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Daily Archives: October 17, 2022
NIO minister: I was betrayed over Brexit and dont want that to happen again – Belfast News Letter
Posted: October 17, 2022 at 10:49 am
Steve Baker, who apologised to Dublin for not paying enough respect to its interests after the UK quit the EU, has now urged the Foreign Office to pay close attention to the DUP stance against the Irish Sea border.
Mr Baker, a junior minister at the Northern Ireland Office and a noted Brexiteer MP, spoke to the News Letter earlier this week.
His interview, published inside today in the print edition and in the link below online, makes all the more striking reading in light of the turmoil which has engulfed his boss, the prime minister Liz Truss.
Mr Baker insists that he was right to issue his apology to Ireland, made on stage at the recent Tory conference, but says the media missed the other part of his comments, about Londons resolve to overhaul the protocol.
He says that as a minister under Theresa Mays government he was betrayed by UK officials in his bid for a full Brexit split from Europe.
Citing Sir Jeffrey Donaldsons recent speech to the DUP conference in Belfast, and its call for an end to EU law dominance over NI, Mr Baker says: It needs to be heard in the Foreign Office by officials who might otherwise do a tech mini technical negotiation.
Mr Baker emphasises that the unionist grievance is the constitutional question. He says that respecting the Belfast/ Good Friday Agreement East-West does mean in my view, ending the supremacy of European law [in NI].
Asked if Ms Truss is so weakened since her disastrous mini budget last month that she will lack the clout to challenge the Irish Sea border, Mr Baker says that shes got so much resilience.
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NIO minister: I was betrayed over Brexit and dont want that to happen again - Belfast News Letter
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New Brexit visa which lets British expats wfh in Spain set to be launched this year – iNews
Posted: at 10:49 am
David Shipp and his wife Nadine always enjoyed the laid-back lifestyle, the food and the weather when they spent a holiday at their villa in Murcia in south-eastern Spain.
Now, they are considering living it for real when Madrid brings a new digital nomad visa into force possibly later this year.
The visa will give Britons and other non-EU citizens the chance to work under the Spanish sun at a lower cost of living than the UK and with tax breaks thrown in as an extra sweetener.
The visas will be offered to people who work remotely for businesses outside Spain and for those who derive a maximum of 20 per cent of their income from Spanish firms.
Law firms that specialise in dealing with the visa said they have received thousands of enquiries from Britons.
Mr Shipp, 51, from Cambridgeshire, who is managing director of a company distributing polished concrete products, can work from anywhere using his laptop and telephone.
I have been keeping an eye on the digital nomad visa. Our intention to move would be in around two years. We are monitoring things now because I still have a daughter at university, he toldi from his home in Britain.
When we go away to Spain for long periods I am still working. This visa (would be) ideal really.
Mr Shipp said he had always admired the Spanish way of life. He bought a holiday home with his wife about a year ago in San Javier in Murcia, a region popular with Britons.
It is something that my wife and I have been speaking about for many years. We used savings to buy the house (in Spain), he said.
(We like) the laid-back attitude (of Spaniards), the weather, the food, all the clichs. It is just a great country.
Maria Luisa Castro, of CostaLuz Lawyers which specialises in dealing with the digital nomad visa, said there had been huge interest from Britons.
There have been hundreds of potential nomads waiting for the visa to be approved, she told i.
I would say that we have between 1,000 and 1,200 prospective applicants in our files.
British diplomats echoed this feeling, telling the i that there was considerable interest in Spains nomad visa.
Spains prime minister Pedro Snchez promised last month that the Start Up law, which includes the visa, would be passed before the end of the current legislature next year.
The visa will initially be valid for one year but can be renewed for up to five years, depending on the applicants situation. Close relatives, such as a spouse or children, will be eligible to join the applicant.
To qualify, the person must come from outside the European Economic Area and be able to demonstrate that they have been working for at least a year for a company outside Spain.
They must also have a contract of employment or, if freelance, they must be able to show that they have been working for companies outside Spain for more than a year.
Applicants must show they will earn enough to be self-sufficient and that they have a permanent address in Spain. It is likely, but not certain yet, that they will have to undergo a criminal record check.
For the first four years that they are living in Spain, they will be taxed at 15 per cent, rather than the standard 25 per cent base rate in Spain.
The Start Up law, which still has to overcome some final hurdles before coming into force, aims to boost the digital economy and attract foreign talent to Spain.
It is also hoped it will smooth foreign entrepreneurs path through the notorious Spanish bureaucracy.
At present, it takes an average of between 20 and 30 days to set up a company in Spain compared to one day in the UK.
Apart from its lifestyle and weather, Spain is well connected to the internet, a crucial factor for people who may be hoping to make the beach their office.
Internet speed is among the fastest in Europe at 148Mbps, almost double the UK speed of 75Mbps.
One disadvantage is that in cities like Madrid and Barcelona, rents have risen sharply in recent years.
Spain hopes good Wi-Fi even in country villages may attract nomads who want a taste of real Spain thus offsetting a growing political problem of rural depopulation.
When the nomad visa becomes a reality in Spain, it will make it the 15th country in Europe to bring in such a scheme.
Across the border in Portugal, nomads can apply for the D7 visa which requires a monthly income of 700 (600).
In Croatia, applicants must earn at least 2,300 per month while in Estonia the minimum figure is 3,500 (3,000) and in Iceland 7,100 (6,140).
Greece brought in a nomad visa in 2021 and sets the minimum monthly income at 3,500. It is not known what the figure will be in Spain.
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New Brexit visa which lets British expats wfh in Spain set to be launched this year - iNews
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They dreamed of the United Kingdom, but Brexit forced these French people to move to Ireland – Morning Express
Posted: at 10:49 am
By Lily Benchick
Posted 5 hours ago, Update 1 hour ago
TESTIMONIALS With the entry into force of Brexit, the need for a visa is pushing expatriates to opt for another British island: Ireland. The real estate market, as a result, is beginning to tighten.
She wanted to settle in September in Scotland to continue her studies, but Axelle Diot had to give up her project. The price of the student visa and the difficulty once there of being able to find small jobs, the obligation to make your passport, the cost of living, the financial aid which has not been put in place since Brexit All that convinced me not to comesays the young woman, who discovered only at the time of her search for installation that the migration rules in the United Kingdom had changed so much since January 1, 2021. I was only made aware of different rules when I started the process of applying to the University of Edinburghregrets the Frenchwoman, who adds that she had not been able to come and settle before the deadline of December 31, 2020, not having finished her course in France.
A real disappointment for the young woman, who finally settled in mid-September in Galway, on the west coast of Ireland, opposite the capital, Dublin. Finally, this change of plan was rather an excellent decision for her, as for others, who found in Ireland a land of substitution in the United Kingdom, offering professional possibilities and personal fulfillment. I realize that Ireland was a good choicesays Axelle Diot.
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Revolut blames Brexit as it shifts one million trading customers from London to Lithuania – The Telegraph
Posted: at 10:49 am
Revolut has blamed Brexit for forcing it to shift more than one million trading customers from London to Lithuania in order to market its products to European clients.
The fintech company will transfer all European Economic Area (EEA) customers from Revolut Trading Ltd, its UK-based subsidiary, to its Lithuanian business by the end of this year, according to accounts filed at Companies House.
The company did not disclose how many customers will be affected, but it is understood it will shift over one million accounts to its Lithuanian arm.
The fintechs trading business, which allows customers to invest in shares and cryptocurrencies, has become a significant revenue stream for the company in recent years.
In the accounts, Revolut said: Due to legislation introduced after the United Kingdoms departure from the European Union, the company cannot currently offer marketing of its products to its EU based customers.
As a result, the business plans to migrate these customers to Revoluts European licenced trading entity towards the end of 2022.
The accounts also reveal that the City watchdog has yet to grant Revolut a so-called Mifid licence, highlighting the regulatory hurdles it is continuing to face in the UK. The company obtained this licence for its Lithuanian business last year.
It comes as the $33bn (29.5bn) company is still awaiting a decision on its UK banking licence application, which it applied for in January 2021 and is regarded as a key milestone in its development.
Nikolay Storonsky, the companys co-founder and chief executive, previously said that he hoped to secure the licence early in 2022.
The former banker has hit out at the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) over what he regards as its slow procedures for processing applications, saying it was slower compared to expectations.
Revolut has suffered a turbulent few months, including a series of high profile resignations and faces questions around its auditing and a cyber attack that affected about 50,000 customers.
The accounts show that Revolut Trading Ltd generated revenues of nearly 13m in 2021, an increase of nearly 70pc on the previous year. Pre-tax profits came in at 8.9m for the period.
Last month, in a boost for the company, Revolut was given permanent approval from the FCA to run its cryptocurrency business in the UK, having previously been placed on a temporary register.
Revolut can no longer market trading products to EU clients from the UK as British-based companies were stripped of their passporting rights following the UKs exit from the EU, which gave companies full access to European markets.
The Mifid 2 rulebook was introduced by the EU in 2018 in a bid to reduce conflicts of interest in the financial services industry.
A Revolut spokesman said: "We plan to migrate all EEA-based users of our trading product from Revolut Trading Ltd to Revolut Securities UAB.
This migration will enable us to grow our trading product further in the EEA. Revolut Securities UAB is our investment firm, and Mifid licensed by the Bank of Lithuania."
The FCA declined to comment. m
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Brexit Boom: Badenoch slashes red tape on Scottish whisky exports – Express
Posted: at 10:49 am
International Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch secured an end to trade barriers with several African and South American nations.
Tariffs on whisky sales to Argentina have been cut by 15 percent, a 49 percent levy on spirits sold to Morocco has been axed and planned taxes on sales to Angola were cancelled.
Ms Badenoch, who celebrated with a visit to the Glenkinchie Distillery in East Lothian, said: Every week we remove a trade barrier somewhere around the world. From whisky in Argentina to gin in Angola, were slashing red tape and opening access to new markets and new customers.
With these trade obstacles gone and more to follow, my message to UK businesses is clear make the most of the huge global appetite for your fantastic products and sell to the world.
Scotch whisky exports grew by 19 percent to reach a total value of 4.51 billion last year.
Ms Badenoch said Brexit allowed the UK Government to have its own place at the negotiating table for trade as the European Union often did not offer what was needed.
She said: This is something that would previously have been done by the EU and quite often we didnt get what was needed. Now were able to control a lot more of our trade policy so it is excellent news.
Ms Badenoch is still pushing to secure a full free trade deal with India later this month despite upset in New Delhi over remarks by Home Secretary Suella Braverman after she said Indian migrants are the largest group that overstay in the UK.
Mark Kent, CEO of the Scotch Whisky Association, said: Securing a deal with India to reduce the 150 percent tariff on Scotch Whisky is the industrys top international trade priority.
We want to see a deal agreed, but not any deal. To deliver for the industry, any agreement must open up the market to more Scotch Whisky producers, which will in turn generate hundreds of new jobs across the UK, hundreds of millions of pounds of additional exports, and boost investment and revenue in India.
The ongoing negotiations are a once in a generation chance to give more Scottish distillers the opportunity to do business in India. That is the scale of the prize on offer.
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Brexit Boom: Badenoch slashes red tape on Scottish whisky exports - Express
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NIH expands faster path used to develop COVID-19 screening to tests, therapies for Alzheimer’s and other neurological disorders – Baltimore Sun
Posted: at 10:48 am
As the coronavirus pandemic was upending daily life across the globe in early 2020, government officials challenged scientists to swiftly develop accurate and easy-to-use tests for COVID-19.
It was a break in the traditional slog from idea to marketable medical tool. The effort, which included funding and support, proved so successful that its now a format for a new initiative funded by the National Institutes of Health. This time, its focused on tests and treatments for neurological disorders such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons diseases and migraines.
NIH chose the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Howard University in Washington to lead a new incubator where scientific innovators can receive funding and mentoring from a diverse set of expert scientists and engineers for ideas that are at such an early stage that the government wouldnt normally take the risk.
The center, called NeuroTech Harbor, solicited the first pitches at the end of September. The university experts will select the innovators from a broad pool of applicants to the incubator and polish their projects to present to NIH, which will ultimately choose those getting ongoing funding, said Sri Sarma, executive director of the new center and associate professor of biomedical engineering at Johns Hopkins.
Potentially lifesaving and life-changing solutions addressing neurological conditions are out there, but the pace of their development is slow, Sarma said.
Many of the most promising concepts often languish due to a lack of resources and the high risks associated with early development phases, she said. NeuroTech Harbors approach will overcome those barriers, helping to fast-track solutions to conditions that affect 1 in 6 people around the globe.
This is the administration building on the Johns Hopkins University Homewood campus in 2020. (Barbara Haddock Taylor / Baltimore Sun)
Diagnostic tools and treatments vary for the neurological disorders: Alzheimers, migraines and Parkinsons, as well as multiple sclerosis and strokes. Together they affect more than a billion people worldwide.
NeuroTech Harbor expects hundreds of applications over five years, and the winners will get up to $500,000 a year for three to four years. Up to eight teams could be chosen this year.
The funding comes from the National Institutes of Healths Blueprint MedTech: Incubator Hubs program, which works to accelerate development of medical devices for nervous system disorders. The NIH neurological program is also funding another incubator led by Boston-area medical and academic institutions, which previously headed COVID-19 test development.
[Johns Hopkins launches major effort to make aging a whole lot less achy]
The Hopkins-Howard team believes it was added because of its commitment to diversity among innovators, which aims not only to widen the pool of scientists and ideas, but to reduce disparities in treatment for neurological disorders.
There are innovators across all populations, people who have ideas to solve problems and expand the reach of products to communities that are disadvantaged, said Dr. Evaristus Nwulia, a professor of neuroscience and director of the Translational Neuroscience Laboratory in the Howard University College of Medicine.
A lot of people are underrepresented on the research side, including minorities, but this also includes women, he said. They have limited access to resources to help them develop effective products to address these problems and move their ideas out into society. And on the other side, some cant access the products or they dont work for them. These underserved populations include people in rural areas.
Nwulia said Howard, a historically Black research university, also will work to expand the pipeline of new ideas and new innovators with programs that go beyond the contours of the NIH program because they lack enough basic research or have another missing piece. A seedling program will offer some funding and mentorship to those projects so they can resolve the weakness and remain viable. Another program headed at Howard will mentor a diverse corps of young people as a pipeline for future researchers.
Diversity unlocks innovation, thinking outside the box and makes the broadest impact, Nwulia said.
In this 2021 photo with the Founders Library in the background, people walk along the Howard University campus in Washington. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP)
There is a lot riding on such efforts, with uneven development of diagnostics and therapies for the diseases. Sarma said scientists, for example, dont really understand the mechanism behind migraines. More is understood about Parkinsons, and when drugs fail, patients have gotten relief from symptoms like tremors through deep brain stimulation. Thats the use of implanted electrodes to provide electrical stimulation to disrupt abnormal electrical signals in the brain associated with movement disorders.
Alzheimers drug development may be among the most disappointing over time with drug failures in clinical trials and even questions about the path researchers have taken to remove proteins called amyloids that form plaque in patients brains. This plaque has long been a hallmark of the disease, though researchers dont fully understand its role.
[With encore, Baltimore singer becomes Alzheimers inspiration at age 91]
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently approved one drug called aducanumab over objections from outside advisers. Aducanumab removes the plaque with the aim of slowing cognitive decline in patients with early onset Alzheimers, but the drug requires high doses that can cause side effects and is costly.
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The outside experts were more hopeful about another drug, lecanemab, which showed a 27% decrease in cognitive decline in its latest trial. But they also questioned whether the benefit was enough and worth the potential side effects and cost.
Nwulia added that the benefits of this and other drugs may vary among populations because of age, race or ethnicity or other factors that have not yet been determined.
The exterior of Davidge Hall at the University of Maryland, Baltimore is shown in this file photo. (Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun )
The pharmaceutical industry, as well as other government, private and academic institutions continue to explore ways of addressing all the neurological disorders.
In the Baltimore region, others taking up research include the Kennedy Krieger Institute and the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
Maryland is in the final stage of plans for an institute that aims to facilitate collaborative research across the campus of the University of Maryland, Baltimore. It will focus on neuroinflammation and injury, neurodevelopment and autism, and the aging brain. The aging category includes neurodegeneration and dementia.
Our institution has tremendous strengths around neuroscience, and now is the ideal time to create interdisciplinary teams in a new institute to accelerate the discovery and translation of novel therapies and offer new hope for patients, said Dr. Mark T. Gladwin, the new dean of the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
There is an urgent need to better understand how the brain develops and ages and responds to inflammatory and traumatic injury, he said. Alzheimers disease and related dementias currently afflict more than 5 million Americans and represent one of our great generational challenges associated with the aging of the worlds populations.
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Facial Recognition Market Size and Share 2022 | Global Industry Analysis, Feasibility Study and Development Scope by 2032 | NEC Corporation (NEC)…
Posted: at 10:46 am
The latest competent intelligence report published by Quince Market Insights with the title An increase in demand and Opportunities for Facial RecognitionMarket 2022 provides a sorted image of the industry by analysis of research and information collected from various sources that have the ability to help the decision. This Report concretes the best results, integrated approaches, and the latest technology. The report identifies and interprets each of the market dimensions to evaluate logical derivatives that have the potential to set the growth rate in the global Facial Recognition market. The report delivers a wide-ranging analysis of the market development status and evaluations of the various market segments and sub-segments of this industry.
The Report presents the competitive outlook and growth strategies of the market where the worldwide markets vital regional market demands are studied. The Research Report will help market players build future business strategies and discover the worldwide competition. This report gives an insight into the various important research industry data and future trend that helps identify the products and drive revenue growth and profitability. The reports contain an overview and review of the leading companies operating in the industry that are considered to be revenue-driving for the market.
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Who are the Major Facial Recognition Market Key players?
NEC Corporation (NEC) (Japan), Aware, Inc. (Aware) (US), Ayonix Corporation (Ayonix) (Japan), Cognitec Systems GmbH (Cognitec Systems) (Germany), NVISO SA (nViso) (Switzerland), Animetrics (US), Neurotechnology (Lithuania), Daon (Ireland), Stereovision Imaging, Inc. (SVI) (US), Techno Brain (Dubai), Innovatrics (Bratislava), id3 Technologies (id3) (Israel), Thales (France), Idemia (France), Nuance Communications, Inc. (Nuance) (US), BioID (Germany), Fulcrum Biometrics, LLC. (Fulcrum Biometrics) (US), TrueFace.AI (US), Amazon (US), FacePhi (Spain), Herta Security (Herta) (Spain), Kairos AR, Inc. (Kairos) (US), SightCorp Inc. (SightCorp) (The Netherlands)
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Global markets are presented by Facial Recognition type, along with growth forecast. Estimates of production and value are based on the price in the supply chain at which the is procured by the manufacturers.
This report has studied every segment and provided the market size using historical data. They have also talked about the growth opportunities that the segment may pose in the future. This study bestows production and revenue data by type, and during the historical period and forecast period.
Key Pointers That the Report Acknowledges:
Growth rate and market size over the analysis timeframe. Leading vendors and suppliers of the market. Exhaustive SWOT analysis of each company. Detailed PEST analysis by region. Opportunities and threats faced by the existing vendors in the Facial Recognition market. Strategic initiatives are undertaken by leading players.
Revenue and Sales Estimation:
Historical Revenue and sales volume are presented and further data is triangulated with top-down and bottom-up approaches to forecast complete market size and to estimate forecast numbers for key regions covered in the report along with classified and well-recognized Types and end-use industries.
Pricing analysis:
Pricing always plays a key role in influencing buying decisions. The price analysis will help determine how businesses evaluate it with other competitors and substitute products. The global Facial Recognition market is a highly research-intensive one that is driven by high R&D and has a strong product analysis which aids in fostering growth with respect to the analysis period 2022-2032.
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Regional Landscape:
Declare some of the factors that directly affect the market including production strategies, business methods, development platforms, and product models. It will also detail recorded revenues by these given regions. Additionally, the Facial Recognition market report includes specific insights into various development plans at the country level, potential market constraints, and other revenue growth restraints.Geographically, the Regions covered in the report:
* North America ( United States, Canada, and Mexico)* Europe (Germany, France, United Kingdom, and Rest of Europe)* Asia-Pacific (Japan, Korea, India, Southeast Asia, and Australia)* South America (Brazil, Argentina, and the Rest of South America)* Middle East & Africa (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, and the Rest of the Middle East & Africa)
Key questions answered in the report:
What is the growth potential of the Facial Recognition market? Which product segment will take the lions share? Which regional market will emerge as a pioneer in the years to come? Which application segment will experience strong growth? What growth opportunities might arise in the Facial Recognition industry in the years to come? What are the most significant challenges that the Facial Recognition market could face in the future?
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Putin will be in a sanatorium and out of power by 2023, a former …
Posted: at 10:44 am
Russian President Vladimir Putin.MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV/SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images
Former MI6 head Sir Richard Dearlove said Wednesday that Putin could be out of power by next year.
He said Putin will likely enter a long-term medical facility and not return to power once he is out.
His predictions line up with other reports of Putin losing power and receiving medical treatment.
The former head of British intelligence predicted that Russian President Vladimir Putin will be out of power by next year and in a medical facility for long-term illness.
Sir Richard Dearlove was head of the UK's Secret Intelligence Service, also known as MI6, from 1999 to 2004. He made the predictions about Putin on Wednesday during an episode of the podcast "One Decision," which he cohosts.
"I'm really going to stick my neck out. I think he'll be gone by 2023. But probably into the sanatorium, from which he will not emerge as the leader of Russia," he said, adding that the sanatorium would be a way to move Putin out of power without a coup.
Dearlove's prediction is in step with other recent reports suggesting Putin is ill and could soon lose power.
Bellingcat's Christo Grozev, an expert on Russian security, said last week top Kremlin security officials believe the war in Ukraine is "lost" and that Putin is losing his grip on power.
Ukraine's military intelligence chief, Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, told Sky News last week Putin was in "a very bad psychological and physical condition and he is very sick." Budanov also said he was "optimistic" Ukraine would prevail and that the war would be "over by the end of the year."
The former British spy Christopher Steele recently said sources told him Putin is seriously ill and regularly leaves meetings for medical treatment, contributing to "increasing disarray in the Kremlin." Steele, who led MI6's Russia desk for years, compiled the infamous Trump-Russia dossier, much of which was discredited.
The state of Putin's health cannot be confirmed, though his rumored conditions include ailments like dementia, Parkinson's disease, and blood cancer.
Dearlove also said there is no succession plan in Russian leadership, but said if Putin did enter a medical facility, the most likely person to step up is Nikolai Patrushev, the secretary of the Security Council of Russia.
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Putin Endures Long Rant From Close Ally Complaining of ‘Lack of Respect’
Posted: at 10:44 am
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The president of Tajikistan a close ally of Russia appeared to strongly rebuke Vladimir Putin at a summit of central Asian leaders and demanded that he showed respect.
Emomali Rahmon, the Tajik ruler since 1994, complained and appeared to scold an uncomfortable-looking Putin at a meeting at the Commonwealth Of Independent States Summit, a gathering of central Asian leaders, in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan.
"Yes, we are small nations, we are not 100-200 million, but we have history, culture, we love, we want to be respected," Rahmon said, according to Mail Online.
Rahmon continued his criticism claiming Tajikistan had to "beg" Russia "to attend some miserable forum in Tajikistan? But we are never being treated like strategic partners! No offense, but we want to be respected!" the Mail reported Rahmon as saying.
Rahmon also complained that African nations received better treatment from Russia, and asked Putin to commit to increase investment into the country.
According to the New Voice of Ukraine, Rahmon also told Putin not to treat central Asian countries as if they were still part of the former Soviet Union.
The outburst was witnessed by leaders from Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, and lasted for seven minutes, per MailOnline.
The incident follows surprising recent public criticism from India's leader, another ally of Putin, of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Speaking at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in September, India's Prime Minister Modi told Putin that "now is not the time for war."
"I know that today's era is not an era of war, and I have spoken to you on the phone about this," Modi told Putin, according to Reuters.
Modi's comments followed an acknowledgment by Putin that even China, Russia's closest ally, had "questions and concerns" about the invasion of Ukraine.
Opposition is also emerging within Russia from the elite of Putin's regime, according to reports.
Last week, Yevgenia Albats, editor of the Russian-language magazine News Times, told The Guardian there was growing discontent among Kremlin officials over th conduct of the war in Ukraine.
The Washington Post also reported that a member of Putin's inner circle had confronted the leader over the handling of the war in Ukraine, citing information obtained by US intelligence.
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Putin Endures Long Rant From Close Ally Complaining of 'Lack of Respect'
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Planning for the chaotic post-Putin world – POLITICO Europe
Posted: at 10:44 am
Vladimir Putin in power has brutalized millions as he careens into tyranny.
Yet Vladimir Putin out of power will bring its own brand of chaos: a Shakespearean knife-fight for power; unleashed regional leaders; a nuclear arsenal up for grabs.
For now, few want to publicly talk about that post-Putin world, wary of the perception of meddling in domestic politics. But privately, western countries and analysts are plotting the scenarios that could unfold when Putin inevitably departs and how Ukraines allies should react.
I will be careful speculating too much about the domestic political situation in Russia, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said last week when asked how the alliance was preparing for the possibility of the Russian leader leaving office.
Regardless of what different analyses may indicate, I think what we need to do at NATO is to be prepared for all eventualities and when it comes to Ukraine, be prepared to continue to support them, he said.
One consensus: It wont be a clean transition, posing myriad dilemmas that could strain Western allies. How much can and should they influence the succession process? What should they do if a Russian republic breaks away? What relationship should they pursue with Putins successor?
We should put aside any illusions that what happens next immediately is democracy, said Laurie Bristow, a former British ambassador to Russia.
What I think happens next, he added, is probably a time of troubles.
For now, Putin is in a safe position. He still controls the state apparatus, and the military is executing his murderous orders in Ukraine.
But the Russian leaders flailing invasion of Ukraine has diminished his position at home and deepened uncertainties over who would take over, and how.
To manage a stable succession when the time comes which will in Putins mind be a time of his choosing then you need a high degree of elite consensus, said Bristow, who served as the United Kingdoms envoy in Moscow from 2016 until 2020.
What theyve done now is break that consensus, he said, noting there is now more vying for power within the Kremlin.
That fighting could turn bloody once the Kremlins top job finally opens up.
This could get very Shakespearean, think King Lear, or [the] Roman Empire, like I, Claudius, or Games of Thrones, very quickly, said William Alberque, a former director of NATOs arms control center.
Alexander Vershbow, a former senior U.S. and NATO official, said the most likely scenario was still a smooth transition within Putins current inner circle but he conceded that toppling tyrants can beget turmoil. There could be internal instability, he said, and things become very unpredictable in authoritarian systems, in personalistic dictatorships.
Bristow, the former British ambassador, warned Western powers to stay out of such succession fights: I think we have to recognize the limits of our ability to influence these outcomes.
Although, the ex-envoy conceded, we certainly have an interest in the outcome.
Russia is sitting on the worlds largest stockpile of nuclear weapons, featuring thousands of warheads that can each inflict massive destruction, death and trauma on a population.
The arsenal has long been a source of Russian strength on the world stage and a dominant part of its global image for years, the possibility of a Kremlin nuclear strike dominated the public imagination in the U.S. and elsewhere.
In a period of leadership uncertainty, that arsenal could become a coveted symbol of power. That would put focus on the Russian militarys nuclear protector, the 12th Main Directorate, or GUMO.
Theres a real possibility, said Alberque, that there would be deadly competition competition to include people trying to rally different parts of the military particularly the 12th GUMO that controls Russias nuclear arsenal.
Put simply, Russia is the largest country in the world, stretching across 11 time zones and climbing from the Caucasus to the Arctic.
While Putin may seem to hold a despotic grip on that entire expanse, there are a number of Russian republics with more tenuous connections to Moscow and some with ambitious political figures. A power vacuum in a faraway capital could present an opening for local leaders to seize more control.
While most analysts believe the Russian Federation would largely hold together through a battle for Kremlin control, they acknowledge the Russian government has long feared fragmentation.
In the event of such factional fighting, all eyes will be on Ramzan Kadyrov, the brutal head of the Chechen Republic.
Does he throw his weight behind a competing faction? Or does he say, Im good with a decade of massive Russian subsidies now lets break off, and I can probably rule Chechnya and Dagestan; I can have my own empire here? said Alberque, now a director at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Moscows invasion of Ukraine could also come back to haunt the Kremlin.
Vershbow, a former American ambassador to Russia, said there is a low probability of disintegration but noted that ironically Putins annexation of areas in eastern Ukraine could be cited as a precedent by separatist leaders inside the Russian Federation, to say borders are now up for grabs.
Once a new leadership team is in place, thats when the most bedeviling policy debates will begin for Western governments.
With Putin off the political stage, some officials in particular in western Europe may argue there is an opportunity to forge a fresh relationship with Moscow.
The U.S. infamously offered Russia a symbolic reset button at the start of Barack Obamas presidency, only to see relations deteriorate further. And Germany for years preached the gospel of economic engagement with Russia, only to declare a historic Zeitenwende, or turning point, after Moscows invasion.
With new leadership in the Kremlin, Germany may say oh, Zeitenwende, never mind. Lets push the U.S. to do another reset with the new Russian leader, Alberque said.
Inevitably, NATOs eastern wing would deplore such overtures. Theyd argue Russia never changes, Alberque said, and lean on allies to not recede from the more assertive NATO stance adopted since the war began.
Polish Minister for National Defense Mariusz Baszczak made exactly that point to POLITICO.
Russia in a version with Tsar as a leader was the same like Russia in a version with a secretary-general of Communist party as a leader, and now its the same as Vladimir Putin as a leader, he said.
What is important from our perspective, he added, is to isolate Russia.
For now, there is no expected Putin successor. But officials say they are expecting a regime with a similar ideology or one even more extreme.
Jnis Garisons, a Latvian state secretary, pointed out that Putin has already jailed critics and possible future leaders like Alexei Navalny, and only more hardliners on the outside are ready to step in.
The only people who criticize him and not in prison are from the right wing, Garisons said.
We should not fall victim to a junta or some group of people coming forward saying that they want a reset, said Ben Hodges, former commander of U.S. Army Europe, if its still the same.
One major difference this time around is that Europe is now less economically dependent on Moscow, reducing a key incentive to re-engage.
We have gone a long way to stop buying from Russia, said a senior EU diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity. That would leave only the issues of nukes but that will largely be with the Americans.
Another signal Western leaders can look for is whether a Putin successor cooperates with international organizations seeking to prosecute Russian war crimes in Ukraine a possibility, of course, that seems remote.
Only a Russia determined to cooperate, would not represent a threat to Europe, said Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsk.
Yet for all the assumptions that a cooperative Russia is far off, several current and former officials cautioned that western governments must combine deterrence with a longer-term effort to engage Russian civil society.
The Western alliance, said Bristow, must consider how we reach out to Russian society beyond the Kremlin, to the next generation of Russian politicians, thinkers, intellectuals, teachers, businesspeople, to kind of spell out an alternative vision to the one theyve got.
My sense, he added, is that quite a lot of people in Russia would like to do that.
Paul McLeary contributed reporting
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