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The coronavirus pandemic has entered a “new and dangerous phase” as daily Covid-19 cases hit record highs, the World Health Organization warned Friday.

The number of new cases reported Thursday “were the most in a single day so far” at 150,000, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a press conference from the agency’s Geneva headquarters. 

Almost half of the total cases were reported from the Americas, Tedros said, with a large number coming from Southern Asia and the Middle East. 

“Many people are understandably fed up with being at home. Countries are understandably eager to open up their societies and economies. But the virus is still spreading fast. It is still deadly and most people are still susceptible,” he said. 

The coronavirus has sickened more than 8.5 million people worldwide and killed at least 454,359, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

The United States has the worst outbreak in the world. The virus has infected 2.1 million Americans and at least 118,435 have died, Hopkins data shows. As of Thursday, the nation’s seven-day average of new Covid-19 cases increased more than 15% compared with a week ago.

Tedros said world leaders and the public need to “exercise extreme vigilance” against the virus, urging them to “focus on the basics.”

“Continue maintaining your distance from others. Stay home if you feel sick. Keep covering your nose and mouth when you cough. Wear a mask when appropriate. Keep cleaning your hands,” he said. 

The WHO has been warning world leaders that there can be “no going back to business as usual” following the Covid-19 outbreak, which has upended economies and wreaked havoc on nearly every country around the globe.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/19/who-says-coronavirus-enters-new-and-dangerous-phase-as-daily-cases-hits-record.html

El conductor Félix Antonio Zepeda, quien supuestamente ocasionó la tragedia en el Valle de Amarateca en donde murieron cinco personas, se defendió este miércoles de quienes lo acusan manifestando que pretendió evadir una rastra. “Por no estrellarme en una rastra que estaba parada allí, por capiarme la rastra el carro se me apagó y más impulso agarró”, dijo Zepeda, mientras se recuperaba en una de las salas del Hospital Escuela Universitario (HEU). Lee sus declaraciones.

Source Article from http://www.laprensa.hn/honduras/938220-410/las-noticias-m%C3%A1s-impactantes-de-este-mi%C3%A9rcoles-en-honduras-y-el-mundo

Eli Broad made his billions building homes, and then he used that wealth — and the considerable collection of world-class modern art he assembled with his wife — to shape the city around him.

Dogged, determined and often unyielding, he helped push and prod majestic institutions such as Walt Disney Concert Hall and the Museum of Contemporary Art into existence, and then, that done, he created his own namesake museum in the heart of Los Angeles.

With a fortune estimated by Forbes at $6.9 billion, the New York native who made California his home more than 50 years ago flourished in the home construction and insurance industries before directing his attention and fortune toward an array of ambitious civic projects, often setting the agenda for what was to come in L.A.

Active and still looking ahead until late in life, Broad died Friday afternoon at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Suzi Emmerling, a spokesperson for the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, said in a statement. A cause of death was not given.

“We join the city of Los Angeles in mourning the loss of Eli Broad. The city and the nation have lost an icon,” Los Angeles Times Executive Chairman Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong and his wife, Michele, said in a statement.

“Eli’s life story is an inspiration and a testament to the possibilities America holds,” they said. “The Broads’ support and leadership of the cultural, educational and medical institutions that sustain us have been transformative. Our thoughts are with Edye and their family and we’re forever grateful to her and Eli.”

Civic transformation was “his driving force,” Barry Munitz, a longtime Broad associate and former chancellor of the California State University, told The Times in 2004.

Broad spent millions to endow medical and scientific research programs, including stem cell research centers at UCLA, USC, UC San Francisco and Harvard. He was also a deep-pocketed booster of public education reform who funded charter schools, a training academy for school district executives and, for a dozen years, the annual $1-million Broad Prize for high-achieving urban school districts.

But he left his most visible legacy as a cultural philanthropist and broker, whose money and world-class modern art collection made him a powerful and often controversial force on the local arts scene.

In the late 1970s, he became the founding chairman of the Museum of Contemporary Art, and he bailed it out of a financial scandal three decades later with a $30-million grant.

In the 1990s, when the effort to build Disney Hall was falling apart, he took charge of a $135-million fundraising campaign to complete construction in 2003.

That year, he also pledged $50 million to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art to build the contemporary art wing that bears his name.

Calling himself a “venture philanthropist,” he expected his benefaction to bring more than a pat on the back and naming rights. He regarded his donations as investments, the success of which he would judge by their returns, whether in the form of scientific breakthroughs, improved test scores or higher museum attendance.

“I am a builder,” the tall, white-haired Broad once told The Times. “I don’t like to preside over the status quo and simply write checks.”

His demands made some potential recipients think twice about accepting money from Broad. “Too many strings,” said the leader of a major Los Angeles nonprofit, who asked not to be named. Others put it less politely. “Eli is a control freak,” Disney Hall architect Frank Gehry said of his former client in a 2011 segment of CBS’ “60 Minutes.”

Broad was known not only for aggressive involvement in his philanthropic projects but also for a tendency to withdraw his support when developments failed to go his way. These traits were well known in L.A.’s art world, in which he was an unavoidable force.

“The truth is that Eli is L.A.’s most prominent cultural philanthropist, and if you run a museum in this city you have a relationship with him one way or another,” Ann Philbin, director of the Hammer Museum, where Broad once sat on the board, said in a 2010 Vanity Fair article.

Broad’s relationships with the institutions he enriched were often vexing.

In 2010, as a dominant member of the MOCA board, he steered the museum toward the controversial choice of Jeffrey Deitch, a New York gallery owner from whom he had purchased art, to be its new director. In 2012 he forced the resignation of the museum’s longtime chief curator, Paul Schimmel, who had clashed with Deitch over shows involving celebrity artists such as Dennis Hopper that seemed to pander to popular tastes. Several board members resigned in protest, including Ed Ruscha, John Baldessari, Barbara Kruger and Catherine Opie.

In 2013, with MOCA struggling financially, Broad tried to broker a merger between the museum and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, a match that made little sense to many in the museum world. The proposal died amid sharp questioning by critics, including the New York Times’ Roberta Smith, who wrote: “The combination of the domineering Mr. Broad and unusually passive trustees has forced to its knees one of the greatest American museums of the postwar era.”

At LACMA, Broad insisted that the much-needed modern art wing be called the Broad Contemporary Art Museum and personally recruited architect Renzo Piano to design it and a board to govern it. LACMA agreed to his terms without a solid pledge from the multibillionaire to donate works from the 2,000-piece contemporary art collection he had built with his wife, Edythe.

Just before the 80,000-square-foot building’s formal unveiling in 2008, Broad stunned much of the museum world by announcing that he would not be giving LACMA his treasure trove of Warhols, Rauschenbergs and Lichtensteins. Instead, he said he would lend works to the museum from the private art foundation he founded in 1984, an arrangement that he believed would ensure the art he and his wife had amassed over decades would be seen and not stored away.

His decision brought pointed headlines, such as the one accompanying a New York Times story: “To Have and Give Not.” Time magazine’s Richard Lacayo was most blunt, writing on his blog, “LACMA got screwed.”

Although Broad had said over the years that he would not go the way of Armand Hammer and Norton Simon, he ultimately did decide to build his own museum. He settled on a prime downtown lot adjacent to MOCA and Disney Hall for the Broad, the eponymous museum and art lending library that opened in September 2015, part of his vision to cement Grand Avenue as the cultural heart of L.A.

“We believe we have reinvented the American art museum,” he wrote in a 2019 L.A. Times essay on Los Angeles’ cultural evolution.

Broad was a major architecture patron, who over the years supported projects by many of the world’s top architects, including Zaha Hadid — who designed the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University, Broad’s alma mater — Cesar Pelli and Richard Meier.

Closer to home, he and his wife made major gifts to UCLA for a fine arts complex and to Caltech for a biological sciences center. He also supplied a $10-million endowment for programming and arts education at Santa Monica College’s performing arts center.

Born in New York on June 6, 1933, Broad was an only child who grew up in Detroit, where his Lithuanian immigrant father, Leon, worked as a house painter before operating several five-and-dime stores. His mother, Rita, was a seamstress who later worked as a bookkeeper for her husband.

The family name was spelled Brod and pronounced like the slang term for a woman, which made young Eli the butt of many jokes. This grew tiresome, so in junior high he added an “a” to his last name and told people “Broad, rhymes with ‘road.’“

“Some of the teasing continued,” he recalled in his 2012 memoir, “Eli Broad: The Art of Being Unreasonable,” “but it didn’t really sting anymore. I had changed myself.”

He graduated with a degree in accounting from Michigan State University in 1954, the same year he married Edythe “Edye” Lawson. In 1956 their son Jeffrey was born, followed three years later by another son, Gary. His wife and sons survive him.

At 20, Broad had become a certified public accountant — one of the youngest in Michigan history. He shared office space with Donald Kaufman, a carpenter-contractor who was married to his wife’s cousin. In 1957 he and Kaufman borrowed $25,000 from Broad’s father-in-law and launched a home-building company, Kaufman & Broad (now KB Home).

Broad had heard of a company in Ohio that beat its competition by building houses without the customary basement. “I didn’t understand why you couldn’t do that in Michigan,” he said in a 2006 Vanity Fair profile. “So we came up with a product, which I modestly called the Award Winner, which sold for $13,740, and vets could move into it for, like, 300 bucks. My idea was if they could move out of garden apartments into three-bedroom houses for less than rent and have equity and the tax benefits, it worked.”

His hunch proved correct. The houses sold quickly, and Kaufman & Broad became the biggest independent builder of single-family homes in the country. The company expanded into Arizona and California. Broad was a millionaire before he turned 30.

In 1963, after Kaufman retired, Broad moved the company from Phoenix to Los Angeles. He and his wife bought a home in Brentwood.

At first, Los Angeles, with geographic sprawl unlike Detroit or Phoenix, baffled him. But gradually he became a master of the metropolis, joining civic boards and elite social circles. Richard Riordan, the venture capitalist and future L.A. mayor, became a close friend.

“Los Angeles is a meritocracy,” Broad told Los Angeles magazine in 2003. “It’s one of the few cities you can move to without the right family background, the right religious background, the right political background, and if you work hard and have good ideas, you’re accepted.”

He got involved in politics, running California Democrat Alan Cranston’s first winning campaign for the U.S. Senate in 1968. Four years later, afraid that Democratic Sen. George McGovern was too soft on the Soviet Union, he served as vice chairman of Democrats for Nixon. Broad later led the successful effort to bring the 2000 Democratic National Convention to Los Angeles.

While he was building Kaufman & Broad, his wife, Edythe, immersed herself in L.A.’s gallery world. Before long her husband became an ardent collector too.

Their first major purchase came in 1972 when they paid $95,000 for a Van Gogh drawing. Broad eventually found modern art more to his liking and began accumulating works by such artists as Lichtenstein, Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Cindy Sherman, Jeff Koons, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Damien Hirst.

In the late 1970s, he led a campaign that raised more than $10 million to launch a museum dedicated to modern art. With a personal donation of $1 million, he became founding chairman of the Museum of Contemporary Art and influenced the selection of Japanese modernist Arata Isozaki to design it.

In 1984, he stepped down as MOCA chair after disagreements with the board but remained one of the city’s most powerful art patrons.

In 1994, Riordan enlisted him to resuscitate the fundraising campaign for Disney Hall, which had been stalled by an economic recession. Riordan and Broad each contributed $5 million to the effort, and with Broad leading the charge the $135-million goal was reached by 1998. Despite a major tiff with architect Gehry, with whom Broad had a troubled history (Gehry designed his Brentwood home but was fired when Broad thought he was taking too long), the concert hall opened in 2003 to jubilant reviews. Broad received the lion’s share of credit for its completion.

His role in reviving the Disney Hall project established him as Los Angeles’ most formidable philanthropist. Los Angeles magazine put him on the cover in June 2003 with the headline, “He has more pull than the mayor, more art than the Getty, and more money than God. Does Eli Broad own LA?”

He acknowledged that people often questioned his motives. He liked putting his name on buildings and always sought the best return on his investments.

In 1995, he purchased a Lichtenstein painting called “I … I’m Sorry” for $2.5 million and paid with his American Express card, reportedly so he could rack up frequent-flier miles. He later donated the miles to California Institute of the Arts in Valencia for student travel. But the real reason for putting a seven-figure tab on his credit card, he said in his memoir, was to keep earning interest on the $2 million until the bill was due.

Strategic planning, as well as keeping a sharp eye on the bottom line, was what got him to the top of two industries. He had taken Kaufman & Broad into the life insurance business in the 1970s, when the housing market was in a slump. In the 1980s, he expanded into annuities and other financial services, which he eventually spun off into a separate company, SunAmerica. In 1993, he stepped down as chairman of Kaufman & Broad to run SunAmerica, his second Fortune 500 company.

In 1999, he sold SunAmerica to American International Group for $18 billion, and he retired in 2000 to become a full-time philanthropist.

Flush with cash from the sale, he committed $2 billion to his philanthropies, including $100 million to create the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, which supports school reform. It has spent more than $600 million since 1999 on a variety of initiatives.

As with the arts, Broad demanded a hands-on role in improving education.

He played a prominent role in the development of the Los Angeles Unified School District’s downtown arts high school. He personally helped recruit two superintendents, former Colorado Gov. Roy Romer and veteran educator John Deasy. But his ambitions ranged beyond L.A. and California.

In 2002, his foundation began to fund the Broad Prize, which targeted urban districts with large achievement gaps. It exemplified its founder’s philosophy of tying monetary awards to concrete results such as gains in student test scores. Disappointed in the slow pace of improvement, he suspended the prize in early 2015.

He also founded the Broad Superintendents Academy, the largest training program in the nation for urban school superintendents. Its more than 150 fellows, many of them from business, the military and other fields outside education, undergo a 10-month program heavy on corporate-style management techniques and have gone on to leadership positions not only in Los Angeles (Deasy is a Broad graduate) but also in New York, Chicago and other major city school districts. In 2019, Broad announced he was moving the academy to Yale University.

The wealth and vision that created these initiatives also made Broad a target of scorn by some education experts. One of his most prominent critics was education historian Diane Ravitch, who assailed Broad along with Microsoft’s Bill Gates and others as members of “the billionaire boys’ club” of business titans whose top-down reform efforts weaken the voices of parents and teachers unions.

“His Broadies are leading districts and states,” Ravitch wrote in her blog in 2012. “Some are educators, some are not. Some are admired, some are despised. But the question remains, who elected Eli Broad to reform the nation’s schools? He is like a spoiled rich kid in a candy shop, taking what he wants, knocking over displays, breaking jars, barking orders.”

None of this discouraged Broad. “Our role is to take risks that government is not willing to do,” he told Newsweek in 2011. “The fact that I don’t concern myself about criticism or pushback helps.”

Broad made an offer to buy the Los Angeles Times and San Diego Union-Tribune in 2015, saying he believed the papers should be owned by a Californian. His offer, which had reportedly been solicited by Tribune Publishing, was rejected. The newspapers were later purchased by Soon-Shiong, a Los Angeles biotech billionaire.

Notoriously impatient — ”Let’s move on” was his favorite way of telling people they were wasting his time — Broad liked to stay busy, multitasking even during his leisure time. The only regret he expressed about an extraordinarily successful life was that he spent too much time building his businesses and not enough time being a father to his sons, neither of whom has sought the public spotlight.

“I was serious, focused, demanding, and not much fun,” Broad wrote in his memoir. “I took the boys with me to tour subdivisions, and now I realize that’s not exactly how kids want to spend their weekends. I missed too many moments.”

“I am unreasonable,” he wrote. “It’s the one adjective everyone I know — family, friends, associates, employees, and critics — has used to describe me…. But I believe that being unreasonable has been the key to my success.”

Woo is a former Times staff writer. Times staff writer Steve Marble contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/obituaries/story/2021-04-30/la-me-eli-broad-dead

A BuzzFeed News world editor faced backlash Sunday for taking a swipe at President Trump while tweeting an article about the attacks in Sri Lanka on Easter.

“Suspect we’d be hearing a lot more outrage from Trump and co. if the Christians killed in Sri Lanka were white,” Miriam Elder tweeted with a link to BuzzFeed News.

Elder’s tweet, as The Washington Examiner reported, received many more comments than likes or retweets. It had received nearly 3,000 replies, 70 retweets and 170 likes as of Sunday evening.

Many of the commenters asked why the BuzzFeed News world editor would politicize the terrorist attacks.

When contacted by Fox News, BuzzFeed News responded: “No comment from us.”

Trump on Easter morning offered condolences to the people of Sri Lanka. The president tweeted about the terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka, saying “we stand ready to help!”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

More than 200 people were killed and hundreds more wounded in eight bomb blasts that rocked churches and luxury hotels in or near Sri Lanka’s capital on Easter Sunday — the deadliest violence the South Asian island country has seen since a bloody civil war ended a decade ago.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks; Sri Lanka’s defense minister described the bombings as a terrorist attack by religious extremists.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/buzzfeed-news-editor-trump-outraged-sri-lanka-victims-white

The vaccine mandate in Los Angeles begins at midnight Monday, and some local businesses are working to adjust.

Claire Risoli, owner of Pocha LA, said her restaurant has to be careful to abide by the rules, but can’t “ruffle feathers” either.

“We just have to play by the rules if we want to play in the game,” Risoli said.

That said, Risoli does not want to have to “police” her customers either.

“It’s definitely a concern. I don’t want to be in the position of having to turn anyone away,” she added.

Some customers, however, are nonplussed by the requirement.

“I’m fine with it. We have three kids. Whenever they wanted to play sports, guess what, they had to have their vaccination stuff. Going to the school, they had to show all that. I’m fine with them requesting that we show that we have vaccinations,” said diner Roland Macias.

For more information about how to provide proof of vaccination, check out KTLA’s guide.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/local-news/businesses-prepare-for-implementation-of-los-angeles-vaccine-mandate-for-many-indoor-establishments/

The restaurant caught fire Saturday after protesters broke windows at the restaurant and threw fireworks inside.

Cortez Stafford, a spokesman for Atlanta fire, said the blaze grew because it wasn’t safe to get to the area near the restaurant when the fire began. He estimated there were 1,000 protesters near the Wendy’s.

“We’re now making our way in there to get a handle on the fire,” he said around 11 p.m.

Brooks had allegedly fallen asleep in his car and blocked the restaurant’s drive-through when Atlanta police were called. Brooks’ shooting led to the resignation, earlier today, of Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields.

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Police responded to the Wendy’s at 125 University Ave. about 10:30 p.m. Friday. Officers confronted Brooks, who authorities said failed a field sobriety test. A struggle broke out as police officers attempted to arrest Brooks.

Video posted on social media showed Brooks on the ground wrestling with two white Atlanta police officers in the parking lot. Officers attempted to use a Taser on Brooks, who was able to wrestle the stun gun away and flee as officers give chase. Shots are heard but not seen in the video.

Restaurant surveillance video released late Saturday by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation shows Brooks running away. He then turns and appears to fire the Taser at the pursuing officers before shots are heard.

The protests in response to Brooks’ death come as people across the country are protesting the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and the treatment of black people by law enforcement. Both men are black. Floyd died after a police officer, Derek Chauvin, knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes. Chauvin has been charged in Floyd’s death.

In addition to the Wendy’s fire, protesters walked on to the highway earlier in the evening, stopping traffic. Troopers warned them that they were violating the law. The demonstrators locked arms.

“You have three minutes to disperse,” a trooper said. 

Organizers encouraged people to leave, but not many did. Some demonstrators were arrested on the interstate before one lane on the highway reopened shortly after 10 p.m.

Protesters continued on to the Atlanta Police Department’s Zone 3 precinct on Cherokee Avenue where they chanted.

.


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Source Article from https://www.ajc.com/news/local/protestors-light-wendy-fire-enter-interstate-after-atlanta-death/oaZtPSD0yipmtBdbSLsp3K/

El diario Últimas Noticias presentará desde mañana, lunes 15 de febrero del 2016, un nuevo diseño, volverá a circular en horario vespertino y ofrecerá a sus lectores cinco suplementos que aparecerán a lo largo de la semana.

Volver a circular desde el mediodía, como fue su tradición, le permitirá al Diario presentar las noticias del día a la comunidad quiteña. “En gran medida, el nuevo diseño tiene que ver con esa posibilidad, pues estamos destinando las páginas principales para la información que se produzca en la mañana”, explica Carlos Mora, editor del Diario.

La información más noticiosa hablará primordialmente de Quito, pero también de política nacional y los hechos más relevantes del país y del Mundo.

Se ha procurado también que la navegación sea más sencilla, según explica Samuel Fernández, jefe de Diseño Editorial del periódico. “Tenemos, básicamente, tres secciones principales, la de las noticias, la de deportes y las de entretenimiento, más los nuevos cinco suplementos, que están concebidos para que sean coleccionables”.

Habrá un suplemento cada día. Los lunes el cuerpo principal del periódico vendrá acompañado de cuatro páginas de la revista El jefe eres tú, con información relevante para emprendedores, para empleados y desempleados y para cuidar la economía familiar.

Los martes estará la ya tradicional revista Vida sana, con información sobre prevención de enfermedades, nutrición, ejercicio, belleza y cocina.

Los miércoles circulará En las aulas, con material de trabajo para alumnos, maestros y padres de familia.

El suplemento En la casa aparecerá los jueves, con información práctica sobre decoración, jardinería, manualidades y mascotas.

Y una gran agenda de actividades para el fin de semana se presentará los viernes en el suplemento Ocio & fiesta.

Los sábados, aunque no a modo de suplemento, habrá información de Turismo. Todos los días, por supuesto, habrá información del espectáculo local e internacional.

Esta renovada presentación, a juicio de Mora, es a la vez una reafirmación de los principios que rigen al Diario desde su fundación, el 8 de junio de 1938. “Hay dos cosas que han caracterizado a Últimas Noticias”, asegura.

“Por un lado, su dedicación a los temas de Quito, a su historia, a su gente, con noticias donde los ciudadanos son protagonistas; y, por otro, el uso de un lenguaje muy cercano y coloquial, con sal quiteña. Y así seguirá siendo”.

Source Article from http://www.elcomercio.com/actualidad/ultimasnoticias-suplementos-noticias-quito-diario.html

Representative Mike Gallagher, Republican of Wisconsin, defended the agencies, saying, “They are doing a very difficult job and they are actually trying to advance the president’s priorities.”

Mr. Trump’s defenders, however, said the threat assessment reflected the views of the national security establishment — a culture that the president took office vowing to disrupt. They said the president would be vindicated for many of his foreign policy initiatives.

“The establishment is wrong and he’s right,” said Stephen K. Bannon, who served as Mr. Trump’s chief strategist until last year. “He’s made NATO more robust. In the Middle East, we’re much more engaged. The destruction of the underlying physical caliphate of ISIS is a fact.”

Jack Keane, a retired four-star Army general, said the nature of intelligence assessments was not to give credit to foreign policy achievements but to dwell on the risks and shortfalls.

“The president wants credit for moving away from an appeasement policy toward a more confrontational approach toward Iran,” Mr. Keane said. “This president has approached the Iranians more than any other president, and he wants to get credit for it.”

In his tweets on Wednesday, Mr. Trump said negotiations with the Taliban to wind down the war in Afghanistan were “proceeding well.” He said the relationship with North Korea was the “best it has ever been with U.S. No testing, getting remains, hostages returned. Decent chance of Denuclearization …”

Under his predecessor, President Barack Obama, he said, the “relationship was horrendous and very bad things were about to happen.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/30/us/politics/trump-intelligence-agencies.html

“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.” [cheering] They came from all 50 states out of some sense of patriotic duty … “It’s so much more than just rallying for President Trump. It’s really rallying for our way of life. The American dream, against fake news.” … to protest an election they believed had been stolen. “Stop the steal! Stop the steal!” “We’re here, patriots. We’re in Washington D.C. Capitol building dead in front of us.” Their day of action would be Jan. 6 … “The House comes to order.” … when Congress would count electoral ballots and ratify the 2020 election results. For some, it was just a rally for their president. For others, it was a call to arms. “We have the power in numbers. March on Congress directly after Trump’s speech.” In the weeks beforehand, there were over a million mentions on social media of storming the Capitol. Maps were shared of the building’s layout. There was talk of bringing weapons and ammunition, and discussion over which lawmakers should be targeted first. This anger was based on a lie. “This election was a fraud.” A lie that had grown more frenzied after the election. “President Trump won this election.” “They were flipping votes.” “Steal the election in Philadelphia.” “When you win in a landslide and they —” “Steal the election in Atlanta —” “And it’s rigged —” “Steal the election in Milwaukee —” “It’s not acceptable.” “This is outrageous.” A lie spread by the president and his closest allies. “Let’s call out cheating when we find it.” Some of whom stoked calls for violence. “All hell is going to break loose tomorrow.” “Everyone’s going to remember who actually stands in the breach and fights tomorrow. And who goes running off like a chicken.” “We bleed freedom.” “This will be their Waterloo.” “And we will sacrifice for freedom.” “This will be their destruction.” “U.S.A.! U.S.A.!” What happened next was chaos. “They broke the glass?” Insurrection. “Take it now!” “Treason! Treason!” Death. Then, there began a campaign to whitewash history, starting at the top. “It was a zero threat. Right from the start, it was zero threat.” And spreading throughout the Republican Party. “Even calling it an insurrection, It wasn’t. By and large, it was peaceful protest.” One lawmaker, who helped barricade the House doors, now suggests there was barely any threat. “If you didn’t know the TV footage was a video from January the 6th, you would actually think it was a normal tourist visit.” A tourist visit this was not. And the proof is in the footage. As part of a six-month investigation, The New York Times has collected and forensically analyzed thousands of videos, most filmed by the rioters themselves. We obtained internal police radio traffic … … and went to court to unseal police body-cam footage. Our reconstruction shows the Capitol riot for what it was, a violent assault encouraged by the president on a seat of democracy that he vowed to protect. We’ll chart how police leaders failed to heed warnings of an impending attack, putting rank-and-file officers in danger. We’ll track key instigators in the mob taking advantage of weaknesses in the Capitol’s defenses to ignite a wave of violence that engulfed the building. We’ll show, for the first time, the many simultaneous points of attack, and the eight breaches of what appeared to be an impenetrable institution of government. We’ll show how the delay to secure Congress likely cost a rioter her life. And how for some, storming the Capitol was part of the plan, all along. “In fact, tomorrow, I don’t even like to say it because I’ll be arrested.” “Well, let’s not say it. We need to go — I’ll say it.” “All right.” “We need to go in to the Capitol.” “Let’s go!” It’s the morning of Jan. 6, and thousands are filling the National Mall in Washington. Trump will speak here at the Ellipse, a large park near the White House and a half-hour walk to the U.S. Capitol where the election will be certified. Who is actually in this crowd? Most are ordinary citizens who believe Trump’s lie that the election was stolen. “It’s going to be a great day. It’s going to be wild, as Trump says.” But we also see more extreme groups who’ve gained a following during Trump’s presidency. There are followers of the QAnon conspiracy … “Drinking their blood, eating our babies.” … who believe that Trump is facing down a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles. Q posts often invoked notions of patriotism and predict a coming storm. And ahead of Jan. 6, some supporters call for violence. The Oath Keepers, a far-right paramilitary group, are also here. “We have men already stationed outside D.C. —” Their leader has said the group is ready to follow Trump’s orders and take members of what they call the “Deep State” into custody. They’re organized, staging their military-style equipment neatly on the ground. And later, they put on body armor, talk on radios, and chat with their supporters on a walkie-talkie app called Zello. “We have a good group. We got about 30, 40, of us who are sticking together and sticking to the plan. Y’all, we’re one block away from the Capitol, now. I’m probably going to go silent when I get there because I’m going to be a little busy.” Another group is the Proud Boys. They’re far-right nationalists who flashed white power signs throughout the day. “Check out all this testosterone.” They became a household name when Trump invoked them during a presidential debate. “Proud Boys, stand back and stand by.” And that’s what they did. They have a history of street violence and will be key instigators of the riot. We’ll return to them soon. Although the rally is billed as a political protest, some make calls to storm the Capitol even before Trump speaks. And later, when Trump does take the stage … “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol.” … some hear his words as a call to action. “I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building.” Two hours before this, the Proud Boys were already heading for the Capitol. They’re clearly spoiling for a fight with far-left agitators like antifa, who they believe are in D.C. But there are moments that suggest another motive. “Come on, tighten up.” “Come on, boys. They’re organized, too. Many are marked with orange tape or hats. They’re wearing body armor, carrying baseball bats and using radios. “That’s affirmative. Jesse, this is Tucker” Leading them is Ethan Nordean, who’s been entrusted with so-called war powers. He’s joined by other well-known Proud Boys like Joe Biggs, an organizer from Florida, Dominic Pezzola, a former Marine, and Billy Chrestman. They will be among the first rioters inside the Capitol building. “Proud Boys.” As Trump is speaking, some of his other supporters also head to the Capitol. Chanting: “Whose streets? Our streets! Whose streets? Our streets!” And the tone is becoming menacing. “And we’re going to storm the [expletive] Capitol. [expletive] you, [expletive].” “U.S.A.! U.S.A.!” Just ahead, officers guarding the building are understaffed and ill-equipped for what’s coming their way. “You going to stop us?” The building is more than two football fields in length. And barricades erected on the east side are defended by just a few dozen officers. The west side, facing Trump’s rally, is even lighter. The fencing has been extended and on the northwest approach, only five officers stand guard. Around five also defend the southwest approach, a few more dot the lawn and about a dozen officers are behind them. Plans to storm the Capitol were made in plain sight, but the F.B.I. and Department of Homeland Security did not deem those threats as credible. “We will take that building!” “U.S.A.! U.S.A.!” Capitol Police leaders and Washington’s mayor were warned at least three times of violent threats, but also didn’t take them seriously or circulate that information. And they declined offers of security personnel from federal and other agencies. They could have enlisted several hundred more Capitol police for duty on Jan. 6, but did not. And none of the officers on the barricades have protective gear or crowd-control equipment. As a result, the Capitol is sparsely defended. “Whose House? Our House! Whose House? Our House!” It’s 12:50 p.m. and a large group of Proud Boys is with other protesters right by the Capitol Police line. Joe Biggs is rallying them. When he’s approached by Ryan Samsel, a Trump supporter from Pennsylvania. They chat, we don’t know about what. But a minute later, Samsel is the first to approach the police line. And it’s now that the protest turns violent. “U.S.A.!” Without hesitation, the crowd overpowers the police. Nearby, a second group breaks through on another approach. Others jump fences. And now hundreds of rioters rush forward on several fronts. “D.C. is a [expletive] war zone.” Police retreat to the Capitol building where it’s becoming more threatening. “This is what we came for! Yeah!” A mob mentality begins to take hold. Police are so outnumbered, they’re forced to retreat again to more tightly defend access points to the Capitol. It’s now five minutes into the siege that the Capitol Police chief calls for backup from local law enforcement, known as the Metropolitan Police, and asks other Capitol leaders to mobilize the National Guard. “You took an oath! Does that not mean a damn thing to you, does it?” Metro Police will arrive within 15 minutes. But for reasons we’ll explain later, the National Guard won’t arrive for over four hours. “Back up! Back up!” Meanwhile, more Capitol Police come to reinforce the line. It’s the first time we see officers in riot gear. But most are missing their shields because they had not prepared to unlock the storage area where that equipment is kept. Proud Boys like Billy Chrestman keep rallying the mob. And again, they start brawling with the police. Minutes later, reinforcements from the Metro Police arrive. A high-ranking Metro officer immediately calls for more backup. They struggle to subdue rioters who respond with their own chemical spray. And within 30 minutes, the police already have casualties. [shouting] This first wave of rioters battling police has paved the way across Capitol grounds for others to follow. And after Trump finishes speaking, thousands more now fill the space. Meanwhile, inside the Capitol, Nancy Pelosi and Mike Pence have begun certifying the 2020 presidential election results. Certification will happen on both sides of the building, in the House and the Senate. And this is what the rioters want to stop. An hour into the assault, the mob is battling a police line here, along the west face of the Capitol. But that violence is now going to spread to multiple points of attack, as west side rioters stream around the Capitol and incite the crowd on the east. Here’s what that crowd looks like on the east. “Stop the steal! Stop the steal! Stop the steal!” They’re aware of the siege happening on the west side, and some are emboldened by it. But up until now, they’ve been kept behind the barricades. “U.S.A.! U.S.A.!” Then this group from the west storms around to the building and pushes right through the barriers. The police here barely put up a fight. And it’s now that protesters, all along the east barricades, surge forward. [cheering] Officers are overwhelmed from several directions, and retreat to guard Capitol entrances. But these rioters believe they’ve been deputized by their president to stop a crime. And now, they start trying to get into the building itself. [shouting] [glass breaking] [pounding on door] The Capitol is now surrounded. Rioters haven’t made it inside yet, but around the time that the mob on the east pushed forward, rioters on the west were making a pivotal move. This scaffolding was erected for the upcoming inauguration of Joe Biden. It covers a staircase that gives direct access to an upper level, and dozens of doors and windows. Three police lines guard that route. But at ground level, officers are so overwhelmed that just a few cover this crucial access point. Several Proud Boys see the weakness. Proud Boys start fighting the police, and with others in the mob, they push through the line. Over several minutes, it’s a brutal fight on these steps. At one point, the rioters are held back. [groaning] But they make a final push up the flight of stairs. [cheering] At the top, they scuffle again with a small group of officers … … who give in after barely a minute. The mob now has direct access to Capitol entrances. “I can’t believe this is reality. We accomplished this [expletive].” And hundreds more protesters below, surge forward. “Let’s go! The siege is ours.” It’s utter mayhem, and it’s about to get worse. This scene is being filmed from countless angles allowing us to piece together, moment by moment, what comes next. Proud Boy Dominic Pezzola uses a police shield he stole to bash in a window. And at 2:13 p.m., the Capitol is breached. Michael Sparks, a Trump supporter from Kentucky, is the first person inside. A police officer seems unsure of what to do and backs off. Sparks is followed by Proud Boys and other far-right extremists, one carrying a Confederate flag, another armed with a baseball bat. When rioters break open the locked doors, hundreds more rush in. [shouting] [glass breaking] This is a critical moment. Officers must now defend the outside and inside of the building, stretching them even further. Simultaneous events now happen that are critical to lawmakers’ safety. Rioters head straight for the Senate, and will be at its doors in two minutes. Above them, the Senate is called into recess. “We’ll pause.” Members will evacuate down these stairs. In this hallway, directly overhead the rioters, Officer Eugene Goodman is sprinting to overtake them. He passes Mitt Romney, who he warns to turn around. Reinforcements are following behind. Goodman overtakes the mob, goes downstairs and intercepts them. He holds them off while backup arrives upstairs. Behind these rioters, and just feet away, is an escape route where the lawmakers and Senate staff are now fleeing. Just one officer stands guard. Keeping his composure, Goodman draws the mob away from that escape route to where reinforcements are waiting. Goodman: “Second floor!” He glances toward the Senate, and realizes the door is unguarded. Goodman shoves the protester again, lures the mob away, and brings them into that line of fellow officers. Again, the rioters here are convinced it’s their duty to defend democracy. “We’re not [expletive] around! Because we are mad!” [shouting] The officers hold them off here, for now. Meanwhile, on the other side of the Capitol, a few political leaders are evacuated from the House of Representatives. But despite a lockdown alert, proceedings here will resume. “The House will be in order.” We’ll go there soon. First, we’ll go to the Crypt in the center of the Capitol below the Rotunda. The mob is already at its entrance. If they get through here, they will more easily fan out across the building. Rioters jostle with police here for six minutes, and then flood through. It’s now 2:24 p.m., some 90 minutes after the siege began, and the mob is about to overrun the building. “Stop the steal! Stop the steal!” As this is happening, and as thousands more swell outside, Trump composes a tweet. Not to calm his supporters, but to blame his vice president. He writes: At this very time, Pence and his family are being taken to safety, along with an aide who’s carrying the country’s nuclear launch equipment. “O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave?” At 2:25 p.m., there’s another major breach on the opposite side of the building, the east side. Rioters have been battling a handful of officers at these doors for almost half an hour. The tide turns when rioters who came through the Crypt, reach these doors and pull them open. Then an active-duty Marine Corps officer, Christopher Warnagiris, keeps that door open for the mob to flood in. Just as elsewhere, this crowd is a mix of die-hard Trump supporters, but also more organized groups like the Oath Keepers, who move in formation here toward that east side entrance. The Oath Keepers and their supporters continue to update each other on the Zello chat app. The group enters the Capitol together. Proud Boys are near them, including Joe Biggs, the organizer we saw earlier. He’s entering the building for a second time. The Oath Keepers fill the Rotunda along with hundreds of other rioters. “Took over the Capitol. Overran the Capitol.” “We’re in the [expletive] Capitol, bro.” Now the police inside the building are completely outnumbered and call for backup. “It’s our House!” “Whose House?” “Our House!” Throughout the Capitol, staffers have barricaded doors to keep the mob out. In Nancy Pelosi’s chambers, staffers rush inside a conference room and lock two doors behind them. Just 12 minutes later, rioters outside head straight for her offices. “Nancy! Nancy!” And pile in. Huddled together under a table, Pelosi’s staff record what’s happening. One rioter tries to break into that same room. Inside, staffers are silent as they record him pounding. [loud banging] He gets through the first door, but the second door keeps him out. It’s a scene that, again, shows just how compromised the U.S. government has become. “I think I like my new dining room.” By 2:30 p.m., the Senate evacuation is well underway. But even though a lockdown was called over 15 minutes ago, the House is still in session. “Do not accept Arizona’s electors as certified.” Representative Jim McGovern is chairing. He told us he wanted to finish hearing objections to the election results by Paul Gosar. House staff and security gave McGovern the all-clear to continue. It’s a delay that likely cost someone their life. Suddenly, staff are now pointing at the chamber’s doors. Just outside, a mob of 100 or more is baying to get into them. These rioters pay little heed to the thin line of police. “They’re going. Yeah, I would just stop — bro.” And in moments, are pushing against the doors into the House. “Stop the steal!” On the other side, Capitol Police erect a barricade and draw their guns. “You’re a traitor.” On the floor, lawmakers are evacuated to the rear of the chamber, where in a few minutes a rioter will be shot and killed. Part of the mob outside now peels off in that direction to find a different way in. Ashli Babbitt, an Air Force veteran and QAnon supporter, is among the first to arrive at the rear of the House. “Open the door.” They see the lawmakers escaping. That lobby might have been clear had the House been evacuated sooner. But the rioters now become incensed. Zachary Alam, a Trump supporter from Pennsylvania, punches in the glass panels with his bare fists. [pounding on door] “Open the door.” Police are stretched extremely thin. Just three officers and a security staffer stand guard. None are wearing riot gear, and they keep their weapons holstered. “It’s going to get worse.” “Open the door.” When a team of heavily armed police now arrives, the three officers step aside. “Go! Let’s go! Get this.” This creates a crucial gap that allows rioters to smash in the glass. A warning — what happens next is graphic. It’s 2:44 p.m., and behind the door, a police officer draws his handgun. Babbitt vaults into the window and the officer shoots her once. [gunshot] “Oh! Oh!” It’s a fatal wound through the upper chest. Inside the chamber, the floor is clear, but lawmakers in the balcony are sheltering in place. [gunshot] “The [expletive]?” “Take your pins off.” “Pins off.” They now remove the breast pins that identify them as members of Congress. A group of rioters who almost made it to the balcony are held at gunpoint as it’s finally evacuated. Now Trump supporters have achieved their goal, stopping the election certification. And while the House is evacuated, at the other side of the building, the Senate is occupied. “Treason! Treason! Treason!” On the Senate floor, they leaf through lawmakers’ files. “There’s got to be something in here we can [expletive] use against these scumbags.” Mug for photos. “Jesus Christ —” Pray. “We invoke Your name. Amen!” “Amen!” And leave a message for Mike Pence. “It’s only a matter of time. Justice is coming.” As rioters inside have been rampaging throughout the Capitol, the crowd outside has grown. And that first battle has continued raging. [horn blowing] For almost two hours, officers face off with rioters who say they support the police … … but assault them, anyway. We’re going to show what happened here because it demonstrates, yet again, how failures by Capitol Police leaders to prepare put the safety of these officers at risk. “Leave him alone! Leave him alone!” Capitol Police had been ordered to withhold some of their stronger weapons. But as soon as Robert Glover, a Metro Police inspector arrives, he calls for his munitions team to help. When the building is breached, Glover knows he needs to retreat and seeks advice from Capitol leaders. [shouting] When Capitol don’t respond, he asks four times. “Push! Push! Push! Push!” Then, the police lose the line. “We the people, we are the storm!” Rioters knock an officer over, throw a fire extinguisher. “U.S.A.!” Glover issues a 10-33, the call of last resort. Crazed rioters hound the police even as they retreat to the upper level. Police now begin to guard this doorway, an iconic centerpiece of presidential inaugurations. But for another two hours, the same pattern will repeat. Rioters fill the terrace. Instigators trigger a frenzy. And tragically, someone will die. A brutal fight erupts in the doorway. The mob heaves in a coordinated scrum. [screaming] “Help!” When police finally push them out, they face even worse violence. They are tased, gassed and robbed of their equipment. They’re beaten with a crutch, a hockey stick and even an American flag. At least four officers are pulled into the crowd. One dragged by his own helmet, face down. And again, the frenzy turns fatal. Rosanne Boyland, a Trump supporter who has been swept up by QAnon conspiracies, is moving toward the door. But amid the scrum, she collapses and is lying unconscious beneath the mob. [crowd chants] “I can’t breathe! I can’t breathe!” As the crowd sarcastically chants a Black Lives Matter slogan, Boyland’s friend, Justin Winchell, tries to pull her to safety. He screams for help. But instead, fellow rioters trample over Boyland and charge at the police again. Boyland will be pronounced dead at a local hospital in the evening. By the end of the day, rioters have breached and entered the building in at least eight locations. There’s the first breach, which we’ve seen, when rioters smashed through two windows and a door. Beside that, a rioter with a crowbar smashes in a second door, and then opens it to hundreds of people. Others smash a window next to the Inauguration door and climb inside. “Patriots, we need people to stand up for our country and our Constitution.” At this entrance, police stand aside and allow rioters to stream in, unchallenged. On the north side of the building, police in riot gear yield and let the crowd in. Another three breaches are on the east side, two by the central doors into the Rotunda, and this southeast door leading to the House chamber. It’s the arrival of more Metropolitan Police and other agencies that finally turns the tide. When those officers enter the Rotunda, they clear it in just 20 minutes. As the mob is pushed back through the east doors, their rage turns to Mike Pence, who Trump attacked earlier. Metro officers also stop other rioters from entering on the west side, where the mob first broke in. But here, too, we see a crowd empowered by the belief that they’re carrying out some patriotic duty. Over the course of the day, 150 police officers are injured. After 4 p.m., Metro and Capitol Police regain control of the upper levels. The final parts of the interior are cleared by other law enforcement, including federal agencies. Tear gas and flash bangs disperse the crowd on the Inauguration terrace. The Virginia State Police and Arlington County Police help to reclaim that area. Then rioters are swiftly pushed off Capitol grounds by a reinforced police line. Only now, more than three hours after Capitol police first called them, do National Guard soldiers arrive. “You can just do and turn down, right now.” Troops were staging just 20 minutes away. But a recent procedural change meant the highest level of the Pentagon had to approve deployment. And Pentagon officials delayed the decision, partially in fear of bad optics, even as the Capitol was being overrun. As calm returns, the president tweets again. He repeats that the election had been stripped away, calls his supporters great patriots, and says: The aftermath of Jan. 6 has been as divisive as the lie that launched it. Even as one arm of government has indicted hundreds of rioters, Republican lawmakers continue efforts to normalize what happened with a mix of denials and conspiracy theories. “Some of the people who breached the Capitol today were not Trump supporters.” “I knew those are people that love this country, that truly respect law enforcement, would never do anything to break a law. And so I wasn’t concerned.” They include Paul Gosar, who’d been at the Trump rally. “The D.O.J. is harassing peaceful patriots across the country.” And Andrew Clyde, who we saw earlier, standing just a few feet from rioters. “There was no insurrection. And to call it an insurrection, in my opinion, is a bald-faced lie.” Republican leaders have blocked an independent investigation that could have brought new details to light. “I’ve made the decision to oppose the House Democrats’ slanted and unbalanced proposal for another commission to study the events of January the 6th.” And in May, a top Republican was ousted from the party’s leadership after blaming Trump for inspiring the riot. “And I think that the party is in a place that we’ve got to bring it back from.” None of what happened on Jan. 6 would have been possible without a huge mass of ordinary people who were proud of what they achieved. “We made it!” “Yeah! We stopped the vote!” Millions around the country still believe the violence was not only justified, but necessary. And the forces that brought them there have not gone away. “Yeah, the patriots are coming back, y’all. Hopefully, y’all will be on our side when that happens.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/30/us/jan-6-capitol-attack-takeaways.html

La voz y las informaciones del conocido periodista radial, Gonzalo Corea no estuvieron lejos del dial por mucho tiempo.

Luego de ser separado de su puesto en Noticias Columbia a finales de diciembre, él aceptó la propuesta de la gerencia de Radio Actual (107.1) y asumió la dirección del nuevo producto noticioso del espacio: Noticias Actual , que se transmite de lunes a viernes a las 6 a. m. y 4 p. m. con micronoticieros cada hora.

Con 32 años de experiencia en radio, el periodista aceptó dirigir el espacio y a su vez el compromiso de hacer crecer el noticiero “haciendo periodismo clásico y apoyándose en las nuevas tecnologías”.

“Nuestro lema es informar con respeto y seriedad. Como la vieja guardia pero con el valor agregado de la tecnología”, contó.

Corea admite que este nuevo proyecto –que está al aire desde el 2 de enero– no es algo en lo que estuviera trabajando tiempo atrás, pues hasta hace pocas semanas fungió como periodista para Columbia.

“Luego de la salida de Nora Ruíz, quien fue directora de Noticias Columbia , a mí se me asignó por todo el mes de diciembre coordinar el noticiero; después de eso me dijeron que contratarían a otra persona para asumir la dirección. Ahora asumo este reto en Noticias Actual donde empiezo de cero. Estaré en la dirección y trabajando en el área de mercadeo. Aunque tenemos el apoyo de la emisora, con el espacio hay que comer”, detalló.

Como el noticiero apenas empieza, Corea no percibirá un salario. Su trabajo en el área de mercadeo servirá para buscar publicidad y que el emprendimiento crezca.

Trayectoria

Junto a Gonzalo, trabajará el también conocido Werny Vásquez, quien posee vasta permanencia en el ámbito radial.

El equipo cuenta con varios periodistas que trabajan a través de una redacción virtual y 25 corresponsales a nivel nacional.

Corea mencionó que a sus 55 años asumió este desafío porque el periodismo y la radio “son su pasión”.

“Yo no pienso en pensionarme; esta es mi pasión. Ya mis tres hijos son profesionales, así que mientras Dios me preste vida voy a seguir en esto”, dijo.

Con “buen contenido, conocimiento y competencia sana”, Gonzalo quiere ganarse a la audiencia.

“Con los noticieros radiales en general y con Noticias Columbia que siempre ha estado en primer lugar quiero que tengamos una competencia muy respetuosa. Columbia fue un matrimonio de 14 años de mucho crecimiento. Siempre voy a estar agradecido”, finalizó.





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Periodista y Licenciada en Comunicación de Mercadeo de la Universidad Latina de Costa Rica.




Source Article from http://www.nacion.com/ocio/tv-radio/Noticias-Actual-periodista-Gonzalo-Corea_0_1608639155.html







Yulimar Mudarra.- Desde el Teatro Teresa Carreño, En el marco de la XV reunión de la Comisión Mixta de Alto Nivel China- Venezuela, se firmaron 22 acuerdos de cooperación entre ambas naciones en materia de inversión, desarrollo económico, vivienda, construcción de obras públicas producción; petrolera, vehículos, computadoras, y celulares.

El presidente de la República, Nicolás Maduro, en la clausura de la reunión afirmó que “este es el año de la recuperación económica del país (…) Venezuela lo tiene todo para ser una potencia en América Latina y el Caribe”, y destacó el esfuerzo conjunto para el impulso del desarrollo de la economí

Maduro comunicó que actualmente en Venezuela se están desarrollando 790 proyectos productivos con China de los cuales 495 se encuentran en ejecución, 205 en desarrollo y 90 en arranque.

El Jefe de Estado, informó que para los 22 nuevos convenios se realizará una inversión de 2.700 millones de dólares.

Además, con la firma de los convenios se ejecutarán proyectos para el fortalecimiento de los 15 motores de la Agenda Económica Bolivariana.

Este convenio fue suscrito por Ning Jizhe, vicepresidente de la Comisión Nacional de la Reforma China y presidente de la Comisión Mixta de Alto Nivel China; mientras que por Venezuela, la firma estuvo a cargo del ministro de Planificación, Ricardo Menéndez.

 

 

 

 



Source Article from http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/slider/venezuela-china-firmas-acuerdos-cooperacion/

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U.S. negotiators have tempered demands that China curb industrial subsidies as a condition for a trade deal after strong resistance from Beijing, according to two sources briefed on discussions, marking a retreat on a core U.S. objective for the trade talks. The world’s two biggest economies are nine months into a trade war that has cost billions of dollars, roiled financial markets and upended supply chains.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has slapped tariffs on $250 billion worth of imports of Chinese goods to press demands for an end to policies — including industrial subsidies — that Washington says hurt U.S. companies competing with Chinese firms. China responded with its own tit-for-tat tariffs on U.S. goods.

The issue of industrial subsidies is thorny because they are intertwined with the Chinese government’s industrial policy.

Beijing grants subsidies and tax breaks to state-owned firms and to sectors seen as strategic for long-term development. Chinese President Xi Jinping has strengthened the state’s role in parts of the economy.

In the push to secure a deal in the next month or so, U.S. negotiators have become resigned to securing less than they would like on curbing those subsidies and are focused instead on other areas where they consider demands are more achievable, the sources said.

Those include ending forced technology transfers, improving intellectual property protection and widening access to China’s markets, the sources said. China has already given ground on those issues.

“It’s not that there won’t be some language on it, but it is not going to be very detailed or specific,” one source familiar with the talks said in reference to the subsidies issue.

A representative for the White House referred Reuters to the U.S. Trade Representative’s Office, which did not respond to a request for comment.

“If U.S. negotiators define success as changing the way China’s economy operates, that will never happen,” said the other source with knowledge of the trade talks.

“A deal that makes Xi look weak is not a worthwhile deal for Xi. Whatever deal we get, it’s going to be better than what we’ve had, and it’s not going to be sufficient for some people. But that’s politics,” that source said.

China pledged earlier this year to end market-distorting subsidies for its domestic industries but offered no details on how it would achieve that goal, three people familiar with the trade talks told Reuters in February.

Mixed messages

One of the key sticking points in the negotiations is the removal of the $250 billion in U.S. tariffs. It is broadly expected in the trade community that U.S. negotiators want to keep some tariffs on Chinese goods, which Washington sees as retaliation for the years of damage done to its economy by Beijing’s unfair trade practices.

The role of the state firms may benefit the United States in another part of the trade deal. The Trump administration wants China to make big-ticket purchases of over a trillion dollars of U.S. goods in the next six years to reduce its trade surplus.

The companies likely to make the purchases are the state-run firms, both sources said.

“The purchasing, for example, reinforces the role of the state sector because the purchasing is all being done through state enterprises,” one of the sources said.

Another point of contention between the two countries, telecommunications, may drive China to increase the state’s role rather than reduce it, the source said.

Pressure from the United States on allies to reduce cooperation with Chinese telecommunications champions such as Huawei Technologies could push the government into raising state support to develop technology at home.

Decades of friction

Subsidies and tax breaks have been a source of friction between the two countries for years.

Washington says Beijing has failed to comply with its World Trade Organization obligations on subsidies that affect both imports and exports.

China has taken steps to address some U.S. concerns in cases brought before the WTO. It has also begun to publicly downplay its push to dominate the future of high-tech industries under its “Made in China 2025” policy, although few expect it to jettison those ambitions.

But the USTR complains of a catalog of other subsidies and supports, including preferential access to capital and land. The United States says China has failed to disclose subsidies as required by the WTO. Washington has detailed more than 500 different subsidies it says China applies in notifications to the WTO.

The scope of China’s local government subsidy programs is largely unknown, and even the Chinese negotiators have said in recent discussions they do not know the details of all those programs.

“China continues to shield massive sub-central government subsidies from the scrutiny of WTO members,” the USTR said in a February 2019 report to Congress on China’s WTO compliance.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/15/us-china-trade-washington-tempers-demand-that-beijing-curb-subsidies.html

La sonrisa de Franco Guzmán delataba travesura. Mientras escribía en una hoja en blanco iba riéndose en silencio, disfrutándose el momento de la creación. Sus expresivos ojos claros revelaban emoción, esa que surge cuando llega una gran idea.

“A ver déjame ver que habéis escrito”, le dijo el maestro español Pedro Zuazua. Franco le estrechó la hoja al maestro, a quien se le dibujó una sonrisa tan pronto comenzó a leer lo escrito. “Está muy bien”, le comentó al estudiante.

El niño, de 12 años, tenía que crear una noticia. La que escogió no pudo haber sido más inverosímil, pero estaba repleta de creatividad. “Hoy en las calles de Washington D.C. una mujer vio a Michael Jackson vivo, caminando y bailando ‘Thriller’”, decía el texto.

Al igual que Franco, otros niños y niñas de la clase de español de séptimo y octavo grado de la escuela José Julián Acosta, de San Juan, dejaron volar su imaginación durante uno de tres talleres de periodismo que ofreció este sábado personal del diario español El País, en colaboración con la Asociación de Periodistas de Puerto Rico (Asppro).

La sonrisa de Franco Guzmán delataba travesura.
(Vanessa Serra Diaz)

La actividad se llevó a cabo en el espacio Beta-Local, en el Viejo San Juan, con la participación de una decena de niños y niñas entre los 8 a los 14 años de edad, quienes tuvieron la oportunidad de armar sus noticias. Los alumnos escribieron sus historias y montaron sus propias portadas, cortando y pegando fotografías en una hoja, que simulaba la primera plana del diario español.

El periodista Pedro Zuazua, director de comunicaciones de Prisa Noticia, en compañía de sus colegas españolas Lucía Díez y Naiara Fuentes, llevaron a cabo el taller en el que le hablaron a los alumnos de la noticia y los géneros periodísticos y les enseñaron cómo redactar una historia noticiosa con las preguntas básicas: qué, cómo, cuándo, dónde y por qué.

“El propósito del taller es que los niños aprendan jugando a lo que es la noticia, a hacer una noticia, a  distinguir una entrevista de un reportaje, de un artículo de opinión. Básicamente que se diviertan aprendiendo algo”, explicó Zuazua, quien aterrizó en la Isla el pasado domingo para participar de las actividades relacionadas al VII Congreso Internacional de la Lengua Española (CILE) y, de paso, celebrar los 40 años del periódico El País.

Destacó que en esta semana que lleva en Puerto Rico ha ofrecido talleres en diversas escuelas públicas y privadas en colaboración con el grupo Santillana, impactando a un total de mil estudiantes. Zuazua dijo que la respuesta de los participantes al proyecto ha sido increíble y que todos se han mostrado participativos.

“Al principio se les ve tímidos, pero al final hablan y hablan y terminan haciendo tres o cuatro noticias. Son muy simpáticos, bien educados y muy agradecidos”, opinó.

El periodista comentó que le ha llamado la atención los temas escogidos por los niños y niñas a los que les ha dado el taller. “Es bien curioso porque les preocupa temas como el terrorismo -el acto terrorista en París, por ejemplo, lo tienen en la cabeza-, los tsunamis, luego el deporte. También me han contado no sé qué de una miss de belleza y les preocupa el estado de las playas. Están muy bien informados”, señaló el periodista, a quien los participantes le han preguntado por los reyes de España y por el fútbol.

“Saben mucho los estudiantes de Puerto Rico porque le poníamos fotografías de diversas personalidades globales y las conocían casi todas eh. Da gusto ver eso. Hay talleres que no da gusto, pero estos han estado fenomenal y los niños superbién”, abundó Zuazua, mientras los niños y niñas trabajaban por grupos en diferentes mesas.

La maestra de español de la escuela José Julián Acosta, Agnes Vera, quien acompañó esta mañana a los estudiantes, destacó que este taller es una oportunidad única para ellos porque les abre una nueva ventana de conocimiento.

“El periodismo es español, el periodismo es lengua. En la escuela hay una unidad en noveno grado que es periodismo y este taller puede ir preparándolos para ese curso. Además, vi el taller como una oportunidad para que de aquí se pueda desarrollar un periódico escolar”, comentó la maestra.

La estudiantes Shu’lien Ortiz, de 14 años y estudiante de octavo grado, por su parte, comentó que le parecía interesante y entretenido el taller, a la vez que se percató que montar una noticia no era sencillo. La jovencita montó su propia portada con dos noticias fascinantes. La primera trataba sobre un maestro que había permitido a los estudiantes tomar un examen con la libreta abierta, mientras la segunda era sobre uno de los “beneficios” de ir a la playa. Su titular leía: “Científicos demuestran que bañarse en la playa quita el estrés”.

Layla Torres, de 13 años, y también estudiante de octavo grado, prefirió hablar sobre las competencias nacionales de natación en Ponce, mientras que Cecilia Feliciano optó por resaltar el concierto de salsa que se celebró ayer en la Plaza del V Centenario como parte del cierre del CILE 2016.

A la vez que todos seguían creando sus noticias, se asomó nuevamente la sonrisa traviesa en el rostro de Franco Guzmán, quien armaba su segundo titular. La historia, que tenía su marca humorística, no pudo haber sido más pertinente para estos días: “Hoy el Rey (de España) insulta a un periodista y se ríe de su chiste”, leía.

El taller que ofreció el diario El País forma parte del compromiso social de la empresa española con la comunidad. El programa ha impactado a niños y niñas en España, México y ahora, en Puerto Rico. 

Source Article from http://www.elnuevodia.com/entretenimiento/cultura/nota/ninosyninasautoresdesuspropiasnoticias-2176294/


La “marcha por la democracia” convocó multitudes en varios puntos de la capital y del país. La calle sigue siendo el catalizador de los movimientos políticos.

Fue una convocatoria inalámbrica. Moderna, como les gusta a Marcos Peña, a Jaime Durán Barba y, en definitiva, al presidente Mauricio Macri.

Un sábado a la tarde, cuando ya casi nadie trabaja y, aun así, con tránsito fluido hasta que no se pudo más. Nada que ver con los “aparatos” territoriales que caracterizan al peronismo tradicional.

Ningún colectivo en la 9 de Julio. Muchos autos estacionados en las calles adyacentes a la Plaza de Mayo, centro neurálgico pero no el único de la movilización.

Dato llamativo para una concentración convocada por internet: abrumadora mayoría de adultos en pareja, minoría de jóvenes, provenientes sobre todo de la zona Norte de la Capital Federal y el GBA.

“No vuelven más” versus el vamos “Vamos a volver” de los K. “Ahora, ahora, la gobernadora” versus “Baradel dejate de joder”.

Pero lo moderno no mata lo clásico: la lucha política se sigue dirimiendo en la calle y en la plaza.

Nada es espontáneo. Hay “aparato” del oficialismo en las redes sociales. Sin embargo, nada sucede si no tiene espacio social, si no anda circulando por ahí a la espera de que alguien encienda la mecha. Y hoy, después de un marzo plagado de marchas opositoras, la mecha se encendió del lado oficial.

Ninguna multitud es despreciable como fenómeno político. Los verdaderos acontecimientos se expresan en “masa” y se impone apreciarlos más allá de los deseos de los líderes.

El conflicto docente (y sindical en general) tiene base social y se ha expuesto largamente durante el último mes.

La pregunta de hoy es: ¿nació el macrismo? Base social tiene. Expresará un corte generacional y “de clase” determinado, pero tiene espacio. Existe. Hoy no importan las conclusiones del gabinete: importa que toda esa gente volverá a su casa con la sensación de un deber cumplido y querrá más.

Tiene un límite, desde luego. El kirchnerismo, para consagrarse como tal, debió exhibir una condición necesaria: éxitos económicos. Al macrismo le faltan todavía, pero la calle demuestra que tiene resto.

Otra cosa es si será sano consolidar una división de estas características. A priori podría especularse con que no, pero tampoco deja de ser el fruto de una elección libre plasmada en la dualidad de millones de personas.

*Editor General de Revista NOTICIAS




Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2017/04/02/1a-nacio-el-macrismo/

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As Ohio Governor Mike DeWine spoke at a community gathering after the Dayton shooting, the crowd erupted in chants of “Do something.”
USA TODAY

DAYTON, Ohio – In the wake of Dayton’s mass shooting Sunday, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine was shouted down by a crowd of vigil attendees wanting action.

As he took the stage in the Oregon District of Dayton, the location of Sunday’s mass shooting, and commented on the size of the crowd gathered, he was met with chants.

“Do something!” the crowd chanted over and over.

“We’re here tonight because we know that we cannot … we know that we cannot … ease the pain of those families who have lost someone,” said DeWine, a Republican, as the chants grew. “We also know that we want to do something.”

Nine people were killed and 27 injured when a suspected gunman opened fire at the Oregon District. The gunman was killed by police.

DeWine has been working on a “red flag law,” which would permit police or relatives to petition a court to remove guns from people deemed dangerous. Several states passed them after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida.

But DeWine is trying to thread a needle with Second Amendment advocates concerned about due process rights and a GOP-controlled Legislature that has shown little interest in gun control.

DeWine’s history with firearms-related legislation is mixed. 

In Congress, DeWine’s support of gun control, such as background checks at gun shows, earned him an “F” rating from the NRA. In 2006, the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence endorsed DeWine in his U.S. Senate race.

He improved to a “C” in 2014, after his first term as Ohio’s attorney general. 

9 dead, 27 injured: Dayton vigil turns into campaign for gun control: ‘When do we want it? Now!’; gunman’s sister among 9 dead

The suspect: Ohio shooting: Police have identified 24-year-old man as suspect who killed 9 in Dayton shooting

But during the GOP primary for governor in 2018, DeWine was not the first choice of gun groups. They preferred his lieutenant governor and one-time rival Jon Husted or even former Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor, who proudly donned her rifle at a 2018 gun-rights rally on the Statehouse steps.

DeWine and Husted joined forces on the GOP ticket. Husted’s presence eased some gun rights advocates’ fears that DeWine might act like former Gov. John Kasich. Kasich signed every Second Amendment bill that crossed his desk and then suddenly started advocating for gun restrictions. 

In the end, the National Rifle Association endorsed DeWine’s bid for governor over Democrat Rich Cordray, former leader of the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

“This is a vigil tonight, a vigil for the people we have lost,” Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley said. “There will be time for action.”

Follow Cameron Knight and Jessie Balmert on Twitter: @ckpj99 and @jbalmert

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/08/05/dayton-shooting-vigil-mike-dewine-chants/1919624001/

Boos, jeers and profanities are nothing new for politicians, especially those who reach the White House. Former presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, as well as Trump, were all heckled, weathering protests along their motorcade routes and at events.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/10/31/southwest-airlines-pilot-anti-biden-chant/

Russian banks that have been cut off from global payments networks are turning to China’s state-owned UnionPay system as the country tries to sidestep boycotts by Western businesses for its invasion of Ukraine.

Visa Inc. and Mastercard Inc. said they are suspending their Russian operations, making it difficult for Russians to buy goods from abroad. The moves by the two companies go beyond sanctions issued against many Russian banks.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/russian-banks-turn-to-china-to-sidestep-cutoff-from-payments-systems-11646578489