#Vitaly Pinchuk
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Some KHL Goals of the Week -- Dinamo Minsk's Vitaly Pinchuk gets the nod at #1.
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2020 IIHF World Juniors Division II A Belarus Roster
Wingers
#9 Evgeni Oxentyuk (Flint Firebirds/Brest)
#12 Pavel Azghirey (Neman Grodno 2/Grodno) C
#13 Valentin Demchenko (Baie-Comeau Drakkar/Liozna)
#15 Ilya Krylovich (C.K. Dinamo-Molodechno/Minsk) A
#16 Yegor Buyalsky (O.R.G. Beijing/Minsk)
#17 Oleg Kachelovsky (K.K. Gomel/Gomel)
#23 Andrei Pavlenko (Yunost Minsk/Minsk)
#24 Vladislav Alistrov (Edmonton Oil Kings/Mogilev)
Centers
#7 Aliaksei Protas (Prince Albert Raiders/Vitebsk) A
#10 Ilya Usau (Prince Albert Raiders/Minsk)
#14 Mikita Pyshkaila (Minskie Zubry/Yubileiny)
#19 Alexei Katsiaouski (Shakhter Soligorsk/Novopolatsk)
#22 Vitali Pinchuk (Kingston Frontenacs/Zhlobin)
Defensemen
#2 Ilya Salauyou (Saginaw Spirit/Mogilev)
#4 Uladislau Barkouski (Free agent/Minsk)
#5 Pavel Denisov (C.K. Dinamo Minsk/Gomel)
#8 Dmitri Kozorez (C.K. Dinamo-Molodechno/Bereza)
#11 Alexander Shkrabov (K.K. Gomel/Gomel)
#18 Uladzislau Koliachonok (Flint Firebirds/Minsk)
#21 Vadzim Shchechin (Yunost Minsk/Ostrovno)
Goalies
#20 Alexei Kolosov (Free agent/Minsk)
#25 Mikita Talapila (C.K. Dinamo-Molodechno/Minsk)
#Sports#Hockey#Hockey Goalies#National Teams#Belarus#Celebrities#Michigan#Canada#Alberta#China#Quebec#Ontario#Saskatchewan
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Trump, Giuliani Press for Dirt on Biden Despite Ukraine Rebuff
(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump and his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, keep repeating allegations that former Vice President Joe Biden did something dirty in Ukraine -- without any proof. Officials in that country haven’t helped clear up the confusion with sometimes conflicting statements over what they might be looking into.Prosecutors in Ukraine, however, aren’t investigating Biden and have no evidence of wrongdoing.No matter. Trump and Giuliani have been intent on pressing for an inquiry. They’ve talked about it publicly. And Trump talked about it with the Ukrainian president in a July phone call that’s now the subject of intense scrutiny. Trump pressed his Ukrainian counterpart to investigate Biden’s son Hunter, according to people with knowledge of the call.Giuliani has at times, though not consistently, admitted pressing the Ukrainians to investigate Biden, the leading Democratic rival to Trump for the 2020 presidential election, and his son.The matter is bubbling up again because of a whistle-blower in the U.S. intelligence community. The contents of the whistle-blower‘s complaint remain secret, but reports have surfaced linking it to Trump’s communications with a foreign leader. And Democratic lawmakers, who were already asking whether Trump’s team had improperly leaned on Ukraine for political gain, are now tussling with the administration to find out just what raised an alarm.Giuliani has claimed for months that as vice president Biden acted to help his son. It’s not disputed that Biden pressured Ukraine to fire its top prosecutor in 2016 and threatened to withhold aid as part of a U.S.-European anti-corruption effort.Giuliani contends -- without offering evidence -- that Biden’s motivation was to stop an investigation into the owner of a natural gas company, Burisma, where Hunter Biden sat on the board. On Thursday night, Giuliani told CNN that his goal was to get the Ukrainian government to investigate corruption “and I’m proud of it.”Biden said Friday in Iowa that “not one single” media outlet has given Trump’s allegations of impropriety any crediblity. “So I have no comment other than that the president should start to be the president,” Biden said.Ukraine is in a delicate position. It has a new president with no prior political experience. It’s highly dependent on the U.S. for political support and military aid. Kyiv also wants U.S. support in the run-up to peace talks later this month over the eastern area controlled by Russian-backed separatists, who took over parts of the country in 2014. It can hardly afford to offend leaders in the U.S.The new president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, will meet with Trump at the United Nations next week, a senior U.S. administration official said on Friday.Shelved InvestigationBloomberg News reported in May that prosecutors in Ukraine had already shelved the investigation into Burisma’s owner by 2015. That suggests Biden and his son didn’t stand to benefit from the prosecutor’s ouster. In addition, Vitaliy Kasko, a former deputy prosecutor who had once pursued the case against Burisma’s owner, told Bloomberg in May that there had been no U.S. pressure to close the case.Biden was indeed active in Ukraine. His threat to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees was contingent on the removal of prosecutor-general Viktor Shokin, who was widely viewed as failing to tackle rampant corruption. Many world leaders and the European Union were demanding Shokin’s dismissal. Shokin denied accusations of wrongdoing.Yet Giuliani has continued to press Ukraine to probe Biden. He planned to visit Ukraine in May to meet with Zelenskiy and discuss reopening the case against Burisma. He canceled the trip at the last minute after public criticism that he was meddling in foreign affairs for possible political gain.Giuliani did, however, meet with a key Zelenskiy aide, Andriy Yermak, in Madrid in August, to press for an investigation into possible Biden conflicts, according to the New York Times.That didn’t ensure smooth relations. In August, the U.S. temporarily blocked $250 million in promised military aid to Ukraine.Zelenskiy announced last week that the U.S. had finally released the funds, and added $140 million, without specifying why it had received more or how it would be used. The Ukrainian president didn’t say whether the U.S. had made any demands and had only words of praise for Trump.“We had several talks,” Zelenskiy said at a conference in Kyiv. “We have very good relations with our strategic partner, the U.S. And I am thankful to them for their support.”Investigating PressureThree congressional committees announced on Sept. 9 that they were jointly investigating whether Trump and Giuliani improperly exerted pressure on the Ukrainian government. In letters to the White House and State Department, they added that they were focusing, among other things, on Trump’s July 25 phone call with Zelenskiy.Schiff, speaking to reporters on Friday, said the committees’ investigation predated the whistle-blower complaint. A statement by Schiff on Sept. 13 about his efforts to get access to the whistle-blower complaint noted that his committee was first informed it existed on Sept. 9.Giuliani has extensive ties to Ukraine stretching back more than a decade.In 2008, he advised Vitali Klitschko, a former boxing champion, on his campaign for mayor, a post he’s held since 2014. In 2017, Ukrainian billionaire Viktor Pinchuk paid Giuliani to give a speech at a conference in Kyiv; on the same trip he met then-President Petro Poroshenko, along with the country’s prime minister, foreign minister and prosecutor general.Later that year Giuliani traveled to the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv to advise the mayor on security issues in a contract paid for by a local businessman, Pavel Fuks, who once tried to do a deal with Trump for Moscow Tower.In May, Ukraine’s then prosecutor-general Yuriy Lutsenko told Bloomberg News in an interview that he had no evidence of wrongdoing by Biden and his son.Since then, Zelenskiy appointed a new prosecutor general, Ruslan Riaboshapka, who had been a top official at the National Agency for Preventing Corruption.\--With assistance from Billy House and Tyler Pager.To contact the reporters on this story: Stephanie Baker in London at [email protected];Daryna Krasnolutska in Kiev at [email protected] contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Katz at [email protected], Winnie O'Kelley, Larry LiebertFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P.
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines
(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump and his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, keep repeating allegations that former Vice President Joe Biden did something dirty in Ukraine -- without any proof. Officials in that country haven’t helped clear up the confusion with sometimes conflicting statements over what they might be looking into.Prosecutors in Ukraine, however, aren’t investigating Biden and have no evidence of wrongdoing.No matter. Trump and Giuliani have been intent on pressing for an inquiry. They’ve talked about it publicly. And Trump talked about it with the Ukrainian president in a July phone call that’s now the subject of intense scrutiny. Trump pressed his Ukrainian counterpart to investigate Biden’s son Hunter, according to people with knowledge of the call.Giuliani has at times, though not consistently, admitted pressing the Ukrainians to investigate Biden, the leading Democratic rival to Trump for the 2020 presidential election, and his son.The matter is bubbling up again because of a whistle-blower in the U.S. intelligence community. The contents of the whistle-blower‘s complaint remain secret, but reports have surfaced linking it to Trump’s communications with a foreign leader. And Democratic lawmakers, who were already asking whether Trump’s team had improperly leaned on Ukraine for political gain, are now tussling with the administration to find out just what raised an alarm.Giuliani has claimed for months that as vice president Biden acted to help his son. It’s not disputed that Biden pressured Ukraine to fire its top prosecutor in 2016 and threatened to withhold aid as part of a U.S.-European anti-corruption effort.Giuliani contends -- without offering evidence -- that Biden’s motivation was to stop an investigation into the owner of a natural gas company, Burisma, where Hunter Biden sat on the board. On Thursday night, Giuliani told CNN that his goal was to get the Ukrainian government to investigate corruption “and I’m proud of it.”Biden said Friday in Iowa that “not one single” media outlet has given Trump’s allegations of impropriety any crediblity. “So I have no comment other than that the president should start to be the president,” Biden said.Ukraine is in a delicate position. It has a new president with no prior political experience. It’s highly dependent on the U.S. for political support and military aid. Kyiv also wants U.S. support in the run-up to peace talks later this month over the eastern area controlled by Russian-backed separatists, who took over parts of the country in 2014. It can hardly afford to offend leaders in the U.S.The new president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, will meet with Trump at the United Nations next week, a senior U.S. administration official said on Friday.Shelved InvestigationBloomberg News reported in May that prosecutors in Ukraine had already shelved the investigation into Burisma’s owner by 2015. That suggests Biden and his son didn’t stand to benefit from the prosecutor’s ouster. In addition, Vitaliy Kasko, a former deputy prosecutor who had once pursued the case against Burisma’s owner, told Bloomberg in May that there had been no U.S. pressure to close the case.Biden was indeed active in Ukraine. His threat to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees was contingent on the removal of prosecutor-general Viktor Shokin, who was widely viewed as failing to tackle rampant corruption. Many world leaders and the European Union were demanding Shokin’s dismissal. Shokin denied accusations of wrongdoing.Yet Giuliani has continued to press Ukraine to probe Biden. He planned to visit Ukraine in May to meet with Zelenskiy and discuss reopening the case against Burisma. He canceled the trip at the last minute after public criticism that he was meddling in foreign affairs for possible political gain.Giuliani did, however, meet with a key Zelenskiy aide, Andriy Yermak, in Madrid in August, to press for an investigation into possible Biden conflicts, according to the New York Times.That didn’t ensure smooth relations. In August, the U.S. temporarily blocked $250 million in promised military aid to Ukraine.Zelenskiy announced last week that the U.S. had finally released the funds, and added $140 million, without specifying why it had received more or how it would be used. The Ukrainian president didn’t say whether the U.S. had made any demands and had only words of praise for Trump.“We had several talks,” Zelenskiy said at a conference in Kyiv. “We have very good relations with our strategic partner, the U.S. And I am thankful to them for their support.”Investigating PressureThree congressional committees announced on Sept. 9 that they were jointly investigating whether Trump and Giuliani improperly exerted pressure on the Ukrainian government. In letters to the White House and State Department, they added that they were focusing, among other things, on Trump’s July 25 phone call with Zelenskiy.Schiff, speaking to reporters on Friday, said the committees’ investigation predated the whistle-blower complaint. A statement by Schiff on Sept. 13 about his efforts to get access to the whistle-blower complaint noted that his committee was first informed it existed on Sept. 9.Giuliani has extensive ties to Ukraine stretching back more than a decade.In 2008, he advised Vitali Klitschko, a former boxing champion, on his campaign for mayor, a post he’s held since 2014. In 2017, Ukrainian billionaire Viktor Pinchuk paid Giuliani to give a speech at a conference in Kyiv; on the same trip he met then-President Petro Poroshenko, along with the country’s prime minister, foreign minister and prosecutor general.Later that year Giuliani traveled to the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv to advise the mayor on security issues in a contract paid for by a local businessman, Pavel Fuks, who once tried to do a deal with Trump for Moscow Tower.In May, Ukraine’s then prosecutor-general Yuriy Lutsenko told Bloomberg News in an interview that he had no evidence of wrongdoing by Biden and his son.Since then, Zelenskiy appointed a new prosecutor general, Ruslan Riaboshapka, who had been a top official at the National Agency for Preventing Corruption.\--With assistance from Billy House and Tyler Pager.To contact the reporters on this story: Stephanie Baker in London at [email protected];Daryna Krasnolutska in Kiev at [email protected] contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Katz at [email protected], Winnie O'Kelley, Larry LiebertFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P.
September 21, 2019 at 12:26AM via IFTTT
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Mutko stepping down as Russia Football Union chief
MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko, banned for life from the Olympics this month, is temporarily stepping down from his role as head of the country’s Football Union, he said on Monday.
Mutko is to appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on Tuesday against the decision by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban him from the Games over allegations of state-sponsored doping.
“For the period of the proceedings I will suspend my work at the Russian Football Union for six months,” Mutko was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.
The IOC said this month it was banning Russia from the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics after finding evidence of “unprecedented systematic manipulation” of doping procedures..
Russia is hosting next year’s soccer World Cup in 11 cities including Moscow, St Petersburg and Sochi.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko arrives for a news conference after the Russian Football Union’s executive committee meeting in Moscow, Russia December 25, 2017. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Mutko also said he was considering resigning as head of the World Cup’s organizing committee (LOC).
“FIFA understands Mr Mutko’s decision which was also taken in the best interest of the World Cup next summer,” the global soccer body said in a statement. “FIFA thanks Mr. Mutko for this responsible step and for the work carried out so far for the World Cup.”
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko gestures during a news conference after the Russian Football Union’s executive committee meeting in Moscow, Russia December 25, 2017. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
FIFA added that Mutko’s decision “will have no impact on the successful staging of the World Cup next summer, as FIFA, the Russian Government, RFU and the LOC continue their fruitful cooperation on the preparations for the World Cup according to plan.”
Mutko sat on FIFA’s decision-making Council, previously known as the executive committee, from 2009 until earlier this year when he was barred from standing for re-election.
Mutko’s position as a government minister was ruled by FIFA’s review committee to be incompatible with FIFA statutes demanding political neutrality from its members.
Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber, additional reporting by Brian Homewood in London, writing by Denis Pinchuk, editing by Ed Osmond/Greg Stutchbury
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
The post Mutko stepping down as Russia Football Union chief appeared first on dailygate.
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