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fredag, december 22, 2023

EUobserver’s Prime 10 tales of 2023


Initially, a disclaimer — or, reasonably, an explication. These will not be, essentially, the most-read EUobserver tales of the previous 12 months. That metric will get too simply swayed by a rogue story going viral on Reddit for no apparent motive, or a headline on a chunk catches hearth, past what the precise piece, good as it might be, actually deserves (mea culpa for making an attempt to provide you with arresting however correct headlines, an artwork kind in itself.)

  • Gone however not forgotten this 12 months, after seven years at EUobserver, Eszter Zalan (Photograph: Moritz Kreis)

As an alternative, chosen by our staff of seven reporters and editors, these are the ten tales we thought greatest confirmed the breadth, depth, and originality of EUobserver over 2023, and it is quest for authentic, investigative, off-diary tales about Brussels, the member states, policy-making, social affairs, international affairs, migration and the surroundings — to call simply 4 of our specialised areas of reporting.

We welcomed to the staff this 12 months Paula Soler, a Spanish journalist previously of El Confidencial, and together with her got here a sweep of tales on office practices, union rights, the gig economic system, a dwelling wage, and all the types of bread-and-butter employee and client points that so many different publications ignore in favour of a ’top-down’ give attention to commissioners, MEPs and ambassadors, or insider Brussels gossip (taking a look at you, Politico).

We additionally mentioned goodbye to Eszter Zalan, our long-serving Hungarian reporter, protecting rule of legislation in Poland and Hungary, in addition to Brexit and LGTQI points, who left to show from poacher-turned-gamekeeper and a brand new job on the European Parliament.

As for the remark web page, one in every of our best-read sections, I had printed 295 op-eds in 2023, as of 10 December (so add one other 10 to that tally), from round 3,650 acquired (and skim!) — in addition to commissioning, I obtain a median of 10+ each day cold-call submissions, for a slot of 1 to 2 items most each day. To all those that did not make the minimize, and received a well mannered ’no’, I hope that goes someway to explaining why. There’s room (that is the web, in any case), there simply is not time.

So let’s begin with Eszter and Paula.

Prosecuting Russia: The probabilities, challenges and dangers of a particular tribunal (Photograph: Ukraine international ministry)

In April, Eszter researched a deep-dive into the precise authorized and technical logistics of prosecuting Russian president Vladimir Putin for alleged warfare crimes in Ukraine — at that stage, the warfare had simply handed its 12-month mark. Sadly, practically two years on, it stays as related as ever, and the chance of Putin dealing with justice as distant as ever. Learn extra

Spain’s €20,000 for all 23-year olds: radical, life like, or ridiculous? (Photograph: Moncloa/Borja Puig de la Bellacasa)

Giving each 23-year previous a lump sum fee of €20,000 from taxpayers’ cash sounds — initially — ludicrously Utopian, even naive. However with the destiny of Europe’s 20-somethings stymied by practically twenty years of financial disaster and recession, excessive unemployment, unaffordable housing, ever extra meagre pensions or the flexibility to save lots of for them, it truly probably saves much more issues additional down the road. Positive, the already wealthy do not deserve it, nevertheless it’s dearer to filter them out than it’s to make it common. Different such fringe radical concepts, reminiscent of nationwide minimal revenue, have come from the outer fringe of Inexperienced/Left think-tanks over the previous 20 years, so may not this one? Learn extra

The ’regulatory fatigue’ fightback towards EU Inexperienced Deal (Photograph: European Union)

One of many extra miserable points of 2023 — apart from the Russia/Ukraine warfare, and the Israel/Gaza warfare, that’s — was watching the long-agreed cross-party consensus on Frans Timmermans’ EU Inexperienced Deal unravel and crumble on the final minute, because the centre-right European Folks’s Social gathering noticed some political capital in switching horses, and swallowing wholesale the arguments of the Huge Agri foyer, and their pesticides and pleasant researchers. Elena Sanchez Nicolas compiled the file on what occurred again in July right here: Learn extra

Past REACH? EU Fee dumps its chemical reform (Photograph: Greg Schwanbeck)

Not unrelated or unconnected was the last-minute U-turn on the 2020 Chemical compounds Technique for Sustainability again in October. Not a topic subject acquainted to the final reader, or most mainstream nationwide media, however one with big knock-on results for EU residents — as reported right here by Elena. ”The earnings of the chemical business are extra necessary than the well being of Europeans,” mentioned Tatiana Santos, head of chemical compounds coverage on the European Environmental Bureau, and it is laborious to disagree. Learn extra

MEP luxurious pension held company property in tax havens (Photograph: Mike Oropeza)

Okay, whereas we’re nonetheless on a downer about MEPs and their all-too-human foibles and weak spot — how about this unique from freedom-of-information fiend Nikolaj Nielsen in Might? The headline says all of it, actually, however the context (we’re not suggesting each MEP was conscious of this) is that whereas on the one hand the EU Fee has, very tentatively, belatedly and half-heartedly, been going after international tax havens, the European Parliament’s personal pension fund was investing in them. One hand not telling the opposite hand what it was doing — and that is the charitable interpretation. Learn extra

Artwork of resistance: Exiled Russians create new wave in Europe (Photograph: Kyle Taylor)

Time for a contract investigation, and this time a have a look at the technology of younger Russian artists who’ve fled Putin’s murderous, autocratic and easily philistine regime, to discover a new life (and hopefully work) in Europe. It is not been simple for any of them. This 4,000 phrase characteristic by Daria Kozlova, a correspondent at unbiased Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta Europe however briefly ’on mortgage’ to us as a resident journalist at EUobserver got here out within the dog-days of August and was not (as per my introduction) an prompt blockbuster, readers-wise. However, like numerous EUobserver items, it has a ’lengthy tail’ of readers discovering it weeks, even months later, and now has a really respectable readership. Which it deserves. Learn extra

EU attorneys for Russia: making ’good’ cash? (Photograph: kremlin.ru)

Some issues could also be morally incorrect, with out being legally incorrect — a basic case could be the ’taxi rank’ precept amongst attorneys, the place they take the subsequent out there shopper, be it an alleged assassin or rapist, as a result of everyone deserves a authorized defence in a court docket of legislation. However when your purchasers are Russian oligarchs, preventing EU sanctions after Putin’s invasion of Russia, absolutely there’s an choice to show down these eye-watering charges? International affairs correspondent Andrew Rettman talked to these attorneys comfortable to take the roubles, greater than a 12 months into the battle. Learn extra

A technology hungry for change — meet the MEPs beneath 35 (Photograph: European Parliament)

We additionally do campaigns, and particular initiatives. The 2024 European Parliament elections are developing, and while in the true world, a 35-year previous isn’t youthful, certainly bearing down on center age, within the Brussels Bubble, it is nonetheless fairly uncommon to have MEPs beneath 35. Bizarre, contemplating the Fridays for Future motion, and all the opposite radical types of avenue politics campaigning 18-35 12 months olds typically get entangled with, however we spoke to all of the under-35 12 months previous MEPs from throughout Europe to see what motivated them — and in the event that they thought of their age a drawback, working within the parliament. Learn extra

UAE’s fossil-fuelled high-tech mirage of a inexperienced future (Photograph: Rashed Al Mansoori, UAE Presidential Courtroom)

Forward of the latest CO28 in Dubai, our Inexperienced economic system correspondent Wester van Gaal flew to Abu Dhabi for the launch occasion — and soaked within the extraordinary environment that may be a unsustainable desert petro-state, making an attempt to reinvent itself as a worldwide Inexperienced saviour. Have a guided tour of the Potemkin village that’s Masdar metropolis. Learn extra

Israel’s Gaza assault ’past proportionality’ (Photograph: Magnus Fröderberg/Norden.org)

EUobserver takes satisfaction in protecting the Nordic area — Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, the Faroe Islands, Greenland and Åland — in cooperation with the Nordic Council. However that is to not say large breaking information tales often come out of those largely agreeable conferences of Europe’s high-tax, high-public spending social-democratic North. October was the exception, the place Norway’s prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre broke ranks, to inform EUobserver founder Lisbeth Kirk that Israel’s actions in Gaza went ”past proportionality”. An anodyne quote in some other context, within the context of the Gaza warfare, a serious break from EU orthodoxy (sure, Norway is not within the EU, however nonetheless…) Learn extra

That is simply 10 tales — from, at a tough estimate, 1,752 items of journalism printed by EUobserver in 2023. Not a foul tally, for an editorial staff of simply seven folks. However a particular shout out ought to go to our backroom workers too, of Henner Sorg (gross sales and advertising), Lou Wilmes (diplomatic relations supervisor), Atufa Ali (enterprise administration), plus authentic founding father of EUobserver Lisbeth Kirk, and chairman of the board, Koert Debeuf.

Whereas we nonetheless have your consideration, a particular point out also can exit to remark piece of the 12 months, and freelance piece of the 12 months.

Rhodes to smash — fleeing the Greek inferno (Photograph: Sky Information/Screengrab)

Ordinarily, opinion items come from journalists, teachers, ambassadors, NGOs, MEPs, activists, researchers, or union officers, dissecting missed items of EU laws, false notes within the drumbeat of international affairs, or client affairs affecting the hundreds of thousands of EU residents who could don’t have any clue the place or how you can rectify an injustice. I all the time have one mantra for incoming op-eds: ’Is it new? And is it attention-grabbing?’ And that additionally provides me the liberty as op-ed editor to vary far and extensive throughout points and matters that our staff of reporters have neither the time nor the experience to cowl, broadening the piste of our protection. However this time, a daily op-ed contributor to the positioning, former Guardian, Politico and Reuters journalist Arthur Neslen, occurred to be in Rhodes this summer season on a household vacation, because the local weather heating wildfires took maintain, and he discover smoke from throughout the opposite aspect of the valley. Learn extra

Oil-spill devastation in Nigeria — and the way the EU can repair (Photograph: European Neighborhood, 2006)

Simply as we had been ”going to press” (to make use of a pre-internet expression), freelance investigative reporter Raluca Besliu, a Romanian journalist based mostly in Brussels however focussing on West Africa and the surroundings, gained the 2023 Hostwriter Story Prize, for this investigation right into a oil spill by the French multinational Totale Vitality, within the Niger Delta. One thing that, in future, the Worldwide Legal Courtroom within the Hague could recognise as a a criminal offense of ’ecocide’. Learn extra



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