Setting the scene on cybercrime: trends and new challenges

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Ladislav Hamran, President of Eurojust.

The Hague, 5 July 2019

The level of digitalisation in our societies is increasing every day and so, unfortunately, is cybercrime. This situation requires law enforcement and prosecution practitioners to constantly adapt their expertise, tools and practices to effectively and efficiently respond to this change.

Today, Europol and Eurojust published the third joint report identifying and categorising the current developments and common challenges in combating cybercrime, which fall into five different areas:

  1. Loss of data: electronic data is the key to successful investigations in all the cybercrime areas, but the possibilities to obtain such data have been significantly limited.
  2. Loss of location: recent trends have led to a situation in which law enforcement may no longer establish the physical location of the perpetrator, the criminal infrastructure or electronic evidence.
  3. Challenges associated with national legal frameworks: the differences in domestic legal frameworks in EU Member States often prove to be serious impediments to international cybercrime investigations.
  4. Obstacles to international cooperation: in an international context, no common legal framework exists for the expedited sharing of evidence (as does exist for the preservation of evidence). There is also a clear need for a better mechanism for cross-border communication and the swift exchange of information.
  5. Challenges of public-private partnerships: cooperation with the private sector is vital for combating cybercrime, yet no standardised rules of engagement are in place, and investigations can thus be hampered.
Eurojust

Borderless crime calls for international measures

All these challenges are of special relevance to combat cybercrime, but affect other crime areas as well.

The very nature of cyberspace means that cybercrime is borderless. Consequently, international measures are required to address the current challenges. S

ignificant progress has been made since the publication of the last report in 2017. Key components of this progress include enhanced cooperation between all parties involved and providing platforms and networks dedicated to sharing knowledge and best practice, such as the European Judicial Cybercrime Network (EJCN) and the Joint Cybercrime Action Taskforce (J-CAT).

Understanding Migration and Asylum in Europe

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By Dr. Alfred Kellermann.

To understand issues of migration and asylum in the EU the following key studies, documents, terms and facts should be known.

  1. European Refugee crisis

The European migrant crisis or refugee crisis is a term given to a period beginning in 2015 characterized by rising numbers of people arriving to the European Union (EU) from across the Mediterranean Sea or overland through South-East Europe. 

Immigrants from outside Europe include asylum seekers and economic migrants. 

The term “immigrant” is used by the European Commission to describe a person from a non-EU country establishing his or her usual residence in the territory of an EU country for a period that is, or is expected to be, at least twelve months.

Most of the immigrants came from Muslim-majority countries in regions South and East of Europe, including the Greater Middle East and Africa. The number of deaths at sea, rose to record levels in April 2015, when five boats carrying almost 2,000 migrants to Europe sank in the Mediterranean Sea.  Now it is lower!

The situation of refugees has become more desperate in recent years. Between 2014 and 2016 over 1 million people sought asylum in the European Union. In 2017, 655.000 persons applied for asylum in the EU for the first time. In 2018, 581.000 did so. https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Asylum.statistics

According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees the top three nationalities of entrants of the over one million Mediterranean See arrivals between January 2015 and March 2016 were Syrian (46,7%), Afghan (20,9%) and Iraqi (9,4%) .

Refugee crises in several Asian and African countries increased the total number of forcibly displaced persons worldwide at the end of 2014 to almost 60 million, the highest level since World War II.

  1. European Agenda on Migration

The latest response from the EU to the situation is the European Agenda on Migration, which aims to strengthen the common migration and asylum policy by implementing various measures helping refugees in difficulty during their travel to Europe locating them in the EU, supporting Member States available to receive refugees and coordinating national operations.

EU operations in 2016 were funded to approximately € 176 million. The EU was also relocating refugees from Italy and Greece to other EU Member States and provided further financial support to countries willing to take in refugees from camps in Syria and those that had set up first–aid centers for refugees on their territory. 

The European Parliament has expressed its concern about EU financial support in the field of asylum and has asked the Commission to evaluate the real needs until 2020.The European Parliament by its policy departments provided many supporting analyses for the respective Parliament committees.  EU external cooperation in migration and asylum has increased considerably in terms of instruments of cooperation with third partner countries and of funds committed. With the current refugee crisis, it is set to increase even further. EU funding regarding the objectives of migration policy lacks evidence of efficiency through lack of coordination of external coordination. 

Migration is one of the great challenges of the globalized world.

Refugees will always move across borders to seek safety for themselves and their families in the face of war, persecution and conflict. People who face poverty in their home country will always move in search of a better life for themselves and their families. In the European Union, the Member States seek to support those who work to protect the legal rights of migrants and refugees, and to ease the challenges of integration.

They support the development of realistic policy solutions to the human challenges involved. In line with the focus on policy and institutional responses, the important humanitarian relief response of NGOs, funding is needed such as the operation of search and rescue vessels in the Mediterranean. 

  1. Is there a difference between a migrant and a refugee?

migrant is a person who leaves home to seek a new life in another region or country. This includes all those who move across borders, including those doing so with government permission, i.e., with a visa or a work permit, as well as those doing so without it, i.e., irregular or undocumented migrants.

The member states of the European Union agree that EU citizens and their families have freedom of movementwithin the EU and the European Economic Area—these citizens are privileged migrants because they do not require individual permission from officials as other migrants do.

These citizens enjoy the rights of the Schengen  Agreement of 14 June 1985, in which 26 European countries (22 of the EU Member States and four EFTA states) joined together to form an area where border checks on internal Schengen borders (between member states) are abolished and instead checks are restricted to external Schengen borders. Countries may reinstate internal border controls for a maximum of two months for public policy or national security reasons. 

refugee is someone fleeing war, persecution, or natural disaster. Refugee status is defined in international law, which requires states to protect refugees and not send anyone to a place where they risk being persecuted or seriously harmed. States hold primary responsibility for the protection of refugees. The UN counted 21.3 million refugees worldwide at the end of 2015.

Asylum” refers to the legal permission to stay somewhere as a refugee, which brings rights and benefits. Not every asylum seeker will ultimately be recognized as a refugee, but every refugee is initially an asylum seeker.

Article 26 of the “Schengen Convention” says that careers which transportpeople into Schengen area who are refused entry into the Schengen area, be responsible for the return of the refused people and pay penalties.

  1. European Union’s asylum policy and the Dublin regulation?

The Dublin Regulation (Regulation No.604/2013): sometimes the Dublin III Regulation; previously the Dublin II Regulation and Dublin Convention) is a European Union (EU) law that determines which EU Member State is responsible for the examination of the application, submitted by persons seeking international protection under the Geneva Convention.

It is the cornerstone of the Dublin System, which consists of the Dublin Regulation and the EURODAC Regulation (Regulation No 603/2013), which establishes a Europe wide fingerprinting database for unauthorized entrants to the EU.  

The Common European Asylum System (CEAS) sets out the Criteria governing the distribution, as between Member States, of responsibilities in asylum cases under Regulation No. 343/2003. Under that regulation only one Member State is in principle , responsible for dealing with an asylum application submitted within the EU. In this regulation are established the criteria and mechanisms for determining the Member State responsible for  examining an asylum application lodged in one of the Member States by a third country national.  

The Common European Asylum System (CEAS) is a set of EU laws. They are intended to ensure that all EU member states protect the rights of asylum seekers and refugees. The CEAS sets out minimum standards and procedures for processing and deciding asylum applications, and for the treatment of both asylum seekers and those who are recognized as refugees. 

Implementation of CEAS varies throughout the European Union. A number of EU states still do not operate fair, effective systems of asylum decision-making and support. This leads to a patchwork of 28 asylum systems producing uneven results. Asylum seekers have no legal duty to claim asylum in the first EU state they reach, and many move on, seeking to join relatives or friends for support, or to reach a country with a functioning asylum system.

However, the “Dublin” regulation stipulates that EU Member States can choose to return asylum seekers to their country of first entry to process their asylum claim, so long as that country has an effective asylum system. The “Dublin Regulation” determines the EU Member State responsible to examine an asylum-application to prevent asylum applicants  in the EU from “” asylum shopping”, where applicants send their application for asylum to numerous EU Member States to get the best deal instead.

EU countries in the north, the desired destination of many refugees, have sought to use this Dublin system to their advantage, at the expense of the south, where most refugees first arrive. Yet these efforts have been obstructed by failures of asylum systems in the south. Domestic and European courts have ruled against asylum seekers being returned to Greece, notably in a landmark case in 2011 (C-411/10 N.S and C-493/10 M.E).

The Advocate General of the ECJ concluded that the transferring Member State must before it transfers an asylum seeker, determine whether that asylum seeker will be exposed in the Member State which is primarily responsible, to a serious risk that the rights guaranteed under the Charter of Fundamental Rights will not be violated. Transfer to Greece, which country is overloaded with asylum applications, risks that the treatment of asylum requests is not well done .

To address the uneven application of CEAS and the problems of the Dublin system, a reform of the CEAS was proposed in 2016. Among the proposed reforms is one that risks endangering the right to asylum in the EU, with an obligation to verify first if asylum seekers could find protection outside the EU. Some EU countries have already voiced opposition to some of the reforms, notably the obligation to take refugees from other EU countries. They started cases at the CJEU against the re-distribution and at the same time the EU Commission instigated cases  against Poland, Hungary and Czech Republic for refusing to abide by the redistribution quota.

The European Parliamentin a study in 2015 examined the reasons why the Dublin system of allocation of responsibility for asylum seekers does not work effectively. The study gave recommendations for resolving current practical, legal and policy problems, to create a burden sharing system through several mechanisms. The European Parliament and the Council proposed a “reference key”, based on an Member State’s GDP and population size to determine its absorption capacity. 

Conclusion
Common asylum and migration policies are not yet realized because of the different attitudes of the EU Member States in respect of migration policies. Therefore, is our final question: Is the migration challenge not the ultimate threat to European Unity and Solidarity?

  • How are EU Member States regulating/managing/supporting migration?

The EU Member States have worked on global migration issues for many years. This has included 1) supporting efforts to improve the treatment of labor migrants in Central Asia, Latin America, South Asia, and the Gulf; 2) advocating a better, common asylum policy in Europe; 3) challenging conditions of detention for migrants in many countries; and 4) defending migrant communities against a wide array of xenophobic attacks in Africa, Asia, Europe, and the United States. 

Examples of support to migration by States and Ngo’s.

In Italy, organizations that work to reform Italy’s asylum system are supported. Medici per i Diritti Umani advocates for better conditions in Italy’s asylum reception centers; Italy promotes housing refugees and asylum seekers in private accommodation as an alternative to state facilities; they work to ensure that international, European, and national laws are honored during asylum procedures, that reception conditions are dignified, and that no one is deprived of their liberty without judicial oversight and procedural safeguards. The Italian Civil Liberties Coalition and its platform Open Migration provides data, fact checking, and stories to inform the migration debate.

In Greece, organizations like the Greek Council for Refugees, which monitors rights violations at border areas, assists in reception facilities, and in detention centers; the Hellenic League of Human Rights, which provides asylum seekers with reliable information about their rights and obligations; and the Greek Forum of Refugees, a refugee- and migrant-led organization that seeks to support migrants’ integration in the country. Solidarity Now,set up in 2013 by the Open Society Foundations—and today a grantee—provides housing, basic medical care, and other relief services to newcomers and Greeks.

In Spain, NGOs are supported which provide legal aid to refugees and seek to improve the national asylum system, such as the as Spanish Commission for Refugees and Coordinadora de Barrios.

In Western Europe, this work extends from the United Kingdom to Finland. The Migrants’ Rights Network reports and challenges the rise in racism and xenophobia in Britain, Migrant Voice amplifies migrants’ perspectives through its newspaper, the Raul Wallenberg Institute in Swedenbuilds the capacity of grassroots groups to advocate for themselves, and Mediendienst-Integration in Germany serves as a reliable source of information and data for media reporting on migration.

In BritainNGO’s have worked with the UK government on the development of a community sponsorship scheme, the Global Refugee Sponsorship Initiative, based on a successful Canadian model for supporting the integration of newly arrived refugee families In Central and Eastern Europe. NGO’s support local organizations which work to ensure newcomers are treated with dignity and assist with their integration into the society. Menedék organizes training courses for professionals including social workers, teachers, and police officers working in immigration detention centers in Hungary, and the Association for Migration and Integration in the Czech Republic is working on ensuring that the rights of EU nationals working in the country are protected.

  • How has the European Union responded to the refugee crisis?

On 20 March 2016 an agreement between the European Union and Turkey, aiming to discourage migrants from making the dangerous sea journey from Turkey to Greece, came into effect.

The deal outlines that migrants arriving in Greece will be sent back to Turkey if they do not apply for asylum or their claim is rejected. To assist in the implementation of this deal the EU would send around 2.300 experts, including security and migration officials and translators to Greece. After 20 March 2016 any irregular immigrant from Syria who is returned to Turkey, will be replaced by a Syrian resettled from Turkey to the EU.

The talks were aiming at accession of Turkey to EU and Turkey will receive from the EU €3,3 billion aid for the assistance.  In the March deal of 2016, the EU announced that Turkey would try to stop people from moving onward into Europe; in return, Turkey was promised financial assistance, visa-free travel to the EU for Turkish citizens, and faster negotiations for EU accession. But the EU-Turkey deal failed to close the border, and thousands of migrants continued to travel irregularly using smugglers. Since the deal, only 750 asylum seekers have been sent back from Greece to Turkey, because Greek officials and courts consider Turkey to be an unsafe country

There has been a Decision from the European Court of Justice of 28 February 2017, that the Court has no competence to judge the legality of the March 2016 EU -Turkey deal on migrants and refugees as “neither the European Council nor any other institution of the EU decided to conclude an agreement with the Turkish Government on the subject of the migration crisis”.

The General Court of the ECJ declared that it lacks jurisdiction to hear and determine the actions brought by three asylum seekers  against the EU-Turkey statement which seeks to resolve the migration crisis.In other words Article 263 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU, regarding the powers of the court, is not applicable in this case. (The orders issued by the court.NF (T-192/16, NG (T-193/16, NM (T-257/16 And the EU –Turkey statement 18 March 2016). 

In 2015, high numbers of migrants, many of them Syrians fleeing conflict, continued to move. Some European states, led by Germany, recognized that their strategy of seeking to block refugees moving across borders was unrealistic and harmful. Countries worked together to allow migrants to move onwards to the places they wished to reach.

This allowed reception countries to focus their resources on supporting asylum seekers and considering claims. By early 2016, support for this policy began to decrease, with increased hostility towards migrants entering the political discourse. Certain countries along the migrant route began to close their borders. 

Deals to distribute asylum seekers between EU Member states. 

The situation further deteriorated when the EU’s decision to transfer 160,000 asylum seekers from Greece and Italy to other European member states was met with widespread resistance. In the end, a small percentage of the needed transfers actually took place. In response to the failure to adequately process asylum claims, the EU set up “hotspots” in Greece and Italy. Hotspots identify, register, and fingerprint incoming migrants, and redirect them either towards asylum or return procedures.

The Turkey deal is one example of a controversial practice, in which the EU links development aid or economic incentives to commitments by states to stem and manage the movements of people from their territory. Similar deals are being approved with a number of third countries including Libya, Egypt, Sudan, and Nigeria. 

In June 2016, the European Commission proposed a new “New Migration Partnership Framework” with third countries in the Middle East and Africa, to better manage migration. The full range of EU policies will be brought to bear: 

  • Focused engagement and enhanced support
  • Breaking the business model of people smugglers and creating legal routes
  • Working together EU and Member States financial allocation.
  •  How have the United Nations responded to the Refugee Crisis?

On 19 September 2016 the Members of the United Nations unanimously adopted the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants. The Declaration recognized the need for more cooperation between nations to manage migration  effectively.

On 19 December 2018  these documents were approved by 152 nations as the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (CCM), that describes itself as covering all dimensions of international migration in a holistic and comprehensive manner. The compact was formally endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly on 19 December 2018. As the Compact is not an International treaty, it will not be binding under international law. According to the Opinion of the New Zealand Government”, the Compact will be non-binding , but will not be legally irrelevant , and “courts may be willing ..to refer to the Compact and take the Compact into account as an aid in interpreting immigration legislation.” 

There was a heated debate in the EU and in some of its Member States about the Global Compact : 20 of 28 EU Member States signed it. Leaked legal opinion of the Council’s Legal Service was used to argument that these lawyers said that the Compact was legally binding.  The opinion merely states that the Compact can influence the content of EU legislation. See https://www.janiceatkinson.co.uk/wp-conent/uploads/’2019/03/UN-GCM-EU-LAW-explanation-why-the-leaked-Legal-Service-Opinion-is-arisk.pdf 
However the Compact will not be legally binding.

The draft agreement recognizes the principles of national sovereignty:

“The Global Compact reaffirms the sovereign right of States to determine their national migration policy and their prerogative to govern migration within their jurisdiction, in conformity with international law. Within their sovereign jurisdiction, States may distinguish  between regular and irregular migration status, including as they determine their legislative and policy measures for the implementation of the Global Compact, taking into account different national realities, policies, priorities and requirements for entry, residence and work , in accordance with international law.”

Calling the agreement a “historic moment”, the General Assembly President Miroslav Lajcak emphasized “it does not encourage migration, nor does it aim to stop it. It is not legally binding. It fully respects the sovereignty of States.      

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This paper has been presented by the author at the World Congress on Humanities and Social Sciences in Paris May 16 -17, 2019 

Mechanism launches social media campaign

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Mechanism launches media tool kit page and social media campaign commemorating the 24th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide

The Hague, 4 July 2019– The International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (Mechanism) has today launched a media tool kit page, aimed for use by the media as part of the wider coverage of the 24th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide. In addition, on 9 July 2019, as part of the commemorations, the Mechanism’s Information Programme for Affected Communities (MIP) will launch a social media campaign, entitled “Remember Srebrenica Genocide”.

The media tool kit page provides selected case information, including case summaries, key documents and guilty pleas, as well as a compilation of archival audio-visual material, from cases completed before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the Mechanism relating to crimes committed in Srebrenica in July 1995. 

The social media campaign, to be launched by the MIP, will run from 9 July to 18 July 2019 and will mark key events that took place during this period in Srebrenica in 1995, as established in the cases completed before the ICTY and the Mechanism.

The campaign will feature a number of short informational videos, infographics and social media posts, using archival material that has been admitted into evidence in proceedings before the ICTY and the Mechanism, such as witness testimonies, original audio-visual material, military reports and forensic documents. 

The MIP was launched in January 2019, with the aim of contributing to an increased awareness and knowledge among the affected communities about the 1990s conflicts in the former Yugoslavia, based on the ICTY and the Mechanism cases. The Programme is generously supported by the European Union.

121st Anniversary of Philippines Independency

In the picture Ambassador Ledda’s welcoming speech.

By Anton Lutter.

In his Independence Day’ speech H.E. Ambassador Jaime Victor Ledda highlighted the very good relations between the Filipino and Dutch peoples and the governments of the Republic of the Philippines and the Kingdom of the Netherlands which are now on its 68th year since diplomatic relations were established in 1951.  

Among the guests who attended this happy occasion where many diplomats, business people and “friends of The Philippines”. The ambassador especially acknowledged the presence of countess Bibi van Zuylen van Nijevelt, grand mistress of the Royal Household and representatives of the Dutch government.

Ambassador Ledda and Gerard Arp, being presented the Noli Me Tangere of Jose Rizal.

One day earlier the 19th of June The Philippines commemorated the 158th birth anniversary of national hero Dr. Jose Rizal. The ambassador: “When he was based in Brussels, he longed to meet with renowned Asia expert Professor Kern in Leiden University, to learn Dutch “because the Dutch are neighbors and have written much about us”. 

“He wrote two novels, the first being the Noli mi Tangere (Touch Me Not) which depicted Philippine society in the 1880s during Spanish colonial period.  This was first translated in Dutch in 1926. Now almost a hundred years later, we are very pleased to present an updated Dutch translation of this outstanding novel by Mr. Gerard Arp which we will launch today.  Indeed, what better way to connect Philippines history and Philippines – Dutch relations”.

Eppo Horlings, consul-general of The Philippines at Amsterdam; Anton Lutter, commander Knights of Rizal; John Lintjer, chairman Philippines-Netherlands Business Council; countess Bibi van Zuylen van Nijevelt, grandmistress of the Royal Household; Ambassador Ledda and spouse Gina Ledda.

The first exemplar Dutch translation was not only presented to the ambassador but also to the grand mistress of the Royal Household, who was happily surprised to receive this masterpiece of Philippine literature.

Ambassador Jaime Victor Ledda also inaugurated in cooperation with Crown Plaza Hotel and Diplomat Magazine, the Philippine Food Festival where one has a chance to experience the many flavors of Philippine’s cuisine to be prepared by two guest chefs Mrs. Maite Hontiveros Dittke and Chef Tani Morabe together with the hotel’s resident chef,  Sido de Brabander. This Food Festival will reflect the rich, diverse and colorful history of the country of more than 7000 islands.

Furthermore, the ambassador thanked everyone – including his staff and the Filipino community – who have in their own way helped facilitate the bilateral ties between the Philippines and The Netherlands.

Ambassador Ledda: “Today, I wish to give special mention to the Filipino Community in Sint Maarten.  I visited Sint Maarten two weeks ago and I was very impressed with the big progress made after Hurricane Irma (which was stronger actually than Typhoon Yolanda) struck two years ago.  Many had an option to be repatriated but they decided to remain.  In a modest way, the Filipino community there have been contributing to the reconstruction and rebuilding of Sint Maarten”.

The Honorary Consul of El Salvador congratulating H.E. Jaime Victor Ledda. on The Philippines National Day.

Ending his speech, he honored his wife Gina Ledda who next to all her diplomatic and social commitments, is raising their son, manage the household and at the same time pursuing a PhD in Economics at the ISS Erasmus in The Hague.

Styrian State Counsellor Eibinger-Miedl in Munich

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Minister of State Dr. Florian Herrmann & Styrian counterpart Regional Counsellor Barbara Eibinger-Miedl – Picture by Bayerische Staatskanzlei.

Tuesday, 25 June 2019, Bavarian State Chancery, Free State of Bavaria, Germany: A further Austrian-German exchange was marked as the Bavarian State Minister for Federal, European and Media Affairs, Dr. Herrmann Florian, welcomed to Munich his Styrian counterpart Mag. Barbara Eibinger-Miedl, State Counsellor for Economy, Tourism, Europe, Science and Research of Styria (Austria). Moreover she represents Styria at the EU Committee of Regions. 

Styria (Steiermark) is the second largest -by surface- out of nine Austrian federated states, and is capital is Graz. Since 16 June 2015 the state’s governor is the conservative politician Hermann Schützenhöfer. 

For further information: 
Government of Styria: http://www.politik.steiermark.at/cms/ziel/5474782/DE/

The Ambassador of Kyrgyzstan H.E. Mr. Muktar Djumaliev

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Ambassador to BENELUX, France, EU, UNESCO, NATO 

Dr. Muktar Djumaliev has 27 years of experience serving the Kyrgyz Republic internationally as ambassador and domestically in senior leadership positions.

Since march 2019 he serves as Ambassador of the Kyrgyz Republic to Benelux, France, EU, NATO, UNESCO with the residence in Brussels.

Ambassador Djumaliev with French President Emmanuel Macron. Photography by Ghislain Mariette / Présidence de la République

He served as Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador to USA and Canada (2010-2015), Ambassador to Switzerland, Lichtenstein (2004-2010). He represented his country as a Chief of the Mission in the UN office in Geneva and the World Trade Organization.

Ambassador Djumaliev presented his credentials to His Majesty King Philippus of the Belgians – Picture by Belgian Monarchy

In 2001-2003 as the First Deputy Minister of economy of the Kyrgyz Republic was involved in the policy development of the country related to the international trade and multilateral trading system. He served also as an international consultant on international trade to ADB, EBRD, GIZ, DELOIT and other specialised UN projects during the period of 2015-2019. He is Founder of Ambassador’s consulting.

Son Excellence Monsieur Muktar Djumaliev, Ambassadeur extraordinaire et plénipotentiaire de la République du Kirghizistan – Luxembourg – Ville – Palais Grand-Ducal – 13/11/2019 – photo: claude piscitelli

He has published number of articles on various trade and trade policy issues, including on regional integrations in the Post soviet countries and international trade.

Education:

  • Ph.D. International relations and diplomacy, Geneva School of Diplomacy, Switzerland, 2017
  • M.A., international law and economics, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland, 2002.
  • B.A., law, Kyrgyz National University, Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic, 1997.
  • B.A., economics, Kyrgyz National University, Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic, 1994.

Andorra reinforces support from Catalonia

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In the picture, Counsellor Alfred Bosch & Minister Maria Ubach Font – Picture by Govern d’Andorra.

Friday, 28 June 2019, Principality of Andorra: Andorran Minister of Foreign Affairs, Maria Ubach Font, received his Catalan partner Alfred Bosch, Counsellor of Foreign Affairs, Institutional Relations and Transparency of the Government of Catalonia, in office since November 2018. 

The meeting addressed different aspects of the relations in the framework of the Collaboration Agreement between the Government of the Principality of Andorra and the Government of the Generalitat of Catalonia, signed in 2009.

Ubach and Bosch commented on the different administrative agreements that exist between the two territories in the areas of health, education and higher education, the environment and natural heritage, sport and economic development, between others and all aspects related to cross-border relations.

The Minister and Councillor likewise dealt with the various areas of collaboration existing in the promotion, and projection of the Catalan language and culture shared by Andorra and Catalonia; the principality being the only country worldwide wherein Catalan is the only official language according to its constitution. 

Spain, and naturally Catalonia are pivotal partners for the micro-state of Andorra in organising the biennial Ibero-American Summit for the first time in 2020. Recently the Andorran civil servant, and Ambassador to Spain H.E. Mr. Jaume Gaytán Sansa left his ambassadorship based in Madrid to dedicate himself to the summit that has never been held in such a small state. Andorra partakes at the summits since 2004. 

For further information:
Princely Government of Andorra: https://www.govern.ad/afers-exteriors/item/10502-maria-ubach-tracta-diferents-aspectes-de-la-cooperacio-entre-andorra-i-catalunya-amb-el-conseller-d-accio-exterior-relacions-institucionals-i-transparencia-de-la-generalitat-alfred-bosch

Ibero-American Secretariat: https://www.cumbresiberoamericanas.com
https://www.segib.org/en/paises/#ps_and

Kazakhs’ Ambassador leaving Germany

In the picture H.E. Ambassador Bolat Nussupov delivering his farewell speech. Berlin, Germany.

On the occasion of the termination of his diplomatic mission as Ambassador of the Republic of Kazakhstan to the Federal Republic of Germany, H.E. Mr. Bolat Nussupov hosted a farewell reception on the 14th of June for the diplomatic corps in Germany, representatives of German politics, economy, culture, media, science and civil society at the Adlon Kempinski Hotel.

In his final speech, Ambassador Nussupov summarized the high level of German-Kazakh relations and the new stage of cooperation between the two countries.

Prof. Matthias Dornfeldt, University of Potsdam, Volker Tschapke, President of Honour, Prussian Society, Yewen Shi-Friese, H.E. Bolat Nussupov, Urs Unkauf, Humboldt University of Berlin and contributor Diplomat Magazine.

During the five years of his work in Germany, the bilateral political and economic cooperation was strengthened and further developed. There were mutual visits at the highest levels. The bilateral trade balance between both states was always positive and 2018 was marked by a record of 5.2 billion euros.

The investments of German companies in Kazakhstan in the last 5 years amounted to more than EUR 2.5 billion, including the anchor projects of such companies as Giessenhaus, HeidelbergCement, Linde, Wilo, OBI, Ulmus Fonds, Goldbeck Solar, Baumann and others.

H.E. Sohibnazar Gayratsho, Ambassador of the Republic of Tajikistan, H.E. Nabijon Kasimov, Ambassador of the Republic of Uzbekistan, H.E. Bolat Nussupov, H.E. Toyly Atayev, Ambassador of Turkmenistan, H.E. Erines Otorbaev, Ambassador of the Kyrgyz Republic.

At the farewell reception, the Federal Government Commissioner for Eastern Europe, Ambassador Michael Siebert, appeared on behalf of the Federal Government. Eduard Kinsbruner, Regional Director for Central Asia from the German Eastern Business Association (Ostausschuss-Osteuropaverein der Deutschen Wirtschaft) spoke about the further developed cooperation from the perspective of the German economy.

Besides all ambassadors of the Central Asian countries, the ambassadors of Djibouti, Rwanda, Indonesia, Singapore, Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia and Moldova as well as the deputy ambassador of Japan joined the farewell reception of the highly acknowledged Kazakh diplomat.

Germany Contributes €1M to OPCW’s Trust Fund for Syria Missions

Permanent Representative of Germany to the OPCW, H.E. Ambassador Christine Weil, and the Director-General of the OPCW, H.E. Mr Fernando Arias.

THE HAGUE, Netherlands – 2 July 2019 – The Government of the Federal Republic of Germany is contributing €1M toward supporting the activities of the Trust Fund for Syria Missions at the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which includes the work of the Declaration Assessment Team (DAT), the Fact-Finding Mission (FFM), and the Investigation and Identification Team (IIT).

The Fund supports the Organisation’s special missions and contingency operations related specifically to the Syrian Arab Republic. The German contribution aims to equip the OPCW with the means to maintain its professional and impartial standards in addressing the threat from chemical weapons use.

The voluntary contribution was formalised with an agreement signed on 28 June by the Director-General of the OPCW, H.E. Mr Fernando Arias, and the Permanent Representative of Germany to the OPCW, H.E. Ambassador Christine Weil, at the Organisation’s headquarters in The Hague.

Expressing his gratitude for Germany’s steadfast support, the Director-General remarked: “Germany has long been an integral partner in the global disarmament regime and a determined supporter of the Chemical Weapons Convention. This kind of resolve is as vital as ever to ensuring that the OPCW can fulfil its mandate.”

Ambassador Weil reiterated Germany’s continuous commitment to supporting the implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention during this challenging time and further advances in the eradication of chemical weapons. She stated: “With this contribution, Germany demonstrates its commitment to OPCW’s efforts to work with the Syrian Arab Republic on the full implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention, including the OPCW Syria missions of DAT, FFM and IIT.”

The Federal Republic of Germany joined the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) in 1997 and has been an active contributor to the OPCW’s programmes ever since.

Sino Premier Chunlan Sun in Munich

PRC Vice-President Chunlan Sun, Minister of State Dr. Florian Herrmann and Ambassador Ken Wu – Picture by Bayerische Staatskanzlei – Bavarian State Chancery.

Friday, 26 June 2019, Germany: PRC Vice-Premier Chunlan Sun was on a working visit in Germany in order to attend the China-Germany Innovation Dialogue Forum on Vocational Education wherein she delivered keynote speeches alongside Germany’s Minister of Education and Research, Anja Karliczek.

Over 150 representatives of the Chinese and German governments, vocational training institutions, colleges, schools, research institutes and enterprises attended the forum. The discussions centered on designing vocational education systems and policies as well as on practical experiences.

During a stopover in Munich, Vice-Premier Sun was treated by the Bavarian State Minister for Federal, European and Media Affairs, Dr. Florian Herrmann for a formal dinner held at the Green Salon of the Prince-Carl-Palace in Munich, de jure working seat of the Bavarian Premier. She was accompanied by PRC Ambassador to Germany Ken Wu as well as her delegation. 

For further information: 
Bavarian State Chancery: http://bayern.de/service/fotoreihen/?frid=in121576&fbclid=IwAR159IvlX0ZtsFV471Y8rikJ_IZB-BB69E4JSKekZFUCCGqGBScQGt6Y7jc
Vice-Premier Sun: http://english.gov.cn/state_council/vice_premiers/2019/06/27/content_281476735971468.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Chunlan