Financial Times Europe - 12.09.2019

(ff) #1

4 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES Thursday12 September 2019


I N T E R N AT I O N A L


C H LO E C O R N I S H— BEIRUT
M I C H A E L P E E L— BRUSSELS
VA L E R I E H O P K I N S— BUDAPEST


Hungary isplanning to upgrade diplo-
matic relations with Syria, a move that
will anger influential EU members who
have sought to keep their distance from
the Damascus regime.
Budapest has for months been work-
ing on a proposal to send a chargé
d’affaires back to Syria, according to
diplomats in Brussels and Beirut, which
would be a precursor to reopening its
embassy. While a few European capitals
have kept up diplomatic ties during the
seven-year conflict, this would be the
first time an EU member state has


moved towards reopening a shuttered
embassy in Syria.
Many EU members strongly oppose
normalising relations withBashar al-
Assad’s authoritarian regime by dis-
patching envoys to Syria. One European
diplomat in Beirut called Hungary’s
proposed move “very annoying”.
While influential EU member states
have officially upheld theirstance of
denying the Assad regime reconstruc-
tion funding and diplomatic relations
without an agreed political transition, a
few states are breaking away.
“It is for individual countries to
decide their representation,” said an
official from an EU country that has
sought to maintain a tough line. “But we
do not think the climate is right.”
The Hungarian foreign affairs minis-
try and a government spokesperson did
not respond to requests for comment.

Administration representatives in Brus-
sels referred questions to Budapest.
Hungary’s far-right prime minister
Viktor Orban has sought to portray
himself as a defender of Christianity,
and has met senior representatives from

Syria’s various Christian communities.
According to European diplomats,
Hungary insists that it is motivated to
strengthen its presenceas part of its aid
efforts, although it is a minor contribu-
tor to the umanitarian effort in Syriah
and mainly funnels support towards
Christian communities.

A European diplomat remarked: “In
Budapest, it is a national sport to annoy
Brussels.”
Emile Hokayem, senior fellow at the
International Institute for Strategic
Studies think-tank, called Hungary’s
potential move “a stunt based on ideol-
ogy”. He said it would “further erode the
EU consensus, but that is in large part
because [Germany, France and the UK]
are not making [Syria] a priority any
more”.
European diplomats do make quiet
trips to Damascus, but few have official
diplomatic representation in Syria, and
they commit not to interact with senior
regime officials.
The Czech Republic was the only EU
country to keep its ambassador in Syria
during the civil war. Romania has an
ambassador to Syria based in the Leba-
nese capital Beirut, while Bulgaria also

has a chargé d’affaires who takes the
place of an ambassador. Gulf states such
as Bahrain and the UAE have reopened
embassies in Syria.
Although Hungarian officials would
not confirm the plans, there have been
signs for some months that Budapest
was warming to Damascus. Janos Budai,
Hungary’s co-ordinator for Syria, vis-
ited Damascus last year, and spoke at a
think-tank event called: “In search of an
EU role in Syria’s future.”
Damascus also courts politicians from
European far-right groups. Hungary’s
far-right Jobbik party has lobbied for re-
establishing ties with Syria.
Syria’s bloody civil war began in 2011,
after a brutal government crackdown
on peaceful protesters mutated into an
armed uprising.Helped by its allies Rus-
sia and Iran, Mr Assad’s regime has been
able to reassert its hold over the country.

M E H U L S R I VA STAVA— TEL AVIV
Benjamin Netanyahu’s tried and tested
election strategy of stoking fears among
his political base and insisting only he
can protect them has served him well,
delivering fourterms as Israel’s prime
minister.
He is preparing for perhaps the big-
gest challenge in his three-decade politi-
cal career, Tuesday’s general election,
the second in six months. And with his
legacyin the balance, the wily leader has
taken the formula a step further with an
incendiary vow to extend Israeli sover-
eignty to parts of the occupied West
Bank.
“It is a major development, because it
is the first serious departure from any
two-state framework,” said Anshel Pfef-
fer, author of a biography of Mr Netan-
yahu, referring to the future creation of
a separate Palestinian state alongside
Israel.
“That said, whatever an Israeli politi-
cian promises in the week before an
election has to be seen through a politi-
cal prism, especially in Bibi’s case,” he
added, using the premier’s nickname.
“His election strategy is to maximise
turnout among his rightwing base, and
he is throwing his base as much red
meat as possible.”
Thwarted in his attempts to cobble
together a coalition government follow-
ing the inconclusive general election in
April, Mr Netanyahu has spent the sum-
merclaiming Arab-Israelis were poised
to commit large-scale election fraud,
warning about the nuclear threat from
Iran and accusing the Israeli media of
bias and, in one case, being anti-Semitic.
Four years ago, he spurred a last-
minute voter surge with an election day
message that Arab voters were heading
to the polls “in droves”. This time,
he pledged on Tuesday that if he
emerged the winner e wouldh
extend Israeli sovereignty to
the 2,400 sq km Jordan Val-
ley, a move that would ll buta
kill off any possible Palestin-
ian state.
Mr Netanyahu’s election
rivals were quick to dismiss the


pledge as a political stunt, butit under-
lined how the stakes have rarely been
higher forhim. If he loses the election,
as some pollspredict, he mayface acor-
ruption indictment as a weakened
opposition leader, beset by rivalsin his
own Likud party who have waited years
for the formidable leader to stumble.
The attorney-general willnext month
rule on whether to indict Mr Netanyahu
for corruption, after police recommen-
dedhe should face charges of bribery,
fraud and breach of trust. Mr Netanya-
hu has denied wrongdoing and labelled
the charges a media-led witch-hunt.
Part of Mr Netanyahu’s problem is
that predictions of low turnout, as Israe-
lis tire of thepolitical squabbling, are
likely to work against him. The
rightwing infighting ahead of the
last election boosted the oppos-
ition when two ofhis allies failed
to meet the minimum threshold
to enter parliament.
“I see the polls, and they
show that many of our voters
are staying home,” Mr
Netanyahu saidas he

urged supporters toback him. He has
also repeated unfounded allegations,
rarely seen in Israeli politics, that Arab-
Israeli citizens were seeking to steal
votes, as the prime minister pursued
both parliamentary and legal action to
force cameras into voting booths. This
week his office retracted a Facebook
post sayingArab-Israeli voters planned
to “annihilate the state of Israel”, saying
it had been issued in error.
Aida Touma-Suleiman, an influential
Israeli lawmaker of Palestinian descent,
said of such a trategy: “He learnt theses
tactics from the racist American right-
wing, which has suppressed and will
suppress the African-American vote.”
The bruisingelection left Mr Netan-
yahu a seat short of a parliamentary
majority, after a rightwing ally deman-
ded he rein in hisreligious, ultraortho-
dox minority coalition allies. Rather
than allow the rival Blue and White
party, led by former military chief Ben-
ny Gantz, the chance to form a govern-
ment, Mr Netanyahu dissolved parlia-
mentjust after hisdeadline expired.
With the Blue and White alliance and

the Yisrael Beiteinu party, led by ex-de-
fence minister Avigdor Lieberman, hoo-
vering up votes, Mr Netanyahu has
focused on securing a bigger share of
votes within his rightwing bloc.
To do this, he must take votes from
parties such as the pro-settlement Yam-
ina, whose leader, Ayelet Shaked, once
described her vision for peace as “Maxi-
mum land, minimum Palestinians”.
Mr Netanyahu’s goal is to ensure that
Likud emerges ahead of the Blue and
White party, which includes three retired
military chiefs, and is once again given
the first opportunity to form a govern-
ment. Yettaking votes from other right-
wing partiesendangers their chances of
reaching 3.25 per cent of the national
vote needed to enter the Knesset.
Beforehis West Bank pledge, Mr
Netanyahu again urged rightwing vot-
ers to back him “otherwise we will wake
up the day after the elections with [Blue
and White co-leader] Yair Lapid and
Benny Gantz as prime ministers”.
He added: “Anyone who wants me as
prime minister must vote for Likud. If
you split the vote, you lose the vote.”

C H R I ST I A N S H E P H E R D A N D TO M
M I TC H E L L— BEIJING

China’s governmentyesterday moved
to exempt 16 types of US exported
goods from import tariffs ahead of the
latest round of trade talks n a gesturei
that will do little to resolve the trade
war between the world’s two largest
economies.

Starting on September 17, China will for
one year suspend the tariffs, which it
said were countermeasures against US
tariffs following Washington’s“Section
301” nvestigation, the State Councili
announced.
Included on the list were some cancer
drugs, lubricant oils and a handful of
chemicals that China either does not
produce itself or cannot easily replace
by buying from other countries.
Nosignificant US exports such as pork
or soyabeans were included, with China
instead turning to countries such as
Argentina, Brazil and Russia for
commoditiesit previously sourced from
US farm states that voted for Donald
Trump in the 2016 presidential
election.
The State Council’s tax regulator will
next look to further expand exemptions
on US goods and release follow-up lists
when they are ready, it said. In total,
more than 6,000 US goodscould qualify
for tariff exemptions.
China and the United States last week
agreed to restart face-to-face talks later
this month in a bid to ease tensions in
their bitter trade row.
Lower-level Chinese and US officials
are expected to resume negotiations
later this week or next, ahead of a trip to
Washington by China’s lead negotiator,
Liu He, in October.
There has been little progress since
negotiations broke down in early May,
when Mr Trump accused Beijing of
“reneging ” on what US officials
described as an almost completed draft
agreement.
A June meeting between Mr Trump
and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping,
on the sidelines of the G20 summit in
Osaka, Japan, also failed to break the
impasse.
People briefed on the negotiations
said that to restore momentum to the
talks,a confidence-building “mini-
agreement” would be needed, in which
the US eased restrictions on technology
sales to Chinese telecoms equipment
maker Huawei in return for Chinese
purchases of American agricultural
commodities. After the May break-
down, Mr Trump moved to limit sales of
US-made components to Shenzhen-
based Huawei and remains frustrated
that China has largely refrained from
any meaningful purchases of US agricul-
tural commodities.
“The Chinese are waiting to see what
the US does on Huawei,” said one person
briefed on the talks.
The next round of US tariff increases
is scheduled to take effect on October 1,
the same day that the Chinese Commu-
nist party will celebrate the 70th anni-
versary of the founding of the People’s
Republic of China in 1949.
Negotiations have been further ham-
pered by the protest movement in Hong
Kong — which Chinese officials say the
US has encouraged — that started over
an extradition bill. US officials have
rejected the accusation.

R O B I N H A R D I N G— TOKYO


A rising star of Japanese politics has
been handed a poisoned chalicefilled
with radioactive water after Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe reshuffled his
cabinet.


In the most eye-catching move, 38-year-
old Shinjiro Koizumi, the son of former
prime minister Junichiro Koizumi, was
given his first cabinet job as environ-
ment minister. But the appointment
makes him responsible for the fate of
thousands of tonnes of contaminated
water at the stricken Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear plant.
The job is likely to prove a test of Mr
Koizumi’s credentials as a future prime
minister while letting Mr Abe tap into
his public popularity, amid a reshuffle
that largely maintained thestatus quo.
Taro Aso, finance minister, Yoshihide
Suga, chief cabinet secretary, and Toshi-
hiro Nikai, ruling party secretary-gen-
eral, all maintained their positions in a
line-up that included only two women.
Toshimitsu Motegi, the man charged
with negotiating Japan’s trade deal with
the US, was promoted to foreign minis-


ter while several other loyal Abe lieuten-
ants got cabinet jobs. Taro Kono, foreign
minister, moved sideways to defence.
“My impression is that this is the Abe
administration entering its final phase,”
said Atsuo Ito, political analyst. “The
pillars of the government are the same
and that will maintain the stability of
the administration.”
The younger Mr Koizumi isregarded
as one of the ruling Liberal Democratic
party’s most formidable electoral assets.
He has previously resisted elevation to
the cabinet, preferring to maintain a
distance from Mr Abe.

But accepting the post of environ-
ment minister will make him the public
face of the contaminated water issue.
The water is stored in rows of tanks on
the Fukushima site but operator Tokyo
Electric expects to run out of space by
2022 as groundwater continues to flow
into the site.
Although the water has been treated
to remove radionuclides, current tech-
nology cannot separate the isotope tri-
tium. Other options include evaporat-
ing the liquid or buildingeven more
tanks to postpone a final decision.
Highlighting the challenge for Mr Koi-
zumi, outgoing environment minister
Yoshiaki Harada said: “The only real
choice is to release it [into the sea] and
dilute it.” Tritium exists in nature in
trace amounts.
Releasing the water would provoke a
fierce backlash from local fishermen,
environmentalists and neighbouring
countries such as South Korea. Mr Koi-
zumi will have to find a way through
their objections.
Mr Koizumi said he would visit Fuku-
shima straightaway to meet local
people.

Middle East


Hungary to upgrade Syria ties and snub EU


Move to normalise links


with Assad regime likely


to anger bloc members


‘It is for individual


countries to decide their
representation. We do not

think the climate is right’


Import duties


China lifts


tariffs from


handful of US


goods ahead


of trade talks


Israel elections. ikud partyL


Netanyahu makes risky push for rightwing vote


Premier pledges to annex part


of West Bank in appeal to his


base ahead of next week’s vote


A Palestinian
protester near
Beit El, in the
Israeli-occupied
West Bank this
week. Below, PM
Benjamin
Netanyahu
MohamadTorokman euters/R

‘His election
strategy is to

maximise
turnout

among his
rightwing

base, and he
is throwing

his base as
much red

meat as
possible’

Japan


Koizumi Jr handed cabinet poisoned chalice


JA M I E S M Y T H— SYDNEY

Australia plans to test welfare recipi-
ents for drugs and expand a cashless
debit card scheme to prevent unem-
ployed people using state benefits to
gamble or buy alcohol under a
shake-upofitssocialsecuritysystem.

The reformsare one of theconservative
government’s first big domestic policy
announcements sincewinning re-elec-
tion in Maywith a pledge to slash
income taxand boost mployment.e
But critics warn the legislation,which
was presented to parliamentyesterday,
would stigmatise the unemployedand
fail to achieve its aims of tackling addic-
tion and getting people back to work.
The ruling Liberal-National coalition
wants to expand an existing trial of a
cashless debit card scheme for welfare
recipients to limit their ability to spend
money on alcohol, drugs or gambling.
Under the scheme, 80 per cent of wel-
fare payments are placed on a card that
can only be used in registered shops. It
typically operates in areas where most
people on welfare are indigenous, rais-
ing allegations of institutional racism.

The government also plans to test
5,000 recipients of income support for
illicit substances such as methampheta-
mine nd marijuana in a $10m pilota
project. Anyone testing positive would
be referred to drug counselling sessions
and have welfare payments “quaran-
tined” using a cashless payments card.

A refusal to take the test would result in
the cancellation of welfare payments.
Scott Morrison, prime minister,has
pitched the reforms as part of a “com-
passionate conservative” welfare
agenda. The government says welfare
recipients have used drugs and alcohol
as an excuse for failing to turn up for job
interviews or work appointments more
than 5,000 times in the past year. “We
want... to assist people struggling with
addiction to break their addiction and
to be able to go forward and get them-

selves into employment and have a
completely different life,” he said.
Critics, however, say such pro-
grammes add to the stigma felt by many
disenfranchised individuals.
“Cashless debit and drug testing com-
pound the sense of shame many people
feel about being unemployed when they
are doing all they can to find paid work
in today’s competitive job market,” said
Charmaine Crowe, a senior adviser at
the Australian Council of Social Service,
an advocacy body.
“Not only are both of these policies
stigmatising, they are also unproven.”
Medical professionals say there are
few, if any, examples of successful pro-
grammes that have reduced addiction.
A trial in the UK was abandoned in
2010 when a government agency con-
cluded the policy was “simplistic”,
“unconvincing” and “had the potential
to make a bad situation worse”.
In New Zealand, where a drug-testing
scheme operates with prospective
employers, just 119 of the 40,000 people
tested in the year to June failed their
tests, a level that experts have said
shows the policy is a waste of resources.

Benefits overhaul


Canberra welfare shake-up targets drug users


‘We want to assist people


struggling with addiction
to break their addiction’

Scott Morrison, prime minister

Shinjiro Koizumi: will have to tackle
problems at Fukushima Daiichi
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