Violet Moss Brown, que este año se había convertido en la persona más longeva del mundo, falleció el viernes a los 117 años y 189 días en un hospital de su natal Jamaica, informaron las autoridades de la isla y sus familiares.
“Es triste, pero esperaba algo así en cualquier momento”, dijo Barry Russell Brown, hijo de Moss Brown, al diario jamaiquino The Star en referencia a la avanzada edad de su madre.
Insistió sin embargo que el deceso no dejó de ser una sorpresa para la familia e incluso para los médicos, debido al ánimo y la buena salud de la que gozó su progenitora.
Moss Brown, también conocida cariñosamente como “Tía V”, falleció la tarde del viernes en el hospital Fairview Medical Centre en Montego Bay, donde permanecía interna desde el 9 de septiembre debido a una arritmia cardiaca y deshidratación.
“Jamaica está orgullosa de usted ‘Miss Vy’ (sic), usted es una mujer inspiradora”, escribió el primer ministro Andrew Holness en su cuenta en Facebook para anunciar el deceso de Moss Brown y ofrecer sus condolencias.
Holness difundió fotografías de cuando en abril de este año visitó a Moss Brown para imponerle la Medalla de Gratitud del gobierno, luego de que días antes se había convertido en la persona más longeva del planeta.
“Su fortaleza y la gracia de Dios la han sostenido durante un siglo, una década y sietes años. Usted es una mujer bendecida, que Dios continúe fortaleciéndola por muchos, muchos años”, le había dicho Holness en aquella ocasión, según escribió el propio primer ministro.
La mujer nació el 10 de marzo de 1900 en la comunidad rural de Duanvale, 100 kilómetros al noroeste de Kingston, donde se casó con Augustus Gaynor Brown, trabajó y residió a lo largo de sus 117 años.
Durante su juventud, Moss Brown trabajó en los cañaverales, cortando caña, y como empleada doméstica, de acuerdo con su biografía difundida por la fundación creada en su nombre.
Con Brown procreó cuatro hijos y dos hijas. El mayor de sus hijos, Harland, falleció en abril a los 97 años, cuando ostentaba el título de hombre más longevo del mundo con uno de sus padres aún vivo.
Moss Brown se convirtió en la persona más longeva del mundo el 15 de abril de este año, cuando falleció la italiana Emma Morana, nacida el 29 de noviembre de 1899. El libro de Récords de Guinness recoció a Moss Brown el pasado 3 de septiembre.
Tras la muerte de “Tía V”, la japonesa Nabi Tajima ocupa la posición de persona más longeva, con 117 años y 44 días.
Ni la Fundación Violet Moss, ni la familia ni el gobierno de Jamaica habían ofrecido el domingo detalles sobre el funeral de “Tía V”. (I)
Oscar Parrilli, titular de la Secretaría de Inteligencia solicitó una medida cautelar para “evitar que NOTICIAS siga violando la Ley de Inteligencia”. La medida consiste en pedir a los denunciados que se abstengan de “realizar publicaciones que impliquen la continuidad del delito atribuido, obligando a los mismos a abstenerse de revelar información a la que de cualquier otra forma pudieran haber accedido y cuya divulgación infrinja los artículos de la Ley 25.520”.
La denuncia presentada por Parrilli sostiene que “La línea del medio gráfico involucrado evidencia un deliberado desprecio hacia la norma infringida”.
Según la agencia oficial Télam “fuentes judiciales confirmaron que el escrito presentado este mediodía se aclara, citando jurisprudencia de la Corte, que la denuncia no afecta a la libertad de expresión”.
Un portal de noticias sobre América Latina bautizado Ansur (Agencias de Noticias del Sur) fue presentado como parte de los acuerdos alcanzados entre las agencias públicas de noticias de la región nucleadas en la Unión Latinoaericana de Agencias de Noticias (Ulan).
El nuevo sitio, desarrollado por la Agencia de Noticias Télam y cuya url es www.ansur.am, se nutre de las principales informaciones que diariamente producen las distintas agencias de noticias de la región (América Latina y el Caribe) en cada uno de sus paises.
Si bien desde Télam se realiza el soporte técnico, la carga de noticias y el desarrollo de la web, los contenidos periodísticos son estrictamente respetados con el respectivo crédito a cada una de las agencias autoras de las informaciones que se reproducen.
Ansur nuclea a las empresas informativas públicas y las áreas de comunicación en aquéllos países que no han desarrollado aún la suya, entre los miembros del Mercosur (Mercado Común del Sur) , la Unasur (Unión de Naciones Suramericanas) y la Celac (Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños) conjunto que cuenta con una población estimada en casi 590 millones de habitantes.
Esa pluralidad de culturas, voces, historias y también de intereses económicos y políticos necesitaban ser reflejadas desde el relato de la noticia en todos los soportes y modalidades, gestados desde una visión propia.
Entre uno de los postulados de la Unión Latinoamericana de Noticias (Ulan), se establece “la necesidad de profundizar en las relaciones de cooperación y colaboración con el fin de fortalecer su condición de ser un espacio plural y democrático desde una visión propia latinoamericana y caribeña en función de romper con la hegemonía impuesta por transnacionales de la comunicación”, tal y como reza en sus estatutos.
Esa decisión fue refrendada en la declaración emitida en la II Asamblea de la Ulan, celebrada en La Habana (Cuba) en abril de 2014 y que registra antecedentes en un encuentro realizado en Brasilia en abril 2013 y con posteriores presentaciones del portal en el último Congreso Mundial de Agencias de Noticas en Ryad (Arabia Saudita) en octubre 2013.
“Ansur es una nueva herramienta, en este caso periodística, para sumar al proceso de integración de nuestra región desde la comunicación y nace como parte de los acuerdos establecidos entre las agencias de noticias socias en la Ulan”, señaló Alberto Hugo Emaldi, coordinador periodístico del sitio e integrante del directorio de la agencia Télam.
El periodista agregó que “Ansur reproduce en un solo sitio web las principales noticias generadas por la agencias noticiosas de nuestra región facilitando una comunicación más veloz” y subrayó que “no se trata de competir con otras empresas de noticias internacionales, sino de potenciar las noticias surgidas desde nuestra agencias”.
Las producciones de las agencias nacionales de noticias comprenden textos noticiosos, videos, fotografías, audios, infografías y contenidos para internet, en un volumen creciente y cada vez con mayor identidad propia.
Las agencias públicas y áreas de comunicación que aportan sus informaciones al portal de Ansur son las de Argentina, Bélice, Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Guyana Francesa, Haití, Honduras, Jamaica, México, Nicaragua, Panamá, Paraguay, Perú, Puerto Rico, República Dominicana, Surinam, Uruguay y Venezuela.
El desarrollo inicial de Ansur esta a cargo de la Agencia Nacional de Noticias Télam S.E. fundada en 1945 y pionera en el continente.
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto faced fresh questions on Wednesday about his dealings with a company at the center of a conflict-of-interest scandal, after it emerged that he enjoyed rent-free use of a house belonging to the firm as a campaign office.
Already under pressure over the government’s handling of the presumed massacre of 43 students abducted by corrupt police in southwestern Mexico in September, Pena Nieto is facing his most difficult period since taking office two years ago.
On Nov. 3, the government announced a Chinese-led consortium had won a no bid contract to build a $3.75 billion high-speed rail link in central Mexico.
Three days later, the government abruptly canceled the deal, just before a report by news site Aristegui Noticias showed that a subsidiary of Grupo Higa, a company that formed part of the consortium and had won various previous contracts, owned the luxury house of first lady Angelica Rivera.
Under public pressure, Rivera said she would give up the house. But neither she nor Pena Nieto have addressed the apparent conflict of interest stemming from the government’s business with Grupo Higa.
On Wednesday, Aristegui Noticias published a new story that said Pena Nieto used a different property belonging to another Grupo Higa subsidiary as an office when he was president-elect in 2012.
Eduardo Sanchez, the president’s spokesman, said Pena Nieto unwittingly used the property. Sanchez said it was leased from the Grupo Higa firm by Humberto Castillejos, the president’s legal adviser, who lent it rent-free to Pena Nieto’s team.
“If I invite you to my house, do you come to my house and ask me under whose name it is? Neither does the president,” Sanchez said, denying there were conflicts of interest.
The spokesman also said there were no more properties Pena Nieto or his team had used belonging to Grupo Higa.
“No, there is no other house that was used in a professional capacity,” Sanchez said.
Castillejos could not immediately be reached for comment.
Jorge Luis Lavalle, a senator with the opposition conservative National Action Party, said the public saw a clear conflict of interest in the dealings of Pena Nieto and his government with Grupo Higa.
“It needs to be investigated. All these doubts need to be dispelled fully and clearly,” he said. “We now have another case with no explanation.”
“How each country now responds must be informed by its epidemiological situation, available resources, vaccination uptake status and socio-economic context”, he added.
“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.
Supporters of Native Americans pause following a prayer during the 38th National Day of Mourning at Coles Hill in Plymouth, Mass., on Nov. 22, 2007. Denouncing centuries of racism and mistreatment of Indigenous people, members of Native American tribes from around New England will gather on Thanksgiving 2021 for a solemn National Day of Mourning observance.
Lisa Poole/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
Lisa Poole/AP
Supporters of Native Americans pause following a prayer during the 38th National Day of Mourning at Coles Hill in Plymouth, Mass., on Nov. 22, 2007. Denouncing centuries of racism and mistreatment of Indigenous people, members of Native American tribes from around New England will gather on Thanksgiving 2021 for a solemn National Day of Mourning observance.
Lisa Poole/AP
Members of Native American tribes from around New England are gathering in the seaside town where the Pilgrims settled — not to give thanks, but to mourn Indigenous people worldwide who’ve suffered centuries of racism and mistreatment.
Thursday’s solemn National Day of Mourning observance in downtown Plymouth, Massachusetts, will recall the disease and oppression that European settlers brought to North America.
“We Native people have no reason to celebrate the arrival of the Pilgrims,” said Kisha James, a member of the Aquinnah Wampanoag and Oglala Lakota tribes and the granddaughter of Wamsutta Frank James, the event’s founder.
“We want to educate people so that they understand the stories we all learned in school about the first Thanksgiving are nothing but lies. Wampanoag and other Indigenous people have certainly not lived happily ever after since the arrival of the Pilgrims,” James said.
“To us, Thanksgiving is a day of mourning, because we remember the millions of our ancestors who were murdered by uninvited European colonists such as the Pilgrims. Today, we and many Indigenous people around the country say, ‘No Thanks, No Giving.'”
It’s the 52nd year that the United American Indians of New England have organized the event on Thanksgiving Day. The tradition began in 1970.
Indigenous people and their supporters will gather at noon in person on Cole’s Hill, a windswept mound overlooking Plymouth Rock, a memorial to the colonists’ arrival. They will also livestream the event.
Participants will beat drums, offer prayers and condemn what organizers describe as “the unjust system based on racism, settler colonialism, sexism, homophobia and the profit-driven destruction of the Earth” before marching through downtown Plymouth’s historical district.
This year, they’ll also highlight the troubled legacy of federal boarding schools that sought to assimilate Indigenous youth into white society in the U.S. as well as in Canada, where hundreds of bodies have been discovered on the grounds of former residential schools for Indigenous children.
Brian Moskwetah Weeden, chairman of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council, said on Boston Public Radio earlier this week that Americans owe his tribe a debt of gratitude for helping the Pilgrims survive their first brutal winter.
“People need to understand that you need to be thankful each and every day — that was how our ancestors thought and navigated this world,” Weeden said. “Because we were thankful, we were willing to share … and we had good intentions and a good heart.”
That wasn’t reciprocated over the long term, Weeden added.
“That’s why, 400 years later, we’re still sitting here fighting for what little bit of land that we still have, and trying to hold the commonwealth and the federal government accountable,” he said.
“Because 400 years later, we don’t really have much to show for, or to be thankful for. So I think it’s important for everyone to be thankful for our ancestors who helped the Pilgrims survive, and kind of played an intricate role in the birth of this nation.”
Esta aeronave, propiedad de Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) salió del Aeropuerto Internacional de El Salvador con destino al Aeropuerto Internacional de Maiquetía Simón Bolívar, a 30 kilómetros de Caracas. Un día antes, aterrizó en el país a las 9:13 pm.
El secretario de Comunicaciones de la Presidencia, Eugenio Chicas, afirmó este miércoles que el avión venezolano Dassault Falcon, de matrícula YV-2040, que el martes 8 de agosto salió del país transportaba al viceministro de Hacienda, Alejandro Rivera, y al viceministro para la Inversión Extranjera, José Luis Merino.
De acuerdo a Chicas, “el vuelo del 8 de agosto venía de Venezuela y transportaba a José Luis Merino y al viceministro de Hacienda”.
Vea el video donde Eugenio Chicas y Carlos Cáceres se contradicen sobre infomación de pasajeros del jet venezolano PDVSA. Cortesía de El Noticiero.
Sin embargo, según un documento de la Dirección General de Migración y Extranjería (DGME) al que tuvo acceso El Diario de Hoy, el 8 de agosto ese vuelo iba en dirección a Maiquetía y dos días después, el jueves 10, la misma aeronave volvió al país.
Asimismo, el vocero presidencial añadió que ambos funcionarios venían en esa aeronave después de participar en la reunión de los países de la Alianza Bolivariana para los pueblos de nuestra América (ALBA), la cual se celebró el 8 de agosto en la capital venezolana.
Al ser cuestionado por un grupo de periodistas sobre esta información, el ministro de Hacienda, Carlos Cáceres, desmintió lo dicho por Chicas y afirmó que su viceministro no ha salido del país.
“El viceministro de Hacienda ha estado ahí, lo he visto sentado en su escritorio”, dijo ayer Cáceres a la salida del lanzamiento de una política de logística del Gobierno.
Pese a la negativa de Cáceres, el documento de Migración y Extranjería da cuenta que entre los pasajeros está el viceministro de Ingresos (adscrito a Hacienda), Alejandro Rivera; junto al viceministro de Inversión y dirigente del FMLN, José Luis Merino; y Mario Ernesto García, quien labora en Cancillería.
Asimismo, el ministro de Hacienda añadió que desconoce por qué Chicas hace esos comentarios y afirmó que tiene días de no verlo. De hecho, pidió a los periodistas que le dieran saludos al vocero de la presidencia, quien sostuvo que los funcionarios estuvieron en Caracas en la reunión del ALBA.
Polémica aeronave
En los últimos tres meses, este avión, propiedad de Petróleos de Venezuela, ha aterrizado tres veces en el Aeropuerto Internacional Óscar Arnulfo Romero.
La primera, proveniente de San Vicente y las Granadinas el 2 de mayo, donde estuvo poco menos de un día para luego partir a Venezuela.
La siguiente, el 7 de agosto, con regreso a Caracas el día siguiente, cuando según registros de la DGME iban los funcionarios públicos Merino, Rivera y García.
La última llegada de la aeronave al país se registró el 10 de este mes, dos días después de la reunión del ALBA en Caracas. Una hora y media después de aterrizar, el jet partió con destino al aeropuerto de Newark, en Nueva Jersey, en Estados Unidos.
Diputados del partido ARENA han pedido a la Autoridad de Aviación Civil y la Comisión Ejecutiva Portuaria Autónoma (CEPA) información sobre la llegada de la aeronave YV-2040 al país, pues temen que esta pueda ingresar ilícitos en complicidad con el FMLN.
Asimismo, los legisladores tricolores expresaron sorpresa pues el arribo de este avión en ambas fechas de agosto coincide con la semana en que el presidente venezolano Nicolás Maduro pidió realizar una reunión de la Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños (CELAC) para discutir la crisis de su país.
En la reunión del 8 de agosto, representantes de los países del ALBA acuerparon al régimen venezolano, encabezado por Maduro, que se encuentra en medio de una álgida crisis política y humanitaria y está siendo acusado de torturas, ejecuciones y represión de la oposición.
Pese a que muchos países reconocen al gobierno venezolano como una dictadura, sus gobiernos aliados en Bolivia o Nicaragua defienden las aciones de Maduro.
Por su parte, el gobierno de El Salvador no ha acompañado intentos de censura internacional a la represión del régimen, el canciller ha mostrado posturas ambiguas y destacados miembros del FMLN han expresado simpatía y acompañamiento a Maduro.
GOLETA, Calif. — A wildfire burning Tuesday on Southern California mountains north of Santa Barbara forced as many as 6,300 people from their homes, but an approaching storm offered hope that the flames would be doused, authorities said.
The so-called Cave fire was a threat to an estimated 2,400 structures, Santa Barbara County fire spokesman Mike Eliason told KEYT-TV.
The National Weather Service said rain was expected to reach the area by midnight.
The fire started at about 4 p.m. Monday in Los Padres National Forest as winds gusted up to 30 mph.
By Tuesday morning it was estimated at more than 6 square miles with no containment. No homes had been lost and there were no injuries, Eliason tweeted.
The fire was mainly burning through dry, brushy canyons and ridges of the Santa Ynez Mountains but evacuations were ordered in populated foothill areas.
Firefighters battle flames along Highway 154 near Santa Barbara, Calif., on Nov. 26, 2019.Noah Berger / AP
A 1990 wildfire in the same area destroyed more than 400 homes.
Firefighters were told during a morning briefing that the area had not received any rain in 180 days and vegetation was ready to burn, as was demonstrated by the fire’s exponential growth in its early hours.
The firefighters were cautioned that roads into the rugged area may be too narrow for their engines, and that many residents had not left.
The arrival of an expected low pressure system and its accompanying rain also posed hazards ranging from shifting winds to debris flows from steep mountainsides, the firefighters were told.
As much as an inch of rain was expected in the area, and crews were warned to not drive across flowing water.
The dangers of the cycle of fire and flood is a raw memory in the region.
In January 2018, a downpour on recently burned slopes just east of Santa Barbara unleashed massive debris flows that devastated the community of Montecito, destroying homes and killing 23 people.
The administration’s long-standing vetting problems have contributed to a surge in doomed picks.
Hours after withdrawing as a candidate to serve on the Federal Reserve Board, Stephen Moore expressed shock that his critics had pored over his divorce records and decades-old columns.
“If I had any sense that this would happen — people would be looking at my writings from 20, 25 years ago — I would have told the president, ‘Wait a minute, I can’t do a Senate confirmation,’” Moore told Fox Business Network on Thursday.
Story Continued Below
But the White House probably should have seen it coming.
Past administrations have historically spent weeks or even months trying to identify potentially damaging information about candidates for administration jobs — long before their nominations are announced. Yet Trump’s White House again appeared to neglect the basic vetting that has for decades been the cornerstone of the nomination process.
“What went wrong here was the vetting process,” Moore acknowledged during Thursday’s interview.
Indeed, many in the administration were unaware of some of Moore’s past writings, according to a person familiar with the matter.
And Trump’s team appeared to be slow to react to Moore’s mounting problems. The White House, which did not respond to a request for comment on this article, announced this week that it was reviewing Moore’s writings, long after Moore had started facing heavy criticism for his outlandish past statements about women. And as of Thursday morning, Moore was telling journalists that the White House still backed his nomination.
“It’s just sloppy,” said one veteran lawyer who helps guide clients through the confirmation process.
The Trump administration’s long-standing vetting problems have contributed to a surge in doomed nominees.
In total, Trump has withdrawn 62 nominees since taking office, according to data provided to POLITICO by the Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit that tracks federal vacancies. At this point in his presidency, Barack Obama had withdrawn 30 nominees. The figures include only people who were formally nominated, so Moore and others who took themselves out of consideration before their official paperwork was sent to the Senate aren’t counted.
The Trump administration has struggled for years to adequately vet nominees, dating back to the presidential transition, when Trump filled his Cabinet with friends and associates with little regard for the rigor of the traditional government hiring process, according to transition officials.
Less than one month after Trump took office, his first nominee for labor secretary, Andy Puzder, pulled out after facing a series of damaging revelations, including that he hired an undocumented household staffer and was once accused of abuse by his ex-wife. Later, his nominee to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, Ronny Jackson, withdrew amid questions about Jackson’s behavior as a physician at the White House.
In the past three months alone, two high-profile candidates for top administration jobs have pulled themselves out of consideration, in addition to Moore. Trump announced last month that he would not nominate Herman Cain, a former pizza executive, to the Fed amid opposition from some Senate Republicans. And in February, Heather Nauert removed herself from consideration to become the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations after learning that she had employed a nanny without the correct work authorization.
Current and former administration officials insist that they’ve made strides in professionalizing the White House’s internal vetting operation. But they say the president himself sometimes undermines that process by making major staffing decisions on his own, with little consultation and with little notice.
“He’s impatient and impulsive,” a former senior White House official said. “When he makes a decision, he wants to move forward. There aren’t any people around him urging caution.”
More than two years into his presidency, Trump is surrounded by fewer senior White House aides who are willing to discourage his inclinations. These days, the White House is permeated by a “let Trump be Trump” mindset, an approach spearheaded by acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney.
“It’s been a steady march toward an unrestrained president,” the former official said. “We’ve now reached the complete extreme of the spectrum in which the president is deciding something in private based on the recommendations of one or two people.”
Bradley Moss, a lawyer who has represented clients seeking employment in the federal government, said the chronic problems getting high-profile nominees confirmed are “the result of nothing less than the president’s own personal disdain for vetting and his personal preference for gut intuition.”
The news of Cain and Moore’s pending nominations to the Fed caught many Senate Republicans by surprise. Trump announced his plans to tap Cain during a question-and-answer session with reporters following an event in the Oval Office, and he revealed Moore’s candidacy in response to a shouted question on the tarmac at Palm Beach International Airport. The unexpected announcements left White House officials with no time to brief lawmakers and get their feedback.
White House officials have instead often assumed that Trump’s nominees will easily win the necessary support from Senate Republicans, especially since they require only a simple majority vote in the chamber. But Senate Republicans have shown in recent weeks that they’re unwilling to simply green-light all of Trump’s nominees.
In the meantime, the president is increasingly relying on acting officials to fill senior roles across the government. Trump has said in private and in public that he likes acting officials because they give him more flexibility and they don’t need to go through the Senate confirmation process. Both the Homeland Security and Defense secretaries — two crucial positions tasked with protecting the country — are serving in an acting capacity.
Watchdog groups also remain alarmed by the sheer number of positions for which Trump has neglected to nominate anybody. At the State Department, more than 30 senior positions are vacant. There are more than a dozen senior-level vacancies at the Justice and Defense departments.
“Our government is still not fully and effectively staffed at the most senior levels,” said Max Stier, who leads the Partnership for Public Service, which advised the Trump transition team as it started staffing up the government.
Lawyers who represent potential nominees say the number of well-qualified individuals interested in joining the administration has slowed. And for those who are interested, the vetting process can sometimes be confusing and unorganized, the lawyers said.
“We had a client who thought he was all set and then at the last minute, they said, ‘No, we’re going to hold things up,’” one of the lawyers said. “We had no idea even who to call to find out what the holdup was.”
But people close to the White House said the president is facing bigger problems than sloppy vetting, adding that many in the West Wing are unbothered by the recent string of withdrawals.
“Compared to all of the stuff Trump is dealing with, this stuff barely registers,” a former administration official said. “Is anybody going to remember Steve Moore in three months?”
When asked if there were any talks of planned power outages, an ERCOT spokesperson said, “At this point in time, we don’t know if they’re already planning for any outages. No, I don’t have that information.
El presidente Lenín Moreno dispuso el viernes que se contraten auditorías internacionales para supervisar cinco grandes obras en el sector petrolífero sobre las que han surgido dudas sobre su calidad y sospechas de corrupción.
En un comunicado el Ministerio de Hidrocarburos explicó que los estudios deben verificar los términos técnicos y financieros, entre otras obras, de la refinería de Esmeraldas, la más grande del país, y la del Pacífico, en fase preliminar de construcción.
Además se auditará los proyectos de una planta de licuefacción de gas natural, una terminal marítima y estación de bombeo y ducto de gas licuado de petróleo (GLP), un poliducto y trabajos iniciales en la Refinería del Pacífico, que espera financiamiento externo para su construcción.
Precisó que tras estudios realizados por técnicos ecuatorianos “se evidenciaron problemas de diversa índole que afectan a su operatividad”, por lo cual con la auditoría internacional se espera contar con un criterio técnico especializado que “de manera imparcial establezca la situación de los proyectos mencionados”.
Una misión de legisladores verificó el jueves que en las instalaciones de la refinería de Esmeraldas hay fisuras y que algunos equipos funcionan a temperaturas más altas de lo recomendado, entre otros problemas.
El pasado 15 de agosto, el mandatario durante su visita en la Refinería de Esmeraldas, indicó que lo menos que ha habido es una enorme irresponsabilidad en la refinería. “Ustedes son trabajadores, estoy seguro de que con poquísimas excepciones, no tienen responsabilidad”, dijo.
Alrededor de estas y otras obras se han generado insistentes denuncias de corrupción, algunas vinculadas con la empresa brasileña Odebrecht, en las que inclusive se ha señalado como presunto responsable al vicepresidente Jorge Glas, quien ocupó el mismo cargo durante el mandato de Rafael Correa (2007-2017).
Moreno llegó al poder el 24 de mayo como sucesor de Correa, su amigo y compañero de partido, pero poco después surgieron discrepancias por el estilo de gestión, el llamado a un amplio diálogo nacional y otras decisiones adoptadas por el nuevo mandatario, quien culpó de un manejo económico inadecuado a su predecesor.
Correa contraatacó tildándolo de desleal y de apartarse del proyecto político que gobernó el país por 10 años.
Esta tarde, la Asamblea decidirá si autoriza que el vicepresidente Glas sea investigado penalmente por su supuesta vinculación con el caso Odebrecht, tal como lo solicitó la Corte Suprema. (I)
Prosecutors on Tuesday filed charges against a couple suspected in the road rage shooting death of Aiden Leos, the 6-year-old boy who was killed last month on an Orange freeway.
Marcus Anthony Eriz, 24, has been charged with murder and shooting at an occupied vehicle, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office said. Eriz’s girlfriend, 23-year-old Wynne Lee, faces counts of being an accessory after the fact and illegally carrying a concealed firearm.
If convicted as charged, Eriz could be sentenced to a maximum of 40 years to life in prison, while Lee may face up to three years in state prison plus one year in Orange County Jail, according to the DA’s office.
“I do want to promise today … that we will get justice for him,” DA Todd Spitzer said at a Monday news conference. “We have to promise him that.”
Eriz and Lee were arrested at their home in Costa Mesa, authorities announced Sunday evening. They were booked into jail, where their bail was each initially set at $1 million.
The couple on Tuesday afternoon made their first appearance in court, where their arraignments were continued to June 18.
In the courtroom, prosecutors asked the judge to increase Eriz’s bail to $2 million and to reduce Lee’s to $500,000. The judge set those provisional bail amounts until June 18, when the matter will be discussed further.
Investigators believe Eriz fired the fatal shot while Lee was driving the vehicle on the northbound 55 Freeway in Orange the morning of May 21.
Aiden, on his way to kindergarten, was in a booster seat in the back of his mother’s car when he was struck by the gunfire during what CHP described as a road rage incident over “a perceived unsafe lane change.”
According to accounts from the mother and other relatives, the suspect’s vehicle had cut her off while she was driving in the carpool lane, and she made a gesture at the other car. The road rage violence unfolded after that.
In an interview with ABC News, Joanna Cloonan described hearing a “really loud noise” as she began to merge away from the suspect’s car.
“And my son said, ‘Ow,’ and I had to pull over. And he got shot,” she said.
Cloonan immediately pulled over and called 911. Aiden was rushed to a local hospital where he succumbed to his injuries a short time later.
“It’s every mother’s worst nightmare,” Alexis Cloonan, Aiden’s older sister, told KTLA. “She had to hold him while he was dying. No mother should have to go through that.”
The suspects fled the scene in what was described as 2018-2019 white Volkswagen Golf SportWagen, a photo of which was released by CHP less than a week after the deadly shooting.
“We have recovered what we believe are the weapon and automobile used in the crime,” Donald Goodbrand, CHP Border Division’s assistant chief, said at a Monday afternoon news conference. The items were not found at the arrest site, he added.
Goodbrand credited tips from the public along with the collaborative work of various law enforcement in helping to lead to the arrests.
At least $500,000 in rewards have been offered for information leading to an arrest in the case, but officials at Monday’s briefing declined to disclose any details about whether anyone would receive the funds.
“Information from the public throughout this process has been extremely helpful,” Goodbrand said, noting investigators had received “hundreds” of tips.
Eriz and Lee were apprehended one day after the funeral service were held for Aiden. CHP Capt. Mike Harris told reporters that he personally called Joanna Cloonan to notify her of the arrests.
“I FaceTimed her,” he said. “I let her know what had taken place. She was very emotional.”
This is a widget area - If you go to "Appearance" in your WP-Admin you can change the content of this box in "Widgets", or you can remove this box completely under "Theme Options"