Ancient Roman Road (Stane Street), West Sussex, UK.
Stane Street is the modern name of the 55-mile-long ancient Roman road in southern England that once connected Roman port of Chichester (Noviomagus Reginorum) on south coast of England to Roman town of London (Londinium). This… pic.twitter.com/3spC3oW38H
— Archaeo – Histories (@archeohistories) January 31, 2024
Day: February 1, 2024
Around 40 Russian Sailors were on the sunken Russian Ship “Ivanovets” according to the Ukrainian 🇺🇦 Navy pic.twitter.com/Ve9xSQLKeZ
— Ukraine Battle Map (@ukraine_map) February 1, 2024
Biden replaces Trump in Oval Office, as rendered by Time Magazine in issue dated three years ago today: pic.twitter.com/rOfkYe0qvn
— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) February 1, 2024
Read @anders_aslund on
How to Kill Russia’s Oil Economy https://t.co/8M86q7xAZI
— Michael McFaul (@McFaul) February 1, 2024
Today all 27 EU leaders have agreed a €50bn aid package for #Ukraine, after Pro-Russian #Hungary had previously blocked the deal. President Zelensky welcomed the new funding, saying it would strengthen the country’s economic & financial stability. 🇺🇦 economic ministry said it… pic.twitter.com/wBey4GAPd3
— Glasnost Gone (@GlasnostGone) February 1, 2024
Two Russian courts have meted out the first convictions in connection with what the government calls the “international LGBT social movement” and which was designated as extremist last year.
On Thursday, a court in the southern region of Volgograd found a man guilty of “displaying the symbols of an extremist organization” after he posted a photograph of an LGBTQ flag online, according to the court’s press service.
Artyom P., who was ordered to pay a fine of 1,000 rubles, admitted guilt and repented, saying he had posted the image “out of stupidity,” the court said.
On Monday, a court in Nizhny Novgorod, east of Moscow, sentenced to five days in administrative detention a woman who had been in a cafe when a man approached her and demanded she remove her frog-shaped earrings displaying an image of a rainbow, said Aegis, an LGBTQ rights group.
The woman was called to the police station after the man, who filmed the encounter, posted it online.
A trial is set to resume next week in Saratov in southwestern Russian against a photographer who posted images of rainbow flags on Instagram, independent Russian news outlet Mediazona reported.
The rainbow flag represents the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community. Russian law prohibits anyone in the country “displaying the symbols” of organizations it considers extremist, a list that includes social network Meta.
Russia’s Supreme Court banned the “LGBT movement” last November, continuing a pattern of increasing restrictions in Russia on expressions of sexual orientation and gender identity.
A law passed last July outlawed legal or medical changes of gender for transgender Russians, and a law banning the promotion of “nontraditional” sexual relations has been on the books for over a decade.
Georgian PM resigns | Eurasianet https://t.co/zh3CWoYlkE
The News And Times Review – #NewsAndTimes – https://t.co/PHMNa5CDQU#News #Times #NT #TNT #Israel #World #USA #POTUS #DOJ #FBI #CIA #DIA #ODNI #Mossad #Netanyahu #Putin #Russia #GRU #Ukraine #SouthCaucasus #NewAbwehr #OSINT pic.twitter.com/XtkPhZurXR— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) February 1, 2024
Georgian PM resigns
Irakli Gharibashvili has resigned as Georgian prime minister, for the second time.
At a briefing on January 29, Gharibashvili, 41, announced that he would assume the role of chairman of the ruling Georgian Dream party starting February 1st.
“I served our country honestly, uncompromisingly defended the interests of our country and people, and I am proud of the results we achieved with the team during this period,” said Gharibashvili.
He expressed gratitude to the party’s billionaire founder Bidzina Ivanishvili, who a month ago re-entered politics to take up the position of “honorary chairman” of Georgian Dream.
Garibashvili said the party needed to focus on securing a “convincing victory” in the parliamentary election due to be held this fall.
He did not say who was succeeding him in the post, but government mouthpiece Imedi TV reported throughout the day that it was going to be the current ruling party chair, Irakli Kobakhidze.
During his short briefing, Gharibashvili praised Georgian Dream’s “internal democracy” and said he was leaving his post according to a “principle of rotation” that has not previously been mentioned as part of the party’s governance.
In reality, the move is almost certainly linked to the billionaire Ivanishvili’s return to politics. The day of his announcement, he denied speculation of an impending government reshuffle. About a week and a half later, however, the party’s charter was altered to authorize the “honorary chairman” to nominate the prime minister.
So what happens next, formally, is that Ivanishvili will nominate a new prime minister, Georgian Dream’s political council will approve that nomination and the nominee will be approved by parliament, where Georgian Dream enjoys a majority.
Until a new PM takes office, all currently serving ministers are fulfilling their duties on an interim basis.
Georgian Dream has been in power since 2012. Its first prime minister was Ivanishvili himself, who served for just over a year.
In 2013 he announced he was quitting politics for good and handed the baton to his protege, Irakli Garibashvili, who was then just 31 years of age.
Garibashvili was PM for just over two years and later served as defense minister.
Ivanishvili made his first return to political life in 2018, making himself Georgian Dream’s chairman. After seeing the party through key presidential and parliamentary polls in 2018 and 2020, respectively, he quit politics again in early 2021.
Shortly afterward, Garibashvili became prime minister again, holding the post until today.
The man Ivanishvili tapped as his own replacement as party chair at that time was Irakli Kobakhidze, the now 45-year-old who appears set to become the next premier.
Garibashvili revealed he had accepted an offer as chairman of the ruling Georgian Dream party in preparation for the upcoming national elections in the autumn.
The prime minister of Georgia, Irakli Garibashvili, is resigning his office to take up a political party role in advance of this year’s national elections.
On Monday, Garibashvili revealed he had accepted an offer as chairman of the ruling Georgian Dream party.
“We will elect a new parliament in the fall, and Georgian Dream should prepare to win elections decisively to continue the way forward in achieving other goals,” he said in a speech.
His resignation comes a month after the return of controversial billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, the founder of Georgian Dream, who reclaimed the title of the party’s honorary chairman.
Ivanishvili, a wealthy figure with ties to Russia, previously served as Georgia’s prime minister from 2012 to 2013.
Georgian Dream has maintained a stance of not endorsing sanctions against Russia or providing military support to Ukraine. In the past year, the party withdrew a proposed foreign agent registration bill, reminiscent of one in Russia, following extensive public protests.
Levan Khabeishvili, the chairman of the opposition United National Movement, expressed concerns about Garibashvili’s resignation, linking it to Ivanishvili’s political manoeuvres.
He asserted that the current government is not serving the interests of the people, but instead rather prioritising their own and Ivanishvili’s enrichment.
Garibashvili previously served as prime minister from 2013 to 2015 and was reappointed to the position in 2021.