiles strategy, due to be published this year, to build on its history of textile manufacturing and switch to a more sustainable industry, benefitting citizens and the environment, writes Valérie Boiten.
Categories: European Union

EU's first-ever 'Eurovision' song stirs controversy

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/04/2021 - 07:04
EU institutions have put forward a first-ever, controversial entry into the Eurovision Song Contest to be held in the Netherlands in May.
Categories: European Union

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