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Fotógrafo y colaborador del sitio digital La Bandera Noticias, Juan Carlos Hernández Ríos fue asesinado la noche del martes en el municipio de Yuriria, Guanajuato, informó el portal Zona Franca.

El jefe de información de Zona Franca, Javier Bravo, aseguró para #AristeguiEnVivo que Juan Carlos Hernández colaboraba desde hace dos meses con el portal La Bandera Noticias, donde fungía como asistente del reportero Alejandro Chávez.

Chávez ya había sido sido amenazado por la familia del alcalde de Yuriria, Gerardo Gaviña, desde diciembre pasado, explicó Bravo.

Sin embargo, el coordinador de Comunicación Social del Gobierno de Guanajuato, Enrique Avilés, negó que Juan Carlos Hernández sea periodista y que su asesinato tenga relación con el ejercicio periodístico.

Agregó que todo crimen es condenable y que se va a investigar el homicidio, porque todos los asesinatos son deplorables para las víctimas y sus familias.

Previamente, el periodista Javier Bravo aseguró que aun cuando Juan Carlos Hernández Ríos era taxista de profesión, comenzó a colaborar con La Bandera Noticias en el marco de la violencia creciente que vive Guanajuato y que, poco a poco, había comenzado a enviar al sitio fotografías y videos para reportes policiacos.

Source Article from https://aristeguinoticias.com/0709/mexico/asesinan-a-colaborador-de-la-bandera-noticias-era-taxista-dice-vocero-de-guanajuato/

By John Ruwitch

PUTIAN, China (Reuters) – Criticised and even sued by luxury brand Gucci and others for facilitating the counterfeit goods trade, Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd has been quietly piloting a scheme to try to curb fakes at source.

In the coastal city of Putian, in Fujian province, Alibaba is working with 17 shoe manufacturers to cultivate home-grown brands online, revitalise a flagging industry and offer would-be counterfeiters an alternative source of livelihood.

Critics say the scheme is misguided and Alibaba should instead focus on scrubbing its online marketplaces of widespread listings of fakes.

But the “Made in China” plan speaks to what proponents say is one of the reasons why there’s been only limited progress in the battle against fake goods in China: a lack of attractive alternatives for those making and hawking goods that infringe on others’ intellectual property rights.

“You can crack down forever and never see an end to it,” said Song Zonghu, who once peddled counterfeit name-brand sneakers and now runs Shuangwei Sporting Goods Co Ltd, one of the firms in the Alibaba programme. “Creating new opportunities while cracking down is the way to go. Everybody has to eat.”

Ni Liang, Alibaba’s senior director of Internet security, says the scheme is a key anti-counterfeit initiative this year. The group plans to expand it to household electronics, toys, bags and other industries, hoping that by building local brands, small manufacturers will turn away from fakes and serve a legitimate sector.

LOGISTICS HUB

Putian is the epicenter of China’s high-quality fake sneaker business, a byproduct of a legitimate footwear industry that employs a tenth of the city’s 3 million people. Copies of Nike, Adidas, New Balance and other brand-name shoes made here are hard to distinguish from the real deal, but sell for a fraction of the price.

The municipal government has cracked down on fakes, arresting 156 people and confiscating about 2 million pairs of counterfeit footwear since 2014, said Wu Haiduan, director of the Putian e-commerce office. He declined to give an estimate of the overall size of the industry, but a grid of Putian’s sleepy daytime streets near government offices comes alive at night, offering hints as to the scale of the issue.

Hundreds of scooters ferry shoes as runners duck in and out of off-brand storefronts or apartment blocks to fetch more boxes. Sellers check each shoe for blemishes, wielding scissors or cigarette lighters to eliminate stray threads and pencil erasers to clean the foam midsoles. Fake certificates and phony credit card receipts are tucked in with the shoes.

Dozens of curbside courier services then wrap and stack the boxes ready to be trucked out by daybreak.

SALES BUMP

Alibaba has trained the shoe manufacturers in online business, helped on quality control and marketing, and run sales promotions. In one 3-day campaign, the shoe brands sold over 4 million pairs – or two every three seconds – worth 480 million yuan ($77.5 million), said Alibaba spokeswoman Crystal Liu.

Sneakers are just the start.

“We’ve received more than 60 requests from other industries,” said Jeff Zhang, head of Alibaba’s domestic retail marketplaces, which include the Taobao and Tmall shopping sites.

For most, the hope is that Alibaba can help re-tool local industry in the face of rising costs and shrinking overseas orders. “They’re all looking for a model that can help them upgrade their local manufacturing,” said Zhang.

Song, the businessman, sees the Alibaba scheme as an economic lifeline, and says the future of his Siweiqi brand canvas shoes, which resemble Converse All-Stars, depends on continued support with sales promotions and exposure. “What we’ve seen so far is just a signal,” he said.

A sales bump is one thing, but building a successful brand is quite another, said Shaun Rein, managing director at marketing firm CMR China. “It’s kind of unlikely to be successful because it’s not so easy just to create a brand out of nowhere,” he said. “For Alibaba, the key is to make a show that they’re trying to crack down on fakes,” he added, noting the company takes a cut on all sales – fake or legitimate.

The American Apparel & Footwear Association, which has lobbied the U.S. government to put pressure on Alibaba, says the company should focus on making it easier for brands to get listings of fake products taken off Alibaba websites.

“The programmes that are going to be the most effective for us are going to be those that really address removing these products from the site,” said AAFA Executive Vice President Steve Lamar, adding that progress has been very slow.

Alibaba removed 12 million product listings last year following complaints from brands, Ni said. He defended the takedown procedures, which critics say are cumbersome, saying that about 40 percent of suspected listings in brand complaints turned out to be genuine or impossible to confirm as fake.

Standing by a motorcycle laden with Nike and Adidas boxes in Putian, Xiao Zhen says business ebbs and flows with the cycle of crackdowns, but won’t dry up any time soon – even if Alibaba can help boost a few successful home-grown brands.

“If everyone could afford famous shoe brands there wouldn’t be anyone making fakes,” she said.

($1 = 6.1951 yuan)

(Editing by Ian Geoghegan)

Source Article from https://es.noticias.yahoo.com/alibabas-latest-gambit-fighting-fakes-foster-local-brands-022247378–finance.html

via press release:

NOTICIAS  TELEMUNDO  PRESENTS:

“MURIENDO POR CRUZAR,” AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE INCREASING NUMBER OF IMMIGRANT DEATHS ALONG THE BORDER, THIS SUNDAY, AUGUST 3 AT 6 P.M./5 C

Carmen Dominicci and Neida Sandoval present the Telemundo and The Weather Channel co-production

Miami – July 31, 2014 – Telemundo presents “Muriendo por Cruzar”, a documentary that investigates why increasing numbers of immigrants are dying while trying to cross the US-Mexican border near the city of Falfurrias, Texas, this Sunday, August 3 at 6PM/5 C.  The Telemundo and The Weather Channel co-production, presented by Noticias Telemundo journalists Carmen Dominicci and Neida Sandoval, reveals the obstacles immigrants face once they cross into US territory, including extreme weather conditions, as they try to evade the border patrol.  “Muriendo por Cruzar” is part of Noticias Telemundo’s special coverage of the crisis on the border and immigration reform.

 

“‘Muriendo por Cruzar’” dares to ask questions that reveal the actual conditions undocumented immigrants face as they try to start a new life in the United States,” said Alina Falcón, Telemundo’s Executive Vice President for News and Alternative Programming.  “Our collaboration with The Weather Channel was very productive. They have a unique expertise in covering the impact of weather on people’s lives, as we do in covering immigration reform and the border crisis. The result is a compelling documentary that exposes a harrowing reality.”

“Muriendo por Cruzar” is the first co-production by Telemundo and The Weather Channel.  Both networks are part of NBCUniversal.

Source Article from http://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com/2014/07/31/noticias-telemundo-presents-muriendo-por-cruzar-this-sunday-august-3-at-6pm/289119/

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Martes, 12 de Agosto 2014  |  1:46 pm






Famosos lamentan la muerte de Robin Williams

Celebridades y admiradores del fallecido actor lamentaron la prdida al tiempo que elogiaron su persona y carrera artstica. | Fuente: Privada | Twitter Thala


Celebridades y admiradores de Robin Williams lamentaron la muerte del actor, al parecer por suicidio.








El destacado actor Robin Williams era uno de los artistas más queridos de Hollywood. Así quedó demostrado a través de frases que compartieron los famosos en Twitter.

La conductora Ellen DeGeneres escribió: “No puedo creer la noticia sobre Robin Williams. Él dio tanto a tanta gente. Tengo el corazón destrozado”.

“Supiste sembrar en mi risas y reflexión con tu arte. Una pérdida profunda de un ser tan mágico y especial. Hoy muchos que necesitan entender lo que es la depresión, levantarán su voz para pedir ayuda o para brindarla. Descansa en paz #Robin Williams, siempre te recordaremos con una cálida sonrisa”, escribió la cantante mexicana Thalía.

Mientras que Sarah Michelle, compartió varias fotografías con el destacado actor. Estas son algunas de las reacciones más destacadas en las redes sociales, conoce más en la siguiente galería.








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Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2014-08-12-continuan-las-reacciones-por-la-muerte-de-robin-williams-noticia_715737.html

Ashley Sawyer participou de episódio da segunda temporada de ‘Catfish’ (Foto: Reprodução/MTV)

A participante de um episódio da segunda temporada do programa “Catfish”, Ashley Sawyer, morreu aos 23 anos nos Estados Unidos. Segundo a MTV americana, responsável pela série, a causa da morte é desconhecida.

“A MTV está profundamente triste por saber que Ashley Sawyer morreu”, afirmou a emissora em nota. “Nossas condolências, pensamentos e orações vão à sua família e aos seus amigos.”

“Catfish” é uma série-documentário que investiga pessoas com relacionamentos pela internet e que mentem sobre sua identidade aos parceiros virtuais.

O episódio com a participação de Sawyer foi transmitido nos EUA em 2013. O capítulo mostrou que tanto ela quanto Michael Fortunato, com quem Sawyer tinha um relacionamento digital por sete anos, mentiam um para o outro.

Ele morreu um mês depois da transmissão aos 26 anos de idade por embolia pulmonar.

À MTV americana, a irmã de Sawyer, Jessica Ross, afirmou que Ashley havia completado um programa de reabilitação e morava no Alabama.

Source Article from http://g1.globo.com/pop-arte/noticia/2016/05/ashley-sawyer-participante-do-programa-catfish-morre-aos-23-anos.html

The United States, like most countries, does not recognize Taiwan as an independent nation. It adheres to the one-China policy, which states that there is only one China, and which acknowledges the Chinese point of view that Taiwan is part of it.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/10/10/taiwan-china-reunification-tsai-ing-wen/

CARSON, California.- Una vez que se reactivó la MLS con un nuevo torneo, Giovani dos Santos sufrió una mala noticia, ya que se lesionó durante el juego entre LA Galaxy y Portland Timbers.

Gío presentó una distensión de tendones en su pierna derecha, que le impidió jugar los noventa minutos. El mexicano solamente participó durante la primera parte en donde acusó molestias.

Después del silbatazo final, el técnico del equipo Curt Onalfo, explicó un posible reporte médico, mismo que será hasta hoy cuando se oficialice. “Gío dos Santos tiene una pequeña distensión de tendones o quizás solo fatiga. Sabremos con exactitud mañana (hoy), pero él no podía seguir jugando en el segundo tiempo, por eso tuve que sustituirlo.

La lesión podría poner en predicamentos a Juan Carlos Osorio, quien en breve deberá dar su lista de seleccionados del Tricolor para los juegos de eliminatoria mundialista frente a Costa Rica y Trinidad y Tobago a finales de marzo.

Source Article from https://www.elsoldezacatecas.com.mx/deportes/malas-noticias-gio-esta-lesionado


“What has allowed Pete [Buttigeig] to be successful is that South Bend doesn’t have the same demands that a New York City or a Los Angeles mayor has,” said Doug Herman, a Democratic strategist. | Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images

2020 elections

‘The irony is that the South Bend mayor is being taken seriously and the New York mayor’s not.’

05/12/2019 06:49 AM EDT

Updated 05/12/2019 10:40 AM EDT


LOS ANGELES — No mayor has ever ascended directly to the White House. So, Pete Buttigieg’s surprising performance in the Democratic primary has been met with a dose of excitement in the nation’s city halls — along with some humility.

Buttigieg, the mayor of Indiana’s fourth-largest city, has been steeped in television coverage, raised millions of dollars and been photographed with his husband, Chasten, for the cover of Time magazine.

Story Continued Below

Meanwhile, New York’s Bill de Blasio, the mayor of the nation’s largest city, is having difficulty persuading anyone — the media, his own constituents — to take his potential run for president seriously.

“Everybody’s going to laugh at him” if he runs, said Doug Herman, a Democratic strategist. “The irony is that the South Bend mayor is being taken seriously and the New York mayor’s not.”

And it isn’t just de Blasio. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who considered running for president before demurring earlier this year, has been asked more than once whether Buttigieg’s success has made him reconsider his choices.

“Mayor Pete, somebody that is a veteran like you, is a mayor like you, is a Rhodes scholar like you, is a pianist like you,” a reporter asked Garcetti in Los Angeles recently, where he appeared alongside Buttigieg. “Do you think, ‘That could have been me?’”

Perhaps it could have been Garcetti. Or former mayors Mitch Landrieu of New Orleans or Michael Bloomberg of New York or any number of big-city mayors or former mayors sitting 2020 out. The Democratic primary once appeared likely to present an opening for a politician who could lean on a record of executive experience in a big, heavily Democratic city.

But what Buttigieg’s success brought to light more than anything is that the particulars of the position were never all that important — that the lane that once appeared to exist for mayors was, in fact, incidental to the office.

“He’s not carrying the flag for mayors,” said Rebecca Katz, a progressive consultant who advised Cynthia Nixon in her primary campaign against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo last year. “Mayor is part of his qualification, [but] he’s running as a millennial, he’s running as a veteran, he’s running a historic candidacy as the first LGBTQ candidate. So there’s a lot of things that make Buttigieg special.”

Still, she said, “I think when mayors, when other elected officials look at his actual qualifications, it’s easy to see how they could look in the mirror and say, ‘Why not me?’”

More than a year ago, when the Democratic primary field was first beginning to take shape, mayors began presenting themselves as credible contenders for the very reason that they were mayors. They pointed to their city hall executive experience and their burgeoning influence within the Democratic Party. With President Donald Trump in the White House and Republicans running Congress before the midterm elections, large Democratic urban centers were a place of refuge for progressives.

“It’s definitely a season for cities,” Buttigieg said last year. “And it’s definitely a season for mayors.”

But then mayors started dropping from the 2020 landscape. Garcetti passed on a run. So did Landrieu and Bloomberg.

Julián Castro, the former mayor of San Antonio, is running. But he polled at about 1 percent in the most recent Morning Consult survey. So is John Hickenlooper, the former Colorado governor and Denver mayor. Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), the former mayor of Newark, stands at 3 percent.

And de Blasio? More than three-quarters of New Yorkers think he shouldn’t run for president, according to a recent Quinnipiac University poll.

“Who Hasn’t told Bill de Blasio That He Shouldn’t Run for President?” a New York magazine headline read.

David Holt, the Republican mayor of Oklahoma City, said it is possible that Garcetti and de Blasio, among other high-profile mayors, were burdened by being known too well by Democrats. Buttigieg’s relative anonymity offered his supporters the excitement of discovering something new.

“Pete was a fresh face, and I think he significantly benefited from that in this process,” Holt said. “If they’d never heard of Cory Booker for some reason three months ago, then I think they’d be pretty excited about him, too. But he and other known candidates have been known quantities for a [long] time.”

On the other hand, Holt said, “For most people, my experience is they’ve never heard of Mayor Buttigieg in their lives.” His candidacy “was kind of an exciting development.”

While not widely known to Democratic voters, Buttigieg had gained some significant connections to party activists through his work with fellow mayors and during his long shot bid to become chairman of the Democratic National Committee. And Buttigieg was less encumbered by the baggage of government than some of his counterparts in bigger cities.

“What has allowed Pete to be successful is that South Bend doesn’t have the same demands that a New York City or a Los Angeles mayor has,” Herman said.

Buttigieg is governing a relatively small city — South Bend’s population is just more than 100,000 people — but his supporters do not care. When searching for identifiers, they are just as likely to mention that he is young, gay, a polyglot or a veteran as they are to define him as a mayor.

Bill Carrick, who managed former Missouri Rep. Dick Gephardt’s 1988 presidential campaign and who advises Garcetti, said of Buttigieg’s success, “I don’t think it has anything to do with being a mayor.”

“That’s all attributable to him — his personality and the way he articulates a message,” Carrick said. “Here’s this guy who is very smart, articulate, interesting background. Yeah, sure, mayor, but also a veteran. … He seized the moment.”

Like most other Democrats, Buttigieg remains far behind Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders in early presidential contest polls. But he is running with the top handful of candidates behind them, and he is raising money at a furious clip.

At a sold-out fundraiser at a West Hollywood gay bar this week, Buttigieg told supporters that, at this point in the campaign, he had expected to be “spending our time explaining how to say my name and convincing people that I ought to be somewhere in this process so that we could fight our way onto the debate stage and have a breakout moment maybe in June.”

“Instead, we qualified for the debates a long time ago,” Buttigieg said. “People are still trying to figure out how to say my name. But instead of trying to claw our way into the top 10, we are consolidating our position as one of the top candidates in the presidential race.”

Many mayors are glad to see it. Steve Benjamin, the Columbia, S.C., mayor and chairman of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, said many mayors are excited about Buttigieg’s candidacy and are hopeful that he could help refocus Washington’s attention on America’s cities.

For years, Benjamin said, “We’ve been, to some degree, knocking our heads against a wall looking for a partner in Washington, D.C. … A lot of mayors are excited to see a peer running and finding some success.”

Garcetti, responding to a reporter’s question about whether Buttigieg’s candidacy made him second-guess his own decision not to run, answered quickly: “No, I think that this is a great candidate for president.

“I’ve never had an ounce of regret.”

Then Garcetti, who has not endorsed a candidate and is appearing with many of them as they come through Los Angeles, called Buttigieg a “kindred spirit.”

As a fellow mayor, he said, “He gets to be my avatar, and I get to run for president through him.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/05/12/pete-buttigieg-2020-mayors-1317436


Gov. Gavin Newsom | Rich Pedroncelli/AP Photo

09/30/2020 06:27 PM EDT

Updated 09/30/2020 08:30 PM EDT


OAKLAND — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday signed policing bills that ban chokeholds, allow the state Department of Justice to investigate police shootings and give counties more oversight of sheriff’s departments.

Impact: The signings represent a win for police reform advocates and Democrats who introduced a wave of bills after the May police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Still, the moment is bittersweet for these groups after some of the most aggressive proposals — including bills to establish a police decertification process and mandate officers intercede to stop excessive force — stalled in the Legislature.

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The new laws: CA AB1506 (19R), by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento), is the biggest breakthrough for legislative advocates for changing police practices. They tried and failed in past years to overhaul the investigatory process for police shootings and other uses of lethal force. The bill will establish an investigative unit within the Department of Justice to handle investigations of officer-involved shootings and lethal force when requested by local law enforcement agencies or district attorneys.

“This has been an effort before George Floyd, but the murder of George Floyd before our eyes put these issues in the spotlight, and it allowed us to get bipartisan support,” McCarty said, explaining it took three and a half years to get the bill enacted.

CA AB1196 (19R), by Assemblymember Mike Gipson (D-Carson), prohibits officers from using carotid restraints or chokeholds, techniques that have come under increased scrutiny in the last few months. The change comes after local law enforcement agencies around the state and country quickly banned the technique in the days following Floyd’s death as a result of an officer kneeling on his neck.

Newsom signed another measure authored by McCarty, CA AB 1185 (19R), that will give county officials more oversight of sheriff’s departments and grant them more authority to collect records from a department in the course of an investigation. The bill specifically authorizes a county to establish a sheriff oversight board and an office of the inspector general that can issue subpoenas.

Later Wednesday, Newsom’s office announced he signed CA AB 846 (19R), by Assemblymembers Autumn Burke (D-Marina del Rey) and Jacqui Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks), which requires law enforcement agencies to evaluate prospective officers for any potential biases related to race, religion, gender or other attributes protected from discrimination.

What’s next: Legislative leaders have committed to making police reform a priority in 2021 after a half-dozen bills died at the end of a chaotic session.

The most contentious is CA SB731 (19R), by Sen. Steve Bradford (D-Gardena), which would have established a system for decertifying peace officers who have committed serious offenses or abuses on the job. California is one of only five states that don’t have a process for pulling an officer’s badge if they’ve committed a crime, which allows problem officers to bounce between departments.

Another measure that will likely be reintroduced next session include an effort by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) that would mandate specific steps an officer has to take when witnessing another officer using excessive force. Other proposals likely to resurface include a ban on using rubber bullets, tear gas and pepper spray during protests and a requirement that all use-of-force incidents are subject to public disclosure.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/california/story/2020/09/30/newsom-to-sign-chokehold-ban-police-shooting-oversight-bill-1319013

An Ethiopian Airlines jet faltered and crashed Sunday shortly after takeoff from the country’s capital, spreading global grief to families in 35 countries that had a loved one among the 157 people who were killed.

Three Austrian physicians. The co-founder of an international aid organization. A career ambassador. The wife and children of a Slovak legislator. A Nigerian-born Canadian college professor, author and satirist. They were all among the passengers who died Sunday morning when the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 jetliner crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa en route to Nairobi, Kenya.

The airline has said eight Americans were killed.

Body bags were spread out nearby while Red Cross and other workers looked for remains.

Around the world, families were gripped by grief. At the Addis Ababa airport, a woman called a phone number in vain. “Where are you, my son?” she said, in tears. Others cried as they approached the terminal.

At the Nairobi airport, hopes quickly dimmed for loved ones. “I just pray that he is safe or he was not on it,” said Agnes Muilu, who had come to pick up her brother.

Henom Esayas, whose sister’s husband was killed, told The Associated Press they were startled when a stranger picked up their frantic calls to his phone, told them he had found it in the debris and promptly switched it off.

DEBRIS OFF MADAGASCAR ‘MOST LIKELY’ FROM MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT 370, REPORT SAYS

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

The father of a British woman named Joanna Toole has told the DevonLive website that he was informed she’d died in the 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.”

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.

The Ethiopian Airlines flight crashed shortly after takeoff from Ethiopia’s capital on Sunday morning, killing all 157 on board, authorities said, as grieving families rushed to airports in Addis Ababa and the destination, Nairobi. (AP Photo/Yidnek Kirubel)

Another victim, Cedric Asiavugwa, a law student at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., was on his way to Nairobi after the death of his fiancee’s mother, the university said in a statement.

Asiavugwa, who was in his third year at the law school, was born and raised in Mombasa, Kenya. Before he came to Georgetown, he worked with groups helping refugees in Zimbabwe, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, the university said, adding that his family and friends “remembered him as a kind, compassionate and gentle soul, known for his beautifully warm and infectious smile.”

Shocked leaders of the United Nations, the U.N. refugee agency and the World Food Program announced that colleagues had been on the plane. The U.N. migration agency estimated some 19 U.N.-affiliated employees were killed. Both Addis Ababa and Nairobi are major hubs for humanitarian workers, and many people were on their way to a large U.N. environmental conference set to begin Monday in Nairobi.

The Addis Ababa-Nairobi route links East Africa’s two largest economic powers. Travelers and tour groups crowd the Addis Ababa airport’s waiting areas, along with businessmen from China, Gulf nations and elsewhere.

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, 18. Several countries including the United States lost four or more people.

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

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

Ethiopian officials declared Monday a day of mourning.

The Ethiopian plane was new, delivered to the airline in November. The Boeing 737 Max 8 was one of 30 meant for the airline, Boeing said in July. The jet’s last maintenance was on Feb. 4, and it had flown just 1,200 hours.

The plane crashed six minutes after departure, plowing into the ground at Hejere near Bishoftu, or Debre Zeit, some 31 miles outside Addis Ababa, at 8:44 a.m.

There was no immediate indication why the plane went down in clear weather while on a flight to Nairobi, the capital of neighboring Kenya.

Members of the Ethiopian community taking part in a special prayer for the victims of the Ethiopian Airlines flight ET302 crash, at the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church of Canada Saint Mary Cathedral in Toronto, on Sunday. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press via AP)

In the U.S., the Federal Aviation Administration said it would join the National Transportation Safety Board in assisting Ethiopian authorities with the crash investigation. Boeing planned to send a technical team to Ethiopia.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The crash shattered more than two years of relative calm in African skies, where travel had long been chaotic. It also was a serious blow to state-owned Ethiopian Airlines, which has expanded to become the continent’s largest and best-managed carrier and turned Addis Ababa into the gateway to Africa.

African air travel has improved in recent years, with the International Air Transport Association in November noting “two years free of any fatalities on any aircraft type.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/ethiopian-airlines-plane-crash-spreading-global-grief-to-families-in-35-countries

In Washington, D.C.-area Asia circles last week, the rumor mill was buzzing with the news of a possible media event at the Demilitarized Zone that separates the two Koreas during President Trump’s visit to South Korea. The other part of that rumor, that Trump would have a third summit, or at least a short meeting, with North Korean Chairman Kim Jong Un, was also floated—but no White House or Blue House officials would commit to anything (well, at least not to me).

But something told me I was not to be disappointed. I held out hope for one reason: Donald Trump’s strategy for dealing with North Korea always involved taking the old rulebook on dealing with the Kim regime and lighting it on fire. What violates such diplomatic decorum more than a meeting planned with little notice and almost no time to prepare? Such a gathering, however, oozes with the potential to get Washington and Pyongyang back on track towards a new type of relations free of nuclear threats. It also hints to the possible elimination of Kim’s nuclear weapons altogether. In other words, it was just too good to pass up for both sides, as I saw it.

TRUMP MEETS KIM IN DMZ, BECOMES FIRST SITTING US PRESIDENT TO STEP INTO HERMIT KINGDOM

With no risk, and lots of possible rewards, why not give it a shot? Trump’s greatest advantage in dealing with Pyongyang is that he simply does not care about the so-called proper way of conducting diplomacy. His mission, as it has always been, is to keep the American people safe, secure and prosperous. A meeting along the DMZ, even if it was quick and more of a gut check to see where Chairman Kim stood on the all-important question of denuclearization, clearly attempts to advance such an agenda. Trump took a chance for peace, with little downside to trying.

In my humble opinion, the president has done more good on the Korean issue in the last year and a half than President Obama did in eight.

Ever the showman, the president did not disappoint. In a historic gathering where Trump became the first sitting U.S. president to step into North Korea, he met with Chairman Kim jointly with South Korean President Moon Jae-in while also having a separate meeting with Kim. While no major deal was announced, just the sheer act of Trump crossing into North Korea territory is progress itself, a sign that trust is building and that both sides can work towards a brighter future. Remember, history is all about mind-blowing optics that change hearts and minds. Most people can’t recite the details of a certain treaty or document that made history, but they always remember the photo that did. Trump delivered that Sunday.

To be honest, this is a day I never thought I would see in my lifetime. During the dark days of 2017, I thought the chances were high that a nuclear war between America and North Korea could break out at any moment. While no handshake can take the place of full-blown nuclear disarmament, meetings such as these can set the tone where more summits and working level gatherings can take place for both sides to make big gains. We must start somewhere, and the past two summits and now Sunday’s gathering all build trust toward the harder work and agreements that are yet to come.

But, just as in all things that involve President Trump, those who can’t stand his clearly unconventional and unorthodox style as commander-in-chief were quick to lash out. Word from the pundit class—or the so-called foreign policy “experts” in both parties who cheered on the Iraq War, the disaster in Libya or countless other international debacles that cost our nation trillions of dollars and too many American lives—called Trump a fool for doing this.

That’s just flat wrong. While I have always believed progressives take their attacks on Trump too far, I can’t say I agree with everything the president does, either. For one, I am not a fan of Trump’s shoot-from-the-cellphone tweetstorms, going on a rampage on whatever issue has upset him at the time. I do get frustrated when he gets the facts wrong on some of the most basic issues. But on this issue, the idea that he is pulling out all the stops to try and get North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons and perhaps someday join the brotherhood of nations, is not only smart statecraft, it’s also good common sense.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Sorry, I won’t let the good outweigh what is merely annoying. In my humble opinion, the president has done more good on the Korean issue in the last year and a half than President Obama did in eight. North Korea is no longer testing nuclear weapons or long-range missiles, and Trump is now apparently pen pals with Kim. Is it all rather strange? Yep. But is it better than a war that would kill millions of people? For sure. And while we have a long way to go before we can declare North Korea is no longer a threat to America, I for one love what the president is doing. And so should the American people.

And heck, if President Obama received a Nobel Prize for nearly nothing, then I think there is only one obvious thing to do, and that’s to make sure Donald Trump receives the award as well.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE FROM HARRY KAZIANIS

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/harry-kazianis-is-trumps-north-korea-strategy-nobel-prize-worthy-obama-got-one-for-much-less

Inland flooding is the leading cause of death associated with tropical cyclones in the past 50 years, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency. On average, damage from inland floods costs more than any other severe weather event. It’s a problem from the mountains of western North Carolina, where Tropical Storm Fred killed five people last week, to the streets of Dearborn, Mich., where heavy rains have repeatedly overwhelmed the sewer systems and destroyed homes.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2021/08/23/tennessee-floods-show-pressing-climate-danger-across-america-wall-water/

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. – President Donald Trump gave a speech Saturday thanking many people for positive Israeli-American relations, but did not mention one prominent supporter: Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Nor did Trump discuss whether he would grant Netanyahu’s major request to back an Israeli annexation of the Jordan Valley, a strip of land that includes nearly a third of the West Bank.

Instead, Trump proclaimed that the U.S.-Israeli “partnership” has never been better, citing actions that ranged from moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem to pulling out of the Iran nuclear agreement.

“The Jewish state has never had a better friend in the White House than your president, Donald J. Trump,” he said at a conference sponsored by the Israeli-American Council, a Los Angeles-based nonprofit group that works to strengthen the bond between the United States and Israel.

Political leaders in the United States and Israel had planned to watch the speech closely for any major change in U.S.-Israeli policy and signs that his bromance with Netanyahu is ebbing.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/12/07/trump-speech-florida-could-offer-clues-israeli-policy-netanyahu/2622283001/



Share of I.C.U. beds occupied in each hospital





More than 95%

90-95%

Less than 90%

No data

Circle size is proportional to I.C.U. capacity.

Wash.

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Ore.

Vt.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Conn.

R.I.

Mich.

Wyo.

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

Neb.

Nev.

Ohio

Md.

Del.

Ind.

Ill.

Utah

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

N.C.

Tenn.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ala.

Miss.

Texas

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

Less than 90%

No data

More than 95%

90-95%

Circle size is proportional to I.C.U. capacity.

Wash.

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Ore.

Vt.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Conn.

Mich.

R.I.

Wyo.

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

Neb.

Nev.

Md.

Ohio

Del.

Ill.

Ind.

Utah

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

N.C.

Tenn.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ala.

Miss.

Texas

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

Less than 90%

No data

More than 95%

90-95%

Wash.

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Vt.

Ore.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

Mass.

S.D.

N.Y.

Conn.

Mich.

Wyo.

R.I.

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

Neb.

Nev.

Ohio

Md.

Del.

Ind.

Ill.

Utah

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

N.C.

Tenn.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ala.

Miss.

Texas

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

Hospitals in the southern United States are running dangerously low on space in intensive care units, as the Delta variant has led to spikes in coronavirus cases not seen since last year’s deadly winter wave.

One in four hospitals now reports more than 95 percent of I.C.U. beds occupied — up from one in five last month. Experts say it can become difficult to maintain standards of care for the sickest patients in hospitals where all or nearly all I.C.U. beds are occupied.

In June, when Covid-19 cases were at their lowest level, less than one in 10 hospitals had dangerously high occupancy rates.


Share of I.C.U. beds occupied in each hospital service area





More than 95%

90-95%

Less than 90%

No data

Week ending July 1

Week ending Sept. 9

Wash.

Wash.

Maine

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Mont.

N.D.

Vt.

Ore.

Vt.

Ore.

Minn.

Minn.

N.H.

N.H.

Idaho

Idaho

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Conn.

Mich.

Conn.

Wyo.

Mich.

Wyo.

R.I.

R.I.

Pa.

Iowa

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

N.J.

Neb.

Neb.

Nev.

Nev.

Md.

Ohio

Md.

Ohio

Ind.

Del.

Ill.

Ind.

Del.

Ill.

Utah

Utah

Calif.

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

Ky.

N.C.

N.C.

Tenn.

Tenn.

Okla.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ariz.

Ark.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ga.

Ala.

Ala.

Miss.

Miss.

Texas

Texas

La.

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

Hawaii

More than 95%

90-95%

Less than 90%

No data

Week ending July 1

Week ending Sept. 9

Wash.

Wash.

Maine

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Mont.

N.D.

Vt.

Ore.

Vt.

Ore.

Minn.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Mich.

Conn.

Wyo.

Mich.

Wyo.

Conn.

R.I.

R.I.

Pa.

Iowa

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

N.J.

Neb.

Neb.

Nev.

Nev.

Md.

Ohio

Ohio

Ind.

Del.

Ill.

Md.

Ind.

Del.

Ill.

Utah

Utah

Calif.

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

Ky.

N.C.

N.C.

Tenn.

Tenn.

Okla.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ariz.

Ark.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ga.

Ala.

Ala.

Miss.

Miss.

Texas

Texas

La.

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

Hawaii

More than 95%

90-95%

Less than 90%

No data

Week ending July 1

Wash.

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Vt.

Ore.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Conn.

Mich.

Wyo.

R.I.

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

Neb.

Nev.

Md.

Ohio

Ind.

Del.

Ill.

Utah

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

N.C.

Tenn.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ala.

Miss.

Texas

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

Week ending Sept. 9

Wash.

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Vt.

Ore.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Conn.

Mich.

Wyo.

R.I.

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

Neb.

Nev.

Md.

Ohio

Ind.

Del.

Ill.

Utah

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

N.C.

Tenn.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ala.

Miss.

Texas

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

More than 95%

90-95%

Less than 90%

No data

Week ending July 1

Wash.

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Vt.

Ore.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

S.D.

Mass.

N.Y.

Mich.

Wyo.

Conn.

R.I.

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

Neb.

Nev.

Ohio

Md.

Del.

Ind.

Ill.

Utah

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

N.C.

Tenn.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ala.

Miss.

Texas

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

Week ending Sept. 9

Wash.

Maine

Mont.

N.D.

Vt.

Ore.

Minn.

N.H.

Idaho

Wis.

N.Y.

S.D.

Mass.

Mich.

Wyo.

Conn.

R.I.

Pa.

Iowa

N.J.

Neb.

Nev.

Ohio

Md.

Ind.

Del.

Ill.

Utah

Calif.

W.V.

Colo.

Va.

Mo.

Kan.

Ky.

N.C.

Tenn.

Okla.

Ariz.

Ark.

S.C.

N.M.

Ga.

Ala.

Miss.

Texas

La.

Fla.

Alaska

Hawaii

In Alabama, all I.C.U. beds are currently occupied. In recent days, dozens of patients in the state have needed beds that were not available, according to data published by the Department of Health and Human Services.

“It means they’re in the waiting room, some are in the back of ambulances, things of that nature,” said Jeannie Gaines, a spokesperson for the Alabama Hospital Association.


Alabama I.C.U. occupancy





50% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

60%

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

50% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

60%

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

60% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

70%

80%

90%

95%

Over

100%

Week

ending

July 1

Week

ending

Sept. 9

In Texas, 169 hospitals have I.C.U.s that are more than 95 percent full, up from 69 in June. There are only about 700 intensive care beds remaining across the entire state, according to recent data.

Hospitals in Houston constructed overflow tents last month to handle the influx of patients, and the rate of hospitalizations in the state is now 40 percent higher than when the tents were built.


Texas I.C.U. occupancy





50% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

60%

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

50% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

60%

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

60% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

Twenty-four hospitals in Florida reported having more I.C.U. patients last week than available beds.

During past surges, hospitals have been forced to improvise by having staff care for more patients than usual or by setting up temporary intensive care beds in other wings of the hospital.

Patients with critical conditions besides Covid, like heart attacks or strokes, can also have worse health outcomes when most beds are full.


Florida I.C.U. occupancy





50% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

60%

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

50% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

60%

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

60% of I.C.U.

beds occupied

70%

80%

90%

95%

Week

ending

July 1

Over

100%

Week

ending

Sept. 9

Unvaccinated Americans are 10 times more likely to be hospitalized with Covid than the vaccinated, according to a recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Several of the states with the highest rates of I.C.U. occupancy, including Alabama and Mississippi, are also among those with the lowest vaccination rates.

“Our biggest concerns are our low vaccination rates,” said Dr. Scott Harris, Alabama’s state health officer. “That’s the reason we’re in the situation that we’re in. Virtually all of our deaths are people who are unvaccinated.”

Hospitalizations among children under 18 are also higher than ever during this wave of the virus, driven largely by surges among children in the least vaccinated states.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/09/14/us/covid-hospital-icu-south.html

The House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday exceeded its bounds in issuing a subpoena for the full report from special counsel Robert Mueller on Russian skullduggery concerning the 2016 elections.

Attorney General William Barr should release as much of the Mueller report as possible, as soon as possible, because the public has a right to see what all the fuss was about. Yet if he determines that some information within it is either classified or subject to grand jury secrecy rules, he is duty-bound to redact it. Unless Congress passes, and President Trump signs, a new law waiving grand jury secrecy rules, then existing laws protecting that secrecy should take legal precedence over Congress’ subpoena authority.

This is decidedly not a similar situation to the 1998 investigation of, and eventual impeachment of, then-President Bill Clinton. That investigation was led not by a special counsel, which is what Robert Mueller was, but by an independent counsel, Kenneth Starr. The difference is significant.

Under the independent counsel statute, which has since lapsed (and always was of dubious constitutionality anyway), such counsels were creatures of, and reported to, Congress. They existed independent of, and separate from, the ordinary lines of authority within the Justice Department and the executive branch. When House Speaker Newt Gingrich and company made the foolish decision to post the full Starr report immediately on the Internet, they had full power to do so because Starr’s report was specifically theirs to use as they saw fit.

Special counsels are different. Special counsels, while enjoying a modicum of separation from ordinary lines of authority in the Justice Department, are nonetheless still ultimately part of the department and the executive branch as a whole. They report to the attorney general (or his designee), and they must follow all ordinary rules of civil and criminal procedure.

Under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e), neither the attorney for the government nor anyone else may “disclose a matter occurring before the grand jury.” The exceptions involve disclosure to another federal grand jury or to an attorney for the government pursuing another criminal matter in certain circumstances, or to certain national security officials if the information involves foreign intelligence, terrorism, or threat of attack. If petitioned by the government or a defendant in another judicial proceeding, the court can also permit release in the other proceeding. Absent such very limited circumstances, Barr would run afoul of this almost blanket prohibition, and could be sanctioned by contempt of court if he disclosed to Congress any grand jury information in the Mueller report under Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(7).

Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., and the Democrats surely know this, but seem not to care about the rule of law, the sanctity of the grand jury process, or the lack of any impeachment authorization in the House that could be considered a “judicial proceeding” to support their subpoena.

The Democrats are not seeking the grand jury information “to avoid a possible injustice in another judicial proceeding,” Douglas Oil Co. v. Petrol Stops Nw., 441 U.S. 211, 222 (1979). Nor are they seeking grand jury information to support articles of impeachment, as the House has not authorized such inquiry, unlike 1974 when grand jury information was produced to the Judiciary Committee related to its impeachment inquiry of President Richard M. Nixon. (Haldeman v. Sirica, 501 F.2d 714 — D.C. Cir. 1974). Likewise, the impeachment proceedings of federal district Judge Alcee Hastings provided the basis for the 11th Circuit to consider such congressional efforts a “judicial proceeding” and thus the House Judiciary Committee could subpoena grand jury documents related to Hastings’ indictment. (In re Request for Access to Grand Jury Materials Grand Jury 81-1, Miami, 833 F.2d 1438 — 11th Cir. 1987).

If Nadler wants to subpoena any grand jury information contained in the Mueller report, he first needs a majority of the House to authorize the Judiciary Committee to investigate impeachment of President Trump.

Somehow, it doesn’t seem as if Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants to open that can of worms, at least not yet.

Quin Hillyer is a senior commentary writer for the Washington Examiner. James Robertson is a lawyer in Mobile, Ala.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/jerry-nadlers-mueller-report-subpoena-isnt-legit-without-impeachment-inquiry

Firefighters surveyed the Soda Rock Winery as it burned during the Kincade Fire and flames raced through Healdsburg, Calif., on Sunday.

Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images


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Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images

Firefighters surveyed the Soda Rock Winery as it burned during the Kincade Fire and flames raced through Healdsburg, Calif., on Sunday.

Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images

A fire that has been burning through the wine country of California’s Sonoma County for the past few days is now spurring evacuations in its largest city.

And as firefighters work to control blazes in both Northern and Southern California, even residents who aren’t running for their lives are dealing with other effects of the fires: rolling blackouts and poor air quality.

Some 180,000 people are being asked to leave their homes in Northern California as the Kincade Fire threatens the city of Santa Rosa. “This is the largest evacuation that any of us at the Sheriff’s Office can remember. Take care of each other,” the office tweeted.

At 3:18 a.m., the city of Healdsburg alerted residents, “Winds have kicked up and the Kincade Fire is approaching. … If you are still in town, LEAVE NOW.”

The Kincade Fire is just 11% contained after three days and has burned about 26,000 acres. Smoke from the fires is affecting the entire Bay Area, though in most of the region, air quality was not expected to exceed the “Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups” range.

PG&E, the state’s bankrupt electric utility, said it would be cutting power to 940,000 homes and businesses in 38 counties. That means an estimated 2.35 million people are without power, according to The Associated Press. The utility company said it was notifying customers 48 hours and 24 hours in advance and then again just before cutting power — but warned that other customers could lose power without notice because of damage to PG&E equipment.

Authorities are still investigating the cause of the Kincade Fire, but PG&E said one of its transmission towers had been damaged shortly before the fire erupted in the same area.

Firefighters hose down a burning house during the Tick Fire in Agua Dulce, near Santa Clarita, Calif., on Friday.

Mark Ralston/AFP via Getty Images


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Mark Ralston/AFP via Getty Images

Firefighters hose down a burning house during the Tick Fire in Agua Dulce, near Santa Clarita, Calif., on Friday.

Mark Ralston/AFP via Getty Images

The Los Angeles County Fire Department said Sunday morning that the Tick Fire was 65% contained after burning 4,600 acres. It had destroyed or damaged about 50 structures in the two days since it had started.

Almost 1,000 firefighters were at work building additional containment lines and looking for burned areas in danger of rekindling. They were also preparing for more Santa Ana winds expected on Sunday evening and Monday morning. Critical fire conditions are possible on Wednesday and Thursday, as gusts could reach 50 to 70 miles per hour and humidity is low.

“The next 72 hours will be challenging,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said at a news conference Saturday, referring to both the power outages and the fires. “I could sugarcoat it, but I will not.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/10/27/773844324/2-million-californians-without-power-and-180-000-ordered-to-evacuate-amid-wildfi