King Abdullah of Jordan says he looks forward to working with Cyprus President to take ties to further heights

King Abdullah II of Jordan sent a congratulatory letter to President Nikos Christodoulides on behalf of the people and Government of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, on assuming his term as President of the Republic of Cyprus.

In the letter he points out that the two countries share a deep – rooted, strategic partnership, underpinned by close ties of friendship and cooperation.

“I look forward to working with Your Excellency to take ties to further heights, in line with our shared commitment to building a prosperous and peaceful future for our peoples and our world”, Kind Abdullah underlines.

He ends his letter wishing the President success, and the people of Cyprus continued progress and prosperity.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

GDP share of general government expenditure reduced in EU and Cyprus in 2021

In 2021, general government total expenditure in the EU amounted to 51.5% of gross domestic product (GDP) and was still influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic and government measures to mitigate its effects, according to data released by Eurostat, the statistical service of the EU.

The decrease in the ratio compared with the previous year (52.8%) was mainly a consequence of increases in GDP, while growth in total expenditure was still observed (7,475 billion euro in 2021 compared with 7,111 billion in 2020; an increase of 364 billion, growing by 5.1% compared with 2020).

This ratio also decreased in Cyprus, with general government total expenditure in 2021 accounting for 43.1% of GDP, compared with 44.6% in 2020.

Among the main functions of general government expenditure in the European Union, ‘social protection’ remained the most important in 2021, equivalent to 20.5% of GDP. The next most important areas were health (8.1%), economic affairs (6.3%) and general public services (6.0%), such as external affairs and public debt transactions, and education (4.8%). The functions public order and safety (1.7%), defence (1.3%), recreation, culture and religiom (1.2%), environmental protection (0.8%) and housing and community amenities (0.6%) had more limited weights.

In Cyprus, the largest share of government expenditure was recorded under the function of social protection (12.5% of GDP), followed by general public services (6.9%), health (6.4%), education (5.5%), economic affairs (5.2%), housing and community amenities (1.9%), defence (1.8%), public order and safety (1.7%), recreation, culture and religion (0.7%) and environmental protection (0.4%).

At EU level, general government total expenditure increased for all the major functions. Still, increases were concentrated in health (+103 billion euro), economic affairs (+96 billion euro) and social protection (+41 billion euro), with a 50 billion euro decrease for unemployment being off-set by increases in ‘old age’ and other detailed functions within social protection.

The situation in Cyprus was relatively more complex. The share of general government expenditure in the GDP decreased for the functions of social protection (from 13.4% of GDP to 12.5%), general public services (from 7.5% to 6.9%), education (from 5.8% to 5.5%), economic affairs (from 5.5% to 5.2%), defence (from 1.9% to 1.8%), public order and safety (from 1.8% to 1.7%) and recreation, culture and religion (from 0.9% to 0.7%).

On the other hand, the share increased in health (from 5.9% to 6.4%), housing and community amenities (from 1.5% to 1.9%) and environmental protection from (0.3% to 0.4%).

Social protection first in all member states

Social protection represented the most important area of general government expenditure in 2021 for all the EU members. Government social protection expenditure as a percentage of GDP varied across Member States from 8.7% in Ireland, 11.0% in Malta, 12.5% in Cyprus and 13.1% in Hungary, to nearly a quarter in France (24.8%), Finland (24.6%) and Italy (23.4%).

In 2021, Austria (10.1%), Czechia (9.8%) as well as Denmark and France (both 9.2%) recorded the highest ratios of government expenditure to GDP devoted to health among the EU members.

The highest ratios of government expenditure to GDP on economic affairs in 2021 were recorded in Greece (10.7%), Austria (9.3%) and Hungary (9.2%), ahead of Malta (9.0%).

The highest ratios of government expenditure to GDP on general public services were observed in Italy and Finland (both 8.1%), Hungary (8.0%) and Greece (7.9%).

For education, the highest ratios to GDP were registered in Sweden (6.7%), followed by Belgium (6.3%) and Denmark (6.0%).

Source: Cyprus News Agency

A new way forward on the Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland: political agreement in principle on the Windsor Framework

Today, the European Commission and the Government of the United Kingdom reached a political agreement in principle on the Windsor Framework. This constitutes a comprehensive set of joint solutions aimed at addressing, in a definitive way, the practical challenges faced by citizens and businesses in Northern Ireland, thereby providing them with lasting certainty and predictability.

The joint solutions cover, amongst other things, new arrangements on customs, agri-food, medicines, VAT and excise, as well as specific instruments designed to ensure that the voices of the people of Northern Ireland are better heard on specific issues particularly relevant to the communities there. These new arrangements are underpinned by robust safeguards to ensure the integrity of the EU’s Single Market, to which Northern Ireland has a unique access.

Today’s political agreement in principle allows the two sides to open a new chapter in our partnership, based on mutual trust and full cooperation, also allowing to unlock the full potential of their relationship.

President Ursula von der Leyen said: “The Windsor Framework was made possible by genuine political will and hard work guided by the fundamental principle that the interests and needs of people should always come first. Supporting and protecting the hard-earned gains of the Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement was the prerequisite of our endeavour. Today, our achievement allows us to put forward definitive solutions that work for people and businesses in Northern Ireland and that protect our Single Market. It also allows us to turn the page towards a bilateral relationship that mirrors the one of close allies standing shoulder to shoulder in times of crisis.”

The joint solutions, found within the framework of the Withdrawal Agreement, are based on the following starting points:

A comprehensive, cross-cutting and definitive solution, addressing practical difficulties in the operation of the Protocol;

A balance between flexibilities for the movement of goods for end use in Northern Ireland and effective safeguards guaranteeing the protection of the EU’s Single Market;

A clear distinction between goods at risk and goods not at risk of entering the EU’s Single Market.

In the sanitary and phyto-sanitary (SPS) area, the joint solutions ensure that the same food will be available on supermarket shelves in Northern Ireland as in the rest of the UK. In practice, agri-food retail products for end consumption in Northern Ireland will be able to move from Great Britain with minimal certification requirements and controls. UK public health standards will apply for those agri-food retail goods for end consumption in Northern Ireland, whilst EU plant and animal health rules remain applicable for the protection of the EU Single Market. This arrangement is commensurate with a set of existing and new safeguards, including SPS inspection facilities and labelling which will be introduced gradually. When these safeguards are fully in place, identity checks will be reduced to only 5%. Physical checks will follow a risk-based and intelligence-led approach. Moreover, travelling with pets will be easy, thanks to a simple pet travel document, a microchip, and a declaration by the owner that the pet will not travel to the EU.

New arrangements in the area of customs are based on an expanded trusted trader scheme that will also be open to businesses in Great Britain. Goods moved by trusted traders and not at risk of entering the EU’s Single Market will benefit from dramatically simplified procedures and drastically simplified declarations with reduced data requirements. Substantial facilitations were found for freight and the movement of all types of parcels, i.e., business-to-business, business-to-consumer, and consumer-to-consumer, with consumer-to-consumer parcels being entirely exempt from the main customs requirements. These new solutions are made possible especially by new data-sharing arrangements allowing for risk assessments, which would constitute the principle basis for controls. Robust authorisation and monitoring of the trusted trader scheme, and increased market surveillance and enforcement by UK authorities also act as safeguards. Full customs procedures will apply to goods at risk of entering the EU’s Single Market.

A permanent solution has also been found to ensure that people in Northern Ireland have access to all medicines, including novel medicines, at the same time and under the same conditions as people in the rest of the UK. This complements the solution the EU adopted in April 2022 for the supply of generic medicines to Northern Ireland. These new arrangements are made possible by new safeguards, notably labelling, designed to ensure that the medicines do not enter the EU’s Single Market.

New flexibilities were also found for certain VAT and excise rules, accompanied by safeguards protecting the EU from fraud risks or potential distortion of competition. These arrangements include a possibility to set UK VAT rates below EU VAT minima rates for immovable goods with no risk that these goods enter the EU Single Market (e.g., a heat pump for a house). A UK SME VAT exemption scheme is now applicable to both goods and services if the UK respects the EU threshold for the size of SMEs. There is now also a possibility to tax all alcoholic beverages according to their alcoholic strength, and to set reduced duty rates to alcoholic beverages, if served for immediate consumption in hospitality venues in Northern Ireland, as long as the applied rates are not below EU minima duty rates.

With regard to governance, the voices of Northern Ireland people and stakeholders will be better heard through regular engagement at each level of the Withdrawal Agreement structures. There will be enhanced engagement with Northern Ireland stakeholders on Protocol-related matters. New thematic subgroups within the Joint Consultative Working Group will be set up. A new emergency mechanism, the Stormont Brake, will allow the UK government, at the request of 30 Members of the Legislative Assembly in Northern Ireland, to stop the application in Northern Ireland of amended or replacing provisions of Protocol-related EU law that may have a significant and lasting impact specific to the everyday lives of communities there. This mechanism would be triggered under the most exceptional circumstances and as a matter of last resort, in a very well-defined process set out in a Unilateral Declaration by the UK.

The Court of Justice of the European Union remains the sole and ultimate arbiter of EU law.

The joint solutions also address implementation difficulties related to tariff rate quotas (TRQs) for the most sensitive categories of steel and clarify the application of State aid rules.

These new arrangements have been carried out within the framework of the Withdrawal Agreement of which the Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland is an integral part. Within these pre-established legal parameters, a number of targeted amendments to the Protocol address, in a definitive way, unforeseen circumstances or deficiencies that have emerged since the start of the Protocol.

Next steps

The European Commission and the Government of the United Kingdom will proceed, within the remit of their respective powers, with the necessary steps to translate the joint solutions into legally binding instruments and to implement these swiftly and in good faith. To that effect, a meeting of the EU-UK Joint Committee on the Withdrawal Agreement, co-chaired by Vice-President Maroš Šefcovic and UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, will also take place in the coming weeks. The Commission has today made proposals to the Council for a Union position as regards, amongst other things, the decisions that need to be adopted in that meeting.

In addition, the Commission has today tabled legislative proposals in the SPS, medicines and TRQs areas, which will now be submitted to the European Parliament and Council.

The respective roles of the European Parliament and Council will be fully respected.

The new arrangements are not compatible with the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill. The Commission welcomes that the UK government is stopping the process of the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, and is not proceeding with it, so that it will fall in the UK Parliament at the end of the Parliamentary session. These arrangements, when implemented, mean that there will no longer be grounds for the existing Commission legal proceedings against the United Kingdom relating to the Protocol on Ireland / Northern Ireland.

Background

The Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland, as an integral part of the Withdrawal Agreement, was agreed jointly and ratified by both the EU and the UK. It has been in force since 1 February 2020 and has legal effects under international law. The aim of the Protocol is to protect the Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement in all its dimensions, maintaining peace and stability in Northern Ireland, avoiding a hard border on the island of Ireland, while preserving the integrity of the EU Single Market.

For More Information

Statement by President von der Leyen

Political Declaration

Memo

Factsheet

Legal documents

Quote(s)

The EU has from the very beginning shown genuine understanding for the unforeseen practical difficulties in implementing the Protocol on the ground. The joint solutions are a result of grit and determined effort by the Commission and the UK alike. They ensure that the Protocol works for the benefit of everyone in Northern Ireland. They also uphold the integrity of the EU’s Single Market. And they help us build the kind of cooperation with the United Kingdom we need in today’s world – enduring, strategic, and successful.

Vice-President Maroš Šefcovic – 27/02/2023

The Windsor Framework was made possible by genuine political will and hard work guided by the fundamental principle that the interests and needs of people should always come first. Supporting and protecting the hard-earned gains of the Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement was the prerequisite of our endeavour. Today, our achievement allows us to put forward definitive solutions that work for people and businesses in Northern Ireland and that protect our Single Market. It also allows us to turn the page towards a bilateral relationship that mirrors the one of close allies standing shoulder to shoulder in times of crisis.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

High concentrations of dust in the atmosphere

High concentrations of dust are observed in the atmosphere on Tuesday according to the measurements of the Ground Stations of the Air Quality Monitoring Network of the Department of Labour Inspection.

According to a press release issued by the Department of Labour Inspection, because the dust contains small-sized inhalable particles that may have a negative effect on human health, the public and especially vulnerable population groups (children, the elderly and the infirm) are urged to avoid going out in open spaces until the phenomenon has passed.

Employers based on the provisions of the Safety and Health at Work (Code of Practice for the Protection of Persons at Work during Dust Episodes) Order of 2022 (R.A.A. 410/2022) must take the appropriate measures (organisational or technical), after assessing the risks for their employees who are in open spaces.

It is recommended to people working outdoors to use appropriate means of personal protection.

For information, the last hourly dust concentration value
s measured at 9:00 am were 112.6 µg/m3 in Nicosia, 131.6 µg/m3 in Limassol, 139.3 µg/m3 in Larnaca, 176.4 µg/m3 in Paralimni, 94.7 µg/m3 in Pafos, 97.9 µg/m3 in Zygi and 73.6 µg/m3 in Agia Marina Xyliatou.

It is noted that “dust” means respirable suspended particles in the atmosphere with a diameter of less than 10 µm (PM10). According to the relevant legislation, the limit value refers to the average daily value and must not exceed the value of 50 µg/m3 (micrograms per cubic metre).

Source: Cyprus News Agency

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

Spyware use and privacy in Greece: discussion with national authorities

MEPs will discuss current issues in Greece with national privacy and data protection authorities, Christos Rammos (President of the ADAE) and Konstantinos Menoudakos (President of the HDPA).

When: Tuesday 28 February 2023, 10.00 – 13.30 (Cyprus Time)

Where: European Parliament in Brussels, Spinelli building, room 3E-2

To learn more about data protection and ongoing spyware investigations in Greece, the Inquiry Committee investigating Pegasus and equivalent spyware has invited Christos Rammos (President of the Hellenic Authority for Communication Security, ADAE) and Konstantinos Menoudakos (President of the Hellenic Data Protection Authority, HDPA) for a discussion with MEPs. The exchange builds on the Committee’s previous public hearing on spyware in Greece and its subsequent fact-finding visit to Greece and Cyprus in November 2022.

After the discussion, MEPs will also speak with Michael O’Flaherty, Director of the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights, who will present a partial update to the agency’s 2017 report “Surveillance by intelligence services: fundamental rights safeguards and remedies in the EU”. The update will be available here.

You can follow the meeting here (live-stream and video-on-demand).

Further information

Committee of Inquiry to investigate the use of Pegasus and equivalent surveillance spyware

Briefing for the PEGA mission to Cyprus and Greece (1-4 November 2022)

Janne OJAMO

Press Officer

(+32) 2 284 12 50 (BXL)

(+32) 470 89 21 92

janne.ojamo@europarl.europa.eu

pega-press@europarl.europa.eu

EP_PegaInquiry

Kyriakos KLOSIDIS

Press Officer

(+32) 2 28 32357 (BXL)

(+33) 3 881 74651 (STR)

(+32) 470 96 47 35

kyriakos.klosidis@europarl.europa.eu

Thea PIERIDOU

Press Officer

European Parliament

Office in Cyprus

30 Vyronos Avenue – 1096 Nicosia

97 665992

22 870500 / 22 396485

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Intelsat Expands Global Reach for Deutsche Telekom IoT

Intelsat, operator of one of the world’s largest integrated satellite and terrestrial networks and leading provider of inflight connectivity, today announced that Deutsche Telekom IoT (DT IoT) intends to integrate Intelsat FlexEnterprise into its cloud-based Internet of Things (IoT) offering to extend powerful, easy-to-use IoT solutions to locations regardless of the availability of fiber or cellular connectivity options.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230228005168/en/

Intelsat expands global reach for Deutsche Telekom IoT into its cloud-based Internet of Things (IoT) offering to extend powerful, easy-to-use IoT solutions to locations regardless of fiber or cellular connectivity options availability. Credit: Getty Images.

IoT services are increasingly used across a diverse array of businesses – collecting data from thousands of devices to analyze that data in a way that helps organizations increase system efficiency, reduce waste, monitor delicate environments, and provide new insights into processes and operations. By using FlexEnterprise to complement cellular connectivity, DT can extend the reach and effectiveness of its solution and drive better results for its customers.

“Satellite connectivity allows IoT to connect physical objects and devices from anywhere on the globe to the virtual world to enhance real-time data collection, analysis and decision making,” said Brian Jakins, Intelsat Networks general manager. “With FlexEnterprise, DT expands the usefulness of its IoT offering, especially for widely distributed applications like renewable energy infrastructure and green IoT environmental monitoring.”

“By integrating satellite connectivity into our DT IoT offering, we connect everything everywhere and reshape the future of global IoT networking,” said Dennis Nikles, CEO of Deutsche Telekom IoT GmbH. “Our customers now have a single point of contact, as well as a ‘network of networks’ with simple and ubiquitous connectivity that enables completely new possibilities.”

FlexEnterprise is a ready-to-deploy, enterprise-grade connectivity service integrating satellite and terrestrial networks to extend internet, cloud, and private networks. The global FlexEnterprise infrastructure is managed by Intelsat, eliminating the need for customers to maintain their own satellite infrastructure and expertise. Intelsat will deliver FlexEnterprise to DT as a satellite-as-a-service offering, further reducing the time and cost of operating new services.

The Intelsat FlexEnterprise satellite platform allows mobile network operators to offer services similar to terrestrial networks regardless of geographic location. For example, industrial IoT customers can connect devices in hard-to-reach places, such as to control mountain-top or offshore wind turbines or assess flood risks by monitoring water levels in remote locations.

About Intelsat

Intelsat’s global team of professionals is focused on providing seamless and secure, satellite-based communications to government, NGO and commercial customers through the company’s next-generation global network and managed services. Bridging the digital divide by operating one of the world’s largest and most advanced satellite fleet and connectivity infrastructures, Intelsat enables people and their tools to speak over oceans, see across continents and listen through the skies to communicate, cooperate and coexist. Since its founding six decades ago, the company has been synonymous with satellite-industry “firsts” in service to its customers and the planet. Leaning on a legacy of innovation and focusing on addressing a new generation of challenges, Intelsat team members now have their sights on the “next firsts” in space as they disrupt the field and lead in the digital transformation of the industry.

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View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230228005168/en/

Contacts

Farah Latif – farah.latif@intelsat.com; +1 703-973-1679

Source: Intelsat

Multimedia

Photo

Intelsat expands global reach for Deutsche Telekom IoT into its cloud-based Internet of Things (IoT) offering to extend powerful, easy-to-use IoT solutions to locations regardless of fiber or cellular connectivity options availability. Credit: Getty Images.

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This material is not a CNA editorial material and CNA shall not bear responsibility for the accuracy of its content. In case you have any questions about the content, kindly refer to the contact person mentioned in the text of the press release.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Blood bank urges volunteers to donate blood

The Ministry of Health’s Blood Bank is urging volunteers to donate blood due to low stock reserves.

In a press release on Tuesday, it said that due to high daily demand for blood and low reserves available, volunteers need to come forward to blood donation centres.

The Ministry of Health said the blood donation points for the week of February 27th to March 5th, 2023, are as follows:

In Nicosia on the 1st floor of the Engomi Health Centre, number 22809098, 22809052, 22809048.

In Limassol at the Church Hall of Agios Georgios Havouzas, number 96651547.

In Larnaca on the 3rd floor of the new General Hospital wing, number 24800402.

In Paphos at Vasileos Constantinou 89 Royal Business Centre, number 99889711.

In Famagusta at the former cooperative building opposite the Church of Agia Varvara, number 96651537.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Ministry of Health announces operation of national network of health observers

The Ministry of Health in Cyprus has announced the operation of the National Network of Health Observers in primary healthcare, Sentinel, with the aim of epidemiological surveillance of respiratory viruses.

According to the press release, the Epidemiological Surveillance and Control of Infectious Diseases Unit is proceeding with a significant upgrade in the collection of epidemiological data through a digitised process as part of the reorganization of the existing surveillance system.

The project’s expenditure is funded by the EU Recovery and Resilience Fund.

The primary goal of the network is the surveillance of respiratory viruses (influenza, SARS-CoV-2, RSV) to enable the study of the seasonality of these viruses and at the same time to achieve the detection and early warning of possible epidemic outbreaks in Cyprus.

Furthermore, the information will be used for real-time public health measures and for the development of medium to long-term public health strategies.

Source: Cyprus News Agency