The meeting discussed the human rights situation in Sudan, the developments achieved, as well as the governmental efforts to strengthen the protection of human rights and achieve justice, as well as the current political developments in the country to achieve stability.
The Vice President of the Sovereign Council expressed Sudan’s willingness to cooperate with all UN mechanisms in the protection and promotion of human rights in the country, stressing the availability of political will to promote human rights, referring to the efforts made to protect civilians and address the conditions of the displaced, in addition to the efforts to secure villages for voluntary return, camps for the displaced and the organization of tribal reconciliations in Darfur, Blue Nile and Southern Kordofan, calling for support to state efforts to create a conducive environment for voluntary return and provide basic conditions for voluntary return, stressing the importance of attracting international support, to effectively contribute to efforts to promote and protect human rights in Sudan, in addition to improving the conditions of refugees.
For his part, Mr Radhouane Nouicer stressed the importance of the cooperation of the Sudanese government to improve and achieve new developments in the field of human rights, welcoming the framework agreement signed last December to complete the transition period. The developments achieved by the Government of Sudan in lifting the state of emergency and the release of prisoners, indicating that he had heard during his visit many statements on developments in the country, stressing the need for cooperation to promote human rights in Sudan.
Morocco handed over T-72B tanks to Kyiv, which were modernized in the Czech Republic. This was reported on the Menadefense website.
About 20 tanks have already been sent to the war zone.
The article notes that the decision for this delivery was made under pressure during the April negotiations at the Ramstein base in Germany.
This meeting was attended by Morocco and Tunisia.
According to Menadefense data, in 1999-2000 the Moroccan army purchased 148 T-72 tanks from Belarus, as well as 136 T-72B and 12 T-72BK.
A day earlier, French President Emmanuel Macron, asked about the possibility of Paris supplying Kyiv with Leclerc tanks, said that “nothing is impossible”.
We remind you that in July 2015, the Ukrainian state company Ukroboronservis also turned to Morocco with a request for spare parts for its T-72 tanks. The French publication Le Journal de l’Afrique reported that Washington had managed to convince Morocco to supply Ukraine with components for the armored vehicles “under conditions of the strictest secrecy”. According to the weekly’s sources, US diplomacy is expanding its operations to obtain arms for Ukraine from Africa.
Illustrative photo: Two T-72B tanks at the Chebarkul training ground, Russia, April 2017.
Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas that regulates blood sugar levels in the body. A new study conducted by the University of Würzburg suggests that exercise could curb the production of this hormone.
Insulin is a vital hormone that plays a crucial role in regulating sugar metabolism in humans and other organisms. The mechanisms by which it performs this task are well understood. However, less is known about the control of <span class=”glossaryLink” aria-describedby=”tt” data-cmtooltip=”
insulin
Insulin is a hormone that regulates the level of glucose (sugar) in the blood. It is produced by the pancreas and released into the bloodstream when the level of glucose in the blood rises, such as after a meal. Insulin helps to transport glucose from the bloodstream into the cells, where it can be used for energy or stored for later use. Insulin also helps to regulate the metabolism of fat and protein. In individuals with diabetes, their body doesn’t produce enough insulin or doesn’t respond properly to insulin, leading to high blood sugar levels, which can lead to serious health problems if left untreated.
” data-gt-translate-attributes=”[{“attribute”:”data-cmtooltip”, “format”:”html”}]”>insulin-secreting cells and the resulting insulin secretion.
Researchers from the Biocenter of Julius-Maximilians-Universität (JMU) Würzburg in Germany have made new discoveries about the control of insulin secretion in their recent study published in Current Biology. The team, led by Dr. Jan Ache, used the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster as a model organism. Interestingly, this fly also releases insulin after eating, but unlike humans, the hormone is not produced by pancreas cells, but rather by nerve cells in the brain.
The figure shows the relationship between the movement and regulation of insulin-producing cells in the fruit fly. Credit: Sander Liessem / University of Wuerzburg
Electrophysiological measurements in active flies
The JMU group figured out that the physical activity of the fly has a strong effect on its insulin-producing cells. For the first time, the researchers measured the activity of these cells electrophysiologically in walking and flying Drosophila.
The result: when Drosophila starts to walk or fly, its insulin-producing cells are immediately inhibited y. When the fly stops moving, the activity of the cells rapidly increases again and shoots up above normal levels.
“We hypothesize that the low activity of insulin-producing cells during walking and flight contributes to the provision of sugars to meet the increased energy demand,” says Dr. Sander Liessem, first author of the publication. “We suspect that the increased activity after exercise helps to replenish the fly’s energy stores, for example in the muscles.”
Blood sugar plays no role in regulation
The JMU team was also able to demonstrate that the fast, behavior-dependent inhibition of insulin-producing cells is actively controlled by neural pathways. “It is largely independent of changes in the sugar concentration in the fly’s blood,” explains co-author Dr. Martina Held.
It makes a lot of sense for the organism to anticipate an increased energy demand in this way to prevent extreme fluctuations in blood sugar levels.
Insulin has hardly changed in evolution
Do the results allow conclusions to be drawn about humans? Probably.
“Although the release of insulin in fruit flies is mediated by different cells than in humans, the insulin molecule and its function have hardly changed in the course of evolution,” says Jan Ache. In the past 20 years, using Drosophila as a model organism, many fundamental questions have already been answered that could also contribute to a better understanding of metabolic defects in humans and associated diseases, such as diabetes or obesity.
Less insulin means longevity
“One exciting point is that reduced insulin activity contributes to healthy aging and longevity,” Sander Liessem tells us. This has already been shown in flies, mice, humans, and other <span class=”glossaryLink” aria-describedby=”tt” data-cmtooltip=”
species
A species is a group of living organisms that share a set of common characteristics and are able to breed and produce fertile offspring. The concept of a species is important in biology as it is used to classify and organize the diversity of life. There are different ways to define a species, but the most widely accepted one is the biological species concept, which defines a species as a group of organisms that can interbreed and produce viable offspring in nature. This definition is widely used in evolutionary biology and ecology to identify and classify living organisms.
” data-gt-translate-attributes=”[{“attribute”:”data-cmtooltip”, “format”:”html”}]”>species. The same applies to an active lifestyle. “Our work shows a possible link explaining how physical activity could positively affect insulin regulation via neuronal signaling pathways.”
Further steps in the research
Next, Jan Ache’s team plans to investigate which neurotransmitters and neuronal circuits are responsible for the activity changes observed in insulin-producing cells in the fly. This is likely going to be challenging: A plethora of messenger substances and hormones are involved in neuromodulatory processes, and individual substances can have opposite or complementary effects in combination.
The group is now analyzing the many ways in which insulin-producing cells process input from the outside. They are also investigating other factors that could have an influence on the activity of these cells, for example, the age of the fly or their nutritional state.
“In parallel, we are investigating the neuronal control of walking and flight behavior,” explains Jan Ache. The long-term goal of his group, he says, is to bring these two research questions together: How does the brain control walking and other behaviors, and how does the nervous system ensure that the energy balance is regulated accordingly?
Reference: “Behavioral state-dependent modulation of insulin-producing cells in Drosophila” by Sander Liessem, Martina Held, Rituja S. Bisen, Hannah Haberkern, Haluk Lacin, Till Bockemühl and Jan M. Ache, 28 December 2022, Current Biology. DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.12.005
Morocco and the European Parliament – On 19 January, the European Parliament adopted a strong resolution urging Morocco to respect media freedom and the independence of journalists. It also called “for the EU and its Member States to continue raising with the Moroccan authorities the cases of detained journalists and prisoners of conscience and attend their trials.”
The cases of three journalists were particularly highlighted in the resolution.
Taoufik Bouachrine sentenced to 15 years in prison, officially for sexual offences. Omar Radi sentenced to six years in prison on charges of espionage and rape. Soulaimane Raissouni serving a five-year sentence for alleged sexual offences. All of them denied the charges and said they were fabricated.
356 MEPs voted in favour of the resolution, 32 against and 42 abstained.
The Reporters Without Borders watchdog welcomed the EU Parliament vote.
The resolution had been initiated by the political group “Renew Europe” comprising MEPs elected on the list of President Macron’s political party. Since 2021, it has been led by the French MEP Stéphane Séjourné, a former member of the Socialist Party and now an advisor to Emmanuel Macron.
On 23 January, members of both houses of the Moroccan Parliament held a joint meeting and unanimously rejected the resolution, largely putting the blame on France. After their session, they called the EU resolution “an unacceptable attack against the sovereignty, dignity and independence of judicial institutions in the kingdom.”
Mohammed Ghiat, president of the National Rally of Independents, the biggest party of the ruling coalition declared: “Their decisions are not going to intimidate us, and we are not going to change our path and approach.”
Ahmed Touizi of the Authenticity and Modernity Party, another member of the ruling coalition, called the resolution “a desperate attempt to influence Morocco’s independent judiciary.”
Rachid Talbi Alami, speaker of the House of Representatives, said that Morocco’s Parliament has decided to reconsider its relations with the European Parliament.
Rabat looking for other allies
The US is one of the traditional allies that continue to reiterate its willingness to boost diplomatic ties with Morocco.
Washington is ready to deepen an already solid strategic partnership, Rabat says. Earlier this month, the Biden administration renewed the US determination to further strengthen diplomatic relations and bilateral cooperation with Morocco in various areas, including trade and security.
At the same time, the US Assistant Secretary of State for International Organizations Affairs, Michele Sison, conveyed her country’s keenness to bolster ties with Morocco.
In a press briefing following talks with Morocco’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sison reiterated the US’ support for Morocco’s Autonomy Plan as the most “serious, credible and realistic solution” to put an end to the dispute over the Western Sahara region.
During her visit to Morocco, Sison recalled the need to maintain the significantly strategic cooperation between Rabat and Washington. In particular, she drew attention to Morocco’s regional leadership in promoting peace and security in the Middle East and North Africa.
This charm offensive of Washington comes at a time when the Moroccan Parliament feels disappointed by France’s and the EU’s attitude on a number of dramatic regional issues concerning Rabat, such as migration and the fight against Islamist movements in the Sahel.
Brussels and Paris need to be vigilant at a time when the presence of France in the region is increasingly and dramatically contested.
In his speech, delivered at UN Headquarters in New York, Mr. Guterres recalled that, within months, the Nazis had dismantled fundamental constitutional rights and paved the way for totalitarian rule: members of parliament were arrested, freedom of the press was abolished, and the first concentration camp was built, in Dachau.
The antisemitism of the Nazis became government policy, followed by organized violence and mass murder: “by the end of the war, six million children, women, and men – nearly two out of every three European Jews – had been murdered”.
Mr. Guterres went on to draw parallels between 1933 and today’s world: “the alarm bells were already ringing in 1933,” he declared, but “too few bothered to listen, and fewer still spoke out”.
The UN chief said that there are many “echoes of those same siren songs to hate,”
pointing out that we are living in a world in which an economic crisis is breeding discontent; populist demagogues are using the crisis to win votes, and “misinformation, paranoid conspiracy theories, and unchecked hate speech” are rampant.
In addition, continued Mr. Guterres, there is a growing disregard for human rights and disdain for the rule of law, “surging” white supremacist and Neo-Nazi ideologies; Holocaust denial and revisionism; and rising antisemitism – as well as other forms of religious bigotry and hatred.
‘Antisemitism is everywhere’
The Secretary-General lamented the fact antisemitic hate can be found everywhere today and, he said, it is increasing in intensity.
Mr. Guterres cited several examples, such as assaults on Orthodox Jews in Manhattan, Jewish schoolchildren bulled in Melbourne, Australia, and swastikas spraypainted on the Holocaust memorial in the German capital Berlin.
Neo-Nazis now represent the number one internal security threat in several countries, declared Mr. Guterres, and white supremacist movements are becoming more dangerous by the day.
US Holocaust Memorial Museum/Yad Vashem
Jews from Subcarpathian Rus are subjected to a selection process on a ramp at Auschwitz-Birkenau, Poland.
‘Set up guardrails’
The online world is one of the main reasons that hate speech, extreme ideologies and misinformation are disseminating so fast around the world, and the UN chief appealed to all those involved, from tech companies to policymakers and the media, to do more to stop the spread, and set up enforceable “guardrails”.
He went on to call out social media platforms and their advertisers who, he said, are complicit in moving extremism to the mainstream, turning many parts of the Internet into “toxic waste dumps for hate and vicious lies”.
The UN’s contribution to addressing the issue includes the Secretary-General’s Strategy and Plan of Action on Hate Speech, proposals for a Global Digital Compact for an open, free, inclusive, and secure digital future, and a code of conduct to promote integrity in public information.
‘New waves of antisemitism’
In his address to the Ceremony, Csaba Kőrösi, President of General Assembly, reminded his audience that, although the Assembly was created to ensure that no one would have to see what the Holocaust survivors endured, 2023 is already seeing “new waves of antisemitism and Holocaust denial” across the world.
“Like poison, they seep into our everyday lives. We hear them from politicians, we read it in the media. The hate that made the Holocaust possible continues to fester”, declared Mr. Kőrösi.
The General Assembly President concluded by urging pushback against the “tsunamis of disinformation crashing about the Internet”.
Action through education and moderation
Tweet URL
The Holocaust began with words – and in the internet and social media era, the power of propaganda is more devastating than ever.
BUT EDUCATION AND KNOWLEDGE CAN HELP PREVENT GENOCIDE.
27 JANUARY IS INTERNATIONAL #HOLOCAUSTREMEMBRANCEDAY.
In a statement released on the International Day, UNESCO, the UN education, science, and culture agency, referred to the partnerships it has established with leading social media company Meta – the owner of Facebook and TikTok – as a first step towards fighting online antisemitism and Holocaust denial, but acknowledged that significant work still needs to be done.
This programme involves the development, in collaboration with the World Jewish Congress, of online resources, which are now used by the platforms to counter the spread of content denying and distorting the Holocaust.
“As we enter a world with fewer and fewer survivors who can testify to what happened, it is imperative that social media companies take responsibility to fight misinformation and to better protect those targeted by antisemitism and hate,” said UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay.
Widespread online Holocaust denial
UNESCO research has found that antisemitism and denial and distortion of the Holocaust, continue to proliferate on all social media platforms.
On average, 16 per cent of social media posts on the Holocaust falsified history in 2022. On Telegram, which has no content moderation, this rises to 49 per cent, whilst on Twitter the amount has risen considerably following the upheaval at the company at the end of last year.
Offline, UNESCO has programmes across the world to promote Holocaust and genocide education.
Next month, UNESCO and the US Holocaust Memorial Museum aim to train ministry of education officials in 10 countries to develop ambitious Holocaust and genocide education projects and, in the US, will train educators in the US on how to address antisemitism in schools.
16 months from the date it opened infringement proceedings against Italy for its persistent discrimination against non-national university teaching staff (Lettori), the European Commission has decided to advance the proceedings to the reasoned opinion stage. Italy’s failure in the interim period to settle its liability to the Lettori for decades of discriminatory treatment explains why the Commission took its decision.
The infringement of the Treaty at issue in this increasingly high-profile case is Italy’s failure to correctly implement the 2006 European Court of Justice(CJEU) enforcement ruling in Case C-119/04 , the last of 4 rulings in favour of the Lettori in a line of jurisprudence which dates back to the seminal Allué rulingof 1989. Pilar Allué Day, a piece published in The European Times in May of this year, recounts how Italy has managed to evade its obligations to the Lettori under each of these CJEU rulings from 1989 to the present.
The simplicity of the solution of the Lettori case renders the duration of the breach all the more remarkable. Implementation of the 2006 enforcement ruling merely required the universities to pay settlements for reconstruction of career from the date of first employment to the Lettori based on the minimum parameter of part-time researcher or more favourable parameters won before Italian courts, as provided for under the terms of an Italian March 2004 law, a law which was approved by the CJEU.
But Italy has consistently tried to subordinate this clear-cut ruling to Italian arrangements and interpretations. The Gelmini Law of 2010 retrospectively interpreted the March 2004 law in a restrictive manner which placed limits on the reconstruction of career due to the Lettori, limits nowhere condoned in the 2006 ruling. A blueprint of a contract for universities and Lettori introduced by interministerial decree in 2019 to give effect to the CJEU jurisprudence effectively ignored the rights to settlements of retired Lettori. Since the litigation for parity of treatment dates back to the 1980s, these Lettori constitute a significant percentage of the beneficiaries of the CJEU case law.
In its press release, the Commission is explicit as to why it decided to send the reasoned opinion to Italy.
Should the Italian authorities fail to pay the settlements due under the ruling in Case C-119/04, then the Commission may refer the case to the CJEU for what would be the fifth ruling in the line of jurisprudence which dates back to Pilar Allué first victory in 1989. In such a scenario Italy’s lawyers would have the unenviable task of explaining to the Court why the March 2004 law- the enactment of which spared Italy the daily fines of €309,750recommended by the Commission- was not subsequently implemented.
The infringement proceedings were preceded by pilot proceedings, a procedure introduced to resolve disputes amicably with member states and prevent recourse to litigation. Over a 10-year period it markedly failed to achieve its objectives. The move to infringement procedures proper with their broadened scope is credited to the evidence of discrimination collected in the national Census of Lettori and to other depositions of Asso. CEL.L, an official complainant in the infringement proceedings, and FLC CGIL, Italy’s largest trade union. That FLC CGIL denounced the discriminatory practices of the state of which it is the main union and canvassed Italy’s MEP in support of the Lettori was obviously influential.
Heartened by the opening of infringement proceedings the Lettori have become more politically engaged. Modelled on the representations of FLC CGIL to Italy’s MEPs, and availing of the multilingualism of the category, Lettori wrote to the euro parliamentarians of their home countries to enlist their support for a move to the reasoned opinion stage. These successful mother-tongue representations including translations of Pilar Allué Day, the definitive legal history of the Lettori, were copied to President of the Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, who has taken a personal interest in the Lettori question.
The age profile and- from the mother-tongue slogans on the placards they carried – the range of nationalities of the Lettori were discernible as they staged a national protest against their discriminatory treatment outside the office of Anna Maria Bernini, Minister for Higher Education and Research, near the Tiber in Rome in December of last year. Gathered afterwards for lunch in nearby cafés before separating for train journeys to different parts of Italy, their flags and placards set down against walls and tables, the setting brought a wistful awareness that in their early and late 60s they were still marching, still protesting. It was not lost on the company that the right to the parity of treatment claimed outside the Ministry had been ratified in the historic Treaty of Rome, signed in 1957 at a venue within easy walking distance: Palazzo dei Conservatori on the Campidoglio.
As Guardian of the Treaties, it is the task of the Commission to ensure that the commitments made by the member states in Rome and other subsequent Treaty cities are respected. That it has had to open second infringement proceedings to compel implementation of the ruling resulting from the first proceedings is the measure of how intransigent and resistant Italy has been.
News that the proceedings had been moved to the reasoned opinion stage was warmly welcomed in universities across Italy. The decision was seen as a serious statement of the Commission’s intent to ensure full compliance with the Court sentence of 2006.
Retired Lettore Linda Armstrong, who taught at the University of Bologna from 1990 to 2020, is all too familiar with the universities’ practice of wilful evasion of CJEU sentences. Much to her exasperation the university withheld her Treaty right to parity of treatment over the course of her teaching career.
Commenting on the Commission’s decision to move the infringement proceedings to the reasoned opinion stage, Ms. Armstrong said:
In the press release giving news of the issue of the reasoned opinion, the Commission announced that it has given Italy two months to respond.
The persecution of Christians in Iran was the focus of the presentation of the 2023 World Watch List of the Protestant NGO Open Doors yesterday, Thursday 25 January, at the European Parliament (EP).
According to their report, 360 million Christians around the world suffer high levels of persecution and discrimination for their faith, 5621 Christians were murdered and 2110 church buildings were attacked last year.
The event was hosted by MEP Peter Van Dalen and MEP Miriam Lexmann (EPP group).
Peter Van Dalen commented on the damning Open Doors report as follows:
MEP Nicola Beer (Renew Europe Group), one of the EP Vice-presidents, had a special address focusing on the positive and constructive role of religious communities in democratic societies and consequently the necessity to defend freedom of religion or belief.
Ms Dabrina Bet-Tamraz, a Protestant from the Assyrian ethnic minority in Iran, who is now living in Switzerland, had been invited to testify about the persecution of Christians in Iran, through the example of her own family.
For many years, Dabrina’s father, Pastor Victor Bet-Tamraz, and her mother, Shamiran Issavi Khabizeh were sharing their faith with Farsi-speaking Muslims, which is forbidden in Iran, and were training converts.
Pastor Victor Bet-Tamraz was officially recognised as a minister by the Iranian government and led the Shahrara Assyrian Pentecostal Church in Tehran for many years until the Interior Ministry closed it down in March 2009 for holding services in Farsi – it was then the last church in Iran to hold services in the language of the Iranian Muslims. The church was later allowed to reopen under a new leadership, with services conducted in Assyrian only. Pastor Victor Bet-Tamraz and his wife then moved into house church ministry, hosting meetings in their home.
Dabrina’s parents were arrested in 2014 but were released on bail. In 2016, they were sentenced to ten years in prison. Their appeal hearing was postponed several times until 2020. When it was obvious that the prison term would be maintained, they decided to leave Iran. They now live with their daughter who had fled to Switzerland in 2010.
In the meantime, she had studied Evangelical theology in the UK and she is now a pastor in a German-speaking church in Switzerland. Her campaign for religious freedom in Iran has taken her to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, to the second annual Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom in Washington DC and to a UN General Assembly, apart from many other events.
At the European Parliament in Brussels, she called on the Iranian authorities to
She asked the international community, including the European Union, to hold Iran accountable for its mistreatment of religious minorities. She urged the Iranian authorities to uphold their obligation to ensure freedom of religion and belief for all their citizens in conformity with the international instruments they have signed and ratified.
MEP Miriam Lexmann, from Slovakia, a former Communist country, pointed at the anti-religious nature of the Marxist ideology imposed on her country for decades after WWII. She made a vibrant plea for freedom of conscience and belief, saying:
MEP Nicola Beer, from Germany, stressed that religious communities play a major role in our democratic countries, contribute to the stability of our societies and provide assistance to the most vulnerable persons through their caritative organizations.
During the debate with the numerous audience, MEP Peter Van Dalen was challenged about the efficiency of sanctions taken by the European Union. His answer was very convincing:
Europe’s ambitions for a circular economy require the timely provision of good-quality recycled raw materials to manufacturers. However, according to a European Environment Agency (EEA) assessment published today, from the eight most common recyclables, only aluminium, paper and glass have well-functioning secondary markets. Lack of standardisation and competition with new materials are among the challenges for other markets, such as wood and textiles.
The EEA report ’Investigating Europe′s secondary raw material markets’ presents a set of criteria to analyse the functioning of markets for secondary, recycled raw materials. Improving markets for recycled raw materials is key to delivering a circular economy in the EU, reducing the need to extract natural resources and avoiding the associated environmental impacts.
Applying the assessment criteria on eight common secondary material markets, the EEA report concludes that only three of those — aluminium, paper and glass — are functioning well. These markets provide credible and continuous information to market stakeholders, they are international and open, and the recycled materials have a significant market share, compared with primary materials, the EEA report notes.
The five secondary raw material markets that are not functioning well include wood, plastics, biowaste, aggregates from construction and demolition waste, and textiles. According to the EEA analysis, the main problems in these markets are their small size compared with primary materials, weak demand, and lack of common specifications, which reduces the quality of materials for industrial use. In addition, some materials face specific challenges, such as competing demand for energy use in the case of wood.
Besides acknowledging the need for more information to enable a proper monitoring and assessment of the markets’ development, the EEA report presents several options to overcome market barriers for recycled raw materials. These include incentives to design products that are easier to recycle, strengthening recycling targets, increasing recycled content in new products, establishing technical standards for recycled materials and using taxes to level price competition with primary raw materials.
On Tuesday, MEPs backed plans to secure the EU supply of chips by boosting production and innovation, and setting up emergency measures against shortages.
The Industry and Energy Committee adopted two draft bills: one on the “Chips Act” that aims to bolster technological capacity and innovation in the EU Chips ecosystem and a second one on the Chips Joint Undertaking to increase investments for developing this type of European ecosystem.
In their amendments to the Chips Act, MEPs focussed more on next-generation semiconductor and quantum chips. A network of competence centres would be created to address the skills shortage and attract new talent on research, design and production. The legislation would also support projects aiming to boost the EU’s security of supply by attracting investment and building up production capacity.
Measures to respond to future shortages
A crisis response mechanism would be set up, with the Commission assessing the risks to the EU supply of semiconductors and early warning indicators in member states that could trigger an EU-wide alert. This would allow the Commission to implement emergency measures such as prioritising the supply for products particularly affected, or carry out common purchasing for member states. MEPs stress that the chips supply chain should be mapped out to identify possible bottlenecks.
MEPs also highlight the importance of international cooperation with partners such as the US, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. The Commission should establish a chips diplomacy initiative to address any future disruption to supply chains.
The legislative report on the Chips Act was adopted with 67 votes in favour to one against, with four abstentions. The committee also voted on the mandate to enter into inter-institutional negotiations with 70 votes to one against, with one abstention.
“Chips for Europe” initiative
In a separate vote, MEPs adopted with 68 votes in favour, none against and four abstentions, the Chips Joint Undertaking proposal, implementing the measures foreseen under a “Chips for Europe” initiative. The scheme aims to support large-scale capacity building through investment into EU-wide and openly accessible research, development and innovation infrastructure. It would also enable the development of cutting-edge and next-generation semiconductor technologies. MEPs highlight that to boost innovation, fresh money will be needed, as well as a reallocation of funds from Horizon Europe.
Quotes
Rapporteur on the Chips Act Dan Nica (S&D, RO) said: “We want the EU Chips Act to establish Europe as an important player in the global semiconductors arena. Not only does the budget need to be commensurate with the challenges and funded through fresh money, but we want to ensure that the EU is leading in research and innovation, that it has a business-friendly environment, a fast permitting process and invests in a skilled work force for the semiconductor sector. Our goal is to ensure growth in Europe, prepare for future challenges and have in place the right mechanisms for future crises”.
Rapporteur on the Chips Joint Undertaking Eva Maydell (EPP, BG) said: “Microchips are integral to the EU’s digital and green transitions as well as our geopolitical agenda. We are calling for fresh funding that reflects the strategic importance of Europe’s Chips sector. Europe’s partners and competitors are also investing heavily in their semiconductor facilities, skills and innovation. We may not have the enormous financial firepower of the US, but the budget offered by the Commission and Council needs to reflect the seriousness of the challenge”.
Next steps
On the Chips Act, the mandate for negotiations will be announced at the opening of the 13-16 February plenary session in Strasbourg. If there is no request to put the decision to enter into negotiations to the plenary vote, Parliament will be able to start talks with the Council. Parliament will hold a vote on the Chips Joint undertaking proposal during the same session.
Background
A Study from the Parliament highlights that the share of Europe in global production capacity of semiconductors is below 10%. The legislative proposal aims to bring it up to 20%.
Parliament analysis in 2022 highlighted that the pandemic has revealed long-standing vulnerabilities in global supply chains, and the unprecedented shortage of semiconductors is a prime example. It shows what might be in store in the years to come. These shortages have led, among other issues, to rising costs for industry and higher prices for consumers, and have been slowing down the pace of recovery in Europe.
King Felipe and Queen Letizia attended the funeral of King Constantine of Greece at the Cathedral of the Annunciation of Saint Mary in Athens, where they were accompanied by His Majesty King Juan Carlos, who travelled from Abu Dhabi; Her Majesty Queen Sofia, who has been in Greece since the deterioration of her brother Constantine’s health; and the Infantas Elena and Cristina. The funeral, which was officiated by the Archbishop of Athens, Hieronymus of Thebes, was attended by the Deputy Prime Minister, Panagiotis Pikrammenos, representing the Hellenic Government. Representatives of numerous Royal Houses were also present, due to his family ties, friendship and his status as a former Head of State.
After the funeral, at which His Royal Highness Prince Paul of Greece said a few words, the King and Queen and the Greek Royal Family moved to the Royal Cemetery of Tatoi Palace, where the burial ceremony of His Majesty King Constantine of Greece took place.
His Majesty King Constantine of Greece passed away on 10 January at the age of 82 in Athens.