Flowers are left at a makeshift memorial outside of the Tops market on May 15 in Buffalo, N.Y.

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Flowers are left at a makeshift memorial outside of the Tops market on May 15 in Buffalo, N.Y.

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Ask just about anyone over the age of 30 in Buffalo’s East Side neighborhood and they’ll know the day the Tops grocery store on Jefferson Avenue opened.

It was July 2003.

“I remember it was a big deal,” Tommy McClam said. He said he was young when it opened. McClam is now the senior director of boys and men of color initiative within the Say Yes to Education organization.

For a long time it served as far more than just a grocery store.

“It was the village watering hole,” McClam said. “It was more than just a Tops grocery store. It was a lot bigger than that for that community.”

That sense of community was shattered last weekend when a gunman killed 10 members of this neighborhood. The store has been shut ever since, and the company said it may be some time before it reopens.

Tops Supermarket said in a statement Wednesday that they “are committed to opening up this community store as soon as we possibly can.”

But the company said it’s unable to commit to a specific timeline for reopening due to the ongoing police investigation, not knowing the condition of the store, and wanting to give staff and the community time.

That’s a tough pill to swallow for many people who relied on that store. Residents fought for nearly a decade to get a full service grocery store opened on the East Side — an area that is otherwise a food desert.

People gathered outside of Tops market embrace on Sunday.

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People gathered outside of Tops market embrace on Sunday.

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A Tops press release from when the store opened said then that the 29,000 square foot store was the “first full-scale supermarket to serve the Jefferson Avenue community in several decades.”

According to that press release, this store was the first such grocery store since an A&P market occupied the same corner during the 1960s.

“To the people who live near the Tops supermarket that opened last week on Jefferson Avenue, the rainbows of fresh produce and aisles stocked with rows of cans, boxes and bags are a testament that there’s hope for a better future in their community,” reads a story from The Buffalo News a few days after the store opened.

It took a lot to get that Tops built, pastor Tim Newkirk told NPR. He is a local historian of sorts, as well as a pastor for GYC Ministries. He says he was part of an effort to get the market built.

“We had rallied together, signed petitions, got the community leaders and spiritual leaders involved” in order to press the city officials and Tops to open a market on Jefferson, he said.

“It was a strong, but well worth the fight,” he said.

An archived article from the Orleans Times Herald said the project took two years to complete and was delayed because regulatory approvals took so long.

When construction began, Newkirk said the people building the store were workers of the neighborhood.

“To have our people working on that very site, it gave a wholesomeness to our community, it gave a sense of value, a sense of worth, because we were the ones to put the bricks down, the mortar down,” he said.

The attack on the elders of the neighborhood and their store has fractured that feeling, Newkirk said.

“It knocked down the morale and the wholesomeness of a vibrant, thriving African American community.”

Less than a week after the attack, neighbors are unsure what they make of the idea of reopening. For many, it’s just too soon to consider.

Others want the store to reopen to prevent the return of a food desert. They also believe reopening will be fighting back against the gunman who sought to hurt them.

Pictures of the 10 people killed in last Saturday’s shooting at Tops market are set up before the start of a vigil on Tuesday. If Tops does reopen, one idea is to make a piece of the store a memorial to the victims.

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Pictures of the 10 people killed in last Saturday’s shooting at Tops market are set up before the start of a vigil on Tuesday. If Tops does reopen, one idea is to make a piece of the store a memorial to the victims.

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Larry Stitts, owner of Golden Cup Coffee, proclaimed during a vigil this week that the Tops will reopen.

“We’re not gonna let Jefferson die. We’re gonna build it up. We’re not gonna let that Tops close. We’re gonna open them doors!” he shouted to applause from the crowd in attendance.

Others are not so sure they will ever go back inside the store.

“That’s sacred ground. A lot of people lost their lives there for no reason at all,” said Michael King, a member of the Buffalo Peacemakers. “So I think they should just get rid of that and just build a new supermarket.”

In a meeting with some of the kids he works with, McClam heard some share an idea to make one piece of the store a memorial to the victims.

They are considering proposing a mural for one wall with plaques made out to each of the victims. On top of that, the kids talked about creating a scholarship in the names of each of the victims.

“Then at that point, Tops doesn’t become a place of sadness, a place of mourning, but a place of life,” he said.

Franchelle Parker, the executive director of Open Buffalo, said this may be an opportunity for improvements to be made to the store. Her office for Open Buffalo is just down the road from Tops. She and others would often run in to grab last minute items for events.

Parker, and others that spoke to NPR, said though the grocery store was important, it often didn’t have the best quality produce and regularly ran out of items.

Parker said she’s heard a lot of gripes from people who think the store definitely needs more options if it does reopen.

At this early stage, with the shock and raw emotions from the immense loss of Saturday’s attack still so fresh, she isn’t sure if she will go back to the store if it were to reopen.

“I don’t know how I feel going back into this location,” she said. “So we need something, but I don’t know if this current structure is it.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/05/21/1099826247/tops-market-history-buffalo-shooting

Lt. Derrick Carroll, a spokesman for the Michigan State Police, said power outages continued in parts of Gaylord on Saturday and a curfew would remain in place that night. Both people known to have died were in their 70s, he said. One of them was found overnight Friday during a search of the mobile home park with a cadaver dog. Crews continued to look on Saturday for a person who was reported missing.

For those like Jasmine Vandenbrook, whose mobile home was smothered by other trailers and destroyed, the challenge was how to move forward now. Ms. Vandenbrook, 31, who shared the home with five family members, said she had no renters’ insurance. They had only been able to salvage a few items.

“It’s very hard seeing that you have nothing,” said Ms. Vandenbrook, who picked up some donated supplies — blankets, clothes, food — at a local church. “All your belongings, everything just ripped out of your house.”

Her family is now living in a friend’s camper until they can find a place to rent.

Luke Vander Ploeg reported from Gaylord, and Mitch Smith from Chicago.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/21/us/gaylord-michigan-tornado.html

The plan also left in place a largely Manhattan district that is expected to lead to a primary between well-tenured Democratic Reps. Jerry Nadler and Carolyn Maloney. The state’s primary is Aug. 23.

Democrats hold 19 of New York’s 27 seats, and now face the prospect of highly competitive primaries in seats that previously sparked little competition.

A plan that Democrats enacted in February would have made them the favorites in 22 of the 26 seats, following the loss of a district due to population stagnation. Now, Democrats might have advantages on paper in 21 of the 26 districts, but their edge in several of the seats will be slim.

“Today is a good day for democracy. Democrats’ scheme to rig the election is finally dead beyond revival,” state GOP Chair Nick Langworthy said in a statement.

The election upheaval comes after the Democratic-drawn maps were tossed by the state’s highest court, and the mapmaking power went to a Republican judge in small, upstate Steuben County and special master Jonathan Cervas, a Carnegie Mellon University fellow.

Cervas notably did away with a Democratic map that included one safe Democratic seat and one safe Republican one in the parts of eastern Long Island, a critical battleground currently held by Republican Reps. Lee Zeldin and Andrew Garbarino.

In his plan, those two Suffolk County districts will now be split between one that Joe Biden won roughly 50 percent to 41 percent percent in 2020 and one that Donald Trump won 51 percent to 49 percent. And Zeldin’s seat is open as he runs for governor.

Democrats had initially planned to adjust the parts of Brooklyn that Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis’ seat is joined with to turn the district from one where Biden received 44.7 percent of the vote to one where he received 55 percent. But under Cervas’ plan, it would be a district where Biden received 46 percent of the vote, according to a review from the Center for Urban Research at The Graduate Center/CUNY.

One of the most seismic shifts in the draft maps released Monday came from Cervas’ decision to end the decades-long practice of splitting Manhattan on an east-west basis. His plan joined Nadler and Maloney into the same seat and created an open one featuring the lower half of the island joined with parts of Brooklyn.

The special master defended the split in a memo accompanying his Saturday morning release.

“The East Side versus West Side distinction tends to break down as we move further south,” he wrote. “Also, even the areas of the city bordering on opposite sides of Central Park do not appear to be as strongly distinguished in terms of economic and demographic differences as they once were.”

Still, the part of Brooklyn that the new open seat would be joined with was adjusted from his Monday plan, in part due a ripple effect caused by adjustments made to Democratic Rep. Yvette Clarke’s nearby district following criticism that the draft split Crown Heights.

But the general concepts of the district remain largely unchanged from Monday, and it was immediately confirmed that the open seat will be a Democratic free-for-all with Jones’ late-night announcement.

“I have decided to run for another term in Congress in NY-10,” Jones, who represents a Westchester-area seat, announced on Twitter at 12:30 a.m. “Since long before the Stonewall Uprising, queer people of color have sought refuge within its borders.”

Manhattan Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou is also launching a campaign for the solidly Democratic seat that already includes former Mayor Bill de Blasio, who launched his run even before the final maps were printed. The final list of entrants is likely to be much longer than that.

Jones’ entrance into that race provided some immediate clarity for contests in the Hudson Valley, where Democratic Reps. Jamaal Bowman and Sean Patrick Maloney will likely receive their party’s nominations in a pair of districts in the Westchester area.

Maloney, who heads the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, set off a firestorm when he announced a run soon after the maps were released Monday that infringed on Jones’ district — leaving Jones with the choice of whether to challenge Maloney in a primary or look elsewhere.

Two open seats a bit further to the north that largely consist of portions of the districts currently held by Tenney and Democratic Rep. Antonio Delgado, who is leaving Congress to serve as lieutenant governor, lean Democratic on paper, but will likely be competitive.

After Tenney’s district was largely dissolved in the Democratic maps that passed in February, she launched a campaign for a Southern Tier seat that most closely resembled the one held by the outgoing Reed. On Saturday morning, she instead launched a bid for a seat that stretches from Niagara County to the furthest shores of Lake Ontario.

That contains several pieces of the seat held by fellow Republican Jacobs. But Jacobs’ corner of the Buffalo suburbs was joined with many parts of Reed’s old Southern Tier district that borders Pennsylvania in the final Cervas maps. Jacobs announced in the 1:00 a.m. hour that he will be running for the seat.

The most popular request Cervas received from the public following his Monday maps was to rejoin Saratoga Springs and Amsterdam (the home of Democratic Rep. Paul Tonko) with the parts of the Albany area represented by Tonko.

Cervas did make an adjustment: He placed Saratoga in the seat, but left Amsterdam in Republican. Rep. Elise Stefanik’s district. Tonko is still expected to run for the Albany-area seat.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2022/05/21/new-maps-new-york-redistricting-00034235

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President Joe Biden did not sound Saturday like he was expecting any “love letters” from Kim Jong Un – he can’t even get a response to an offer of coronavirus vaccines as the hermit kingdom is hit by its first major Covid-19 outbreak.

And during a news conference here Saturday, he did not sound particularly eager for a handshake with the North Korean despot.

“That would depend on whether he’s sincere and whether he’s serious,” Biden said when asked whether he’d be willing to meet Kim.

The days of glitzy, leader-to-leader summits and other photo ops that defined President Donald Trump’s diplomatic forays with North Korea and elevated Kim appear over for now. So are the attempts at a grand bargain, “everything for everything” denuclearization agreement.

Instead, Biden administration officials are focused on what they call a “calibrated, practical approach,” seeking incremental progress toward denuclearization through sustained diplomatic engagements. And Kim, once again isolated on the world stage and unable to grip and grin with a US president, appears poised to reach for a headline-grabbing intercontinental ballistic missile test while Biden is in the region instead.

One year after the Biden administration completed a review of its North Korea policy, Biden’s first trip to South Korea now puts him at the center of the still unproven new strategy.

Even as a potential missile launch while Biden is in the region could ratchet up tensions, observers have also eyed a major coronavirus outbreak in North Korea as offering a potential, albeit narrow, diplomatic opening – if not with the US, then at least with South Korea.

Testing Biden’s response

Jake Sullivan, the US national security adviser, has said the US is “prepared” for the possibility of a North Korean missile or nuclear test while Biden is in the region and that the President could consequently adjust the US’s military posture in the region.

“If something does occur, it will only serve to reinforce and highlight the fact that the United States is going to be engaged in the Indo-Pacific, is going to be a stalwart ally, and is going to stand up to and not shrink from any acts of aggression,” Sullivan told reporters aboard a South-Korea bound Air Force One.

To date, the President’s strategy has yet to yield a single working meeting with North Korea in the year since the administration completed a review of the US policy toward the hermit kingdom, a senior administration official said, adding that “it has not been for lack of trying.” And North Korea has also quickened the pace of its ballistic missile tests – launching 15 this year, so far.

“We are obviously concerned,” the official said of the tests. “But we remain committed to our fundamental approach, which is we will do what we need to do on security for us, for our allies, for our deployed forces. And at the same time, we will continue enforcing (United Nations) Security Council resolutions and urging others and pressing others to do the same. But we will continue reaching out to the North and making clear that we seek diplomacy with them. We seek engagement.”

“Unfortunately, up until now – I think we have to be honest about this – they have not been willing to,” the senior official added.

Covid in North Korea could be an opportunity for engagement

US officials and North Korea experts pinned the country’s lack of diplomatic engagement with the US and other countries in part on the draconian coronavirus lockdown measures the hermit kingdom has had in place throughout Biden’s time in office.

But news earlier this month of North Korea’s first major, publicly acknowledged coronavirus outbreak has also stirred some hope of a potential opportunity for de-escalation.

While US officials do not believe the outbreak will hamper North Korea’s ability to conduct a missile test, they have also watched carefully for signs it could accept South Korean or international help to combat the outbreak.

“The hope is that they will be more willing to engage on Covid-related humanitarian assistance and that this could potentially serve as a means to thaw a diplomatic track that’s been frozen since the failed US-North Korea summit in Hanoi,” said Patricia Kim, a David M. Rubenstein fellow at the Brookings Institution. “So, I think there is hope there.”

A senior administration official said the US has previously told North Korea it is willing to engage in discussions about coronavirus relief aid but has not had any direct outreach since the latest outbreak. Pyongyang has yet to respond to the new government in Seoul’s offer of coronavirus assistance.

A major shift from Trump’s showman diplomacy

Trump’s policy toward North Korea mirrored the erratic nature of his presidency. Warned by then-President Barack Obama in the Oval Office in 2016 that Pyongyang would present him his gravest national security threat, Trump adopted a bellicose approach to the North and its leader in the early days of his presidency.

From his summer home in New Jersey, Trump threatened to rain “fire and fury” on North Korea should its provocations continue. He bragged that his “nuclear button” was larger than Kim’s. And during a speech at the United Nations, he referred to the dictator as “Little Rocket Man,” an insult he devised to reduce his foe to a caricature.

Yet as time went on — and, in Trump’s view, as his rhetoric drew Kim in — the policy swung hard in another direction. After a historic summit in Singapore, the first between a US and North Korean leader, the men exchanged what Trump later called “love letters.” They met again in Hanoi, though those talks fell apart over differences in sanctions relief.

The last time Trump visited Seoul as president, he journeyed to the Korean demilitarized zone to meet Kim in person, stepping over the line of demarcation into North Korea.

Biden, for his part, will forego a visit to the DMZ altogether, with officials saying he opted instead for a briefing at Osan Air Base, having already toured the DMZ as vice president.

Trump’s efforts seemed to prompt a pause in North Korean provocations, with a reduction in missile and nuclear tests. Yet substantively, efforts to convince Kim to halt his nuclear program stalled and ultimately yielded no progress toward the ultimate goal of denuclearization.

“I think the Biden administration has tried to distinguish its North Korea policy by making the case that it’s not interested in flashy summits or grand bargains, but that it wants to take a practical and calibrated approach to build towards the complete denuclearization of North Korea,” said Patricia Kim. “I think the hang up, of course, is not so much US policy, but the fact that North Korea seems to have zero interest in talking about denuclearization.”

While Trump sought to cultivate Kim as a partner and personal friend, he cast skepticism at the necessity of keeping US troops on the Korean Peninsula and levied stiff tariffs on South Korean goods, steps that caused deep anxiety in Seoul and the broader region over American commitment to security.

Biden has adopted a far more traditional approach, welcome news in the countries he is visiting this week.

“There is clearly a sigh of relief after Biden came to the region and talked about alliances in a language that allies understood. They just didn’t understand, did not comprehend, what Trump had been saying,” said Victor Cha, the Korea chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/21/politics/joe-biden-north-korea-south-korea/index.html

Russia has cut off Finland’s natural gas after the Scandinavian country made clear its desire to join NATO and refusal to pay in Russian currency.

Finland’s government-owned energy company announced Saturday that they will be losing access to Russian natural gas imports after the country refused to pay state conglomerate Gazprom for the energy in rubles. The rift in the energy supply chain is only the latest development in an ongoing feud between the two countries.

“Natural gas supplies to Finland under Gasum’s supply contract have been cut off,” Finnish state company Gasum announced Saturday.

FINLAND BREWERY LAUNCHES NATO-INSPIRED BEER

The enterprise clarified that the change in supply would not directly affect operation, and customers would still have access to natural gas through other sources.

Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin gives a press conference with the Swedish Prime Minister prior to a meeting on whether to seek NATO membership, in Stockholm, Sweden, on April 13, 2022. (PAUL WENNERHOLM/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

“Starting from today, during the upcoming summer season, Gasum will supply natural gas to its customers from other sources through the Balticconnector pipeline,” the statement continued. “Gasum’s gas filling stations in the gas network area will continue in normal operation.”

Natural gas accounts for only 6% of Finland’s energy consumption.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures while speaking to employees of the Almazov National Medical Center in St.Petersburg, Russia, Friday, March 16, 2018.  (Anatoly Maltsev/Pool Photo via AP / AP Newsroom)

Russia has strong-armed Finland on other energy supply chains as well.

Russia said it would cut off electricity to Finland starting last week as it claims the country has not paid, a state-owned power company said.

RAO Nordic, a subsidiary of Inter ROA, said it will stop exporting electricity to Finland without providing specifics amid larger tensions across Europe beset by the Russia-Ukraine War, Reuters reported.

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“This situation is exceptional and happened for the first time in over twenty years of our trading history,” RAO Nordic said in a statement, per the report.

Fox News’ Lawrence Richards contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/russia-gazprom-cuts-off-finland-gas-supply-nato

A late-night party ended in a mass shooting that left one person dead and eight others injured in San Bernardino Friday.

The shooting was reported in the 3600 block of East Highland Avenue about 11:53 p.m., San Bernardino Police Department Sgt. Thomas said.

A large crowd had apparently been attending a party at one of the businesses located in the Highland Square shopping center when gunfire erupted.  

Arriving officers found one person outside the business was pronounced dead at the scene, Thomas said.

Family members told KTLA the victim was a 20-year-old man who was attending the party at a lounge in the shopping center.

Police have not identified the victim.

A witness said shots were also fired across the street at a Mobil gas station.

“We just heard gunshots and a lot of kids running,” a witness who did not want to be identified said. “Most of the kids were under 18 years.”

Video showed crime scene tape blocking the parking lots of both locations Saturday morning.

Police later confirmed that eight additional victims had been shot in the incident, many of which self-transported to local hospitals.

The eight wounded victims appeared to have non-life-threatening injuries, Thomas said.

The wounded victims were being treated at Loma Linda University Medical Center and Arrowhead Regional Medical Center.

Video following the incident showed a crowd at the scene being aggressive with law enforcement as they tried to investigate the shooting.

Police have not said if they are searching for a single shooter or multiple shooters.

No motive for the shooting has been released.  

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/local-news/mass-shooting-leaves-1-dead-8-wounded-in-san-bernardino/

Rome, Georgia (CNN)Jennifer Strahan walked up and down the main street of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s hometown with a mission — to make sure as many potential voters as possible know who she is before Tuesday’s Republican primary.

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/21/politics/marjorie-taylor-greene-republican-georgia-primary/index.html

The Roman Catholic archbishop in Nancy Pelosi’s home town of San Francisco has banned her from receiving communion there over her staunch support of abortion rights, which she has strengthened as supreme court justices weigh finalizing a draft ruling outlawing the termination of pregnancies in more than half the county.

In a letter addressed to the US House speaker and posted on his Twitter account, ultra conservative Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone argued that Pelosi’s “position on abortion has become only more extreme over the years, especially in the last few months,” and he had decided to block her from communion after she had ignored his requests to explain her stance to him.

Cordileone – San Francisco’s archbishop since 2012 – accused Pelosi of failing to “understand the grave evil she is perpetrating, the scandal she is causing, and the danger to her own soul she is risking”. He said he would need to stop her from receiving communion until she “publicly repudiates her support for abortion”.

“Please know that I find no pleasure whatsoever in fulfilling my pastoral duty here,” Cordileone added in his letter, which he said served as a public notice of his decision to Bay Area Catholics.

The missive hailed Pelosi for “her advocacy for the care of the poor and vulnerable”, said the move was apolitical, and called the longtime Democratic congresswoman a “sister in Christ”, but it also called for the House speaker to confess and repent.

Pelosi, who has often mentioned her faith in Catholicism, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Cordileone.

Cordileone’s letter comes after the 2 May leak of a draft ruling which showed the supreme court’s conservative majority was ready to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade decision that essentially legalized abortion nationwide.

Abortion would be outlawed in 26 states if Roe v Wade is overturned.

Though conservatives have celebrated the leak, liberals have loudly protested it, including by staging demonstrations on the streets.

Pelosi has been at the forefront of the objections, including by appearing on CNN last week and calling the current composition of the supreme court “dangerous to families and to freedoms in our country.”

During that interview, Pelosi predicted the supreme court would also seek to outlaw contraception and same-sex marriage should Roe v Wade fall, which the House speaker has said would be “an abomination, one of the worst and most damaging decisions in modern history.”

“Understand this,” Pelosi said. “This is not just about terminating a pregnancy.”

Politically, Democrats who are Catholic and support abortion rights often draw criticism from fellow members of their faith. One prominent Catholic Democrat who opposes abortion is Louisiana’s governor, John Bel Edwards, though he’s also pledged to veto legislation that would criminalize abortion.

Cordileone has built his reputation on his vehement opposition to same-sex marriage. He has previously said that many of his views are actually quite similar to those of Pope Francis, though Cordileone has posited that Catholicism’s worldwide leader may just be better at communicating them.

Francis last year told Joe Biden to keep receiving communion as conservatives pushed for the Democratic US president to be denied the sacrament because of his support for abortion rights.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/may/21/nancy-pelosi-san-francisco-archbishop-communion-abortion

At least six people have been killed in Russian attacks on the city of Severodonetsk in Ukraine’s Luhansk region in the past day, the head of the regional military administration said Saturday.

The dead include two people sheltering in a school basement, Serhiy Hayday said, adding that three people had also been wounded when Russians fired on the school.

“Two people died on the spot, three more were hospitalized. Two killed and one wounded are members of the same family,” Hayday said in a statement on Telegram.

Residents of Severodonetsk had been hiding since the beginning of the war, according to Hayday.

Two women were killed by Russian shelling in Lysychansk and Privillia, and a man and a woman died near their house in Severodonetsk, he said, without specifying how they died.

The Russians “have thrown all their forces and efforts into the assault on Severodonetsk and cutting off the Lysychansk-Bakhmut route, so that we can’t evacuate people, deliver the humanitarian aid or deliver any supplies or ammunition to our defenders,” the official added.

Luhansk is one of two regions of Ukraine that has been partly controlled by Russian-backed separatists since 2014, along with Donetsk. The latest phase of the Russian invasion includes attempts to take full control of the regions.

“Fighting is currently taking place on the outskirts of Severodonetsk,” Hayday said, asserting that Ukrainian forces had repulsed 11 enemy attacks. He said Ukrainian defenders had destroyed Russian tanks, artillery systems and combat vehicles in the fighting, and shot down two Russian drones.

A cooling tower at the Azot nitrogen ammonia plant in Severodonetsk caught fire during a Russian attack, Hayday said, but the fire was extinguished and did not spread.

He said about 1,000 people were in the plant’s bomb shelters, and said authorities have tried to provide these people with everything needed: Generators, water and humanitarian aid.

“Thank God, there are not many chemical substances there, as Azot was not working to its full capacity, as it used to during Soviet times. But anyway there are the remnants of chemicals, which are hazardous and highly explosive,” he warned.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/europe/live-news/russia-ukraine-war-news-05-21-22/h_9c69cefe00251f503732b7b83a2e09da

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/05/21/biden-yoon-meeting-north-korea-casts-shadow-over-south-korea-talks/9830779002/

The archbishop of San Francisco said Friday that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who is Catholic, can no longer receive the sacrament of communion because she has declined to back down from her push for abortion access.

Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone wrote in a public post Friday that his “many requests” have not been accepted to speak with Pelosi, who is from San Francisco, since she vowed to keep Roe v. Wade. The archbishop said he communicated to Pelosi on April 7 that, should she not publicly repudiate her “advocacy for abortion ‘rights” or refrain from referring to her faith in public, he would have no choice but to deny her communion. The archbishop’s reprimand is the latest development in political and religious debate as some leaders in the Catholic Church speak out against Catholic politicians who support abortion. 

The archbishop referred to the Catholic Church’s Cannon 915, which says that, “Those who have been excommunicated or interdicted after the imposition or declaration of the penalty and others obstinately persevering in manifest grave sin are not to be admitted to holy communion.” The Chatecism of the Catholic Church is against abortion. 

“As you have not publically repudiated your position on abortion, and continue to refer to your Catholic faith in justifying your position and to receive Holy Communion, that time has now come,” the archbishop wrote. “Therefore, in light of my responsibility as the Archbishop of San Francisco to be ‘concerned for all the Christian faithful entrusted to [my] care’ … by means of this communication I am hereby notifying you that you are not to present yourself for Holy Communion and, should you do so, you are not to be admitted to Holy Communion, until such time as you publically repudiate your advocacy for the legitimacy of abortion and confess and receive absolution of this grave sin in the sacrament of Penance.”

U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi speaks in front of the steps to the House of Representatives with congressional members to speak on the Roe v. Wade issue May 13, 2022 in Washington, DC. 

Win McNamee / Getty Images


The archbishop simplified his position in a follow-up tweet: “After numerous attempts to speak with Speaker Pelosi to help her understand the grave evil she is perpetrating, the scandal she is causing, an the danger to her own soul she is risking, I have determined that she is not to be admitted to Holy Communion,” he wrote.

The archbishop’s public post comes as the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade sparked renewed attention over the abortion debate, and a flurry of proposed laws both from those who support and oppose abortion. 

But Pelosi isn’t the first politician to be reprimanded by those in the Catholic Church over abortion — bishops have debated whether President Biden, who is also Catholic, should receive communion as well. Pope Francis last year said he has never denied anyone communion, and encouraged Catholic leaders to avoid aligning themselves with politics. 

Ultimately, in November 2021, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops voted to approve a document that fell short of refusing communion to Mr. Biden or others who advocate for widespread abortion access. 

Rebecca Kaplan contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/abortion-nancy-pelosi-communion-archbishop-san-francisco/

Former President Donald Trump tosses a MAGA hat to the crowd before speaking at a rally in Florence, Ariz., in January.

Mario Tama/Getty Images


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Former President Donald Trump tosses a MAGA hat to the crowd before speaking at a rally in Florence, Ariz., in January.

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A little more than a dozen years ago, a new movement erupted in American politics calling itself “the Tea Party.” In the midterm elections of 2010, that movement remade Congress and helped the Republican Party to a decade of dominance in electing the legislatures of roughly 30 states.

The phrase “Tea Party” has since faded from the scene. The congressional caucus that went by that name has been largely inactive for years. But the political ferment and fervor once associated with that label have grown more intense as they were reshaped by former President Donald Trump.

Today, the populist energy within the Republican Party goes by the name he gave it: MAGA (Make America Great Again). And its influence on the 2022 midterms seems destined to track that of the Tea Party surge in 2010.

There is one difference between then and now that could alter that trajectory. The Tea Party was driven largely by hostility to former President Obama. It never had a singular leader of its own whose brand was a driving force in itself – for good or ill. The current MAGA movement is essentially defined by Trump. Its future, short-term and long, will depend largely on his.

Given all we know about Trump, that sword could be extremely sharp on both edges on Election Day.

High tide for the Tea Party

The Tea Party name was both a slogan (Taxed Enough Already) and a feisty reference to the legendary Boston Tea Party of 1773. In grade school we all saw pictures of colonial anti-tax activists tossing tea from a cargo ship in Boston harbor, a prelude to the American Revolution.

The colonial protesters’ Don’t Tread on Me flag from that period was often seen among the signs waved by protestors on Washington’s National Mall in the spring of 2009. The crowds grew and spread to state capitals and converged on town hall meetings that members of Congress held back home.

Demonstrators gather to protest taxes and economic stimulus spending on Apr. 15, 2009 in Santa Monica, Calif.

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Demonstrators gather to protest taxes and economic stimulus spending on Apr. 15, 2009 in Santa Monica, Calif.

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At the outset, they were primarily protesting the tax and spending plans of the new administration under President Barack Obama. But signs at rallies also targeted gun control and abortion, and some depicted Obama with a slice of watermelon for a mouth. Soon enough, the movement found its focus in the health care reforms known as Obamacare.

Some in the Tea Party movement also cast doubt on Obama’s legitimacy as president, insisting he had been born in Africa. Although that particular theory was thoroughly disproven, it retained its appeal and its power to rouse rowdy crowds. It also merged well with the issue of Obamacare, and the combination formed the basis for the emerging candidacy of Trump, who would also add the promise of a wall across the entire U.S.-Mexican border.

Trump had been known as a high-stakes, high-risk Manhattan businessman and flamboyant media personality. He had been a Democrat before flirting with a third-party presidential bid in 2000. Then he turned up at the Conservative Political Action Conference in February 2011.

The Tea Party movement was then nearing its second birthday and riding high. The Tea Party Caucus had formed in Congress with 52 members the previous summer, reflecting the popularity of the label in the wake of the 2010 midterms. In those critical elections, robust Republican turnout (and lackluster Democratic turnout) helped the party capture more than 60 seats in the U.S. House — the most the GOP had flipped in one election since 1938.

Republicans also captured six governorships (for a total of 29) and increased the number of state legislative chambers they controlled from 36 to 60. Obama called it “a shellacking.”

A different story in the Senate

But the 2010 beatdown had one missing piece. While Republicans romped in many Senate races that year — winning 24 of the 37 on the ballot and gaining 6 seats — they fell short of winning a majority in that chamber. While Tea Party turnout helped the party outpoll Democrats for the Senate by 2 million votes nationally, it wasn’t quite enough.

In 2012, with Obama winning a second term as president, Republicans held their majority in the House but again struggled in the Senate races. Democrats won 23 of the 31 Senate seats on that year’s ballot, including two in particular the GOP had counted on winning.

One was the Indiana seat of longtime incumbent Republican Richard Lugar. Lugar was shocked by a Tea Party challenger, Richard Mourdock, who got 60% in the primary. But in a debate that fall, Mourdock defended his opposition to abortion even in cases of rape by saying such a pregnancy was still “something God intended.” He lost to a Democrat that fall.

Another seat Republicans had expected to win was in Missouri, where incumbent Claire McCaskill was considered the most vulnerable Democratic senator of the cycle. The crowded Republican primary was won by Todd Akin, a member of the Tea Party Caucus in Congress, who in a debate with McCaskill said this about a pregnancy following a rape: “If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to shut that whole thing down.” McCaskill wound up winning reelection easily.

In the 2014 cycle, Obama was no longer on the ballot to juice Democratic turnout. But he was still in office, and that spurred Republican turnout. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell saw his opportunity to end eight years of minority status and put a heavy thumb on the scale in that year’s Republican primaries. His direction of party resources to the mainstream nominees he preferred put him at odds with Tea Party enthusiasts in several contests.

Military veterans, Tea Party activists and Republicans gather in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 13, 2013 to rally for the reopening of national memorials and against then-President Barack Obama during a government shutdown. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

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Military veterans, Tea Party activists and Republicans gather in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 13, 2013 to rally for the reopening of national memorials and against then-President Barack Obama during a government shutdown. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

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McConnell’s picks won, and in the fall they beat the Democrats in two thirds of the races, gaining nine seats and installing McConnell as majority leader. As majority leader, he blocked one Supreme Court nominee (by Obama in 2016) and oversaw the confirmation of three nominated by Trump.

A different kind of Republican

Trump was never a conventional Republican, as McConnell would be the first to say. Trump did not try to claim the mantle of previous Republican presidents. He did not woo the Republicans’ party elites or major donors. He had no previous government experience and regarded that as an asset. He never really claimed the Tea Party label, but as he became increasingly visible as a candidate during Obama’s second term, he co-opted much of the Tea Party agenda and schedule of grievances.

He also borrowed a slogan from Ronald Reagan’s presidential campaigns (“Let’s Make America Great Again”) trimming the first word for brevity and punch. The four-letter acronym was soon emblazoned on a million campaign hats and regularly added to Trump’s messages on Twitter. His followers embraced it.

Trump has now been out of office for 16 months, but MAGA marches on. Like the Tea Party rising in the first two years of Obama’s presidency, MAGA has thrived as Democratic President Joe Biden has struggled. Inflation is at a 40-year high, and the country is in a restive mood.

Biden has fallen 16 percentage points in the Gallup measure of presidential approval, just as Obama had fallen by about 20 at a comparable point in 2010 (Obama had started at 67% approval, Biden at 57%).

Throughout that year, the Tea Party positioned itself to spearhead the new majority GOP in the next Congress. MAGA is doing much the same now. But just as the Tea Party then was a force in House races that sometimes misfired on the statewide stage, MAGA is likely to be tested in 2022 and beyond.

The past haunts the present

Candidates who had Trump’s endorsement have won important primaries for the Senate in swing states such as Ohio and North Carolina. The former was especially notable, as many of the state’s establishment Republicans had stuck with one of their own, Josh Mandel, while Trump jumped in for the right-wing firebrand J.D. Vance.

In North Carolina, where former governor Pat McCrory was running for the GOP Senate nod, the primary winner is Trump-backed and lesser-known Rep. Ted Budd, who has refused to say whether Biden is the legitimate president.

Pennsylvania’s primary showed both the power of Trump’s endorsement and its potential unintended consequences. For the Senate, Trump strongly endorsed the celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz, snubbing a hedge fund billionaire who had served in the George W. Bush administration. That race appears to be headed for a statewide recount.

Even more eye-catching was Trump’s choice in the Pennsylvania governor’s race. Former Rep. Lou Barletta, a loyal Trump supporter, was in the hunt, but Trump opted for Doug Mastriano, a retired colonel and state legislator who was actively involved in trying to overturn Biden’s win in the state last fall.

Mastriano was in the angry crowd outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, when rioters entered the House and Senate chambers attempting to overturn the election. He has been subpoenaed by the House committee investigating that attack.

He has also been an outspoken foe of all abortions. The memory of what happened to Mourdock and Akin, caught out on the issue of abortion, is especially meaningful at this moment.

Total bans are now the legislative agenda in some states, and could be part of the GOP’s congressional agenda next year if they are in charge and the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade as expected this summer.

Trump and the risk

The issue of abortion access might help Democrats address their perennial problem with turnout in midterm elections. The same might be true of Trump’s sure-to-be-visible role in many campaigns this fall.

Trump offers a backstop for Republicans in some races, but he also poses a risk. Most Republicans want the 2022 elections to be about inflation and federal mandates. Trump’s role risks making them instead a referendum on him and his baseless insistence he won an election he lost.

How the Trump factor will play out may vary from state to state. But we can expect him to be, as ever, a magnet for media attention. He will instantly nationalize contests on which he concentrates. He will summon the us-versus-them reflex in voters across the political spectrum.

Perhaps the mere presence of Trump in the fall will be enough to bolster weaker GOP nominees and even save the Mourdocks and Akins of 2022. But there remains the possibility that the Jan. 6th investigation or developments elsewhere will make Trump more of an albatross for his party. It would indeed be an irony if he ultimately saved Biden from a shellacking of his own.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/05/21/1100386445/trumps-maga-is-marching-down-a-trail-blazed-by-the-tea-party

A strong tornado tore through Gaylord, a Michigan city about 2½ hours north of Lansing, on Friday afternoon, causing widespread damage, one death and 23 injuries, according to Michigan State Police.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2022/05/20/gaylord-michigan-tornado/

GAYLORD, Mich. – At least one person has died and 44 others were injured when a tornado touched down in Gaylord, Michigan on Friday, according to Gaylord Mayor Todd Sharrad.

Michigan State Police and Mayor Sharrad say the tornado first hit in a mobile home park and continued in about a two to three-mile span through the commercial corridor seen in the video player above.

“I would say it was on the ground for about two hours,” said Gaylord Mayor Sharrad. “It did wipe out a Hobby Lobby, Jimmy Johns, Quick Lube on our west side of town, and then it came into town, and it wiped out a lot of homes.”

Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer arrived in Gaylord Friday night and put in an emergency declaration.

“It’s been a tough week for Northern Michigan,” said Whitmer. “We’ve had the fire of the blue lake to today’s tornado right here in Gaylord, and I know it’s going to be a tough weekend for families here. For businesses and for the recovery. We’re Michiganders, and we’re tough, resilient, and we’ve been through a lot of tough stuff together, especially in the last few years, and we will get through this.”

The damage is severe, and officials say that it will take days to assess how bad the damage is.

“I’ve never seen anything like this in my life,” said Sharrard. “A lot of the time, my drill has been going, and now it’s like, ‘here feel exhausted.’ I’m concerned about all of our citizens, all of the crew that’s trying to help clean everything up to.”

Officials say the damage is substantial as the people injured have been transported to multiple hospitals after the emergency facility in Gaylord stopped accepting patience due to lack of power as it is running on emergency generators.

“You always see it on pictures and you always see it on tv’s from other communities but not in our backyard,” Sharrard said. “The devastation is numbing.”

Sharrard says at least 12 homes have been demolished with nothing but their foundation remaining.

Read: ‘It was like driving around a war zone’: Tornado destroys at least 12 homes in Gaylord

There is no power, but over 100 consumer crews are traveling to Gaylord to help with the power shortage, and if you’re trying to reach your loved ones, a cell phone tower has been taken out, so it may be challenging to communicate.

The National Weather Service has confirmed a tornado moved through the area around 3:45 p.m. on May 20, and viewers have been sending in pictures of the aftermath. The photos show just how substantial the damage was with even big box stores being crushed.

NWS officials said they will be surveying the damage Friday afternoon and evening. They said the survey won’t be completed until Saturday. The NWS plans for a storm summary page to be shared online this evening.

Officials with the Michigan Department of Transportation said the tornado touched down near Home Depot on the west side of the city before moving east. MDOT also reported that debris were tossed onto nearby roads, including M-32. Drivers are asked to drive with caution in the area.

“So we don’t really know we don’t know the magnitude yet,” said Jim Keysor, of NWS. “We have a storm survey team out right now. But we do know that there’s considerable damage across the western part of Gaylord a lot of businesses, a lot of homes, there’s a lot of debris and roads that are blocked by debris.

View: Pictures, videos show considerable damage from tornado in Gaylord area

Gaylord resident Linda Buck witnessed the tornado and spoke with Local 4 on Friday.

“Well my heart was racing, I was very nervous because I had actually never seen a tornado before and never seen it in action with debris so I was pretty nervous. We were just trying to think of a plan and of course, we don’t have a basement at my work so we were thinking, we’re just gonna hunker into the back rooms if it came our way. But fortunately, it didn’t. But unfortunately, there was other people who saw the brunt of it,” Buck said.

Original report: Tornado touches down Friday in Gaylord; Stores damaged, vehicles tossed, injuries reported

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer responds

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said officials are monitoring the situation in Gaylord closely.

She said Michigan State Police reported downed trees and power lines, and damage to several homes and businesses.

View photos of damaged caused by the Gaylord tornado below:

In this photo provided by Angela Russ, severe weather damage is seen in Gaylord, Mich., just off the citys 75 southbound 282 exit, Friday, May 20, 2022. (Angela Russ via AP)
This image provided by Steven Bischer, shows damage following an apparent tornado, Friday, May 20, 2022, in Gaylord, Mich. (Steven Bischer via AP)
In this photo provided by Angela Russ, severe weather damage is seen in Gaylord, Mich., just off the citys 75 southbound 282 exit, Friday, May 20, 2022. (Angela Russ via AP)
In this photo provided by Angela Russ, severe weather damage is seen in Gaylord, Mich., just off the citys 75 southbound 282 exit, Friday, May 20, 2022. (Angela Russ via AP)
This image provided by Steven Bischer, shows damage following an apparent tornado, Friday, May 20, 2022, in Gaylord, Mich. (Steven Bischer via AP)
This image provided by Steven Bischer, shows damage following an apparent tornado, Friday, May 20, 2022, in Gaylord, Mich. (Steven Bischer via AP)
This image provided by Steven Bischer, shows an upended vehicle following an apparent tornado, Friday, May 20, 2022, in Gaylord, Mich. (Steven Bischer via AP)
Tornado touched down in Gaylord
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area.
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area.
Tornado touches down Friday in Gaylord; Stores damaged, vehicles tossed, injuries reported
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area. (Michigan State Police)
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area. (Michigan State Police)
Tornado touches down Friday in Gaylord; Stores damaged, vehicles tossed, injuries reported
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area. (Michigan State Police)
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area.
Video shows tornado moving through Gaylord, Michigan on May 20, 2022
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area.
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area.
Damage from a May 20, 2022, tornado in the Gaylord area.
Damage from tornado in Gaylord on May 20, 2022. (WDIV)
Damage from tornado in Gaylord on May 20, 2022. (WDIV)
Damage from tornado in Gaylord on May 20, 2022. (WDIV)

Source Article from https://www.clickondetroit.com/weather/2022/05/21/at-least-1-killed-23-injured-when-tornado-touched-down-in-gaylord-everything-we-know-so-far/

Russia claimed to have captured Mariupol on Friday in what would be its biggest victory yet in its war in Ukraine. The announcement came following a nearly three-month siege that reduced much of the strategic port city to a smoking ruin, with over 20,000 civilians feared dead.

There was no immediate confirmation from Ukraine.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu reported to President Vladimir Putin the “complete liberation” of the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol – the last stronghold of Ukrainian resistance – and the city as a whole, spokesman Igor Konashenkov said.

Service members of the Ukrainian armed forces, who surrendered at the besieged Azovstal steel mill in Mariupol in the course of Ukraine-Russia conflict, sit in a bus upon their arrival under escort of the pro-Russian military in the settlement of Olenivka in the Donetsk region, Ukraine May 20, 2022.

ALEXANDER ERMOCHENKO / REUTERS


Russia’s state news agency RIA Novosti quoted the ministry as saying that a total of 2,439 Ukrainian fighters who had been holed up at Azovstal had laid down their arms and surrendered since Monday, including over 500 on Friday.

The steelworks had been the site of fierce fighting for weeks. The dwindling group of outgunned fighters had held out in the plant, drawing Russian airstrikes, artillery and tank fire before their government ordered them to abandon its defense and save their lives.

Wives of fighters who held out at the steelworks spoke emotionally about what may have been their last contact with their husbands.

Olga Boiko, wife of a marine, wiped away tears as she said that her husband had written her on Thursday: “Hello. We surrender, I don’t know when I will get in touch with you and if I will at all. Love you. Kiss you. Bye.”

Natalia Zaritskaya, wife of another fighter at Azovstal, said that based on the messages she had seen over the past two days, “Now they are on the path from hell to hell. Every inch of this path is deadly.”

She said that two days ago, her husband reported that of the 32 soldiers with whom he had served, only eight survived, most of them seriously wounded.

The complete takeover of Mariupol gives Putin a badly needed military victory in the war he began on Feb. 24 – a conflict that was supposed to have been a quick and easy victory for the Kremlin but instead has seen the failure to take the capital of Kyiv, a pullback of its forces to refocus on battles in eastern Ukraine and even the sinking of Russia’s flagship of its Black Sea fleet, the Moskva.

Military analysts say the city’s capture at this point holds more symbolic importance than anything else, since Mariupol is already effectively under Moscow’s control and most of the Russian forces that were tied down by the drawn-out fighting have already left.

Russia had sought control of Mariupol, on the coast of the Sea of Azov, to complete a land corridor to the Crimean Peninsula, which it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, and free up troops to join the growing battle for control of the wider industrial Donbas region, home to an 8-year-old Moscow-backed separatist rebellion. It would also deprive Ukraine of a vital port.

The city endured some of the worst suffering of the war. An estimated 100,000 people remained from a prewar population of 450,000, many trapped without food, water, heat or electricity. Constant bombardment has left behind shattered and charred buildings in row after row of destroyed apartment blocks and ruined neighborhoods.

A maternity hospital was hit with a lethal Russian airstrike on March 9, producing searing images of pregnant women being evacuated from the facility.

A week later, about 300 people were reported killed in a bombing of a theater where civilians were taking shelter, although the real death toll could be closer to 600. Officials had written the word “CHILDREN” in Russian on the pavement outside to try to forestall an aerial attack.

Long traffic jams of cars snaked out of the city, filled with evacuees fleeing past checkpoints of Russian soldiers with heavy weapons who didn’t have time to search inside each vehicle in the convoys.

Satellite images in April showed what appeared to be mass graves near Mariupol, where local officials accused Russia of concealing the slaughter by burying up to 9,000 civilians. The imagery showed rows of graves stretching away from an existing cemetery in the town of Manhush, outside the port city.

Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko accused the Russians of “hiding their military crimes” in the mass graves and labeled it “the new Babi Yar” — recalling the ravine in Kyiv where the Nazis massacred nearly 34,000 Ukrainian Jews during World War II.

It was not the first time Moscow has claimed to have captured Mariupol. At a joint appearance with his defense minister on April 21, Putin declared that “the completion of combat work to liberate Mariupol is a success.” Even though die-hard Ukrainian forces were still inside the Azovstal plant at that point, Putin ordered the military to seal off the complex “so that not even a fly comes through.”

After continued bombardment, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on May 16 the evacuation of his forces from the bunkers and tunnels beneath Azovstal was done to save the lives of the fighters.

“Ukraine needs Ukrainian heroes to be alive. It’s our principle,” Zelenskyy said.

The Azovstal complex covers 11 square kilometers (4 square miles) and is threaded with about 24 kilometers (15 miles) of tunnels and bunkers. Earlier in May, hundreds of civilians were evacuated from the plant during humanitarian cease-fires.

One civilian evacuee from Azovstal, who made it to the Ukrainian controlled city of Zaporizhzhia on May 3, said she went to sleep at the plant every night afraid she wouldn’t wake up. “You can’t imagine how scary it is when you sit in the bomb shelter, in a damp and wet basement, and it is bouncing and shaking,” said Elina Tsybulchenko, 54.

While Russia described the troops leaving the steel plant as a mass surrender, the Ukrainians called it a fulfilled mission.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Zelenskyy, described the defense of Mariupol as “the Thermopylae of the 21st century” – a reference to one of history’s most glorious defeats, in which 300 Spartans held off a much larger Persian force in 480 B.C. before finally succumbing.

“The Azovstal defenders thwarted the enemy’s plans to seize eastern Ukraine, drew away enormous numbers of enemy forces, and changed the course of the war,” Podolyak said.

Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said Mariupol’s defenders gave Ukraine “critically important time to form reserves and regroup forces and receive help from partners. And they fulfilled all their tasks.”

The U.S. has gathered intelligence that shows some Russian officials have become concerned that Russian forces in the ravaged port city of Mariupol are carrying out grievous abuses, a U.S official familiar with the newly declassified findings told CBS News.

The Russian officials are concerned that the abuses will backfire and further inspire Mariupol residents to resist the Russian occupation. The U.S. official, who was not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that the Russians, who were not identified, also feared that the abuses will undercut Russia’s claim that they’ve liberated the Russian-speaking city.

Meanwhile, teams of war crimes investigators are hard at work across Ukraine gathering evidence they hope will lead to more prosecutions of Russia’s invading forces. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/russia-claims-mariupol-wives-ukraine-fighters-last-messages/

“I support Archbishop Cordileone in his courageous pastoral outreach to a member of his flock,” Bishop James D. Conley of the Diocese of Lincoln, Neb., said on Twitter.

In his letter, Archbishop Cordileone also noted that Ms. Pelosi has refused to speak with him since voting for the Women’s Health Protection Act, a bill to ensure abortion access nationwide, in September.

Growing up in Baltimore, Ms. Pelosi regularly attended Mass with her family and went to Catholic school. She has said her mother had hoped she would become a nun.

Ms. Pelosi often refers to her faith in discussing her position in support of abortion rights.

“I come to this as a Catholic mother of five in six years and one week, and with the joy that all that meant to us,” she said on the House floor last year, speaking in support of the bill. “But with the recognition that it was my husband and I — our decision. It was our decision. And we should not, in this body or in that court, be making decisions for the women in America.”

She has criticized her church for making the issue of abortion a litmus test for membership.

“They would like to throw me out, but I’m not going, because I don’t want to make their day,” she said at an event in March.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/20/us/politics/pelosi-communion-abortion.html