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segunda-feira, 7 de maio de 2012

Fotógrafos registraram a Lua em vários momentos de exibição...

Foto 1 de 7 | | Crédito: Wilson Cardoso/Brigada Militar/Divulgação
Repórter fotográfico da Brigada Militar flagrou a lua na ERS-122, no domingo
 
 

Governo alemão manda mensagem para Hollande | Mundo | band.com.br - Band.com.br

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 Atualizado em segunda-feira, 7 de maio de 2012 - 09h39

Governo alemão manda mensagem para Hollande

Steffen Seibert, porta-voz do país, diz que o objetivo deles é o crescimento, e não a austeridade
O resultado oficial das eleições apontam Hollande com 52% dos votos, contra 48% do conversador Nicolas Sarkozy / Eric Cabanis/ AFP/ ArquivoO resultado oficial das eleições apontam Hollande com 52% dos votos, contra 48% do conversador Nicolas SarkozyEric Cabanis/ AFP/ Arquivo

O governo alemão assegurou através de seu porta-voz, Steffen Seibert, que não é possível renegociar o pacto fiscal europeu assinado em março, em uma mensagem ao presidente eleito francês, o socialista François Hollande, que quer que o objetivo seja o crescimento, e não a austeridade.

"Não é possível renegociar o pacto fiscal" assinado por "25 dos 27 Estados membros da União Europeia" e que tem por objetivo reforçar a disciplina na gestão das finanças públicas, disse Seibert à imprensa.

Seibert respondia a uma pergunta sobre o desejo de Hollande de integrar a este pacto um capítulo sobre o crescimento. O porta-voz reiterou as condições do governo alemão, que não quer "crescimento a base de déficits, e sim crescimento mediante reformas estruturais".

Seibert deixou claro que o governo de Angela Merkel não quer promover políticas de relançamento na Europa, e sim promover o caminho eleito pela Alemanha e as reformas do mercado de trabalho adotadas por seu antecessor, Gerhard Schroder.

O presidente eleito francês deixou claro em seu discurso após sua vitória nas urnas o desejo de "dar à construção europeia uma dimensão de crescimento, emprego, prosperidade e futuro".

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Campaign to Free TymoshenkoMerkel Wants Mass Boycott of Euro 2012 in Ukraine

Riot police conduct an exercise at a stadium in Lviv as part of preparations for the upcoming Euro 2012 championship.Zoom
AFP
Riot police conduct an exercise at a stadium in Lviv as part of preparations for the upcoming Euro 2012 championship.
Germany is intensifying its diplomatic pressure on Ukraine over its treatment of the imprisoned opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko. SPIEGEL has learned that Chancellor Angela Merkel has been campaigning for a mass boycott of the European Football Championship in Ukraine by leaders across Europe if Kiev does not release Tymoshenko.

In the ongoing conflict over the Ukrainian leadership's treatment of the imprisoned opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko, Angela Merkel is trying to raise the pressure on Kiev. SPIEGEL has learned that the German chancellor is campaigning within the European Union for a mass boycott of the European Football Championship in Ukraine by European heads of state and government if Kiev does not release Tymoshenko.
Merkel has already signaled that she may refrain from traveling to Ukraine for the tournament, which takes place from June 8 to July 1. Officials at the Chancellery in Berlin believe, however, that the threat of an EU-wide boycott would have a greater impact than unilateral action by individual countries.
Last week, the European Commission announced that all 27 EU commissioners would refrain from traveling to the matches in Ukraine if Tymoshenko remains in custody. German President Joachim Gauck and eight other European heads of state have already canceled their participation in a planned mid-May summit in Crimea with Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.

On Sunday, Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert denied that the chancellor was pushing for a boycott. "The chancellor is not campaigning for an EU-wide political boycott for the European Championship games in Ukraine," Seibert told the German news agency DPA. Merkel has not yet decided whether she herself will boycott the games in Ukraine and will decide about her travel plans "at short notice," Seibert said.
In Poland, which is co-hosting the European Championship together with Ukraine, the government takes a critical view of the German initiative. During Gauck's inaugural visit to Poland in March, which took place before his decision to cancel his trip to Ukraine, Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski asked the German president to meet with Yanukovych as planned. Other countries have to keep up a dialogue with Ukraine, Komorowski argued. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has also told Merkel that he rejects a political boycott of the tournament.
Psychological Boost
On Friday, Tymoshenko agreed to be treated in a Ukrainian hospital in the presence of a German doctor. Doctors from the Charité hospital in Berlin have examined Tymoshenko in the women's prison in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, where she is being held, on a number of occasions, and the German government had been negotiating with the Ukrainian government about possibly treating Tymoshenko in Germany. The 51-year-old politician is reported to be suffering from chronic back pain as the result of a herniated disk and has been on hunger strike for over two weeks in protest over what she claims was an assault by prison guards.
In an interview published in the Sunday edition of the Austrian newspaperÖsterreich, Tymoshenko's daughter Yevhenia Tymoshenko, who has been leading the fight to save her mother, said that Yulia Tymoshenko would continue with her hunger strike "until decisions have been made." She said her mother had experienced an "enormous" psychological boost from the diplomatic pressure on Ukraine.
Yevhenia Tymoshenko planned to travel to Berlin on Monday, where she was expected to hold closed-door talks with German Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger, according to DPA. There had been speculation that Yevhenia Tymoshenko might also meet with Merkel during her visit to Berlin, but on Monday a government spokesman denied that such a meeting would take place.
Tymoshenko is the main political rival of President Yanukovych. Last October, she was sentenced to seven years in prison for abuse of office. The West regards the trial as politically motivated.
dgs/SPIEGEL - with wire reports