An elevated view of smog and air pollution in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA.

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An elevated view of smog and air pollution in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA.

Dave G. Kelly/Getty Images

Pollution, much like wealth, is not distributed equally in the United States.

Scientists and policymakers have long known that black and Hispanic Americans tend to live in neighborhoods with more pollution of all kinds, than white Americans. And because pollution exposure can cause a range of health problems, this inequity could be a driver of unequal health outcomes across the U.S.

A study published Monday in the journal PNAS adds a new twist to the pollution problem by looking at consumption. While we tend to think of factories or power plants as the source of pollution, those polluters wouldn’t exist without consumer demand for their products.

The researchers found that air pollution is disproportionately caused by white Americans’ consumption of goods and services, but disproportionately inhaled by black and Hispanic Americans.

“This paper is exciting and really quite novel,” says Anjum Hajat, an epidemiologist at the University of Washington who was not involved in the study. “Inequity in exposure to air pollution is well documented, but this study brings in the consumption angle.”

Hajat says the study reveals an inherent unfairness: “If you’re contributing less to the problem, why do you have to suffer more from it?”

The study, led by engineering professor Jason Hill at the University of Minnesota, took over six years to complete. According to the paper’s first author Christopher Tessum, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Washington, the idea stemmed from a question at a conference.

Tessum presented earlier research on how blacks and Hispanics are often more exposed to air pollutants than whites. After he finished, someone asked “if it would be possible to connect exposure to air pollution to who is doing the actual consuming,” says Tessum. According to Tessum, no one had ever tried to answer that question.

It’s a big, complicated issue, but studying it could address a fundamental question: Are those who produce pollution, through their consumption of goods and services, fairly sharing in the costs?

What kind of data could even answer such a multifaceted question? Let’s break it down:

For any given area in the U.S., the researchers would need to know how polluted the air was, what communities were exposed to pollution, and the health effects of that level of exposure.

Then, for the same area the researchers would need to identify the sources of that exposure (coal plants, factories, agriculture to name a few), and get a sense of what goods and services stem from those emissions (electricity, transportation, food).

Finally, whose consumption of goods and services drives those sectors of the economy?

“The different kinds of data, by themselves, aren’t that complicated,” says Tessum. “It’s linking them where things get a little trickier.”

The most relevant air pollutant metric for human health is “particulate matter 2.5” or PM2.5. It represents the largest environmental health risk factor in the United States with higher levels linked to more cardiovascular problems, respiratory illness, diabetes and even birth defects. PM2.5 pollution is mostly caused by human activities, like burning fossil fuels or agriculture.

The EPA collects these data through the National Emissions Inventory, which collates emissions from specific emitters, like coal plants or factories, measures of mobile polluters like cars or planes, and natural events like wildfires, painting a detailed picture of pollution across the U.S.

The researchers generated maps of where different emitters, like agriculture or construction, caused PM2.5 pollution. Coal plants produced pockets of pollution in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, while agricultural emissions were concentrated in the Midwest and California’s central valley. “We then tied in census data to understand where different racial-ethnic groups live to understand exposure patterns,” says Hill.

Tessum then used previous research on the health effects of different exposure levels to estimate how many premature deaths per year (out of an estimated 102,000 from domestic human-caused emissions) could be linked to each emitter.

“We wanted to take this study further by ascribing responsibility of these premature deaths to different sectors [of the economy], and ultimately to the consumers, and maybe consumers of different racial and ethnic groups,” says Hill.

To do that, the researchers actually worked backwards, following consumer spending to different sectors of the economy, and then ultimately to the main emitters of air pollution.

Consider one major contributor to emissions: agriculture. Consumer expenditure surveys from the Bureau of Labor Statistics provide detailed data on how much money households spend in various sectors of the economy, including food.

These data gave the researchers an idea of how much blacks, Hispanics, and whites spend on food per year. Other expenditures, like energy or entertainment, are also measured. Taken together these data represent the consumption patterns of the three groups.

To translate dollars spent on food into air pollution levels, the researchers traced money through the economy. Using data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the researchers can estimate, for example, how much grocery stores or restaurants spend on food. Eventually, these dollars are linked back to the primary emitters — the farms growing the food or the fuel that farmers buy to run their tractors.

The researchers have now completed the causal chain, from dollars spent at the grocery story, to the amount of pollution emitted into the atmosphere. Completing this chain for each source of pollution revealed whose consumption drives air pollution, and who suffers from it.

After accounting for population size differences, whites experience about 17 percent less air pollution than they produce, through consumption, while blacks and Hispanics bear 56 and 63 percent more air pollution, respectively, than they cause by their consumption, according to the study.

“These patterns didn’t seem to be driven by different kinds of consumption,” says Tessum, “but different overall levels.” In other words, whites were just consuming disproportionately more of the same kinds of goods and services resulting in air pollution than minority communities.

“These results, as striking as they are, aren’t really surprising,” says Ana Diez Roux, an epidemiologist at Drexel University who was not involved in the study. “But it’s really interesting to see consumption patterns rigorously documented suggesting that minority communities are exposed to pollution that they bear less responsibility for.”

Diez Roux thinks this is a good first step. “They certainly make assumptions in their analysis that might be questioned down the line, but I doubt that the overall pattern they found will change,” she says.

Tessum points to some hopeful results from the study. PM2.5 exposure by all groups has fallen by about 50 percent from 2002 to 2015, driven in part by regulation and population movement away from polluted areas. But the inequity remains mostly unchanged.

While more research is needed to fully understand these differences, the results of this study raise questions about how to address these inequities.

Tessum stresses that “we’re not saying that we should take away white people’s money, or that people shouldn’t be able to spend money.” He suggests continuing to strive to make economic activity and consumption less polluting could be a way to manage and lessen the inequities.

Diez Roux thinks that stronger measures may be necessary.

“If want to ameliorate this inequity, we may need to rethink how we build our cities and how they grow, our dependence on automobile transportation,” says Diez Roux. “These are hard things we have to consider.”

Jonathan Lambert is an intern on NPR’s Science Desk. You can follow him on Twitter: @evolambert

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/03/11/702348935/study-finds-racial-gap-between-who-causes-air-pollution-and-who-breathes-it

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that barring “overwhelming” new evidence she would not pursue impeachment against President Trump because it would be too divisive and “he’s just not worth it.”

“I’m not for impeachment,” said Pelosi in an interview with the Washington Post published Monday. “This is news. I’m going to give you some news right now because I haven’t said this to any press person before. But since you asked, and I’ve been thinking about this: Impeachment is so divisive to the country that unless there’s something so compelling and overwhelming and bipartisan, I don’t think we should go down that path, because it divides the country. And he’s just not worth it.”

Impeachment by the House of Representatives, which Democrats control, can be accomplished by a simple majority. But to remove Trump from office would require a two-thirds majority vote in the Republican-led Senate.

Pelosi’s comments echo those by House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-NY, in an interview with Politico publisher earlier Monday.

“You don’t want to divide the country, so you have to think you have such a case that once the case is finished being presented, enough people understand you had to do it,” said Nadler.

A poll of Iowa Democrats released over the weekend found only 22 percent of respondents saying they cared “a lot” about impeachment, far lower than issues like health care (81 percent), climate change (80 percent) or income inequality (67 percent).

Other Democrats are more enthusiastic. Freshman Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., made headlines in January for saying of the president “We’re going to impeach this mother***er” at a MoveOn event in Washington, D.C. Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Cal., first introduced articles of impeachment against Trump for obstruction of justice in July 2017.




Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/03/11/pelosi-not-worth-it-to-impeach-trump/23689899/

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(CNN)Passengers do not have many options if they are booked on flights in the United States and learn that they will be on the same model of aircraft, the 737 MAX 8, that crashed in Ethiopia over the weekend. While passengers can always choose not to get on a plane if they feel unsafe, the two major US airlines that have 737 MAX 8 planes are not grounding those aircraft or changing their standard flight cancellation, change or refund policies.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/11/politics/737-max-8-plane-crash-passenger-options/index.html

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s budget is the confession of a broken promise.

As a candidate, Trump famously vowed to eliminate the national debt in eight years.

But under the spending blueprint he released Monday — which has “promises kept” in its title — the federal government wouldn’t start paying down debt for 15 years. Until then, even under the rosy projections of Trump’s budget-writers, Washington would run annual deficits adding to a red-ink total that already stands at more than $22 trillion.

Of course, Trump’s initial promise was fantastical. But his tax cuts and defense buildup ushered in a new era of trillion-dollar annual deficits. His own budget projects that next year’s deficit will weigh in at $1.1 trillion.

That’s despite calling for massive cuts to entitlement programs, headlined by a plan to force recipients of Medicaid, food stamps and federal housing subsidies to work or otherwise engage in their communities.

There was no way, given the state of the national debt or of his preferred policies, that Trump could begin to entertain the idea that he would be able to campaign in 2020 on having kept the promise that he would eliminate the national debt.

Instead, what he’s setting up to do with this budget is fight with — and blame — members of Congress as he frames his re-election message. The fiscal failure is their fault because they didn’t follow his lead, his allies say.

“Congress just hasn’t been willing to play ball,” Russ Vought, the deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget, said Monday at a White House press conference. The deficits in Trump’s early years in office were necessary, Vought said, “to get the economy going,” which was essentially the reasoning for the deficit-financed Obama stimulus plan a decade ago.

Now, administration officials and Trump allies say, it’s time for Congress to make trade-offs that reflect Trump’s priorities.

Democrats say he’s asking them to harm the poor and the middle-class to maintain low tax rates for individuals and corporations and to continue building up the Pentagon at the expense of non-defense agencies, which would see a 5 percent cut in discretionary spending.

“The cruel and shortsighted cuts in President Trump’s budget request are a roadmap to a sicker, weaker America,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a statement. “House Democrats will reject this toxic, destructive budget request which would hollow out our national strength and fail to meet the needs of the American people.”

Trump “is committed” to cutting deficits and eliminating the debt, said Michael Caputo, who worked on his 2016 campaign. “I think he’s now accustomed to the unfortunate reality of the situation, which is neither side has any interest in proper stewardship of the taxpayers’ money.”

That means hammering lawmakers on both sides of the aisle for blocking his proposals to eliminate federal programs and even spending requests — like the $8.6 billion he wants for a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico — that would add to the expenditure side of the ledger.

Already, he’s getting pushback from members of his own party on specific provisions. For example, Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, dashed out a press release vowing to fight Trump’s proposal to slash funding for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative by 90 percent.

On a more global level, lawmakers are also sure to refuse his calls to make massive cuts to entitlement programs, including Medicare and Medicaid, where his budget envisions reaping savings from kicking the poor and elderly off social insurance programs if those aid recipients don’t work.

And Democrats say his request for more wall money — in the midst of a fight with Congress over whether he can shift previously appropriated money around for that purpose — is a non-starter. Moreover, they say he’s pinching the poor and middle class through programmatic cuts for what Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., the vice chairman of the House Budget Committee and a possible 2020 presidential candidate, called “narrow personal political priorities” like tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans and the border wall.

“The president’s budget is a chance to challenge the country to think big,” said Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., the vice chairman of the House Budget Committee and a potential 2020 presidential candidate. “President Trump just delivered a budget that challenges America to look backwards to a 1970s economic vision and a 5th century national security vision with a silly wall.”

Even if Congress enacted every line of Trump’s budget — and make no mistake, it’s actually headed straight for a waste bin in Pelosi’s Capitol office — he would start next year’s campaign stretch run having added trillions of dollars to the debt he promised to eliminate.

More than that, he has now shown he has no plan for the budget being balanced in any single year until he’s been out of office for at least a decade.

He can blame Congress all he wants. But the numbers — even the optimistic figures pumped out by his budget office — don’t lie. Trump didn’t just break his promise to eliminate debt; he reversed it.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/trump-broke-his-promise-fix-debt-he-ll-blame-congress-n981866

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Asked twice in her first press briefing in six weeks whether the job of Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta was in jeopardy, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders pointedly declined to endorse the embattled department head.

Acosta—the only Hispanic member of Trump’s cabinet—has faced sharp criticism for the leniency he showed as a U.S. attorney in Miami to Jeffrey Epstein, an accused sexual predator. Epstein is alleged to have engaged in the sex trafficking of underaged girls, yet the plea deal to which he ultimately agreed—and which Epstein brokered—had him admit guilt only on two minor prostitution charges.

Though that deal was struck 11 years ago, full details have only recently been brought to public attention. The revelations about Epstein, which come during a time of #MeToo and a broader conversation about disparities in the criminal justice system, have led to calls for Acosta’s resignation.

Sanders did little to tamp down speculation about Acosta’s future in the Trump administration. Asked by a reporter if Trump had any “misgivings” about Acosta’s role in the Epstein deal, Sanders said only that the matter was “currently under review.” She added that the White House was “certainly looking at it.”

A short time later, Sanders was asked by another reporter whether Trump had “full confidence” in Acosta or whether the Labor Secretary was “possibly leaving.”

Related: Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta:

President Donald Trump signs an executive order on a revised Cuba policy aimed at stopping the flow of U.S. cash to the country’s military and security services while maintaining diplomatic relations, Friday, June 16, 2017, in Miami. From left are, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., Florida Gov. Rick Scott, Cary Roque, Vice President Mike Pence and Labor Secretary Alex Acosta. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

President Donald Trump, Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta, third from left, Ivanka Trump, the daughter of President Donald Trump, second from right, and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, right, tour the Waukesha County Technical College in Pewaukee, Wis., Tuesday, June 13, 2017. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)




Sanders passed up the opportunity to reaffirm Trump’s support for Acosta. “I am not aware of any personnel changes,” Sanders said, repeating her previous statement that “those things are currently under review.” She did not say what that review entailed.

Sanders did not immediately respond to a subsequent request for comment.

Were Acosta to either depart or face dismissal, he would be one of a legion of department heads and top-level advisers to leave the administration, including press secretary Sean Spicer, chief of staff Reince Priebus, chief of staff John Kelly, deputy chief of staff Joe Hagin, chief strategist Steve Bannon, communications director Mike Dubke, communications director Hope Hicks, communications director Bill Shine, chief counsel Don McGahn, Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, U.S. attorney general Jeff Sessions, national security adviser Mike Flynn, national security adviser H.R. McMaster, secretary of state Rex Tillerson, Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, FBI director James Comey, and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley.

The above is not a complete list.

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/03/11/white-house-wont-say-if-embattled-labor-secretary-acosta-has-trumps-support/23689852/

Israeli actress Gal Gadot pulled no punches after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel is “not a state for all its citizens” over the weekend.

The leader took to social media after famed Israeli TV star Rotem Sela criticized Netanyahu’s campaign rhetoric — particularly, his commentary on the country’s Arab population — ahead of the upcoming spring election.

“When the hell will someone in this government let the Israeli public know that this is a country for all its citizens and that every person is born equal. And also, that the Arabs are human beings,” Sela asked in an Instagram Story on Sunday, taking a jab at a remark Israeli Culture Minister Miri Regev made during a recent TV interview, according to a translation from The Washington Post. Regev reportedly urged citizens to vote for Netanyahu in April to avoid a government with Arab political parties, referring to prime minister candidates Benny Gantz and Yair Lapid’s Blue and White party.

NETANYAHU: ISRAEL IS THE STATE OF ‘JEWISH PEOPLE ALONE’

This Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2019 photo, shows Rotem Sela, one of Israel’s top models and TV hosts, during a TV reality show filming near Jerusalem.
(AP)

In a Facebook post on Sunday, Netanyahu offered Sela a correction, which apparently inspired the “Wonder Woman” star to speak out.

“Dear Rotem Sela, I read what you wrote. First of all, an important correction: Israel is not a state for all its citizens. According to a basic law we passed, Israel is the nation-state of the Jewish people — and the Jewish people only,” Netanyahu wrote, referring to a Jewish state law passed in July 2018 that defines Israel as “the national home of the Jewish people” as well as declared Jerusalem its official capital, according to The Times of Israel.

Arabs, who have full citizenship rights, comprise about 20 percent of Israel’s 9 million residents.

“As you wrote, there is no problem with the Arab citizens of Israel — they have equal rights like all of us and the Likud government has invested more in the Arab sector than any other government,” Netanyahu continued in an Instagram post. “The Likud just want to sharpen the central question in these elections: Should Israel be led by a strong right-wing government headed by myself or by a left-wing government of Yair Lapid and Gantz with the support of the Arab parties? Lapid and Gantz have no other way of forming a government and such a government will undermine the security of the state and the citizens. The decision will be made in another month at the ballot box. Good Day.”

After reading Netanyahu’s post, Gadot pledged allegiance to Sela.

Israeli actress Gal Gadot slammed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for claiming Israel is a state of “Jewish people alone.”
(Getty)

ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER BENJAMIN NETANYAHU TO BE INDICTED ON BRIBERY, FRAUD AND BREACH OF TRUST, PENDING HEARING

“Loving your neighbour as yourself is not a matter of right-left, Jewish-Arab, secular or religious; it is a matter of dialogue, of dialogue for peace, equality and tolerance for each other,” Gadot posted in Hebrew on her Instagram Story, a translation by The Straits Times states.

Gal Gadot fired back at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday.
(Instagram/@gal_gadot)

“The responsibility for such hope is on us to create a brighter future for our children. Rotem, my sister, you’re an inspiration for us all,” she added.

According to The Straits Times, Gantz and Lapid’s Blue and White party is receiving “slightly” more support in the polls compared to Netanyahu’s Likud party.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/wonder-woman-star-gal-gadot-slams-netanyahu-for-claiming-israel-is-home-only-to-the-jewish-people

Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy Patricia D’Alesandro PelosiPelosi, Schumer push back on new Trump demand for wall funding: ‘We hope he learned his lesson’ Five things to watch for in Trump’s 2020 budget Democrats hurting themselves with handling of Ilhan Omar controversy MORE (D-Calif.) made her strongest comments to date on impeachment, saying in a new interview that President TrumpDonald John TrumpButtigieg: ‘I have more years of government experience under my belt’ than Trump Tucker Carlson says he won’t apologize for comments in resurfaced radio interview Buttigieg calls Pence ‘cheerleader for the porn star presidency’ MORE is “just not worth it,” unless there’s bipartisan support for going down that road.

“Impeachment is so divisive to the country that unless there’s something so compelling and overwhelming and bipartisan, I don’t think we should go down that path, because it divides the country,” Pelosi said in a Washington Post interview published Monday. “And he’s just not worth it.”

Pelosi told the newspaper last week that despite her opposition to impeachment, she does not believe Trump is fit to serve as president.

“Are we talking ethically? Intellectually? Politically? What are we talking here?” she said. “All of the above. No. No. I don’t think he is.”

The California Democrat has set a very high bar for impeachment proceedings, even as the more progressive wing of her caucus clamors to remove Trump from office.

Impeachment has split the caucus since Democrats took control of the House in January, and the topic has gained steam in recent weeks following explosive testimony from Trump’s former lawyer, Michael CohenMichael Dean CohenOversight Dem: ‘I imagine’ chairman will ask for investigation into Cohen for alleged perjury A deal for Trump: Take North Korea’s offer and build upon it The Memo: Team Trump insists Dem probes could ‘boomerang’ MORE.

Rep. Brad ShermanBradley (Brad) James ShermanTlaib to offer impeachment articles against Trump by end of month Democrat vows to move forward with impeachment, dividing his party Trump pick sets up fight over World Bank MORE (D-Calif.) re-introduced articles of impeachment on the first day of the new Congress in January, alleging that Trump had obstructed justice by firing then-FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyConway’s husband: ‘Banana republic’ if Trump got his wish to go after investigators It’s not about collusion; it’s about obstruction … and impeachment Breadth of Trump probe poses challenge for Dems MORE.

Freshman Rep. Rashida TlaibRashida Harbi TlaibDemocrats hurting themselves with handling of Ilhan Omar controversy Democrats allow anti-Semitism to spread with their weak resolution NY Times columnist on CNN: Omar ‘has come to be a bridge destroyer’ MORE (D-Mich.) — who drew national attention on her first day in office by pledging to “impeach the motherf—er” — said last week she will introduce a measure by the end of the month to oust the president.

In an interview with Showtime’s “The Circus” that aired Sunday, interviewer Alex Wagner remarked to Tlaib that “it doesn’t feel like you think he’s any less of a motherf—er today than two months ago.”

“That’s right,” Tlaib replied, smiling.

A third Democrat, Rep. Al GreenAlexander (Al) N. GreenDem to Trump official: ‘White babies would not be treated the way these babies of color are being treated’ Tlaib to offer impeachment articles against Trump by end of month The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by the American Academy of HIV Medicine – Next 24 hours critical for stalled funding talks MORE (Texas), has pledged to force another House floor impeachment vote. He forced two procedural votes on impeachment during the 115th Congress when Republicans were in the majority, but neither effort was successful.

Green is scheduled to discuss his next steps on impeachment in an interview with C-SPAN’s “Washington Journal” on Tuesday morning.

Outside of Congress, liberals agitating for Trump’s impeachment, like billionaire activist Tom Steyer, quickly began pushing back on Pelosi.

Steyer’s group, Need to Impeach, has aired television ads and held town halls to pressure Democratic lawmakers on impeachment.

“Speaker Pelosi thinks ‘he’s just not worth it?’ Well, is defending our legal system ‘worth it?’ Is holding the President accountable for his crimes and cover-ups ‘worth it?’ Is doing what’s right ‘worth it?’ Or shall America just stop fighting for our principles and do what’s politically convenient?” Steyer said in a statement on Monday.

Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill have largely sought to tamp down the issue, arguing that lawmakers should take a wait-and-see approach as special counsel Robert MuellerRobert Swan MuellerSasse: US should applaud choice of Mueller to lead Russia probe MORE and congressional committees conduct their investigations.

Pelosi has long attempted to downplay talk of impeachment, calling it a “gift” to Republicans. She has maintained a consistent view on the subject since reclaiming the Speaker’s gavel, arguing it would have to be clear-cut and bipartisan.

“If there’s to be grounds for impeachment of President Trump — and I’m not seeking those grounds — that would have to be so clearly bipartisan in terms of acceptance of it before I think we should go down any impeachment path,” Pelosi told USA Today in an interview published on the first day of the new Congress in early January.

And in an interview around the same time with NBC’s “Today,” Pelosi stressed that “we have to wait and see what happens with the Mueller report.”

“We shouldn’t be impeaching for a political reason,” she added.

Cohen’s hearing late last month before the House Oversight Committee, in which he testified that Trump was directly engaged in bank fraud and involved in a scheme to silence women who alleged they had affairs with Trump more than a decade ago, gave new momentum to impeachment proponents.

Rep. Carolyn MaloneyCarolyn Bosher MaloneyDems feel growing pressure on impeachment Pelosi brushes off impeachment talk after Cohen testimony Dem rep says Cohen hearing ‘could lead to impeachment’ MORE (D-N.Y.), a member of the Oversight panel, said she felt the hearing “ possibly could lead to impeachment.”

But Pelosi declined to wade into the debate, calling it a “divisive issue in our country.”

“I’m not going into that,” she told reporters the day after Cohen’s public testimony.

Instead, she and other party leaders have fixed their attention on ramping up investigations into Trump.

The House Intelligence Committee has spoken with Cohen behind closed doors in recent weeks and is scheduled to interview a Russian-American businessman at the end of the month about plans for a Trump Tower in Moscow.

Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee earlier this month launched a sprawling investigation into the president’s administration, campaign and business, sending document requests to 81 individuals and entities.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold NadlerJerrold (Jerry) Lewis NadlerPresident Trump should not underestimate Jerry Nadler House heads down wrong path to impeachment with investigations Tlaib to join protest calling for Trump impeachment MORE (D-N.Y.), whose committee would oversee any impeachment proceedings, said at the time that the probe is part of congressional oversight responsibilities, adding that Congress remained “far from” impeachment.

“We are going to be the check and the balance,” Nadler told CNN the same day he issued document requests. “We are going to find out, we are going to lay out the facts for the American people.”

Updated at 6:52 p.m.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/433547-pelosi-says-impeaching-trump-just-not-worth-it

BERLIN—The Trump administration has told the German government it would limit intelligence sharing with Berlin if Huawei Technologies Co. is allowed to build Germany’s next-generation mobile-internet infrastructure.

In a letter to the country’s economics minister, U.S. Ambassador to Germany Richard A. Grenell wrote allowing the participation of Huawei or other Chinese equipment vendors in the 5G project would mean the U.S. won’t be able to maintain the same level of cooperation with German security agencies.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/drop-huawei-or-see-intelligence-sharing-pared-back-u-s-tells-germany-11552314827

Algeria‘s President Abdelaziz Bouteflika has said he will not seek a fifth term and delayed the country’s presidential polls amid mass protests against his reelection bid. 

In a message carried by the official APS news agency on Monday, the 82-year-old also said the elections would follow a national conference on political and constitutional reform to be carried out by the end of 2019.

“There will be no presidential election on April 18,” he said in reference to the scheduled date of the vote, adding that he was responding to a “pressing demand that you have been numerous to make”. 


The ailing leader, who has been confined to a wheelchair since suffering a stroke in 2013, said a government reshuffle would also take place soon.

“Even if this is a beautiful victory for the Algerian people and the gesture was there, I do not believe that the entire regime and its system is going to collapse,” Dalia Ghanem Yazbeck, a resident scholar at the Carnegie Middle East Center, told Al Jazeera.

“This is a regime that is composed of different strata and circles of power. You have the [ruling party] FLN apparatchik, you have the bureaucracy, political and military leadership and you have business tycoons,” she added.

According to APS, Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia resigned on Monday and was replaced by Interior Minister Noureddine Bedoui. Ramtane Lamamra was named deputy prime minister, a position that did not exist before.

The dramatic developments followed weeks of mass demonstrations against Bouteflika’s plan to extend his 20-year rule.

‘All eyes on the army’

Amel Boubekeur, a research fellow at the Paris-based School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences, said Monday’s announcement was only the beginning. 


“All eyes are on the army now. Is the army going to let new protests to happen next Friday?” Boubekeur told Al Jazeera.

“With Bouteflika aside, the army is going to have its say as to what kind of position they will accept.

“Now it seems the regime of Bouteflika is done, but [the question is] are we going to get back the state civilly without … any pressure on all these people who have been using the state for their interest for so long?”

‘Bouteflika’s system is over’ 

A veteran of the country’s war of independence against colonial France, Bouteflika has seen his popularity wane in recent years as a result of his deteriorating health. 

Massive protests began on February 22 to denounce Bouteflika’s plans to extend his rule in the upcoming polls.

On March 3, after his campaign manager officially registered Bouteflika’s candidacy, the president tried to appease protesters by offering to hold a national dialogue conference, changethe constitution and hold a vote within a year of his reelection in which he promised not to take part. 

The promises, however, failed to quell public anger, galvanising discontent among different sectors, particularly students and other young people.

Some long-time allies of Bouteflika, including members of the FLN party, expressed support for the protesters, revealing cracks within a ruling elite long seen as invincible.


In the clearest indication yet that the generals sympathise with protesters, the chief of staff said on Sunday that the military and the people had a united vision of the future, state TV reported. Lieutenant General Gaid Salah did not mention the unrest.

“Bouteflika’s system is over,” said a commentator on Ennahar, which is close to the president’s inner circle.

In response to Monday’s announcement, Soufiane Djilali, leader of the opposition Jil Jadid party, said Bouteflika could not stay in power until late 2019. 

“The first round has been won. The mobilisation on the streets must not stop. There can be no question of the current presidency continuing until the end of 2019! Zero confidence,” Djilali wrote on Twitter. 


Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/03/algeria-bouteflika-delays-elections-seek-term-190311174206302.html

As the investigation continues into the fatal crash of a 737 Max 8 in Ethiopia on Sunday, regulators in China and Indonesia are grounding the planes, and some airlines in other countries are voluntarily pulling their fleets from service.

In the United States, the Federal Aviation Administration, which certified the latest version of Boeing’s best-selling jet as airworthy in 2017, has not taken that step despite mounting questions about the plane’s safety record.

Robert W. Mann, an airline industry consultant in Port Washington, N.Y., described what a grounding entails and the factors regulators consider when making the decision to order one. His responses have been condensed and edited for clarity.

A grounding occurs when the relevant safety regulator (the F.A.A. in the United States, or the European Aviation Safety Agency in Europe) removes the airworthiness certificate for a certain kind of plane. Effectively that makes those airplanes unusable in that jurisdiction, and also in other jurisdictions that have accepted a particular regulator’s authority.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/11/business/737-grounding-airplane.html

President Trump kicked off a new battle with Congress on Monday by releasing his fiscal 2020 budget plan seeking billions more in funding for a border wall and controversial work requirements for Americans collecting a variety of welfare benefits.

Both proposals are sure to face resistance from Democrats, especially coming off a partial shutdown triggered by a border wall dispute that only ended when Trump declared a national emergency over immigration — a step being litigated in the courts and challenged in Congress. The requests are part of the president’s $4.7 trillion budget plan.

Escalating Trump’s pursuit of wall funding, the White House in the new budget requested an additional $8.6 billion to build the wall along the U.S.-Mexico border—seeking $5 billion from Congress, plus $3.6 billion from the military construction budget, for fiscal 2020.

TRUMP TO REQUEST $8.6 BILLION IN WALL FUNDING IN ‘TOUGH’ BUDGET REQUEST, SETTING UP CONGRESSIONAL SHOWDOWN

Meanwhile, the budget aims to implement new welfare requirements — namely, that Americans 18-65 years old work at least 20 hours a week in a job, a job training program or a community service program to secure a range of benefits and aid.

According to the administration, the work requirement would apply to federal programs like food stamps, Medicaid, and federal housing, but would come with a hardship exemption. Last year, the administration opened the door for states to impose work requirements for Medicaid recipients. This part of the budget proposal would bring those work requirements to the federal level.

The proposal would represent an expansion of work requirements, though some already are in place. For the past several administrations, able-bodied recipients of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps) have mostly had to work at least 80 hours a month — while recipients of traditional welfare known as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) have also faced work requirements.

The budget, meanwhile, projects a $1.1 trillion deficit for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, but also calls for deep cuts to domestic programs.

“In the last two years, President Trump and his Administration have prioritized reining in reckless Washington spending. The Budget that we have presented to Congress and the American people…embodies fiscal responsibility and takes aim at Washington’s waste, fraud, and abuse,” Office of Management and Budget Acting Director Russ Vought said in a statement.

“Our national debt nearly doubled under the previous Administration and now stands at more than $22 trillion,” he continued. “This Budget shows that we can return to fiscal sanity without halting our economic resurgence while continuing to invest in critical priorities.”

The budget also includes a national paid family leave proposal and seeks money to establish the Space Force as a new branch of the military, while sharply curbing spending on domestic safety-net programs. The outline includes a total of $2.7 trillion in nondefense spending cuts and the administration says the proposal would put the federal government on track to balance the budget by 2034.

The White House’s request for billions of dollars in additional funding for a wall comes as senior Homeland Security officials told Fox News that the administration is preparing for an estimated 180,000 migrants traveling as families to cross the border—either illegally, or claiming asylum—marking a record in family units crossing.

“We want to strengthen legal immigration and welcome more individuals through a merit-based system that enhances our economic vitality and vibrancy of our diverse nation. We also will continue to uphold our humanitarian ideals,” Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said last week during a House hearing. “But illegal immigration is simply spiraling out of control and threatening public safety and national security.”

NIELSEN DECLARES MIGRATION CRISIS ‘SPIRALING OUT OF CONTROL,’ WARNS IT WILL GET ‘EVEN WORSE’

The $8.6 billion would allow the administration to complete more than the promised 722 miles of wall along the border, according to White House officials. The funding comes on top of the billions Trump is working to shift from military accounts after declaring a national emergency last month. The emergency declaration came after Congress blocked Trump’s original request for $5.7 billion for construction of the wall. That denial sparked the longest partial shutdown of the federal government in U.S. history.

Democrats, though, continue to argue that an emergency at the border is “non-existent,” and promised to block the proposal to build the wall again.

“President Trump hurt millions of Americans and caused widespread chaos when he recklessly shut down the government to try to get his expensive and ineffective wall, which he promised would be paid for by Mexico,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a statement.

“Congress refused to fund his wall and he was forced to admit defeat and reopen the government. The same thing will repeat itself if he tries this again. We hope he learned his lesson,” they said, adding that the funding would be better put to use toward domestic programs like “education and workforce development.”

The administration is expecting pushback on this “tough” budget, according to White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow.

“I would just say that the whole issue of the wall, of border security, is of paramount importance,” Kudlow said on “Fox News Sunday. “We have a crisis down there. I think the president has made that case very effectively.”

Trump also proposed $750 billion for defense, representing a 5 percent increase, while cutting non-defense discretionary spending by 5 percent below the cap. The budget will also increase requests for some agencies, while reducing others to reflect those priorities. For example, the 2020 budget seeks to reduce funding for the Environmental Protection Agency.

Budgets are mainly seen as blueprints for the White House’s priorities and agenda but are often debated and negotiated on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers craft the appropriation bills that eventually fund the government.

And while the budget will suggest it balances in future years, it is also expected to rely on projections for continued economic growth from the tax cuts Trump signed into law in 2017. But there’s no guarantee that would cover the lost tax revenues.

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By proposing spending levels that don’t raise the budget caps, the president is courting a debate with Congress. Lawmakers from both parties have routinely agreed to raise spending caps established by a previous deal years ago to fund the government.

Fox News’ Griff Jenkins, John Roberts, Chris Wallace and The Associated Press contributed to this report.  

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-releases-budget-seeks-billions-more-for-border-wall-and-work-requirements-for-welfare

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Caracas (CNN)Seventeen people have died in Venezuela’s massive power outage, “murdered” by the government of President Nicolas Maduro, opposition leader Juan Guaido alleged Sunday.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/11/americas/venezuela-guaido-maduro-blackout/index.html

    Media captionBig Brexit moment: Will MPs back or bin the PM’s deal?

    Theresa May is heading to Strasbourg for last-ditch talks with senior EU officials aimed at winning MPs’ backing for her Brexit deal.

    She will meet European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker on the eve of the second vote on her deal.

    The BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg said the trip did not guarantee there is a new deal to be signed by both sides.

    But she said sources told her they believe direct talks are the right way to progress at this critical moment.

    Former Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith, a leading Brexiteer, said he believed the two sides were “reaching the point where they are about to have some kind of agreement”.

    The EU has said it is now up to MPs to decide the next steps for Brexit and it remains “committed” to agreeing a deal.

    But earlier in the Commons, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said there had “not been a single change” to the agreement since it was heavily defeated by MPs in January and it was still a “bad deal”.

    Following speculation the vote could be postponed or downgraded, No 10 said the motion to be debated would be published later on Monday – although it gave no details of what it could contain.

    Downing Street said the PM’s focus was “getting on with the work required to allow MPs to support the deal and to bring this stage of the process to an end”.

    The UK is due to leave the EU on 29 March but MPs rejected the withdrawal deal on offer in January and demanded major changes.

    Media captionJeremy Corbyn, on Brexit negotiations: “This is a government in chaos”

    What is the EU saying?

    BBC Brussels reporter Adam Fleming said the mood was “bleak” in Brussels after the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, briefed EU ambassadors on the state of play earlier.

    Adam Fleming said the member states were told that the UK had rejected the EU’s proposed solutions on the backstop because “they wouldn’t get the support of the Cabinet”.

    “There is a widely held view that the UK has not been negotiating in good faith over the last few days,” he said, adding that at least one diplomat had mentioned planning for a “post-Theresa May government”.

    President of the European Parliament, Antonio Tajani, confirmed he would also be meeting Mrs May on Monday evening, tweeting that a no-deal Brexit “must be avoided to protect our citizens and safeguard overall stability”.

    The government has been seeking changes to the Irish backstop, the safety net designed to maintain an open border on the island of Ireland, and only to be used as a last resort.

    But the details of it were a sticking point for many MPs when they voted her deal down in January. They worry that – in its current form – the backstop may leave the UK tied to the EU indefinitely.

    In a statement, the Commission said it had put forward proposals to try to reassure MPs the backstop “if used will apply temporarily”.

    A spokesman said the EU was willing to meet UK negotiators at any time and was “committed to ratifying this deal before 29 March”.

    Media captionIs the UK actually in a crisis over leaving the EU?

    How have MPs reacted?

    Brexit minister Robin Walker has been updating MPs in response to an urgent question from Labour.

    He said the government “absolutely stood by” its commitment to hold Tuesday’s vote and, if the PM’s deal was defeated, subsequent votes by Thursday at the latest on a no-deal exit and extending talks.

    Details of Tuesday’s “meaningful vote” motion will be published by the end of Commons business, expected to be about 22.00 GMT, while Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay will be making a statement before that.

    Labour MP Pat McFadden said any vote had to be on the Brexit deal, as currently constituted, and not a version of the deal ministers might hope to end up with after further talks with the EU.

    And Tory Brexiteer Peter Bone urged the government to delay the vote until MPs had had enough time to scrutinise any changes to the deal.


    What could happen this week?

    • Theresa May’s deal to face a “meaningful vote” in Parliament on Tuesday
    • If it’s rejected, a further vote has been promised for Wednesday on whether the UK should leave without a deal
    • If that no-deal option is rejected, MPs could get a vote on Thursday on whether to request a delay to Brexit from the EU.

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    Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-47530505

    Authorities have seized the biggest shipment of cocaine recovered at the ports of New York and New Jersey in almost 25 years.

    The massive bust Feb. 28 at the Port of New York/Newark in Elizabeth came after authorities checked a shipping container entering the country. They found 60 packages containing 3,200 pounds of a white powdery substance that proved to be cocaine, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a statement Monday.

    An examination of a shipping container entering the United States revealed sixty packages containing a white powdery substance that field-tested positive for cocaine.DHS NY

    The seizure, which has an estimated street value of $77 million, is the biggest cocaine bust at the ports since 1994 when about 6,600 pounds were seized, according to a CBP spokesman.

    The container was recovered from a ship that originated in South America, the spokesman said.

    Customs officers turned the drugs over to federal Homeland Security officials for investigation.

    Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/authorities-make-largest-cocaine-seizure-n-y-area-port-25-n981736

    <!– –>

    New developments due this week in a handful of criminal cases connected to special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe could help sketch a more detailed picture of the high-profile, yet highly secretive, investigation.

    President Donald Trump‘s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, could receive more than a decade in cumulative prison time after his second and final sentencing hearing. Another Trump campaign leader, Manafort’s former longtime aide Rick Gates, will reveal whether he is still providing information to the probe. And Trump’s first national security advisor, Michael Flynn, will give a status update to the judge who had previously accused him of arguably selling out his own country.

    Two deadlines are also set this week for Republican political operative Roger Stone, among the most recent of Trump’s associates to be hit with charges in Mueller’s probe of Russian meddling, and possible Trump campaign collusion, during the 2016 election. Before new details about his upcoming trial can be hashed out, Stone’s attorneys will have to explain how the rerelease of his book, “The Myth of Russian Collusion,” squares with his strict gag order in the case.

    Mueller’s busy week arrives amid persistent speculation that the investigation may be nearing its conclusion. Lawmakers of both parties on Capitol Hill have called for the summary findings of the investigation to be made public without redactions.

    Since the start of the investigation, Trump has denied any wrongdoing and has decried the probe as a “witch hunt.”

    Here’s what’s coming up this week:

    Paul Manafort

    Manafort, 69, was already sentenced last week to less than four years in prison in a case brought by Mueller’s prosecutors in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia. But he will be sentenced by another judge Wednesday in Washington, D.C., district court.

    Some legal experts predict that that judge, Amy Berman Jackson, will be more likely to give Manafort a harsher sentence than the judge in the Virginia case, T.S. Ellis, who had previously expressed his displeasure with the special counsel’s legal tactics.

    So-called statutory maximum rules set a 10-year cap on the prison sentence Jackson can impose in Manafort’s case. Mueller’s prosecutors, who suffered a bruising defeat after failing to secure a lengthy prison term for Manafort in Virginia, may argue in D.C. that Manafort’s two sentences should be served consecutively, rather than simultaneously.

    Many legal experts were shocked by Manafort’s relatively light first prison sentence of 47 months — a length of time significantly below the 19-to-24 years suggested by federal guidelines. Manafort was convicted on eight criminal counts including bank fraud and tax fraud, which mostly related to work he had done for a pro-Russia political party years before he joined Trump’s campaign.

    Ellis had previously accused Mueller of levying the finance charges against Manafort in order to pressure him into cooperating with the Russian interference probe. The judge had also taken a hostile tone toward Mueller’s team before and during the trial.

    Jackson, in contrast, had ordered Manafort jailed pending trial after Mueller accused him of tampering with potential witnesses. Manafort has been detained in an Alexandria jail since June.

    “I don’t believe Judge Berman Jackson will make any of the statements Judge Ellis did regarding the special counsel’s motivations,” former federal prosecutor Anthony Capozzolo told CNBC. “I thought Judge Ellis’ comments were perplexing and confounding.”

    Richard Gates

    Gates, who testified against his former business partner Manafort at trial last summer and has cooperated extensively with the special counsel, will file a joint status report with Mueller on Friday.

    Gates, 46, has had his sentencing on charges of lying to investigators and conspiracy delayed multiple times since he pleaded guilty in early 2018.

    In January, Mueller told the judge that Gates “continues to cooperate with respect to several ongoing investigations, and accordingly the parties do not believe it is appropriate to commence the sentencing process at this time.”

    Michael Flynn

    Prosecutors and Flynn’s attorneys are set to update Judge Emmet Sullivan in a status report Wednesday, where they might decide on whether Flynn is set to be sentenced.

    Flynn’s initial sentencing date in December was pushed off during a dramatic hearing in D.C. federal court, where Sullivan blasted the 60-year-old retired lieutenant general for his crime of lying to investigators about his communications with then-Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak before Trump took office.

    “Arguably, you sold your country out,” Sullivan said at the hearing. The judge had suggested that Flynn could get a lighter sentence if the decision was delayed until after he finished cooperating with Mueller.

    “The court likes to be in a position to say there is nothing else this defendant can to do help the United States of America,” Sullivan said.

    The status of Gates’ and Flynn’s cases could provide one of the strongest indications yet about how near the Russia probe is to completion.

    If their sentencing hearings continue to be adjourned, or if the special counsel says that they are still providing information about ongoing investigations, then “It’s likely that Mueller’s investigation will be continuing for some time,” Capozzolo said.

    Roger Stone

    Lawyers for Stone, 66, were ordered by Jackson in D.C. to explain by Monday Stone’s efforts to comply with his gag order, as well as shed light on “unexplained inconsistencies” regarding some statements made to the court.

    The gag order on Stone, a self-described political dirty trickster, had been strengthened after he posted an image on Instagram showing Jackson’s face next to the cross hair of a rifle’s scope.

    Following that action, Jackson learned that Stone was rereleasing his book, “The Myth of Russian Collusion,” which criticizes Mueller.

    Jackson also asked the defense attorneys to provide a list of other information, including records related to Stone’s book deal.

    If Jackson decides that Stone has disobeyed her gag order, she could revoke his $250,000 signature release bond and order him held without bail until his trial on charges of lying to Congress and witness tampering.

    That all precedes a status conference on Thursday morning, where the parties in the case are expected to hash out details related to Stone’s trial, which is yet to be scheduled.

    “I think Stone’s been playing with fire for a while,” said Carl Tobias, a law professor and federal courts expert at the University of Richmond.

    Jackson “has plenty of discretion to do whatever she thinks is necessary” to keep the trial from being tainted, Tobias said — which could theoretically involve revoking Stone’s bail and sending him to jail pending trial.

    But that “does seem fairly drastic,” Tobias added.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/11/heres-what-to-expect-from-the-mueller-probe-this-week.html

    California authorities have identified the young girl whose body was found in a duffel bag along an equestrian trail last week.

    The girl has been identified as 9-year-old Trinity Love Jones of Los Angeles County, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said Sunday.

    The medical examiner’s office determined that Trinity’s death was a homicide, but the cause of death is being withheld, the sheriff’s department said in a statement.

    Authorities have detained two persons of interest in the case, but did not identify them.

    Trinity’s body was dumped near an equestrian trail in Hacienda Heights sometime on the evening of March 3. It was discovered on the morning of March 5 by Los Angeles County maintenance workers, the LASD said last week.

    The child’s body was found partially inside a black rollaway-type duffel bag, and her upper body was seen protruding from the bag. No obvious signs of trauma were found on her body, the sheriff’s department said last week.

    The LASD had released a composite sketch of Trinity, urging the public to identify the little girl.

    Trinity was wearing gray panda print pants and a pink shirt which read “Future Princess Hero.”

    Source Article from https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/tasneemnashrulla/9-year-old-girl-body-duffel-bag-los-angeles

    The Latest on Ethiopian Airlines crash (all times local):

    5 p.m.

    A Greek man who narrowly missed the Ethiopian Airlines flight that crashed near Addis Ababa on Sunday says he argued with ground staff to try and board after reaching the gate minutes too late.

    “I saw the last passengers going through but the gate had already closed. I complained, in the usual way when that kind of thing happens. But they were very kind and placed me on another flight,” Antonis Mavropoulos told Greece’s private Skai Television, speaking from Nairobi.

    Mavropoulos, who runs a recycling company and lives in Athens, was traveling to Kenya to attend an environmental conference.

    “I’m slowly coming to terms with what happened and how close it came. On the other hand, I’m also very upset — I’m shattered — for those who were lost,” he said in the interview Monday. “To be honest, I didn’t get much sleep last night.”

    Mavropoulos put his survival down to luck.

    “I didn’t check my suitcase because I knew the gap between connecting flights was tight. If I had checked the bag in, they would have waited for me,” he said. “This is a very difficult moment — one that can change your life.”

    ___

    4:45 p.m.

    Ethiopia’s state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting Corporate cites the United States ambassador as saying a six-member team of U.S. aviation experts are on their way to the site of Sunday’s crash.

    Ambassador Michael Raynor visited the crash site on Monday. He told the broadcaster that the experts from the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board were expected to arrive at the site on Tuesday.

    He says that “Boeing and Interpol will also assist the Ethiopian government in the investigation. Interpol will assist in identifying the victims.”

    The flight data recorder and voice cockpit recorder have been found.

    ___

    4:35 p.m.

    Ugandan authorities say a senior police officer is among the dead in the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash on Sunday.

    Ugandan police say they are mourning Christine Alalo, who served as police commissioner under the banner of the African Union mission in Somalia.

    The statement calls her “a highly respected member of the force who loved her job.”

    Alalo was returning from a trip to Italy. She is the lone Ugandan who died in the crash. All 157 on board were killed.

    ___

    4:20 p.m.

    A German pastor and an aid worker from Germany are among the victims of the Ethiopian Airlines crash on Sunday.

    The World Council of Churches says Rev. Norman Tendis was traveling to a U.N. environment summit in Nairobi. The 51-year-old worked in Villach, Austria.

    The German development aid organization GIZ confirms that a staffer was on the plane. Spokeswoman Tanja Stumpff tells The Associated Press that the woman was on a business trip.

    Germany’s Foreign Ministry has confirmed that at least five German citizens died in the crash.

    ___

    4:05 p.m.

    Catholic Relief Services announces “with heavy hearts” that four of its Ethiopian colleagues died in Sunday’s plane crash outside Addis Ababa.

    The aid group in a statement says Sara Chalachew, Getnet Alemayehu, Sintayehu Aymeku, and Mulusew Alemu had been traveling to Nairobi for training.

    The four had worked with the organization for as long as a decade. They worked in procurement, logistics and finance.

    All 157 people on board were killed. They came from 35 countries.

    ___

    3:30 p.m.

    There are scenes of agony as members of an association of Ethiopian airline pilots cry uncontrollably for colleagues killed in Sunday’s crash near Addis Ababa.

    Framed photographs of seven crew members sit in chairs at the front of a crowded room.

    One pilot says he had planned to watch a soccer game between Manchester and Arsenal with the flight’s main pilot, Yared Getachew.

    It was Getachew who issued a distress call shortly after takeoff and was told to return. But all contact was lost.

    Another pilot says he flew with Yared several times and said they even lived together before becoming senior pilots.

    ___

    3:15 p.m.

    Pope Francis has sent his condolences to the families of the victims of the plane crash in Ethiopia.

    Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s secretary of state, said in a statement Monday that the pope was sad to learn about the crash and “offers prayers for the deceased from various countries and commends their souls to the mercy of Almighty God.”

    The statement said, “Pope Francis sends heartfelt condolences to their families, and upon all who mourn this tragic loss he invokes the divine blessings of consolation and strength.”

    ___

    3 p.m.

    Shares of Boeing are tumbling before the opening of U.S. markets following the crash in Ethiopia of a Boeing 737 Max 8, the second deadly crash since October.

    All 157 people on board were killed on Sunday. A Lion Air model of the same plane crashed in Indonesia last year, killing 189 people.

    Shares of Boeing Co. plunged more than 9 percent in premarket trading Monday. If that trend holds, it could be one of the company’s worst trading days in about a decade.

    Indonesia and China have grounded all Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft. Ethiopian Airlines and Cayman Airways are doing the same.

    ___

    1:35 p.m.

    Ethiopia’s state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting Corporate reports that the black box has been found from the crashed Ethiopian Airlines plane.

    An airline official, however, tells The Associated Press that the box is partially damaged and that “we will see what we can retrieve from it.”

    The official spoke on condition of anonymity for lack of authorization to speak to the media.

    The plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa on Sunday en route to Nairobi.

    ___

    1:20 p.m.

    China says two United Nations workers were among the eight Chinese nationals killed on the Ethiopian Airlines flight that crashed shortly after takeoff Sunday.

    Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang says the other Chinese passengers included four who were working for a Chinese company and two who had travelled to Ethiopia for “private matters.”

    All 157 people on board the flight to Nairobi died.

    Lu said Chinese President Xi Jinping and other Chinese leaders have sent condolence messages to their Ethiopian counterparts. China has extended condolences to victims’ families.

    China has ordered its airlines to ground their Boeing 737 Max 8 aircrafts by 6 p.m.

    ___

    12:45 p.m.

    The United Nations migration agency said that one of its staffers, German citizen Anne-Katrin Feigl, was on the plane en route to a training course in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya and the plane’s destination.

    Germany’s foreign ministry has officially confirmed that five victims of the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash that killed 157 people were German citizens.

    The ministry said in a statement Monday that it was in contact with the families of the victims. It did not reveal any information on the identity of those who died in the crash Sunday.

    All in all, 35 countries had someone among the 157 people who were killed. All people on board died minutes after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    ___

    12 p.m.

    The U.N. office in Nairobi is joining Ethiopia in mourning the 157 dead in Sunday’s Ethiopian Airlines crash shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    A moment of silence and U.N. flags at half-staff marked the deaths that included several workers with U.N. and affiliated organizations.

    The U.N. resident coordinator in Nairobi, Siddharth Chatterjee, says that “This has taken us by shock. … But it also goes to reinforce the mortality of human life and therefore reinforces the need for humanity.”

    He says U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres sent “a poignant message of condolences to everybody, not just the U.N. staff but the crew of the flight and all other nationalities which were on the plane.”

    People from 35 countries died.

    ___

    10 a.m.

    A spokesman says Ethiopian Airlines has grounded all its Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft as a safety precaution, following the crash of one of its planes in which 157 people were killed.

    Asrat Begashaw said Monday that although it is not yet known what caused the crash on Sunday, the airline decided to ground its remaining four 737 Max 8 planes until further notice as “an extra safety precaution.” Ethiopian Airlines was using five new 737 Max 8 planes and was awaiting delivery of 25 more.

    Begashaw said searching and digging to uncover body parts and aircraft debris will continue. He said forensic experts from Israel have arrived in Ethiopia to help with the investigation.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/the-latest-greek-man-says-he-narrowly-missed-doomed-flight

    The aircraft climbed slowly after its wheels left the ground, then descended about 400 feet, climbed again and then plunged into a rural area. It carved a large crater near the city of Bishoftu, southeast of the capital, according to data supplied by Flightradar24, a Swedish company that tracks flights around the world. The accident killed eight Americans, 18 Canadians, 32 Kenyans and nine Ethiopians.

    Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-fi-ethiopian-crash-20190310-story.html

    In a story March 11 about the Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft after a crash in Ethiopia, The Associated Press reported erroneously that China grounded its models of the same plane for nine hours. China’s aviation authority ordered its airlines to ground their Boeing 737 8 Max jets within nine hours, or by 6 p.m.

    A corrected version of the story is below:

    The Latest: Boeing model grounded in China after crash

    China’s civilian aviation authority has ordered all Chinese airlines to temporarily ground their Boeing 737 Max 8 planes after one of the aircraft crashed in Ethiopia

    ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — The Latest on Ethiopian Airlines crash (all times local):

    6 a.m.

    China’s civilian aviation authority has ordered all Chinese airlines to temporarily ground their Boeing 737 Max 8 planes after one of the aircraft crashed in Ethiopia.

    The Civil Aviation Administration of China said the order is to take effect by 6 p.m. Monday.

    It said the order was taken out of safety concerns because the Ethiopian crash was the second in similar circumstances since an Indonesian crash in October also killed everyone aboard.

    It said further notice would be issued after consultation with the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and Boeing on safety measures taken.

    Eight Chinese nationals were among the 157 people aboard the plane when it crashed Sunday shortly after takeoff.

    ___

    This story has been corrected to say Indonesia crash occurred in October.

    ___

    12:30 a.m.

    The Norwegian Refugee Council says it is “deeply distressed” by the Ethiopian Airlines crash and that two colleagues are missing.

    A statement says the two staffers had been scheduled to travel on the Sunday morning flight from Addis Ababa to Nairobi in neighboring Kenya.

    The statement gives no further details.

    All 157 people on the plane were killed.

    ___

    11:17 p.m.

    The United Nations migration agency says the U.N. and its agencies on Monday will fly flags at half-staff after early indications show 19 employees of U.N.-affiliated organizations died in the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

    A statement says the organizations include World Bank, International Telecommunications Union, the U.N. Environment Program and others.

    The statement also says one of the migration agency’s staffers died. Anne-Katrin Feigl was a German national who was en route to a training course in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya and the plane’s destination.

    All 157 people on board died minutes after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    ___

    11 p.m.

    Nigeria’s foreign affairs ministry says a former ambassador is among the victims of the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

    A statement says Abiodun Oluremi Bashua was a retired career envoy who served in various capacities in Iran, Austria and Ivory Coast.

    It says the ambassador, born in 1951, was a “seasoned U.N. expert” with experience in several United Nations peacekeeping missions in Africa.

    All 157 people died when the plane crashed minutes after taking off from Addis Ababa.

    ___

    10:30 p.m.

    The World Food Program is confirming that two of the eight Italian victims aboard the Ethiopian Airlines jet worked for the Rome-based U.N. agency.

    A WFP spokeswoman identified the victims as Virginia Chimenti and Maria Pilar Buzzetti.

    Another three Italians worked for the Bergamo-based humanitarian agency Africa Tremila: Carlo Spini, his wife Gabriella Viggiani and the treasurer, Matteo Ravasio.

    In addition, Paolo Dieci, a prominent aid advocate with the International Committee for the Development of Peoples, known by its acronym CISP, was killed.

    Also among the Italian dead was Sebastiano Tusa, a noted underwater archaeologist and the Sicilian regional assessor at the Culture Ministry. RAI state television said he was heading to Malindi, Kenya to participate in a UNESCO conference on safeguarding underwater cultural heritage in east Africa, which opens Monday.

    ___

    10:15 p.m.

    A U.N. official says the United Nations expects that about a dozen passengers affiliated with the world organization were on the Ethiopian Airlines jet that crashed outside Addis Ababa killing all 157 people on board, but it could be more.

    The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said Sunday that national delegates who might have been heading to U.N. meetings, including the U.N. Environment Program’s assembly, wouldn’t be included in the count.

    U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said some colleagues were among the victims.

    Earlier, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he is “deeply saddened” by the crash that including U.N. staff members, according to a statement from U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric, who gave no details.

    –By Edith M. Lederer

    ___

    10:10 p.m.

    The father of a British woman named Joanna Toole has told the DevonLive website that he has been informed that she was among the people who died in the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

    Adrian Toole said his 36-year-old daughter Joanna was traveling for her work for the United Nations.

    He told the website she was a fervent environmentalist who had worked on animal welfare issues since she was a child.

    He said “Joanna’s work was not a job, it was her vocation.”

    Adrian Toole said his daughter used to bring home pigeons and rats in need of care and had traveled to the remote Faroe Islands to try to stop whaling there.

    She is one of seven British nationals confirmed to have died in the crash.

    According to her Facebook page, she worked for the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization.

    ___

    9:55 p.m.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he is deeply saddened by the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash that killed 157 people, including 18 Canadians.

    Trudeau said in a statement he joins the international community in mourning the lives of so many. He says the Canadian government is providing consular assistance and working with local authorities to gather further information.

    He said he is reaching out to Kenya’s president and Ethiopia’s prime minister. The flight departed from Addis Ababa and was heading to Nairobi.

    ___

    9:40 p.m.

    The Paris prosecutor’s office has opened an investigation into the Ethiopian Airlines crash because there are French citizens among the 157 killed.

    The prosecutor’s office announced the decision Sunday, without elaborating. It is a standard procedure when French citizens are killed abroad.

    The French government announced that eight French people are among the victims and opened a crisis center for families of victims, but is not releasing the identities. The airline says seven French citizens are among the victims. The reason for the discrepancy isn’t immediately clear in the chaos of the crash aftermath.

    Separately, France’s air accident authority, known as the BEA, said it would likely be involved in the Ethiopian-led investigation because French company Safran jointly manufactured the Boeing jet’s engines along with General Electric.

    ___

    9:25 p.m.

    The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees says “it is with great sadness and shock” that refugee agency colleagues were among the victims of the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash.

    A statement by Filppo Grandi says his office is working to confirm how many colleagues were on board the plane that crashed shortly after taking off from Addis Ababa to Nairobi.

    Both cities are hubs for humanitarian workers.

    The statement also says that “colleagues from the United Nations and other partners were also on board.”

    None of the 157 people on board survived.

    ___

    8:40 p.m.

    The United Nations secretary-general says he is “deeply saddened” by the Ethiopian Airlines crash outside Addis Ababa and sends his sympathies to families of the victims, who include U.N. staff members.

    The statement by the spokesman for Antonio Guterres gives no details on the victims but says the U.N. is working closely with Ethiopian authorities.

    Ethiopian Airlines’ list of 35 nationalities represented by the victims notes that one had a U.N. passport.

    The plane was heading to Nairobi, where a U.N. environment summit starts on Monday.

    ___

    8:25 p.m.

    Ethiopia’s House of People’s Representatives has declared Monday a national day of mourning for all 157 victims of Sunday’s crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s office says the cause of the crash will be “communicated promptly to the public as updates come in.”

    The prime minister visited the crash site earlier Sunday, as did the airline’s CEO. The plane had been en route to Nairobi.

    __

    7:55 p.m.

    Identities of the 157 victims of the Ethiopian Airlines crash continue to emerge, along with condolences.

    Many of the 35 countries that had victims are hurrying to confirm deaths and inform families.

    The Russian Embassy in Ethiopia says the airline has identified the three Russians on board as Yekaterina Polyakova, Alexander Polyakov and Sergei Vyalikov. News reports identify the first two as husband and wife. State news agency RIA-Novosibirsk cites a consular official in Nairobi as saying all three were tourists.

    Serbia’s foreign ministry confirms that a citizen was among those killed but gives no details. Local media identify the man as 54-year-old Djordje Vdovic. The Vecernje Novosti daily reports that he worked at the World Food Program.

    ___

    7:50 p.m.

    An Italian aid group that partners with UNICEF in northern Africa says one of its founders, Paolo Dieci, is among the dead in the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

    The International Committee for the Development of Peoples, known by its acronym CISP, in a statement said “the world of international cooperation has lost one of its most brilliant advocates and Italian civil society has lost a precious point of reference.”

    UNICEF Italia sent a tweet of condolences over Dieci’s death. It noted that CISP was a UNICEF partner in Kenya, Libya and Algeria.

    In all eight Italians were killed Sunday. Three belonged to the Bergamo-based humanitarian group Africa Tremila and one was the Sicily regional assessor to the culture ministry, officials said.

    ___

    7:40 p.m.

    Germany’s foreign ministry says “we must unfortunately assume that German citizens are also among the victims of the plane crash in Ethiopia.”

    Ethiopian Airlines’ list of nationalities for 150 of the 157 people on board included five from Germany. The plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa en route to Nairobi on Sunday morning.

    German officials didn’t say how many Germans were believed to have been on board.

    The ministry said German diplomats “are in close contact with Ethiopian Airlines and the Ethiopian authorities to get confirmed information as soon as possible.”

    ___

    7:35 p.m.

    A prominent Kenyan soccer official is believed to be among the 157 people killed in the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash.

    Hussein Swaleh, the former secretary general of the Kenyan soccer federation, was due to return home on the flight after working as the match commissioner in an African Champions League game in Egypt on Friday.

    The plane was destined for the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, but crashed minutes after takeoff Sunday in Addis Ababa.

    Kenyan soccer federation president Nick Mwendwa said Swaleh was one of the 32 Kenyan nationals on the flight. Mwendwa wrote on Twitter: “Sad day for football.”

    ___

    7:25 p.m.

    The United States confirms that Americans are among the victims of the Ethiopian Airlines crash outside Addis Ababa on Sunday morning.

    A brief State Department statement says U.S. embassies in Addis Ababa and Nairobi are working with Ethiopia’s government and Ethiopian Airlines “to offer all possible assistance.”

    The airline has said eight Americans were killed. All of the 157 people on board died.

    The State Department says it will directly contact victims’ family members and that “out of respect for the privacy of the families, we won’t have any additional comments about the victims.”

    ___

    7:10 p.m.

    Ethiopia’s state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting reports that the number of Ethiopian victims in Sunday’s plane crash is 18 and their families have been notified.

    Ethiopian Airlines had said nine Ethiopian passengers were killed. This new total includes the flight crew.

    People from 35 countries were on the flight. All 157 people were killed.

    It is not yet clear what caused the crash of the new Boeing 737 MAX 8 plane six minutes after it took off en route for Nairobi.

    ___

    7:05 p.m.

    British officials have confirmed that seven British nationals have died in the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    British ambassador to Ethiopia Alastair McPhail says in a video posted by the Foreign Office that embassy staff is working to get details.

    The victims have not been named. The airline says all 157 on board were killed.

    McPhail expressed condolences to the victims and urged people worried about loved ones to follow the Foreign Office’s social media channels.

    ___

    7 p.m.

    Austrian media report that three local doctors were among the passengers on board an Ethiopian Airlines plane that crashed near Addis Ababa shortly after taking off for Nairobi.

    The Austria Press Agency quotes a spokesman for the country’s foreign ministry, Peter Guschelbauer, saying the doctors were between 30 and 40 years old and worked at hospitals in Linz.

    Guschelbauer, who couldn’t immediately be reached for comment, told APA that the doctors were traveling to Zanzibar for professional purposes.

    ___

    6:55 p.m.

    A Slovak lawmaker says his wife, daughter and son were killed in the crash of a passenger plane in Ethiopia.

    Anton Hrnko with the ultra-nationalist Slovak National Party says he is announcing “in deep grief” that his wife Blanka, son Martin and daughter Michala were among the 157 people killed outside Addis Ababa on Sunday morning.

    President Andrej Kiska offered his condolences to Hrnko and the relatives of the fourth Slovak victim.

    ___

    6:50 p.m.

    The mayor of the northern Italian city of Bergamo says three members of a local humanitarian organization, Africa Tremila, were aboard the Ethiopian Airlines jet that crashed after takeoff, killing all aboard.

    Bergamo Mayor Giorgio Gori said in a Facebook post that the president of the aid group, Carlo Spini, his wife and the treasurer, Matteo Ravasio, had been en route to South Sudan.

    The foreign ministry says in all eight Italians were among the dead. They included the Sicilian regional assessor to the Culture Ministry, Sebastiano Tusa, according to the Sicilian regional president.

    In a tweet, Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte said it was a day of pain for everyone: “We are united with the relatives of the victims and offer them our heartfelt thoughts.”

    ___

    6:40 p.m.

    Ethiopian Airlines says Ethiopian authorities, manufacturer Boeing and other international stakeholders will collaborate on an investigation into the cause of Sunday morning’s crash after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    A new statement by the airline also says families of the 157 victims have been contacted and that remains will be returned to them once identified.

    The cause of the crash is not yet known. The new Boeing 737-8 MAX plane had been en route to Nairobi. Victims came from 35 countries.

    ___

    6:30 p.m.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other senior German officials are sending Ethiopia their condolences following news of the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane destined for Nairobi.

    Merkel’s spokeswoman Martina Fietz said Sunday on Twitter that the chancellor expressed her “deeply felt condolences and sympathy for the relatives of the victims.”

    Authorities in Ethiopia said all 157 people on board were killed in the crash. Five Germans were among the victims, said authorities.

    German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier likewise issued statements of condolence.

    Maas said Germany’s embassy in Addis Ababa was in close contact with Ethiopian authorities.

    ___

    6:20 p.m.

    As sunset approaches at the site of an Ethiopian Airlines crash, searchers and a bulldozer pick through the scattered remains of the plane.

    No one survived the crash. Authorities say 157 people were on board, with 35 nationalities represented.

    Red Cross and other personnel are scouring a vast area for remains and pieces of the plane, which disintegrated with no large segments remaining.

    It is not yet clear what caused the crash. The jetliner, a new Boeing 737-8 MAX, showed unstable vertical speed after takeoff, air traffic monitor Flightradar 24 said in a Twitter post.

    ___

    5:35 p.m.

    Ethiopian Airlines has issued a new list of crash victims that now includes German, Austrian, Russian, Swedish, Spanish, Israeli citizens and others.

    The new list shows 35 nationalities among the dead after the plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa en route to Nairobi on Sunday morning. In all, 157 people were on board.

    Five Germans were killed and three each from Russia, Austria and Sweden. Spain, Israel Morocco and Poland each lost two citizens.

    Countries losing one citizen were Belgium, Djibouti, Indonesia, Ireland, Mozambique, Norway, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Somalia, Serbia, Togo, Uganda, Yemen, Nepal and Nigeria.

    ___

    5:15 p.m.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirms that two Israeli citizens were among the 157 people killed in an Ethiopian Airlines crash outside Addis Ababa.

    Netanyahu’s office said he spoke with Israeli envoys who briefed him with details. Netanyahu says in a statement that “our hearts go out to their families.”

    More than 30 nationalities were among the victims.

    Meanwhile, Slovakia’s foreign ministry confirms authorities’ earlier reports that four Slovak nationals were killed.

    And a Dutch foreign ministry spokeswoman says embassy staff are working to confirm that five citizens from the Netherlands are among the dead.

    ___

    5:10 p.m.

    The Ethiopian Airlines plane that crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa on Sunday morning likely was carrying people set to attend a major United Nations environmental conference in Nairobi.

    Authorities have said more than 30 nationalities were among the dead.

    The U.N. Environment Assembly is set to begin on Monday in Kenya’s capital, where the plane was headed.

    French President Emmanuel Macron and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres are among those expected. U.N. Environment has said more than 4,700 heads of state, ministers, business leaders and others would attend.

    ___

    4:50 p.m.

    Ethiopia’s prime minister has visited the site of an Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed all 157 people thought to be on board.

    Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s office says he expressed his “profound sadness” and ordered a full investigation and “all required support” to the families of the dead.

    More than 30 nationalities were among the victims.

    The plane en route to Nairobi crashed six minutes after takeoff from Addis Ababa. The cause of the crash of the new Boeing 737-8 MAX is not yet known.

    Images from the crash site show little left of the plane.

    ___

    4:20 p.m.

    The new Boeing 737-8 MAX plane that crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa on Sunday morning was one of 30 purchased and being delivered to the rapidly expanding airline.

    A Boeing statement in July noted the delivery of the first plane.

    The Ethiopian Airlines CEO says the plane that crashed with 157 people thought to be on board had been delivered in mid-November.

    It is not yet clear what caused the crash just six minutes after takeoff en route to Nairobi. The CEO says the pilot sent out a distress call and was given clearance to return.

    ___

    3:30 p.m.

    The Ethiopian Airlines CEO and Kenya’s transport minister say Canadians, Chinese, Americans and others are among the many nationalities among the victims of Sunday morning’s deadly plane crash after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    Authorities earlier said 32 Kenyans and nine Ethiopians were killed. Now they add 18 Canadians; eight each from China, the United States and Italy; seven each from France and Britain; six from Egypt; five from the Netherlands and four each from India and Slovakia.

    The airline has said 157 people were thought to be on board.

    It is not yet clear what caused the crash of new Boeing 737-8 MAX plane shortly after takeoff from Bole Airport en route to Kenya’s capital, Nairobi.

    ___

    2:45 p.m.

    Ethiopian Airlines has published a photo that appears to show its CEO standing amid the wreckage of the plane that crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

    Little of the plane can be seen in the freshly churned earth.

    The airline’s social media post says that “Tewolde Gebremariam, who is at the accident scene now, regrets to confirm that there are no survivors. He expresses his profound sympathy and condolences to the families and loved ones of passengers and crew who lost their lives in this tragic accident.”

    The airline has said 157 people — 149 passengers and 8 crew — are thought to have been on board the flight that crashed six minutes after takeoff en route to Nairobi.

    It is not yet clear what caused the crash.

    ___

    1:50 p.m.

    A spokesman for Ethiopian Airlines says the among the dead in the crash Sunday are 32 Kenyans and 17 Ethiopians. Asrat Begashaw said that 31 other nationalities were also among those on board the new Boeing 737-8 MAX plane that crashed, killing all the 157 people thought to be on the flight.

    1:35 p.m.

    Ethiopia’s state broadcaster says all passengers on the Ethiopian Airlines plane that crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa are dead.

    The airline has said 157 people were thought to be on board the flight to Nairobi on Sunday morning.

    Broadcaster EBC says the passengers included 33 nationalities.

    The cause of the crash of the new Boeing 737-8 MAX plane is not immediately known.

    ___

    1:10 p.m.

    Records show that the Ethiopian Airlines passenger plane that crashed shortly after takeoff Sunday morning from Addis Ababa en route to Nairobi was a new one.

    The Planespotters civil aviation database shows that the plane, a Boeing 737-8 MAX, was delivered to Ethiopian Airlines in mid-November.

    The Ethiopian Airlines’ statement says the 737-8 MAX crashed six minutes after takeoff, with 157 people thought to be on board.

    The cause of the crash is not immediately known.

    ___

    11:45 a.m.

    Ethiopian Airlines says it believes 149 passengers and eight crew members were on board a plane that crashed six minutes after taking off from Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, on a flight to Nairobi.

    A statement from the airline on Sunday morning said the Boeing 737 crashed around Bishoftu, or Debre Zeit, some 50 kilometers (31 miles) south of the capital, shortly after taking off at 8:38 a.m. local time.

    The airline statement said “search and rescue operations are in progress and we have no confirmed information about survivors or any possible casualties.”

    The Ethiopian prime minister’s office in a separate, earlier statement offered condolences to families.

    ___

    11:33 a.m.

    The Ethiopian prime minister’s office says an Ethiopian Airlines plane has crashed on its way to Nairobi, with deaths reported.

    The office issued a statement Sunday morning saying the Boeing 737 was on a regularly scheduled flight when it crashed. The statement gave no details.

    A spokesman for the airline confirmed the plane crashed while heading from Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa. It is not yet clear where the crash occurred. The airline has not issued a statement.

    The state-owned Ethiopian Airlines calls itself Africa’s largest carrier and has ambitions of becoming the gateway to the continent.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/travel/correction-ethiopia-plane-crash-the-latest-story

    Black body bags were spread across the red sands near Bishoftu, Ethiopia, on Monday as word of the crash traveled to the families of 157 victims in 35 countries.

    Investigators have yet to locate the flight data recorder, the so-called black box, which they hope will shed light on what brought down a new plane on a clear, sunny day.

    A list of the dead released by Ethiopian Airlines included passengers from China, the United States, Saudi Arabia, Nepal, Israel, India and Somalia. Kenya lost 32 citizens. Canada lost 18.

    The flight was intended to fly from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to Nairobi, Kenya. Many of the victims worked for the United Nations and were set to attend a conference on the environment in Nairobi on Monday.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/11/world/boeing-737-max-air-crash-ethiopia.html

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    (CNN)Early warning signs are flashing for President Donald Trump on some of his core arguments on immigration, the economy and North Korea that are central to his 2020 re-election message.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/11/politics/donald-trump-2020-immigration-economy-budget-north-korea/index.html