Adam Easton
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Born | Easton |
United Kingdom | |
Date of died | September 15,1397 |
Died | Rome |
Italy | |
Place of burial | Rome, Italy |
Rank | Cardinal |
Created cardinal | December 21, 1381 |
Creat cardin | Pope Urban VI |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2867378 |
Adam Easton Life story
Adam Easton was an English cardinal, born at Easton in Norfolk. He joined the Benedictines at Norwich moving on to the Benedictine Gloucester College, Oxford where he became one of the most outstanding students of his generation, being especially proficient in Hebrew.
Wagner could pose as migrants to enter EU, PM Morawiecki warns
...By Adam Easton & James GregoryBBC News, in Warsaw and LondonWagner fighters in Belarus could pose as migrants and enter the EU, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has warned...
Ukraine war: Auschwitz anniversary marked without Russia
...By Adam Easton in Warsaw & Jasmine Andersson in LondonBBC NewsFor the first time a Russian delegation was not invited to a ceremony marking the liberation of the former Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi death camp in modern-day Poland...
Russia to suspend gas supplies to Poland
... However, if Russian gas supplies remain suspended for several weeks, the country will probably have to start restricting supply to the country s largest consumers, such as chemical manufacturers, the BBC s Warsaw correspondent Adam Easton said...
Ukraine war: Trucks stuck at Poland-Belarus border as EU sanctions deadline passes
... And hours after the deadline passed, the waiting times had been shortened to 12 hours, says the BBC s Adam Easton in Warsaw, with the number of trucks at two border crossings between 230-400 vehicles...
Poland told to pay €1m a day in legal row with EU
... BBC Warsaw correspondent Adam Easton says the Supreme Court has stopped scheduling new cases for the chamber, but it has continued hearing cases that are already scheduled...
Poland told to pay €1m a day in legal row with EU
The EU's top court has told Poland to pay a daily fine of €1m (£850,000) in an row over judicial reforms.
Earlier this year, Poland was ordered to suspend a controversial disciplinary chamber but has Not Yet done so.
Poland has repeatedly been at loggerheads with the EU over changes that are seen as weakening the independence of Polish courts.
This month, Poland's Constitutional Tribunal angered European leaders by in effect rejecting the primacy of Eu Law .
The ruling said parts of Eu Law were incompatible with the Polish constitution, prompting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to speak of a " direct challenge to the unity of the European legal order".
The original case was taken to the tribunal by Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki in a bid to prevent Polish judges using Eu Law to challenge his government's judicial changes.
One significant factor in the EU-Poland row is that the European Commission is yet to approve €57bn (£48bn; $66bn) of Covid-19 recovery funds earmarked for Poland, and may not do so until its judiciary dispute is settled.
An opinion poll on Tuesday suggested that 40. 8% of Poles believed their government should concede defeat and end The Row , while another 32. 5% said it should compromise.
A central plank of Poland's controversial reforms is a disciplinary chamber of the Supreme Court that critics argue is being used to punish independent judges because it has The Power to sanction the content of their rulings.
Back In July , the European Court of Justice (ECJ) delivered an interim ruling that Poland should suspend The Chamber as it was neither sufficiently independent nor impartial. The Polish Prime Minister has said The Chamber will be shut down in its current form, but he has insisted that EU institutions have no right to tell Warsaw How To organise its judiciary.
BBC Warsaw correspondent Adam Easton says the Supreme Court has stopped scheduling new cases for The Chamber , but it has continued hearing cases that are already scheduled.
Last month, the EU asked the Luxembourg-based court to impose a daily fine until Poland responded. On Wednesday, The Court 's vice-president ruled that the fine would have to be paid until Poland either suspended The Chamber or until The Final ruling on its future.
from " delaying bringing its conduct into line with that order" and it was necessary to " avoid serious and irreparable harm to the legal order of the European Union".
This video can not be played
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Media caption, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen says she is " deeply concerned" about Poland's court rulingPoland's leader told the European Parliament this month it was " unacceptable to talk about financial penalties" and he accused the EU of overstepping its powers.
His conservative-nationalist government has already been ordered by the ECJ to pay €500,000 A Day for failing to shut down temporarily the enormous Turow coal mine and Power Plant close to The German and Czech borders. Poland has refused to pay that fine because it argues The Plant heats and provides water to local homes.
Source of news: bbc.com