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While hundreds of police, then Vice President Mike Pence, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), and others “were put in mortal danger, and as the seat of American Democracy was desecrated by the insurgent mob,” the complaint contended, Trump was reported by those close to him as being “delighted,” “borderline enthusiastic,” and “confused about why other people on his team weren’t as excited as he was.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/legal-issues/house-members-sue-trump-capitol-riot/2021/03/05/905b3a20-7cf5-11eb-85cd-9b7fa90c8873_story.html

Democrats on Capitol Hill and the 2020 campaign trail on Sunday expressed their sympathy over the death of former Rep. John ConyersJohn James ConyersEXCLUSIVE: Trump on reparations: ‘I don’t see it happening’ McConnell: Reparations aren’t ‘a good idea’ This week: Democrats move funding bills as caps deal remains elusive MORE (D-Mich.), one of the U.S.’s longest-serving black lawmakers.

Conyers’s fellow Democrats remembered the lawmaker in statements as a fighter for progressive causes such as single-payer healthcare and civil rights, pointing to his involvement in a congressional resolution apologizing for America’s role in the slave trade among other legislation.

“Saddened to hear of the passing of Congressman John Conyers,” tweeted Rep. Barbara LeeBarbara Jean LeeFemale lawmakers make bipartisan push for more women in politics at All In Together gala DeLauro enters race to succeed Lowey as Appropriations chief The 13 House Democrats who back Kavanaugh’s impeachment MORE (D-Calif.), former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus. “He was a tireless advocate for racial and economic justice for more than 50 years. As a CBC co-founder, he focused the nation’s attention on inequality and so many overlooked issues. My heart is with his family today.”

“Rep.John Conyers had an historic and principled 53 years of service,” added Rep. Steve CohenStephen (Steve) Ira CohenDemocrats introduce ‘THUG Act’ to block funding for G-7 at Trump resort Hill editor-in-chief: ‘Hard to imagine’ House leadership without Cummings Top Democrat holds moment of silence for Cummings at hearing MORE (D-Tenn.), who also served in Congress with Conyers. “He passed the MLK holiday after a 15 year campaign.He hired Rosa Parks.The Congressional apology for slavery and Jim Crow would not have occurred without his support. He was kind to all and a mentor to me.”

“Our Congressman forever, John Conyers, Jr.,” tweeted Rep. Rashida TlaibRashida Harbi TlaibHouse Democrats offer bill to expand the estate tax Bernie Sanders and Ilhan Omar to hold Minneapolis rally The Hill’s Campaign Report: DNC toughens December debate criteria MORE (D-Mich.), who hails from the same state Conyers once represented. “He never once wavered in fighting for jobs, justice and peace. We always knew where he stood on issues of equality and civil rights in the fight for the people. Thank you Congressman Conyers for fighting for us for over 50 years.”

“John Conyers was a civil rights champion who served Michigan and the people of Detroit for decades. He began his career working for John DingellJohn DingellEnergy efficiency cannot be a partisan issue for Washington Polling director: Young voters swayed by health care, economy, gun control McCain and Dingell: Inspiring a stronger Congress MORE, before running for Congress himself and they both believed in justice and equality for all,” tweeted another Michigan congresswoman, Rep. Debbie DingellDeborah (Debbie) Ann DingellHillicon Valley: Facebook launches ‘News Tab’ | Senate passes bill to take on ‘deepfakes’ | Schumer outlines vision for electric cars Dem lawmaker raises concerns over ‘eavesdropping’ smart speakers Pelosi focused on narrow impeachment probe on Ukraine: report MORE (D).

Candidates in the 2020 Democratic Party primary also sounded off on their support for Conyers’ legacy, including Sen. Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisHarris reverses course, attends South Carolina justice forum Watch live: 2020 Democrats speak at criminal justice forum Michael Moore praises O’Rourke on gun reform MORE (D-Calif.) who vowed to “carry on his fight.”

“For over 50 years, Congressional Black Caucus Co-Founder John Conyers Jr., reminded us to fight for jobs, justice, and peace and ensured we never forget Martin Luther King Jr.’s sacrifice,” she tweeted. “My prayers are with his family today.”

Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersHarris reverses course, attends South Carolina justice forum Watch live: 2020 Democrats speak at criminal justice forum Michael Moore praises O’Rourke on gun reform MORE (I-Vt.) addressed Conyers’ death at his campaign rally in Detroit alongside Tlaib Sunday afternoon, referring to Conyers as his “friend” and a “champion of civil rights.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/467671-democratic-lawmakers-candidates-pay-respects-to-john-conyers

Imágenes del interior del Manchester Arena.

La policía de la ciudad inglesa de Manchester reportó un “incidente grave” que causó al menos 19 muertos y 50 heridos este lunes en un estadio donde se desarrollaba un concierto de la cantante estadounidense Ariana Grande.

La entidad -que dijo haber recibido reportes de una explosión- pidió al público que se mantuviera lejos de la zona del atentado y señaló que lo sucedido está siendo investigado como un posible “incidente terrorista”.

“Los servicios de emergencia se encuentran atendiendo a reportes de una explosión en el Manchester Arena”, señaló el breve comunicado policial.

Imágenes de video en redes sociales mostraron a los espectadores tratando de salir del recinto en pánico.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
PA

Image caption

“Sólo queríamos salir lo más rápido posible porque no sabíamos qué estaba pasando”, narró uno de los presentes en el concierto.

Los administradores del Manchester Arena informaron en su cuenta de Twitter que el incidente sucedió en las afueras del escenario mientras la gente se retiraba del concierto.

“Nuestros pensamientos y oraciones están con las víctimas”, señaló el breve pronunciamiento.

El Manchester Arena es un centro deportivo cubierto con capacidad para 23.000 personas en el que se realizaron grandes presentaciones como conciertos de U2 y Madonna.

También se celebraron eventos de boxeo, artes marciales y básquetbol.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Reuters

Image caption

El Manchester Arena tiene capacidad para 21.000 personas.

“Gritando y corriendo”

Testigos relataron que después de que se escuchó “un fuerte ruido”, la confusión y el pánico se apoderó de los presentes en el concierto.

Robert Tempkin, de 22 años, contó como “todo el mundo estaba gritando y corriendo, había abrigos y teléfonos de la gente en el suelo“.

“Algunas personas gritaban que habían visto sangre. Había un montón de ambulancias, vi a alguien siendo tratado y no podría decir lo que le había sucedido”, añadió.

Josh Elliott, hablando a BBC Radio 5, dijo que estaba sorprendido por las noticias de las muertes.

“Fue un alboroto, fue horrible. Nos levantamos cuando pensamos que era seguro y salimos lo más rápido posible”.

Elliot narró que fuera del Manchester Arena “la gente solo lloraba y lloraba. “Había vehículos de la policía por todas partes“.

“Sólo queríamos salir lo más rápido posible porque no sabíamos qué estaba pasando”, concluyó.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
PA

Image caption

La policía confirmó que se registraron muertos y heridos.

Michelle Sullivan asistió al concierto con sus hijas, de 12 y 15 años.

“Fue muy aterrador”, dijo. “Justo cuando las luces se han apagado oímos una explosión muy fuerte. Todos gritaron”, señaló.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
AFP

Image caption

Los asistentes relataron escuchar un fuerte ruido y que después el pánico se apoderó de la gente.

Más información en breve.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-internacional-40007936

May 24 at 4:17 PM

When an edited video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) began spreading across the Web this week, researchers quickly identified it as a distortion, with sound and playback speed that had been manipulated to make her speech appear stilted and slurred.

But in the hours after the social-media giants were alerted, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube offered widely conflicting responses that potentially allowed the viral misinformation to continue its spread.

YouTube offered a definitive response Thursday afternoon, saying the company had removed the videos because they violated “clear policies that outline what content is not acceptable to post.”

Twitter declined to comment. But sharing the video would likely not conflict with the company’s policies, which permit “inaccurate statements about an elected official” as long as they don’t include efforts of election manipulation or voter suppression. Several tweets sharing the video, often alongside insults that Pelosi was “drunk as [a] skunk,” remained online Friday.

But Facebook, where the video appeared to gain much of its audience, declined Friday to remove the video, even after Facebook’s independent fact-checking groups, Lead Stories and PolitiFact, deemed the video “false.”

“We don’t have a policy that stipulates that the information you post on Facebook must be true,” Facebook said in a statement to The Washington Post.

The company said it instead would “heavily reduce” the video’s appearances in people’s news feeds, append a small informational box alongside the video linking to the two fact-check sites, and open a pop-up box linking to “additional reporting” whenever someone clicks to share the video.

That didn’t satisfy lawmakers such as Rep. David N. Cicilline (D-R.I.), who took to Twitter to demand that Facebook “fix this now!”

“Facebook is very responsive to my office when I want to talk about federal legislation and suddenly get marbles in their mouths when we ask them about dealing with a fake video,” Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) tweeted. “It’s not that they cannot solve this; it’s that they refuse to do what is necessary.”

While Facebook’s actions might provide context and lower the rate at which people will happen upon the video while browsing the social network, they did virtually nothing to prevent the false video’s spread by people who have already seen it: Any user could still like, comment, view and share the video as often as they liked.

In the 24 hours after The Post alerted Facebook to the video, its viewership on a single Facebook page had nearly doubled, to more than 2.5 million views. The video had also been reposted onto other Facebook pages, where its audience was growing even further.

The conflicting responses reveal a key vulnerability in how the Internet giants safeguard against viral lies and blatant falsehoods. The companies run some of the country’s most prominent and powerful sources of information, including for understanding political campaigns in the months heading into the 2020 presidential election. But they have shown little ability — and, in Facebook’s case, interest — in limiting the spread of falsehoods.

Facebook has resisted removing outright false information by citing free-speech concerns, a stand the company reiterated Friday. “There’s a tension here: we work hard to find the right balance between encouraging free expression and promoting a safe and authentic community, and we believe that reducing the distribution of inauthentic content strikes that balance,” Facebook said in a statement.

Jason Kint, the chief executive of Digital Content Next, a trade group representing online publishers, said Facebook should take a more active role in policing and slowing the spread of misinformation.

The site, he said, is reluctant to give too much power to fact-checkers or content moderators, and many pieces of content can often lapse into gray areas, where people’s perceptions of the material depend on their personal politics.

But with clearer distortions like the Pelosi video, the company should respond more quickly and decisively to potentially stifle the disinformation before it gains a life of its own.

“When they put it into people’s timelines and give it velocity and reach that it doesn’t deserve, they’re helping to spread it,” he said.

“Disinformation can spread faster than true information itself,” he added,” And these networks have bad actors — which, in a scary way on this one, involves people in very prominent positions — who can move disinformation so quickly. I don’t think the people who are charged with getting the truth out there are able to mobilize those networks in the same way.”

President Trump on Thursday night tweeted a separate video taken from the Fox Business Network: a selectively edited 30-second clip focused on her pauses and verbal stumbles from a 20-minute official briefing earlier that day.

The videos fed into what Pelosi’s defenders have called sexist and conspiratorial portrayals of the health of America’s highest-ranking elected woman. They also resemble political videos that posed similar questions about Hillary Clinton’s fitness during the 2016 campaign.

Pelosi tweeted Thursday night that Trump was “distracting from House Democrats’ great accomplishments #ForThePeople, from his cover-ups, and unpopularity.”

Facebook has an internal software tool to find and demote the distorted video’s online duplicates, but the company could not say Friday how many times the video had been reposted.

With the company’s decision made, Facebook groups reiterated their interest in promoting the distorted video. The Facebook page “Politics WatchDog” — from where the video has been shared 47,000 times, often alongside false claims about Pelosi’s use of alcohol and drugs — hosted a user poll with the question: “Should Pelosi video be taking down?” When a majority voted “no,” the page posted, “The people have spoken. Video stays,” alongside an emoji of a wine glass.

The Facebook page’s owners did not respond to requests for comment. But in a Facebook post, they called The Post “fake news” and said the “independent fact checkers that Facebook uses are pro liberal and funded by the left.”

Among the people who promoted the distorted video before Facebook responded: President Trump’s personal attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani. He tweeted a link to the Facebook page Thursday evening — “What is wrong with Nancy Pelosi? Her speech pattern is bizarre” — then deleted it minutes later. He later referred to it as a “caricature exaggerating her already halting speech pattern.”

Giuliani said in an interview Friday that someone had texted him the video, and that he decided to share it after watching her for the past few weeks when he said she had been “talking funny.”

After his tweet, he said, someone else texted him that the video had been altered. “I couldn’t tell if it was doctored,” he said. “I could tell she was worse than a few days ago. So I took it down [just] in case.”

Josh Dawsey contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/05/24/facebook-acknowledges-pelosi-video-is-faked-declines-delete-it/

Bienvenido a tu guía de The New York Times. Te presentamos la información más relevante y destacada de hoy, con enlaces en español e inglés. El resumen se actualiza durante el día, así que sigue revisando para más información.

¿Qué te gustaría leer en este resumen? ¿Tienes sugerencias? Escríbenos a comentarios@nytimes.com.

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Una mujer en Jojutla, Morelos, zona cercana al epicentro del terremoto del 19 de septiembre, busca qué pertenencias puede rescatar de entre los escombros.

Credit
Edgard Garrido/Reuters

Continúan los rescates en México

Casi tres días después de que un terremoto de magnitud 7,1 azotara el centro de México, las labores de rescate continúan a pesar de la lluvia, a pesar del desánimo de rescatar cuerpos sin vida. El gobierno mexicano ha dicho que “la prioridad número uno es salvar la vida humana. ¡Los trabajos de rescate siguen sin descanso!”. El titular de Protección Civil federal informa que hay 286 personas que murieron a causa del sismo: 148 en Ciudad de México, 73 en Morelos, 45 en Puebla, 13 en Edomex, 6 en Guerrero y 1 en Oaxaca.

Jojutla, en Morelos, es uno de los municipios más afectados por este terremoto y nuestra corresponsal fue testigo de cómo muchos habitantes creen que ya nada será lo mismo.

En Ciudad de México, hay 3848 edificios dañados. En un edificio que se derribó por completo en la colonia Condesa, ayer se cerraron las labores de rescate pues se había sacado a todas las personas que se sabía que estaban en el inmueble; en un momento muy emotivo, los rescatistas pidieron un aplauso y entonaron el himno nacional. En este video de 360º puedes observar cómo se ha organizado la gente en esta colonia:

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Citizens Mobilize After Mexico Quake

La movilización ciudadana tras el sismo: los mexicanos ayudan a despejar escombros y a descargar víveres, agua y más en centros de acopio en lo que continúan las operaciones de rescate.


By Kirsten Luce, Neeti Upadhye y Guglielmo Mattioli
Publish Date on September 21, 2017.


Photo by Kirsten Luce, Neeti Upadhye y Guglielmo Mattioli.

Watch in Times Video »

Tener la información adecuada, actualizada y comprobada ha sido muy difícil en este momento de crisis; así surgen críticas a las coberturas mediáticas y a los protocolos de actuación de quienes comandan las labores de rescate. Esta confusión se evidenció en el rescate que se realiza en el Colegio Enrique Rébsamen, donde se creía —porque así lo informó quien comandaba el rescate, la Secretaría de Marina— que había una niña aún con vida. La tarde del jueves, la Marina dijo que no había ninguna niña que se estuviera intentando rescatar. Todos los medios de comunicación y la sociedad en general estaban perplejos ante tal declaración, pues muchos siguieron casi el minuto a minuto de esta labor de recuperación. Ya por la noche, los vicealmirantes al mando del rescate reconocieron que la confusión había surgido por la información que ellos dieron y confirmaron que se sigue buscando a una persona con vida entre los escombros.

Asimismo, las iniciativas para apoyar en Ciudad de México siguen y es muy importante tener certeza de dónde y cómo se puede ayudar. Por ello, si quieres hacerlo, te recomendamos que sigas a la iniciativa #Verificado19S, que tiene este mapa en el que puedes observar qué información está comprobada.

El largo camino a la recuperación

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Un hombre camina por un muro que divide una carretera en Puerto Rico.

Credit
Ricardo Arduengo/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

El gobierno de Puerto Rico reporta que hasta el momento diez personas murieron a causa de María, que ha dejado destrozado a Puerto Rico: sin electricidad, sin comunicación telefónica, con los caminos llenos de escombros y la mayor parte del agua no es potable: la profunda crisis económica que ya vivía la isla se agrava por los efectos de este fenómeno meteorológico y el camino hacia la recuperación parece interminable.

Se hacen de palabras

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El líder de Corea del Norte, Kim Jong-un, respondió directamente al discurso que el presidente Donald Trump dio en la Asamblea General de las Naciones Unidas.

Credit
Korean Central News Agency, vía Reuters

La confrontación entre los mandatarios de Estados Unidos y Corea del Norte continúa: ayer Kim Jong-un llamó a Donald Trump un “viejo estadounidense trastornado mentalmente” y que “un perro asustado ladra más fuerte”, en respuesta a los señalamientos del mandatario estadounidense en la Asamblea General de Naciones Unidas, en la que llamó a Jong-un “un hombre-cohete” y dijo que “destruiría Corea del Norte por completo”. Ayer, Trump firmó una orden ejecutiva para aumentar las sanciones al país asiático con el fin de excluirlo del sistema bancario internacional, y de afectar las principales industrias y exportaciones norcoreanas.

Más en América Latina y el Caribe

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Un grupo de manifestantes celebra el acuerdo de paz en Colombia en la Plaza Bolívar de Bogotá, el 26 de septiembre de 2016.

Credit
Guillermo Legaria/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

• Ayer se conmemoró el Día Mundial de la Paz; el presidente colombiano escribe en Opinión acerca de seis lecciones para alcanzar la paz. En la Asamblea General de Naciones Unidas, el secretario general de ese organismo, António Guterres, consideró que Colombia “es la única buena noticia” en ese foro.

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El presidente venezolano Nicolás Maduro en un mitin en Caracas, el 19 de septiembre

Credit
Reuters

• En lugar de acudir a la reunión del Consejo General de Naciones Unidas —donde podía haber recibido “posibles atentados en su contra“— el presidente de Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, llegó cerca de la medianoche a Cuba para reunirse con Raúl Castro y entregarle personalmente un donativo para ayudar a Cuba por los daños del huracán Irma en la isla.

Un futuro incierto para el TLCAN

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Chrystia Freeland, ministra de Exteriores de Canadá; Ildefonso Guajardo Villarreal, secretario de Economía de México, y Robert Lighthizer, el representante comercial de Estados Unidos se reunirán mañana en Canadá.

Credit
Marco Ugarte/Associated Press

Mañana 23 de septiembre reinician la negociaciones del Tratado de Libre Comercio de América del Norte en Ottawa, Canadá. “Nos estamos moviendo a velocidad de la luz, pero no sabemos si vamos a alcanzar una conclusión, ese es el problema”, dijo Robert Lighthizer, quien encabeza las negociaciones para Estados Unidos. “Estamos corriendo muy rápido… hacia algún lado”. Lee más en esta entrevista.

Elecciones en Alemania

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Angela Merkel llegando a una conferencia de prensa en Berlín. Merkel busca obtener un cuarto periodo como canciller de Alemania en las elecciones del 24 de septiembre.

Credit
Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters

Este domingo se llevarán a cabo las elecciones en Alemania y aquí te decimos por qué se cree que Angela Merkel podría salir victoriosa y continuar como canciller y una de las mujeres con mayor poder en el mundo.

Uber podría salir del camino londinense

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Las oficinas de Uber en Londres

Credit
Andrew Testa for The New York Times

La agencia de transportes de Londres anunció este viernes que no renovará la licencia de Uber para que opere en la capital británica, que representa el mercado más grande en Europa para la compañía. La licencia expirará el 30 de septiembre, pero Uber tendrá veintiún días para apelar a la decisión, en los que podrá seguir operando en Londres; la compañía apeló de inmediato.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/es/2017/09/22/tu-resumen-de-noticias-mas-rescates-en-mexico-como-alcanzar-la-paz-y-no-habra-uber-en-londres/

Attorneys representing the Kentucky high school student involved in a confrontation that went viral on social media last month announced Tuesday that they were suing The Washington Post for $250 million in compensatory and punitive damages.

The lawsuit, which was filed in federal court in Kentucky, accused The Post of practicing “a modern-day form of McCarthyism” by targeting Nicholas Sandmann and “using its vast financial resources to enter the bully pulpit by publishing a series of false and defamatory print and online articles … to smear a young boy who was in its view an acceptable casualty in their war against the president.”

Washington Post spokesperson Kris Coratti told Fox News in an email that the paper was “reviewing a copy of the lawsuit, and we plan to mount a vigorous defense.”

COLORADO TEACHER FACES TERMINATION AFTER MISIDENTIFYING COVINGTON STUDENT, CALLING HIM ‘HITLER YOUTH’

Sandmann, a junior at Covington Catholic High School, became a target for outrage after a video of him standing face-to-face with a Native American man, Nathan Phillips, while wearing a red “Make America Great Again” hat surfaced in January. Sandmann was one of a group of students from Covington attending the anti-abortion March for Life in Washington, D.C., while Phillips was attending the Indigenous Peoples’ March on the same day.

Sandmann and the Covington students were initially accused of initiating the confrontation, but other videos and the students’ own statements showed that they were verbally accosted by a group of black street preachers who were shouting insults both at them and a group of Native Americans. Sandmann and Phillips have both said they were trying to defuse the situation.

CONSERVATIVE LEADERS DEMAND APOLOGY FOR MEDIA TREATMENT OF COVINGTON STUDENTS

The lawsuit claims The Post “ignored the truth” about the incident and says the paper “falsely accused Nicholas of … ‘accost[ing]’ Phillips by ‘suddenly swarm[ing]’ him in a ‘threaten[ing]’ and ‘physically intimidat[ing]’ manner … ‘block[ing]’ Phillips path, refusing to allow Phillips ‘to retreat,’ ‘taunting the dispersing indigenous crowd,’ [and] chanting, ‘Build that wall,’ ‘Trump2020,’ or ‘Go back to Africa,’ and otherwise engaging in racist and improper conduct. …”Sandmann’s attorneys accuse The Post of publishing seven “false and defamatory” articles about the incident between Jan. 19 and 21 and claim the paper “knew and intended that its false and defamatory accusations would be republished by others, including media outlets and others on social media.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Earlier this month, Sandmann’s attorneys sent preservation letters to more than 50 media organizations, celebrities and politicians — including The Post, The New York Times, CNN, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and actors Alyssa Milano and Jim Carrey — the first step in possible libel and defamation lawsuits.

Last week, investigators hired by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington concluded that the students did not instigate the confrontation with Phillips. Bishop Roger Foys, who initially condemned the students’ behavior, wrote in a letter to parents that they had been “placed in a situation that was at once bizarre and even threatening.”

Fox News’ Lucia I. Suarez Sang and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/covington-high-students-legal-team-sues-washington-post

Syracuse Police have confirmed that one person was shot in the leg Friday night at a shopping mall that is owned by the owners of the Walden Galleria.

A male suffered a non-life threatening injury in the shooting shortly after 7 p.m. at Destiny USA, according to police, who advised the public in a Tweet to avoid the mall’s food court area.

No suspect was in custody, police said.

Syracuse Police Chief Kenton Buckner told Spectrum News the shooting did not appear to be at a random target and that “everything is safe now.”

Police said shortly before 9 p.m. that the mall would be closed for the evening.

Destiny USA is owned by partners in the Pyramid Cos., who also own Walden Galleria.

Source Article from https://buffalonews.com/2019/11/29/black-friday-shooting-at-syracuse-mall-owned-by-walden-gallerias-owner/

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – The governor is urging visitors to reschedule upcoming travel to Hawaii as the state struggles to respond to a COVID surge that’s threatening to overwhelm hospitals.

He also said that a lockdown “is on the table” if infection rates don’t decline.

“It is not a good time to travel to the islands. I encourage everyone to restrict and curtail travel to Hawaii,” Gov. David Ige said, at a news conference Monday. “Is a lockdown on the table? Yes, it would be if the number of cases continues to grow exponentially as it has in the last 10 weeks … then we will have to take action to limit and ensure that the hospitals aren’t overrun.”

He added that he doesn’t have a specific trigger for when a stay-at-home might be imposed.

“We are in contact with the hospitals every single day about their current situation of the number of patients they are seeing and about their capacity to continue to serve our community,” he said.

The governor’s remarks come as the state grapples with rapid community spread of the Delta variant. Skyrocketing COVID counts are already straining Hawaii hospitals and ICUs are nearing capacity.

Despite the situation, the governor stopped short of announcing any new restrictions Monday.

Earlier this month, he announced new caps on social gatherings and capacity restrictions for restaurants, bars, gyms and other social establishments.

Earlier on Monday, Oahu’s mayor instituted a new ban on all large organized gatherings, including weddings, funerals and conventions.

The order cancels scores of events that were planned for Oahu this month.

This story will be updated.

Copyright 2021 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.

Source Article from https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2021/08/23/live-governor-holds-news-conference-number-covid-cases-hospitalizations-soar/

WASHINGTON, July 3 (Reuters) – President Donald Trump on Wednesday said his administration had not dropped its efforts to add a contentious citizenship question to the 2020 U.S. census, contradicting statements made by his own officials including Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

The U.S. Supreme Court last Thursday blocked Trump’s plan to add the citizenship question, saying administration officials had given a “contrived” rationale.

Administration officials including Ross said on Tuesday that the census forms were being printed without the citizenship question.

Critics have called the citizenship question a Republican ploy to scare immigrants into not taking part in the decennial population count and engineer an undercount in Democratic-leaning areas with high immigrant and Latino populations. That would benefit non-Hispanic whites and help Trump’s fellow Republicans gain seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and state legislatures, the critics said.

RELATED: Controversy over the 2020 census

WASHINGTON, DC – APRIL 30: Kevin Smith, Associate Director for Information Technology at the US Census Bureau, Census Bureau Director Steven Dillingham, Robert Goldenkoff, strategic issues director at the Government Accountability Office and Nicholas Marinos, information technology and cybersecurity director at the GAO, testify before a House Appropriations Subcommittee about preparations for the upcoming 2020 Census, on April 30, 2019 in Washington, DC. The 2020 census has caused controversy as the Trump administration is pushing to include a citizenship question. (Photo by Pete Marovich/Getty Images)




“The News Reports about the Department of Commerce dropping its quest to put the Citizenship Question on the Census is incorrect or, to state it differently, FAKE! We are absolutely moving forward, as we must, because of the importance of the answer to this question,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

White House and Commerce Department officials had no immediate comment on Trump’s tweet.

“There’s nothing fake about the Department of Justice writing us saying printing is starting without the citizenship question,” the American Civil Liberties Union, which had challenged the citizenship question in court, wrote on Twitter.

Trump’s hardline policies on immigration have been a key element of his presidency and 2020 re-election campaign.

Trump last Thursday also said he is exploring whether the census, which the U.S. Constitution requires be carried out every 10 years, can be delayed.

But Ross, a key figure in the controversy, said in a statement on Tuesday, “The Census Bureau has started the process of printing the decennial questionnaires without the question.”

 

MARYLAND COURT CASE

At the same time, the Justice Department told a judge in Maryland presiding over an ongoing court battle over the citizenship question that the administration had made a final decision not to proceed, according to two lawyers involved in the litigation.

U.S. District Judge George Hazel asked for the administration to submit its declaration in writing by next Monday, according to one of the lawyers. So far, the court docket shows no such filing.

Trump’s administration had told the courts that its rationale for adding the question was to better enforce a law that protects the voting rights of racial minorities. Critics called that rationale a pretext for partisan motives.

Although the Supreme Court left open the possibility of the administration adding the question in the future, there was little time left for officials to come up with a new rationale. The administration had said in court filings that it needed to finalize the details of the questionnaire by the end of June.

The census is used to allot seats in the U.S. House and distribute some $800 billion in federal funds. Opponents have said the citizenship question would instill fear in immigrant households that the information would be shared with law enforcement, deterring them from taking part.

Citizenship status has not been asked of all households since the 1950 census. Since then, it was included only on questionnaires sent to a smaller subset of the population.

A group of states including New York and immigrant rights organizations challenged the legality of the administration’s plan.

Manhattan-based U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman ruled on Jan. 15 that the Commerce Department’s decision to add the question violated a federal law called the Administrative Procedure Act. Federal judges in Maryland and California also have issued rulings to block the question.

Furman said the evidence showed that Ross had concealed his true motives for adding the citizenship question and that he and his aides had convinced the Justice Department to formally request its addition to the census.

Evidence surfaced in May – documents written by a Republican strategist before he died last year – that those challenging the question said showed the administration’s plan to add a citizenship question was intended to benefit Republicans and non-Hispanic white people in redrawing electoral districts based on census data.

(Reporting by Makini Brice and Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/03/trump-denies-wh-retreat-on-census-citizenship-question/23762447/

As COVID-19 was breaking out in New York state last March, Governor Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order requiring nursing homes to accept patients who were presumed to have the virus. Following the order, about 9,000 COVID patients were brought into nursing homes across the state, likely leading to the virus’s rampant spread in those facilities.

Governor Cuomo responded to his mistake by listening to the demands of one of his top donors: the lobbying group for the nursing home industry. As The Daily Poster reported in May, he granted full corporate legal immunity to nursing homes, all the way up to the C-suite. At the time, New York Democratic Assemblyman Ron Kim warned that the liability protections removed a key deterrent to corporate misbehavior and effectively shielded nursing home executives from legal consequences if their cost-cutting, profit-maximizing decisions endangered lives.

Now the situation has exploded into a full-scale scandal: last week, Cuomo’s administration was caught on tape admitting it was withholding data about how many nursing home residents had been infected with COVID, and how many had died.

“License to kill”? New York Republicans are looking to form an impeachment commission to investigate Governor Andrew Cuomo’s handling of the COVID-19 crisis in nursing homes. Cuomo in New York City, September 8, 2020.
Spencer Platt/Getty

After Kim told The New York Post that it appeared that Cuomo was “trying to dodge having any incriminating evidence,” the governor reportedly lashed out at Kim both publicly and privately, including an alleged late-night phone call in which Cuomo threatened to “destroy” Kim. (A senior Cuomo adviser released a statement denying those threats and questioning Kim’s credibility.)

With federal law enforcement officials reportedly launching a probe into the Cuomo administration’s handling of nursing home deaths, the controversy is expected to be part of this coming week’s confirmation hearings for Attorney General nominee Merrick Garland.

For his part, threats of potential retribution haven’t persuaded Kim to back down from holding Cuomo accountable. On Friday, he called the governor an “abuser” on ABC‘s The View. Now, in a new interview, Kim explains what was really going on in New York’s nursing homes this spring, and how Cuomo’s corporate immunity order allowed nursing home executives to save money even at the expense of their residents’ safety.

What follows is an excerpt of Kim’s discussion with The Daily Poster/Newsweek. The transcript has been edited for clarity and brevity.

New details have emerged about what was going on in New York’s nursing homes last spring, as the pandemic was ravaging the state. What were you seeing and doing last spring?

Let’s start from the beginning. We are notified that COVID is spreading, and everyone is paranoid, no one knows what’s going on. The governor asked for extraordinary powers, and he wanted $40 million of emergency money right away to get ahead of COVID. My colleagues at the time said, “You can’t do this, you can’t support that.” But I actually sponsored that bill. I stood up and defended the governor and the commissioner, saying, “My constituents are completely worried. And despite whatever differences we may have with Cuomo’s administration, we need someone, in light of what’s going on in Washington, to step in.”

A month into it, the nursing home executive order comes out, the March 25 executive order, the infamous one that directs untested COVID patients to nursing homes. And we eventually found out there were 9,000 of these patients that were transferred. That happened, and right away, everyone said this is wrong.

Constituents started reaching out to me, saying things like, “My mom is stuck in a nursing home, and I know that COVID is transmitting in there and I can’t get access. She’s sleeping in a hallway, exposed, no PPE.”

They are outside, protesting, trying to get in. So I get involved and I realize what’s going on. And that’s when I realized the March 25 order and the impact this is having on the ground. And that’s when we started exposing the undercounting.

Just around that time, when I was helping all these constituents, my uncle, who was in a nursing home, passed away with presumed COVID. So I lived that experience personally: the trauma, the pain, of losing someone who died alone in excruciating pain. There are 15,000 other stories like that in New York state.

In April, Governor Cuomo put a provision into the state budget that granted legal immunity to all health care facilities, including nursing homes, and including the executives of those facilities. How did the corporate immunity order affect the situation, and how does it connect to the Cuomo administration underreporting nursing-home data?

Up to 9,000 COVID patients were being sent to nursing homes. And the nursing homes were telling the administration—which now the AG’s report shows—that we can’t take these people in. Like, “Half of our staff got COVID, they’re out. We don’t have enough staff, we don’t have the PPE.” And at that moment, Cuomo decided to give them legal immunity. That was their solution to that crisis, to the industry asking to be included in broad legal immunity.

They decided to protect the business interests of those who should have done everything possible, spent every dollar, to save people’s lives. But the moment they got the legal immunity, it was clear that they felt like they didn’t have to invest anymore in PPE, or hire more staff members. They completely shut down. They had a license to kill. That’s what the immunity was.

Can you clarify what information about the nursing homes was not being released?

They made a decision around May to not release the fatalities of nursing home residents who died in a hospital. In other states, nursing home residents who were transferred and died in a hospital were counted as nursing home residents. But Cuomo’s administration decided to separate that out. They made a unilateral decision to not include that.

We were ranked at number one, number two, for nursing home deaths consistently for a few weeks. And then all of the sudden, once they decoupled the numbers, we were in the middle of the pack. When we asked the commissioner during an oversight hearing in August, “Why aren’t you combining and disclosing the entire data?” their answer was, “Put your questions in writing, we will respond in a couple of weeks.” That’s how we left the oversight hearing.

New York Assemblyman Ron Kim tells Newsweek how Governor Cuomo’s corporate-immunity order affected what happened to nursing home residents. “He was trying to become the national hero against Trump.”
Hugh Hastings/Getty Images

It took them six months, after an AG report and lawsuits, and endless FOILs [Freedom of Information Law requests], to finally release the undercounted numbers, which was the premise of our private meeting with [Cuomo aide] Melissa DeRosa that included the chairs of the oversight committees from the hearing last week, last Wednesday.

During that call, DeRosa seemed to say that the administration made a deliberate decision not to release the information for fear of political or other consequences. Is that how you read it?

It almost felt like that movie with Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson, “A Few Good Men.” They had the script, my colleagues were just grilling and asking questions and interrupting. And at a point DeRosa jumps in and says, “Do you want the truth? You know, I’ll tell you the truth.” And that’s where she said, “This is what happened. Donald Trump was targeting us. And we could not let the Department of Justice have the data because we didn’t know how they were going to use that against our administration.”

Do you think they’re wrong to have feared the Justice Department misusing, or politically weaponizing, the information?

No. I think Donald Trump toxicity is real. The right-wing insurrectionist type of conservatism that we saw is all real. But what they did was not share information in real time that we could have used to legislate. If they shared all that data, we would have passed different policies. We would have gone in a different direction. We could have repealed legal immunity [for nursing home executives] entirely. Instead, they chose to not share that information with us because they didn’t want the Department of Justice to take a look at it.

Why was the Cuomo administration hiding data about nursing home deaths from state lawmakers?

That’s one of the questions that we have remaining. I do not know who was in that room pushing those policies. I don’t know exactly why they made a choice to hide that information.

I think others have surmised that it would make him look bad politically. He was in the middle of a book tour. He was trying to become the national hero against Trump. Having the highest number of [nursing home] deaths would probably not fit that narrative. I think that’s the best-case scenario, that it was just something out of vanity and personal fame.

I think the worst-case scenario is something that’s way, way more disturbing, which is that they made really horrible decisions. For example, how did these experimental drugs get into state-owned nursing homes, and veterans died taking them? Who made that decision and who had access to the governor’s office, directing that type of policy? I think there’s a lot to uncover there. My gut feeling is that there’s a lot more than just protecting Cuomo the politician. I think they made a lot of horrible policy decisions driven by industry and businesses. And that’s what they’re afraid for the public to know.

In August, you passed the bill to limit the corporate immunity order. The legislature didn’t have access to information at that time about what was happening in the nursing homes. With access to that information, would you have been able to push a full repeal of the order?

Right. If we had the full data set, I think we had a much stronger argument to repeal legal immunity.

What about Cuomo’s argument that the immunity order was necessary, because it was the only way to force nursing homes to take patients who might not have otherwise had somewhere to go?

There are two things. And both illustrate the incompetence of his managerial skills. The first part is they had already given out the immunity for volunteers and hospital workers through an executive order on March 23. I don’t think anyone argued against that. Yes, we need to recruit a lot of people and they need to feel safe that when they’re treating COVID, that they couldn’t be sued the next day if it wasn’t something horrible. You know, I think we understood that we needed to get volunteers. We extended the Good Samaritan Law, fine.

But the moment that they expanded beyond that and included the executives, the businesses, the corporations behind them, that’s when you knew this was no longer about volunteerism, but about protecting business interests. And the data showed that despite what the governor put out there, we had space in hospitals, we had a surplus of ventilators.

The trend was going in a different direction, but he still moved people out of nursing homes because, in my opinion, they were making space for the high-end surgeries, other things that are more profitable in the hospitals.

What do you make of Cuomo’s reaction to the scrutiny his administration is now receiving?

It’s a complete distraction. Acknowledge your mistakes, make an apology. What he has done over and over is try to implicate the assembly, the Senate, and punt and distract from the actual problem at hand. He does not want to talk about whether Melissa said there was a cover-up for political reasons. No reporter has been called on to grill him on that question.

He is good at punting and distracting, so he can get the public to focus on something else. But the facts are the facts, and it’s not going to go away and he’s in the wrong, and he needs to face the reality and the truth that he did something that could constitute an obstruction of justice by hiding information from the Department of Justice for his own political gain.

Correction 2/20, 10:00 a.m.: Ron Kim’s name was misspelled in the headline in an earlier version; this has been corrected.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/andrew-cuomo-caved-donors-he-shielded-nursing-home-bosses-ron-king-says-1570702

CHICAGO (WLS) — Parts of the Chicago area are bracing for several inches of wet, slushy snow as a late winter storm moves in on the last weekend in April.

WATCH: Latest ABC7 AccuWeather Forecast

A Winter Storm Watch has been issued for Boone, De Kalb, Ogle and Winnebago counties from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and for Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, and McHenry counties from 1 p.m. Saturday to 1 a.m. Sunday. A Winter Storm Warning has been issued for Lake and McHenry counties in Illinois from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday, and Kenosha, Racine and Walworth counties in Wisconsin from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday.

ABC7 meteorologist Larry Mowry said precipitation will begin falling as rain between 9 and 11 a.m. Saturday morning. Through the afternoon hours, the rain will change over to snow, mainly for areas along and north of I-80 as temperatures dip into the 30s and 40s. Winds will gust up to 40 mph.

Within the Winter Storm Watch area, there will be a swath of heavy snow with accumulations ranging from 4 to 8 inches.

If O’Hare sees more than 2.2 inches of snow from this system, it will be the greatest snowfall on record this late in the season.

A historic mid-April storm dropped as many as eight inches of snow on parts of the Chicago area less than two weeks ago. Woodstock received 8.5 inches of snow and 5.4 inches of snow fell at O’Hare on April 14.

WATCH: Brookfield Zoo animals enjoy April snow

Source Article from https://abc7chicago.com/weather/winter-storm-watch-issued-for-much-of-chicago-area-saturday/5272472/

In 2014 and 2015, a Trump legal entity lent at least $96 million to the subsidiary that operated Turnberry, according to British regulatory filings. The next year, the Trump Organization would go back to Deutsche Bank for more.

The relationship between Mr. Trump and Deutsche Bank had survived some rocky moments. In 2008, amid the financial crisis, Mr. Trump stopped repaying a loan to finance the construction of a skyscraper in Chicago — and then sued the bank, accusing it of helping cause the crisis. After that lawsuit, Deutsche Bank’s investment-banking arm severed ties with Mr. Trump.

But by 2010, he was back doing business with Deutsche Bank through its private-banking unit, which catered to some of the world’s wealthiest people. That unit arranged the Doral loans, and another in 2012 tied to the Chicago skyscraper.

Mr. Trump’s go-to in the private bank was Rosemary Vrablic, a senior banker in its New York office. In 2013, she was the subject of a flattering profile in The Mortgage Observer, a real estate magazine owned by Mr. Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who was also among her clients. In 2015, she arranged the loan that financed Mr. Trump’s transformation of Washington’s Old Post Office Building into the Trump International Hotel, a few blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House.

In early 2016, as Mr. Trump was lending tens of millions of dollars to his campaign, his company contacted Ms. Vrablic about getting money for Turnberry, said two of the three people familiar with the request, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The proposal was to expand Deutsche Bank’s outstanding loans backed by the Doral by well over $10 million and to use the proceeds for work on Turnberry, the people said.

Around the time that Mr. Trump was winning New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, officials in the private-banking unit informed their superiors that they were inclined to provide him with the loan, according to one of the people familiar with the internal discussions.

Senior executives in New York balked, arguing that Mr. Trump’s candidacy made such a loan unacceptably risky, the three people said. In part, they feared the bank’s reputation could be harmed if the transaction were to become public because of the polarizing statements Mr. Trump was making on the campaign trail.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/02/business/trump-deutsche-bank.html


Antes de leer la nota de tapa de esta semana, muchos usuarios de redes sociales se escandalizaron con la imagen de la portada de NOTICIAS.

En primer plano, aparece un grupo de “monjes” con las caras de Ricardo Lorenzetti, Daniel Scioli, Mauricio Macri, Sergio Massa, Hugo Moyano y Héctor Magnetto. Detrás, la figura de la expresidenta, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, encadenada a un poste de madera y en llamas. ¿El título? “El pacto para que Cristina no vuelva nunca más”.

Con distintos argumentos y haciendo hincapié en “un ataque sexista contra la figura de la ex mandataria” algunos usuarios de redes sociales manifestaron su enojo y repudio por la tapa de esta semana. Otros, en cambio, aseguran que la imagen de Cristina en “la hoguera” inspira “odio”.

Para NOTICIAS, se trata simplemente de ilustrar simbólicamente con una referencia histórica medieval un escenario político actual de la Argentina. Sin metáforas, no hay lenguaje.


Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2015/12/18/polemica-por-la-tapa-de-noticias/

And earlier this week, the University of California, San Francisco launched an effort of its own to offer diagnostic and antibody Covid-19 testing to 5,700 residents who live in a specific section of the Mission District, San Francisco’s densest neighborhood.The initiative, which is being done through a partnership with the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, is intended to gather data on the prevalence of Covid-19 in the area.

Across the country, states say that Covid-19 testing is increasing but there still aren’t sufficient tests available. As the U.S. starts to re-open, medical experts say that testing will need to pickup speed, alongside contact tracing and other efforts to quickly isolate those who might be contagious before they can spread the virus to others. 

Los Angeles accounts for almost half of the state’s coronavirus cases. It has more than 20,000 confirmed cases, of the 45,031 total in California. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/29/los-angeles-becomes-the-first-major-city-in-the-us-to-offer-free-coronavirus-testing-for-all-residents.html

Árboles caídos y varios semáforos sin funcionar fueron los resultados de las lluvias y tormentas que se registraron esta madrugada en Montevideo.

Hasta el momento se registran dos situaciones de calles cortadas por caídas de ramas de árboles: en Gonzalo Ramírez y Eduardo Acevedo, donde se encuentran la Facultad de Información y Comunicación (FIC) y la Facultad de Ciencias Económicas, y en bulevar Artigas y Canelones.

Si bien en la mañana eran varios los semáforos que estaban fuera de servicio, el Centro de Gestión de Movilidad de la Intendencia de Montevideo reportó que pasadas las 13 horas solamente quedan sin funcionar los ubicados en avenida General Paz y Caramurú.

Por los fuertes vientos Bomberos recibió aproximadamente 200 llamadas compuestas por denuncias de voladuras de techos y caídas de árboles y ramas, indicó a El País Anderson Ferreira, vocero de Bomberos. 

“No se registraron pérdidas mayores ni personas lesionadas en la zona compuesta por Montevideo y Canelones”, agregó Ferreira.

Hasta las 00:00 horas rige una advertencia naranja para dos departamentos y otra advertencia de color amarillo para otros cinco, informó el Instituto Uruguayo de Meteorología (Inumet).

Interrupciones de energía

En un comunicado emitido este mediodía, UTE informó que el temporal de la madrugada dejó 34.000 servicios afectados en todo el país y que al momento son 8.700 los clientes que no tienen el servicio.

Además indicaron que es recomendable “extremar los cuidados en relación con los cables que se encuentren caídos, tanto en vía pública como en fincas. No deberá acercarse ni tocar los mismos ya que eventualmente podrían estar energizados”.

Inundaciones en el litoral

Luis Astigarraba, coordinador de Seguridad de la Jefatura de Policía de Soriano, informó a El País que el viento provocó en el departamento la caída de columnas de UTE en la localidad de José Enrique Rodó y zonas aledañas.

El alcalde de Rodó, Washington Loitey, indicó que el viento “estuvo bravo” pero solo dañó el techo de una casa en colonia Manuel Victoria y “algunos eucaliptos que cayeron sobre columnas del tendido”.

En Mercedes, una mujer tuvo que ser evacuada por bomberos al inundarse su casa por el desborde de pluviales, situación que podría abarcar a otras familias en caso de que las lluvias sigan siendo intensas.
Además, se voló una chapa en la escuela 46, que quedó tocando los cables de energía.

En Río Negro, la localidad de Algorta se quedó sin luz y en Fray Bentos, varios vecinos reclaman por el desborde de pluviales en Rivera entre las calles Colón y Ferreira Aldunate.

Además, una planta de silos en la ruta 24 y otra de aceites en Nuevo Berlín sufrieron diversos daños.

(Producción: Daniel Rojas)

Vientos de más de 100 km/h en Durazno

Sobre las seis de la mañana y por espacio de 50 minutos, un temporal con rachas de viento de hasta 110 kilómetros horarios, descargas eléctricas e intensas precipitaciones, provocó daños en casi toda la zona centro del país.

En Florida el viento voló literalmente el techo del Parador de la localidad de San Gabriel, sobre la ruta 55, causando heridas a una persona, que tuvo que ser derivada al hospital local. En el área rural de San Gabriel y Colonia 33 Orientales, también se registró importante caída de árboles.

En Sarandí Grande, una panadería sufrió pérdidas al volarse el techo del local ingresando agua lo que generó importantes pérdidas económicas.

En Durazno hay 1.700 clientes sin energía eléctrica, hubo caída de granizo en zonas al Este del departamento y las cuadrillas de la intendencia trabajan en el retiro de árboles caídos en zonas como la terminal de ómnibus José Enrique Rodó, las plazas Independencia y Sarandí, y respuesta a llamados puntuales en calles Rivera y San Martin, Zorrilla y Zagnoli, Wilson Ferreira casi Basilio Muñoz, entre otros.

Por otra parte, el fenómeno climático adverso hizo que colapsaran decenas de árboles y columnas del alumbrado, además de provocar la rotura de baterías de semáforos en ruta 5 y los accesos a la ciudad.

(Producción: Víctor Rodríguez)

Turbonada en Melo

Una fuerte turbonada se desató sobre la planta industrial del frigorífico PUL en las cercanías de Melo. El temporal arrasó con decenas de pinos que estaban en los accesos, arrancó carteles y dos autos fueron aplastados por árboles caídos. Hubo algunas motos dañadas y dos funcionarias se descompasaron por lo ocurrido.

Un funcionario comentó que quedó “todo oscuro y comenzó a llover fuerte con un intenso viento que estremecía todo y hacía un fuerte ruido, cuando salimos a ver pudieron percatar como los pinos se retorcían y volaban por el aire”. “Fue espantoso” acotó.

Si no puede ver el video, haga click aquí.

El episodio duró unos 109 minutos y solo perjudicó esa franja sobe la ruta 8 hacia Montevideo. Por el momento no se informó sobre daños en la planta industrial.

(Producción: Néstor Araújo)

Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/arboles-caidos-montevideo-casas-inundadas.html

La fiscalía general mexicana confirmó este viernes que los 43 estudiantes desaparecidos el pasado 26 de septiembre en el estado sureño de Guerrero fueron asesinados por miembros del grupo criminal Guerreros Unidos, según el testimonio de tres nuevos detenidos que se declararon autores confesos del crimen.

El fiscal general, Jesús Murillo Karam, realizó el anuncio en una conferencia de prensa en la que anunció la detención de Patricio Reyes “El Pato”, Jonatan Osorio “El Jona” Agustín García “El Chereje”.

Murillo Karam ha confirmado la participación de la Policía Municipal de Iguala en la desaparición de los normalistas.

De acuerdo con el Procurador, la Policía Municipal habría trasladado a los estudiantes en camionetas para ser entregados a narcotráficantes locales, que luego fueron asesinados y prendieron fuego a los 43 cuerpos.

Luego de matar y quemar los cuerpos, la orden fue fracturar los huesos de los cuerpos incinerados y trasladar los restos al río San Juan y vaciar las bolsas, salvos dos bolsas que fueron arrojadas completas al río. Más de 10 horas duró el fuego donde se calcinaron los 43 cuerpos de los estudiantes.

Jesús Murillo Karam, informó que la investigación queda abierta hasta que se puedan identificar los restos encontrados. Los restos de los cuerpos serán enviados a Austria para realizar pruebas y poner confirmar la identidad de cada una de las víctimas, por lo complejo del caso y el estado de los restos, los resultados no tienen fecha de entrega, por lo que el caso aún no se cierra y se mantiene la situación de “desaparecidos”.

La procuraduría mexicana ha informado que han detenido a 74 personas presuntamente involucradas en el caso de los 43 estudiantes desaparecidos, además falta ejecutar más de 10 órdenes de captura a otros implicados. Murillo Karam comenta que existe una serie de testimonios que involucran al exalcalde de Iguala, José Luis Abarca capturado este martes por la madrugada, como autor intelectual de los hechos.

Esta es la ruta que según el procurador general de México, fue ocupada durante el secuestro de 43 estudiantes que fueron asesinados en Iguala.

Cronología de la desaparición de los 43 estudiantes

26 de septiembre: 57 estudiantes de una escuela de Ayotzinapa (Guerrero) desaparecen tras ser víctimas de ataques a tiros de la policía local y sicarios del cártel narcotraficante Guerreros Unidos en los que mueren seis personas. Los jóvenes, la mayoría de entre 18 y 21 años, se habían desplazado a Iguala para recaudar fondos y en el momento del ataque se habían apoderado de dos autobuses para regresar a su escuela.

30 de septiembre: Son encontrados ilesos 14 de los estudiantes desaparecidos, que estudian para ser maestros rurales en una emblemática escuela conocido por su formación socialista y sus contundentes acciones políticas.

04 de octubre: Encuentran los restos de 28 personas en fosas clandestinas cerca de Iguala. Los primeros peritajes descartaron que entre ellos hubiera estudiantes desaparecidos.

06 de octubre: El presidente Enrique Peña Nieto, que ordenó a la fiscalía general asumir este caso, prometió que no habrá impunidad para el crimen.

07 de octubre: Estados Unidos y la Organización de Estados Americanos (OEA) se unen a los reclamos internacionales, entre ellos de la ONU, para que México esclarezca el crimen.

17 de octubre: La fiscalía anuncia la captura de Sidronio Casarrubias, supuesto líder de Guerreros Unidos.

23 de octubre: El gobernador de Guerrero, Ángel Aguirre, se aparta del cargo en medio de violentas protestas que reclamaban su dimisión por su falta de reacción en este caso y por no haber frenado la violencia en su región, que tiene los índices de asesinatos más elevados de México.

24 de octubre: La fiscalía eleva de 28 a 38 el número de cádaveres encontrados en una decena de fosas clandestinas y que aún no han sido identificados.

29 de octubre: Peña Nieto recibe por primera vez a las familias de los desaparecidos y les pide confianza en las investigaciones. Los padres son escépticos respecto a las autoridades y aseguran que sus hijos siguen con vida.

04 de noviembre: Policías federales mexicanos capturan en Ciudad de México al exalcalde de Iguala, José Luis Abarca, y su esposa, ambos acusados de estar al servicio de los Guerreros Unidos. La fiscalía acusa a Abarca de ordenar a sus policías que reprimieran a los combativos estudiantes porque pensaba que iban a sabotear un acto público de su esposa.

05 de noviembre: Más de 60.000 mexicanos volvieron a protestar en Ciudad de México para exigir la aparición con vida de los jóvenes y castigo para todos los responsables del crimen.

07 de noviembre: La fiscalía informa que detenidos confesaron que los estudiantes fueron asesinados y sus cadáveres incinerados, aunque recalca que hasta no tener pruebas científicas de ello los seguirá considerando como desaparecidos.

Source Article from http://www.laprensa.com.ni/2014/11/07/internacionales/1383959-pgr-de-mexico-da-informacion-sobre-estudiantes-desaparecidos-en-iguala