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No Black people who survived the massacre or their relatives have been given compensation in return. Insurance companies declined most Black victims’ claims, which were worth more than $27 million in today’s money. About 10,000 community residents were left homeless.

“I call on the American people to reflect on the deep roots of racial terror in our Nation and recommit to the work of rooting out systemic racism across our country,” Biden said in the proclamation on Monday, in which he committed to work to remove systemic racism from policies, laws and hearts.

In the proclamation, Biden also called on the federal government to “reckon with and acknowledge” how it has “stripp[ed] wealth and opportunity from Black communities.” He said his administration was “committed to acknowledging” how federal policy affected Greenwood in particular.

The president said that laws and policies made recuperating from the massacre “nearly impossible,” including federal highway construction splitting the community and federal involvement in redlining.

Biden also pledged that his administration would tackle racial inequities in a number of ways, including infrastructure, environmental justice, funds for businesses in “economically disadvantaged” regions, and in particular for minority-owned businesses.

On Tuesday, Biden is set to visit Tulsa, where he will give a speech on the massacre and meet with survivors.

Oklahoma has been caught in a culture war over education and race, with a new GOP-backed state law that will ban teachers from teaching subjects that cause anyone to “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or any other form of psychological distress” because of their race or gender.

Gov. Kevin Stitt, a Republican, has said the new law won’t bar teaching about the massacre, but state Sen. Kevin Matthews, a Democrat, has called the law “an affront to Black people.”

Republicans across the country have pushed back against the teaching of critical race theory, with many states moving to bar it from classrooms. Critics of such legislation have said it would limit schools from properly teaching and discussing subjects like diversity and equity.

The centennial comes just over a year after the nation faced a reckoning following the murder of George Floyd, a Black man, by a white Minneapolis police officer. Earlier this year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention deemed racism a “serious public health threat,” with CDC Director Rochelle Walensky pointing to “severe” and “unacceptable” inequities in health outcomes across racial and ethnic lines.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/05/31/joe-biden-tulsa-proclamation-491450

Con 116 votos, los legisladores de la Asamblea de Ecuador aprobaron este jueves una resolución de rechazo a los actos de violencia del pasado 5 de julio en la Asamblea de Venezuela. 

En el documento votado la tarde de este jueves, la Asamblea ecuatoriana expresó su rechazo y condena a todo acto de violencia como el sucedido el 5 de julio del 2017 en la Asamblea de Venezuela. Además, invitó a “hacer votos para que el pueblo venezolano encuentre una salida política en conformidad con sus mecanismos democráticos”. Este planteamiento se aprobó con 116 votos afirmativos y solo 3 abstenciones. 

En medio de una protesta ciudadana que no ha cesado desde el 1 de abril en Venezuela, cinco diputados opositores fueron heridos por seguidores del presidente Nicolás Maduro que irrumpieron violentamente en la sede del Parlamento. (I)

Source Article from http://www.eluniverso.com/noticias/2017/07/13/nota/6278479/asamblea-ecuador-se-solidariza-su-similar-venezuela

The suspect in a string of central Illinois burglaries was arrested Thursday after allegedly killing a sheriff’s deputy in Rockford and leading police on a multicounty chase that ended with a six-hour standoff near Lincoln.

Authorities say Floyd E. Brown, 39, opened fire Thursday morning as the U.S. Marshals Service tried to serve arrest warrants on him—including one from McLean County—at a Rockford hotel. McHenry County Sheriff’s Deputy Jacob Keltner, who was assigned to the U.S. Marshals, was shot and later died from his injuries, police said. A female acquaintance of Brown was also wounded by gunfire, apparently shot by Brown himself, police said. Her injuries were not life-threatening.

Illinois State Police say Brown, reportedly armed with an AK-47, fled south on Interstate 39 toward Bloomington-Normal. He displayed a rifle and was driving over 100 mph with officers in pursuit, police said.

Three Unit 5 schools (Normal West, Parkside Junior High, and Parkside Elementary) were briefly put on “lockout” for less than 5 minutes, the school district said. A lockout means people cannot go in and out of the buildings but students proceed with their day as scheduled.

“This was precautionary and had nothing to do with anything going on in the schools,” Unit 5 said on Facebook.

As Brown headed south on Interstate 55 near Lincoln, police bumped his vehicle and he went into the ditch, authorities said. He barricaded himself in the vehicle for six hours until being arrested without incident around 5 p.m., police said. Interstate 55 was closed down in both directions before re-opening around 7 p.m.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker sent a tweet expressing condolences to the deputy’s family members.

“All of Illinois grieves for the fallen,” Pritzker said at a Springfield press conference. “And our prayers are with the families of those who’ve been injured in the line of duty and the families of those that we’ve lost. We owe all of them a debt of gratitude.”

State Police Acting Director Brendan F. Kelly also offered his condolences to Keltner’s family.

“ISP’s SWAT team in particular showed incredible tactical restraint, bravery and boldness today,” Kelly said in a statement. “This dark day has come to an end, and this defendant can now be brought to justice.”

Bloomington Connection

Brown was wanted on warrants out of McLean, Sangamon, and Sangamon counties, authorities said. He was also wanted for alleged parole violation.

Bloomington Police have been looking for Brown since at least December, when he allegedly caused a high-speed crash while fleeing police on Veterans Parkway. Bloomington Police say he was a suspect in “numerous central Illinois burglaries in 2018,” including in Bloomington. He fled that December crash on foot and was never found—until Thursday.

At the time, police said Brown had “no known connections to Bloomington-Normal” and was likely trying to find a way back to his residence in Springfield.

“Chief (Clay) Wheeler and the rest of the Bloomington Police Department would like to give our sincerest thoughts and prayers to the wounded officer from McHenry County sheriff’s office,” BPD said in a statement. “We also would like to thank all of the jurisdictions who helped and are currently investigating this incident.”

A Bloomington Police spokesperson declined to say how many local burglaries Brown is suspected in.

People like you value experienced, knowledgeable and award-winning journalism that covers meaningful stories in Bloomington-Normal. To support more stories and interviews like this one, please consider making a contribution.

Source Article from https://www.wglt.org/post/suspect-barricaded-i-55-after-deputy-killed-rockford

TikTok has filed a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration after the White House issued an executive order that would effectively ban the hugely popular app from operating in the United States.

AP


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AP

TikTok has filed a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration after the White House issued an executive order that would effectively ban the hugely popular app from operating in the United States.

AP

Updated at 3:22 p.m. ET

TikTok has filed a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration arguing that the president’s executive order taking aim at the Chinese-owned app is unconstitutional and should be blocked from taking effect.

The suit, which has been expected for weeks, claims that President Trump’s Aug. 6 executive action declaring a national emergency that would effectively ban the video-sharing app in the U.S. was taken without any opportunity for the company to be heard, allegedly violating its due-process rights.

TikTok’s attorneys additionally claim the president exceeded his authority in issuing the order and that the planned ban violates the company’s free speech rights, arguing that computer code is a type of expression protected under the First Amendment.

The Trump administration has long maintained that TikTok’s Beijing-based parent company, ByteDance, could share Americans’ personal data with China’s authoritarian government, something the White House considers a national security threat.

But in its lawsuit, TikTok said it has taken “extraordinary measures” to protect the privacy of more than 100 million U.S. citizens who use TikTok by storing their data outside China in Virginia, with backup in Singapore, as well as building “software barriers” to ensure data that TikTok harvests stays separate from ByteDance.

“The executive order seeks to ban TikTok purportedly because of the speculative possibility that the application could be manipulated by the Chinese government,” TikTok’s lawsuit says.

Attorneys for the company say Trump’s crackdown on TikTok is not driven by genuine national security concerns but rather an attempt “to further the president’s anti-China political campaign.”

Trump’s executive order would make it a crime for U.S. citizens to have any business transactions with TikTok. The order would likely force Apple and Google to remove the service from app stores and deprive users who already have the app of critical updates.

Violators could face fines up to $300,000, or even criminal charges, according to the emergency economic powers Trump cited in his executive order. Typically, such sanctions have been leveled against foreign terrorist organizations and kleptocrats, not technology companies.

Exercising his authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the president did not follow due process and did not act in good faith by not providing any evidence that TikTok is an actual threat, nor did the administration justify punishing the app, attorneys for TikTok argue.

“The executive order is not rooted in bona fide national security concerns. Independent national security and information security experts have criticized the political nature of this executive order, and expressed doubt as to whether its stated national security objective is genuine,” TikTok’s attorneys wrote.

TikTok gathers data on users comparable to other apps controlled by major U.S. technology companies, but it states in its privacy guidelines that it can share information with its Chinese owners, which has caused alarms in Washington.

In the suit, TikTok points out that national security experts have openly questioned whether its lighthearted videos can really provide much intelligence to Beijing authorities.

“The vast majority of TikTok videos could not reasonably be construed to in any way relate to national security, nor is its user data more susceptible to collection by Chinese authorities than from any number of other sources,” the lawsuit says.

Separately, Trump has ordered ByteDance to sell its U.S. assets to an American company, an additional pressure intended to speed up an acquisition of TikTok by a U.S. firm.

In 2017, ByteDance acquired China-based lip-syncing app Musical.ly, which had accrued a sizable American following that helped fuel the rise of TikTok in the United States. As part of that takeover, regulators in Washington reviewed “voluminous documentation” about the company’s security practices, a process that ultimately secured the blessing of American authorities.

In its suit, TikTok’s legal team says the Trump administration ignored the findings of that review.

“Among other evidence, ByteDance submitted detailed documentation to CFIUS demonstrating TikTok’s security measures to help ensure U.S. user data is safeguarded in storage and in transit and cannot be accessed by unauthorized persons — including any government — outside the United States,” according to the lawsuit. (CFIUS, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, is a group led by the Treasury Department and includes top officials such as those from the Justice and Homeland Security departments.)

TikTok, known for short, often goofy videos, has been downloaded more than 2 billion times worldwide, recording in the first quarter of 2020 the most downloads of any app in history, according to research firm Sensor Tower.

About 1,500 people in the U.S. work for TikTok, with its U.S. headquarters in Los Angeles. The company says it has plans of hiring an additional 10,000 American workers over the next three years.

Facebook recently launched a service remarkably similar to TikTok called Reels following Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg long publicly warning about how an ascendant China poses a direct threat to American technology, a theme he underscored during his remarks last month to Congress.

TikTok CEO Kevin Mayer called Facebook’s Reels a “copycat service” that is “disguised as patriotism and designed to put an end to our very presence in the U.S.”

The White House did not immediately comment on TikTok’s lawsuit.

Editor’s note: TikTok helps fund NPR-produced videos from Planet Money that appear on the social media platform.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/08/24/901776584/tiktok-sues-trump-to-block-u-s-ban

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Lunes, 19 de Enero 2015  |  12:24 pm






Pia Rizza – miembro del reality Mob wives Chicago

La estrella del reality de televisin Mob Wives Chicago, fue rechazada por la publicacin a pesar de que imgenes desnudas de Pia fueron filtradas. La misma Pia tratando de evitar que los extorsionadores generaran ingresos con las mismas, las solt a la prensa de espectculos estadounidense. An a pesar de lo meditico del tema, Playboy prefiri evitar a la modelo. | Fuente: Pública | Facebook Pia Rizza


A pesar de haber tenido en su portada a grandes celebridades como Madonna, Kim Basinger y Bo Derek , la revista para caballeros Playboy rechazó la presencia de otras tantas.






Algunas de las celebridades más exhuberantes y bellas de la farándula internacional han sido protagonistas de editoriales fotográficas de una de las publicaciones para caballeros más populares, la revista Playboy.

La cantante Madonna, la actriz Bo Derek, la tambien intérprete Kim Basinger son solo algunos de estos conocidos nombres que han ofrecido al mundo la belleza de sus curvas completamente al natural.

Sin embargo, no todas las celebridades tienen esa suerte y es que muchas estrellas (entre ellas cantantes, personalidades de la televisión, actrices, entre tantas otras) han sido rechazadas por el propio Hugh Hefner debido a una vida plagada de excesos.

Recordemos en la siguiente galería a algunas de las estrellas del espectáculo que fueron rechazadas por la publicación.








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Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2015-01-19-playboy-5-celebridades-rechazadas-por-la-revista-para-caballeros-noticia_760982.html

Homem ficou totalmente coberto por papel alumínio para invadir banco (Foto: PM/Divulgação)

Dois homens embrulharam todo o corpo em papel alumínio para tentar assaltar um banco em Praia Grande, no Sul catarinense, na madrugada deste sábado (9). Os suspeitos fugiram sem levar nada, assim que perceberam a aproximação da Polícia Militar. Um foi detido na tarde deste sábado.

Conforme a PM, o intuito dos suspeitos é que o alarme do local não disparasse. “Eles queriam que com o papel alumínio os detectores não notassem a presença deles, mas a  central de monitoramento do banco viu o deslocamento deles e acionou a PM”, diz o Major Dimitri.

O caso ocorreu por volta das 5h em uma agência do Banco do Brasil. A polícia acredita que um terceiro suspeito teria avisado a chegada da polícia. Os dois homens que estavam dentro do banco pularam muros de diversas residências e seguiram em direção a um matagal.

Suspeitos queriam não acionar alarme, mas videomonitoramento flagrou ação. (Foto: PM/Divulgação)

“Desde a madrugada a polícia faz rondas e aborda pessoas a pé. O suspeito que encontramos, por volta das 15h30, estava no mato, sujo, molhado, disse ser do Rio Grande do Sul, e estava se contradizendo. Ele tem passagens policiais e foi encaminhado para a delegacia para prestar depoimento”, explica o Major Dimitri.

Conforme a PM, o intuito dos suspeitos era abrir um cofre. Eles estavam com maçaricos no local. Uma parede da agência chegou a ser quebrada.

 

 

 

 

Source Article from http://g1.globo.com/sc/santa-catarina/noticia/2016/04/assaltantes-se-embrulham-em-papel-aluminio-para-tentar-furtar-banco.html

CLOSE

According to new polls, President Donald Trump and the Republican Party are losing the battle on who is to blame for the partial government shutdown.
Wochit

The partial government shutdown blew through the record of the longest ever in U.S. history over the weekend and is headed into uncharted territory. The impact is intensifying on both the government employees who missed a payday Friday — some of them forced to work anyway, some of them furloughed — and on other Americans who want to take an airline flight, visit a national park or eat FDA-inspected food.

With the political heat rising, this would be the moment during previous shutdowns when the White House and Congress would agree to some face-saving compromises to fund the government, at least for the short term.

This time, though, there are few signs that President Trump and newly empowered House Democrats are about to budge. Here are five likeliest scenarios to end the shutdown —and why none of them are likely to happen.

#1 President Trump caves

Facing polls that show him getting most of the blame, the president agrees to the Democrats’ proposal to fund most government agencies and pass a short-term bill for the Department of Homeland Security to continue the battle over building a wall along the southern border, his signature campaign promise and current non-negotiable demand.

Why it won’t happen: The last time Trump agreed to this very deal, in December, he was savaged by conservative talk-show hosts Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter. Since then, the president has promised his base that he isn’t giving an inch.

#2 Speaker Pelosi caves

With the shutdown hurting Americans and blocking the agenda Democrats had hoped to pursue in the House of Representatives, Speaker Nancy Pelosi agrees to a deal that includes some funding for the wall, perhaps splitting the difference between $1 (the number she jokingly agreed to) and $5.7 billion (Trump’s demand). 

Why it won’t happen: Just as the Republican base views building the wall as a matter of principle, the Democratic base views not building the wall as a matter of principle. What’s more, this standoff is the first test of Pelosi’s leadership since Democrats regained control of the House. She wants to show her troops that she can be as tough as Trump. 

#3 Senate Republicans bolt

The House already has passed the funding bill that the GOP-controlled Senate approved last month. Republican senators, especially those who are up for re-election next year, have grown increasingly anxious about the potential political costs for them back home from the extended shutdown. They could approve the measure and send it to the White House.

Why it won’t happen: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (who happens to be one of those GOP incumbents up in 2020) has made it clear that he’s not challenging the president. He says he won’t allow a bill to be brought up on the Senate floor that Trump won’t sign.

It’s also unlikely that Congress could override a Trump veto. Ironically, the Republican-controlled Senate conceivably could muster the two-thirds support needed. But in the Democratic-controlled House, where most Republicans represent districts dominated by GOP voters, those representatives aren’t likely to allow to join with Democrats to support an override.

#4 They go big

The White House and congressional Democrats agree on the sort of ambitious compromise on immigration that has eluded Washington for years. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Republican who is close to Trump, has suggested a trade-off that would provide money for Trump’s wall and codify protection for the so-called DREAMers, young undocumented people brought to this country when they were children who now face an uncertain future. This deal might also include thousands of other immigrants who came to the United States with temporary visas because of crises in their home countries.

Why it won’t happen: Trump has given no sign that he’s interested in doing this, and neither have congressional Democrats. What’s more, neither side, and especially congressional Democrats, trusts the other to live up to a deal. It’s similar to one that was being negotiated a year ago, only to have Trump publicly disavow it.

#5 Declare an emergency

The president declares a national state of emergency at the border and moves to divert funds from the Pentagon to begin building the wall, pre-empting Congress’ role in allocating money. Trump has publicly suggested this option, although he has been reluctant so far to move ahead. He and Congress would still need to take separate action to fund the government agencies now affected by the shutdown.

Why it won’t happen: It would surely spark court challenges, and wall construction would likely be blocked by the courts until the legal issues are considered. While the president says he “absolutely, 100 percent” has the authority to act, even some of his own advisers have told him that he doesn’t. He’s also being cautioned by some Republicans who warn he would be setting a precedent for a similar exercise of extraordinary presidential power by a future Democratic president.

That said, some analysts see Option #5 as the mostly likely way out of the current cul-de-sac. 

When the president delivers his State of the Union address on Jan. 29, will the shutdown be over? In normal times, the answer would be yes. In today’s world, don’t hold your breath. 

Poll: Americans blame shutdown on Trump over Democrats by wide margin

National Weather Service: No shutdown for agency ‘tirelessly’ forecasting snowstorm

 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/01/14/government-shutdown-how-will-it-end/2565793002/

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Dr. Deborah Birx, member of President Trump’s coronavirus task force, discussed some of the latest revelations learned from data that her team continues to collect, pointing to what they have been able to learn from those infected with the virus who have not shown symptoms.

Birx said that especially within certain limited populations that have experienced outbreaks, examining those who never knew they had it can be vital to advancing the White House’s strategy for monitoring COVID-19.

TOP PUBLIC HEALTH EXPERT SAYS U.S. ‘NOT OUT OF THE WOODS’ IN CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC

“I think we’re getting a lot of information out of these isolated outbreaks that are occurring, whether they’re occurring in prisons or among essential workers in packing plants, or specifically gatherings that came together — whether it was a wedding or event — and when you look at those epidemics it isn’t until you start seeing symptomatic groups, so when you go in there and test you find a lot of people have the virus and may not ever develop symptoms,” Birx told Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures,” noting that she thinks “we’re really starting to look at this in a very careful way to understand how we do surveillance.”

Birx said that the administration’s plan for monitoring the pandemic is to conduct both diagnoses and surveillance of at-risk populations. By finding asymptomatic cases early in places like inner cities and long-term care facilities, she said, the government can better determine where the virus has spread before a large number of people get sick.

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE 

Antibody tests can also help achieve this by determining whether asymptomatic people have already been infected. Birx said that the government is working on a method for people to have two antibody tests to increase “the specificity and sensitivity of the test to make it more accurate,” with details potentially coming later this week.

Birx further discussed antibody testing on CNN’s “State of the Union,” particularly the World Health Organization’s warning that people who have recovered and have antibodies may not actually be immune to COVID-19.

“WHO is being very cautious,” Birx said, explaining that there are different types of antibodies that have different impacts when it comes to fighting off illness.

“I think what WHO was saying, we don’t know how long that effective antibody lasts,” Birx said, recognizing that “that is a question that we have to explore over the next few months and over the next few years.”

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

Birx also appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” addressing how states and individuals should handle the coming reopening of certain parts of the country. While Vice President Pence predicted that the worst of the pandemic will be “behind us” by Memorial Day in late May, Birx told NBC’s Chuck Todd that “social distancing will be with us through the summer to really ensure that we protect one another as we move through these phases.”

Birx specifically cautioned at-risk individuals such as the elderly and those with pre-existing conditions should still shelter in place, even if their states are following the White House’s guidelines for gradually reopening in phases.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/birx-studying-those-without-symptoms-can-help-prevent-greater-spread-of-coronavirus

Fox News anchor Chris Wallace on Sunday called out conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh over the difference between his response when President TrumpDonald John TrumpGillibrand backs federal classification of third gender: report Former Carter pollster, Bannon ally Patrick Caddell dies at 68 Heather Nauert withdraws her name from consideration for UN Ambassador job MORE and former President Obama made an executive action. 

“I want to ask you about the game you say we play in Washington,” Wallace said while on “Fox News Sunday.” “Because the fact is that when President Obama took executive actions, you were outraged.”

Wallace noted a couple of examples from Obama’s administration, such as when he took executive action in November 2014 to protect millions of immigrants without legal status from deportation. 

Limbaugh, who has supported Trump’s national emergency declaration to fund a border wall, said at the time that America couldn’t “stand idly by and try to find some political opportunity while the president basically shreds the Constitution and flushes it down the toilet.”

“I understand that you like what President Trump is doing and you didn’t like what President Obama was doing,” Wallace said. “And that’s the concern here, is that to the degree you give the president more and more powers, yes you’re going to get things from one president you like, but you’re going to get executive powers from another president that you don’t like.”

“You may look at it that way. I don’t,” Limbaugh replied, adding that “what Obama was doing was furthering” problems related to executive action because he was taking “action that I deemed to be harmful to the country.”

“I look at what Trump is doing as something he has to do because he’s not getting any cooperation whatsoever,” Limbaugh said. 

The comments from Limbaugh came just days after Trump declared a national emergency to allocate nearly $8 billion for construction of his long-promised wall along the southern border. 

Trump made the announcement as he agreed to sign a congressional spending bill without the $5 billion in funds for a border wall he had demanded. 

Limbaugh has actively backed the president’s pitch to build a border wall since Trump’s 2016 campaign. He was among a group of commentators who urged Trump to only sign a congressional spending bill in December if it included funds for a wall along the southern border.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/media/430417-chris-wallace-calls-out-rush-limbaugh-for-being-outraged-when-obama-took

SANTA CLARITA, Calif. — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday declared a state of emergency in L.A. County due to the Tick Fire, which continued to rage out of control and threatened thousands of homes after jumping State Route 14 in the Sand Canyon area of Santa Clarita, KTLA reported.

As of 9:30 a.m., the fire has burned 4,300 acres and is just 5% contained, the Los Angeles County Fire Department said. Approximately 600 firefighters have been assigned to the blaze.

Sand Canyon has been evacuated from SR-14 to Placerita Canyon Road, while the Fair Oaks area remains under voluntary orders, according to the city’s emergency website.

The fast-moving fire erupted about 1:24 p.m. Thursday in the 31600 block of Tick Canyon Road in Agua Dulce and quickly spread to neighboring Santa Clarita.

The blaze prompted closures along SR-14 Thursday night before flames eventually jumped to the other side overnight.

A SigAlert was issued about 2:30 a.m. for the closure of all lanes between Golden Valley and Escondido Canyon for an unknown duration, according to the California Highway Patrol.

READ ABOUT SAN DIEGO FIRE DANGER HERE

Irene Navarro uses a garden hose to water down vegetation around her property as the Tick Fire burns nearby on October 24, 2019 in Canyon Country, California. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Homes Lost, Thousands of Structures Threatened

The Tick Fire destroyed least six structures have been destroyed, but that figure will increase once teams are able to fully inspect the area, according to officials.

“We know that number is going to rise today as we have our damage assessment teams out,” L.A. County Fire Department Chief Daryl Osby said.

More than 15,000 structures remain threatened, he added.

The Tick Fire flared up Friday morning, resulting in more homes catching fire.

One home was engulfed in flames about 4 a.m. in the 29500 Arches Lane, video from the scene showed. Gusty winds were blowing embers sideways and threatening other homes in the tightly packed neighborhood.

Smoke appeared to be coming from the attic space of another home near the burning structure.

As the sun rose, Sky5 video discovered several more burned out homes in the Canyon Country area.

Mandatory evacuations in place

More than 40,000 residents remain under evacuation orders as of 9:30 a.m. Friday.

“This is the largest evacuation we’ve had in Santa Clarita, over 50,000 last night. It could be more,” said L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger.

Mandatory evacuations were in place for about 40,000 people, according to fire officials. The following areas are listed under the orders:

  • North of SR-14: From Bouquet Canyon Road and Vasquez Canyon Road down to Soledad Canyon Road; from White Canyon Road and Plum Canyon Road to Sierra Highway and Davenport Road
  • South of SR-14 — east and west of Sand Canyon Road to Placerita Canyon Road

Shelters are available to evacuees at College of the Canyons, Valencia Campus located at 26455 Rockwell Canyon Road in Santa Clarita, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department stated.

Another evacuation center opened Friday at West Ranch High School at 26255 Valencia Blvd.

Residents with small animals were being directed to Castaic Animal Care Center at 31044 North Charlie Canyon Road, or any L.A. County Animal Shelter.

Large animals can be brought to the Antelope Valley Fairgrounds located at 2551 W. Avenue H in Lancaster.

Pierce College in Woodland Hills was initially accepting large animals, but the location was closed by 9 p.m. Thursday, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Santa Clarita said it would be posting public safety updates on its emergency website.

School closures

Several school districts have canceled classes due to poor air quality Friday. The following schools have asked students to stay home until further notice:

  • William S. Hart Union High School District
  • Saugus Union School District
  • Castaic Union School District
  • Los Angeles Unified School Districts schools within the San Fernando Valley
  • Fillmore Unified School District
  • Mupu School District

Critical fire weather

The Santa Clarita area is under a red flag warning as strong winds continue to blow Friday. Gusts of 45 to55 mph were expected to continue in the Tick Fire area through Friday morning, the National Weather Service said.

A combination of high temperatures and low humidity will add to the firefighting challenges.

No injuries connected to the fire have been reported.

The cause is under investigation.

Check back for updates on this developing story.

Source Article from https://fox5sandiego.com/2019/10/25/new-evacuations-ordered-as-tick-fire-burns-in-northern-la-county/

Western nations’ intervention in Ukraine will be met with a “lightning-quick” military response, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned.

The bellicose threat from Putin came as Russia claimed on Wednesday to have carried out a missile strike in southern Ukraine that destroyed a “large batch” of Western-supplied weapons.

Countries aiding Ukraine “that get it into their heads to meddle in ongoing events from the side and create unacceptable strategic threats for Russia, they must know that our response to counterpunches will be lightning-quick”, said the Russian leader.

“We have all the tools for this that no one else can boast of having,” Putin told lawmakers in St Petersburg, implicitly referring to Moscow’s ballistic missiles and nuclear arsenal.

“We won’t boast about it: We’ll use them if needed and I want everyone to know that. We have already taken all the decisions on this.”

Russia’s leader was not specific but he recently oversaw the successful test of the Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile, which Russia is soon expected to deploy with the capability for each to carry 10 or more nuclear warheads.

‘They think it is dangerous’

Putin promised to finish what he called the “special military operation” to seize territory from Ukraine, which Moscow considers historically to be Russian. He blamed NATO nations and their allies for instigating the battle currently under way in Ukraine.

“The countries that have historically tried to contain Russia don’t need a self-sufficient, massive country such as ours. They think it is dangerous to them just by means of its existence. But that is far from the truth. They are the ones threatening the whole world,” said Putin.

By launching the offensive in Ukraine, Russian forces neutralised “a real danger of … a major conflict that would have unfolded on our territory according to other people’s scripts”, said Putin.

He alleged NATO planned to use Ukraine as a route to invade Russia through the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow annexed in 2014, and the separatist-held eastern Donbas border region.

“All the tasks of the special military operation we are conducting in the Donbas and Ukraine, launched on February 24, will be unconditionally fulfilled,” Putin said, adding Western attempts to “economically strangle Russia” through sanctions had failed.

‘Minor gains’

On the battlefield on Wednesday, fighting continued in Ukraine’s east along a largely static front line about 480km (300 miles) long. Russia claimed its missiles hit a batch of weapons that the United States and European nations had delivered to Ukraine.

Western officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence findings, said Russia has made slow progress in the Donbas region in the east with “minor gains”, including the capture of villages and small towns south of Izyum and on the outskirts of Rubizhne.

The offensive continues to suffer from poor command, losses of troops and equipment, bad weather, and strong Ukrainian resistance, the officials said.

Some Russian troops have been shifted from the gutted southern port city of Mariupol to other parts of the Donbas. But some remain in Mariupol to fight Ukrainian forces holed up at the Azovstal steel plant, the last stronghold in the city. About 1,000 civilians were said to be taking shelter there with an estimated 2,000 Ukrainian defenders.

Just across the border in Russia, an ammunition depot in the Belgorod region burned on Wednesday after several explosions were heard, the governor said.

Explosions were also reported in Russia’s Kursk region near the Ukrainian border, and authorities in Russia’s Voronezh region said an air defence system shot down a drone.

‘Weaponisation of energy supplies’

Polish and Bulgarian leaders accused Moscow of using natural gas to blackmail their countries after Russia’s state-controlled energy company stopped supplying them on Wednesday. European Union leaders echoed those comments and were holding an emergency meeting on the Russian move.

Simone Tagliapietra, senior fellow at the Bruegel think-tank in Brussels, said Russia’s goal in cutting off the flow of gas is to “divide and rule” – pit European countries against one another as they cast about for energy.

The cutoff and the Kremlin warning that other countries could be next sent shivers of worry through the 27-nation European Union.

Germany, the largest economy on the continent, and Italy are among Europe’s biggest consumers of Russian natural gas, though they have already been taking steps to reduce their dependence on Moscow.

“It comes as no surprise that the Kremlin uses fossil fuels to try to blackmail us,” said EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

“Today, the Kremlin failed once again in its attempt to sow division amongst member states. The era of Russian fossil fuel in Europe is coming to an end.”

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told the Polish parliament he believes Poland’s support for Ukraine and the sanctions against Russia were the real reasons behind the gas cutoff. Bulgarian Prime Minister Kiril Petkov called the suspension blackmail, adding: “We will not succumb to such a racket.”

Fatih Birol, executive director of the Paris-based International Energy Agency, said the cutoff was a “weaponisation of energy supplies”.

Europe is not without some leverage in the dispute, since it pays Russia $400m a day for gas, money Putin would lose with a complete cutoff.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said a Russian demand to switch to paying for gas in roubles instead of euros or US dollars resulted from Western actions that froze Russian hard currency assets.

He said those were effectively “stolen” by the West in an “unprecedented unfriendly action”.

Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/4/27/lighting-quick-retaliation-if-nato-intervenes-in-ukraine-putin

Russian forces retreated from Lyman, a strategic city for its operations in the east, the Russian defense ministry said Saturday, just a day after Moscow’s annexation of the region that’s been declared illegal by the West.

“In connection with the creation of a threat of encirclement, allied troops were withdrawn from the settlement of Krasny Liman to more advantageous lines,” the ministry said on Telegram, using the Russian name for the town of Lyman.

Russian state media Russia-24 reported that the reason for Russia’s withdrawal was because “the enemy used both Western-made artillery and intelligence from North Atlantic alliance countries.”

The retreat marks Ukraine’s most significant gain since its successful counteroffensive in the northeastern Kharkiv region last month.

Russia’s announcement comes just hours after Ukrainian forces said they had encircled Russian troops in the city, which is located in the Kramatorsk district of Donetsk.

Ukrainian forces said earlier Saturday that they had entered Stavky, a village neighboring Lyman, according to Serhii Cherevatyi, the military spokesperson for the eastern grouping of Ukrainian forces.

“The Russian group in the area of Lyman is surrounded. The settlements of Yampil, Novoselivka, Shandryholove, Drobysheve, and Stavky are liberated. Stabilization measures are ongoing there,” Cherevatyi said in a televised press conference on Saturday morning.

“[The liberation] of Lyman is important, because it is another step towards the liberation of the Ukrainian Donbas. This is an opportunity to go further to Kreminna and Severodonetsk. Therefore, in turn, it is psychologically very important,” he said.

Cherevatyi said the Ukrainian troops actions are setting the tone to “break the course of these hostilities.”

Why Vladimir Putin is annexing Ukrainian territory

He added that there had been “many killed and wounded,” but could not provide any further details.

The head of Luhansk regional military administration Serhiy Hayday also revealed Saturday further details of the Lyman offensive, suggesting Russian forces had offered to retreat, but to no avail from the Ukrainian side.

“Occupiers asked [their command] for possibility to retreat, and they have been refused. Accordingly, they have two options. No, they actually have three options. Try to break through, surrender, or everyone there will die,” Hayday said.

“There are several thousand of them. Yes, about 5,000. There is no exact number yet. Five thousand is still a colossal grouping. There has never been such a large group in the encirclement before. All routes for the supply of ammunition or the retreat of the group are all completely blocked,” he added.

Yurii Mysiagin, Ukrainian member of Parliament and deputy head of the parliament’s committee on national security, referenced the move into Stavky on Saturday by publishing a video on Telegram showing a Ukrainian tank moving up the road with a clear sign indicating the region of Stavky. CNN could not independently verify the original source or the date.

A video posted on social media, and shared by President Volodymyr Zelensky’s chief of staff, shows two Ukrainian soldiers standing on a military vehicle attaching the flag with tape to a large sign with the word “Lyman.”

“We are unfurling our country’s flag and planting it on our land. On Lyman. Everything will be Ukraine,” one of the soldiers says to the camera.

Chechen leader’s threat

Meanwhile, pressure appears to be growing on Russian President Vladimir Putin to use nuclear weapons on the battlefield.

Ramzan Kadyrov, leader of the Chechen republic, in an angry statement slamming Russian generals in the wake of the withdrawal from Lyman, said it was time for the Kremlin to make use of every weapon at his disposal.

“In my personal opinion we need to take more drastic measures, including declaring martial law in the border territories and using low-yield nuclear weapons,” Kadyrov said on his Telegram channel. “There is no need to make every decision with the Western American community in mind.”

Earlier this week, Dmitry Medvedev, who served as Russia’s President between 2008 and 2012, discussed nuclear weapons use on his Telegram channel, saying it was permitted if the existence of the Russian state was threatened by an attack even by conventional forces.

“If the threat to Russia exceeds our established threat limit, we will have to respond … this is certainly not a bluff,” he wrote.

Concerns have risen sharply that Moscow could resort to nuclear weapons use after Putin’s proclamation on Friday that Russia would seize nearly a fifth of Ukraine, declaring that the millions of people living there would be Russian citizens “forever.”

The announcement was dismissed as illegal by the United States and many other countries, but the fear is the Kremlin might argue that attacks on those territories now constitute attacks on Russia.

In his speech in the Kremlin, the Russian leader made only passing reference to nuclear weapons, noting the United States was the only country to have used them on the battlefield.

“By the way, they created a precedent,” he added.

Nuclear power plant chief held

Also on Saturday, the director-general of Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant was detained by a Russian patrol, according to the president of state nuclear company Energoatom.

Director-General Ihor Murashov was in his vehicle on his way from the plant when he was “stopped … taken out of the car, and with his eyes blindfolded he was driven in an unknown direction. For the time being there is no information on his fate,” Energoatom’s Petro Kotin said in a statement.

“Murashov is a licensed person and bears main and exclusive responsibility for the nuclear and radiation safety of the Zaporizhzhya NPP,” Kotin said, adding, that his detention “jeopardizes the safety of operation of Ukraine and Europe’s largest nuclear power plant.”

Kotin called for Murashov’s release, and urged the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to “take all possible immediate actions to urgently free” him.

Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs “strongly” condemned Murashov’s “illegal detention,” calling it a “another manifestation of state terrorism from the side of Russia and a gross violation of international law.”

“We call on the international community, in particular the UN, the IAEA and the G7, to also take decisive measures to this end,” the ministry said in a statement.

Overnight, Russia hit Zaporizhzhia with four S300 missiles, according to the head of the regional administration Oleksandr Starukh.

And in Kharkiv, the Regional Prosecutor’s Office said Saturday that the bodies of 22 civilians, including 10 children, were found following Russian shelling on a convoy of cars near the eastern town of Kupiansk.

The cars were shot by the Russian army on September 25 “when civilians were trying to evacuate,” it said in a Telegram post, adding that an investigation was ongoing.

Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) and police had “discovered a convoy of seven cars that had been shot dead near the village of Kurylivka, Kupiansk district,” on Friday, Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office said.

The SBU confirmed on Telegram they would be investigating a “war crime” where at least 20 people died in “a brutal attack.”

CNN could not independently verify the allegations. There has been no official Russian response to the claims made.

CNN’s Darya Tarasova, Josh Pennington and Zayn Nabbi contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/01/europe/ukraine-russia-lyman-donetsk-intl/index.html

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Elsa holds steady in strength as it nears landfall in Cuba but is not expected to strengthen much more. Elsa drenched Jamaica on Sunday before it is expected to soak Cuba today before turning its sights on Florida’s Gulf Coast and beyond.

At 11 a.m., the National Hurricane Center said Tropical Storm Elsa was located about 20 miles east-southeast of Cayo Largo, Cuba. It was moving northwest at 14 mph with maximum sustained winds of 65 mph.

The Tropical Storm Warning along the west coast of Florida has been extended north to the Suwannee River, including Tampa Bay. The Storm Surge Watch along the west coast of Florida has been extended north to the Ochlockonee River.

Elsa forecasted to weaken to a tropical depression while passing west of Jacksonville Wednesday

The storm has not seen any further drop in pressure that would indicate strengthening over the past 24 hours. Some slight weakening is likely while Elsa crosses west-central Cuba today. Restrengthening over the Gulf of Mexico should be limited by unfavorable westerly shear.

The NHC track forecast has been nudged slightly westward with the 11 am update.

This track would suggest some minor impacts for Jacksonville, and Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia late Tuesday into Wednesday.

ELSA: Impacts for NE Florida and SE Georgia | TRACKING THE TROPICS: Interactive map | THE LATEST: Animated update

11 a.m. Monday Tropical Storm Elsa update

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has declared a state of emergency for Charlotte, Citrus, Collier, DeSoto, Hardee, Hernando, Hillsborough, Lee, Levy, Manatee, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Pasco, Pinellas and Sarasota counties. President Joe Biden has declared a federal disaster order for the same 15 counties.

Elsa is the season’s fifth named storm and the first Atlantic hurricane of 2021.

Stay tuned to The Weather Authority so you won’t be caught by surprise when Elsa impacts our area on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Source Article from https://www.news4jax.com/weather/2021/07/05/tropical-storm-warning-extends-up-floridas-gulf-coast-as-elsa-nears-cuba-landfall/

Rev. Robert Fisher, the rector of St. John’s Episcopal Church in Washington D.C. — located in Lafayette Square near the White House — told “The Story” Monday that whoever set fire to the basement of the church’s parish hall Sunday night does not represent the majority of people who have protested following the death of George Floyd.

Fisher joined host Martha MacCallum moments after President Trump walked through Lafayette Park to the boarded-up church, where he posed for photographs while holding a Bible in the air.

“This is such an interesting moment to me when,” Fisher said. “We agreed to have this talk, I had no idea what was going to be going on at 7:00 tonight. I actually haven’t seen any of it. I’ve been listening to it all, of course, and honestly, it feels, like so many ways, a surreal moment for me. I feel like I’m in some alternative universe in some way.”

ST. JOHN’S RECTOR SAYS DAMAGE COULD HAVE BEEN ‘A LOT WORSE’

Fisher recalled parishoners calling him with news of the fire Sunday evening. He told MacCallum that he and his wife visited the church early Monday and were thankful the only room burned was a newly-renovated part of the nursery.

“It was just one room that had been recently renovated and it was not one of the irreplaceable historic parts of the space. I was so grateful for that,” he said.

“And I’m very mindful that those people who did this — it may have been one person, I don’t know who it was — I think it is really important to say that person does not represent the majority of the people that are out there peacefully protesting with an important message.”

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In closing, Fisher thanked the public for their outpouring of support, and added that America must continue to look past the violence and concentrate on the “message of fighting racism as a country.”

“That is the only way that we are going to have healing and progress.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/st-johns-rector-fire-impromptu-trump-visit

September 9 at 10:47 AM

LONDON — The British Parliament is expected again on Monday to reject Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s call for early elections, further narrowing the options for the new British leader.

John Bercow — the colorful and controversial speaker of the House of Commons, known for his enthusiastic shouting of “order, order” — set the tone for a long day of debate with the announcement that he would step down on Oct. 31, if the push for an October election indeed fails.

The date is significant because Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said Britain will leave the E.U. by then, “do or die.”

Johnson got little help from his Irish counterpart Monday as he sought to turn the page on a disastrous week in London and unblock the path to a British exit from the European Union on Halloween.

With another near-certain defeat expected in Parliament on Monday night, Johnson crossed the sea in the morning, visiting Dublin for talks with Irish leader Leo Varadkar aimed at disentangling one of the thorniest aspects of Brexit negotiations: what to do about Northern Ireland. 

But the chilly, overcast skies in Dublin matched the apparent mood between the leaders. While Varadkar told reporters he was hoping for “a good start” to the talks, he was also clear that Johnson’s government had yet to offer a serious proposal for breaking through the deadlock.

And he savaged a favorite Johnson talking point, insisting that a British exit without a deal would only lead to more rounds of interminable negotiation — not to an end to Britain’s Brexit agony.

“There is no such thing as a clean break,” Varadkar said as Johnson grimaced. 

The British leader struck a notably more conciliatory tone than he had last week, insisting again that the Britain “will come out on October 31” but also citing a clear preference for a deal to manage the withdrawal.

To leave without one, he said, “would be a failure of statecraft for which we would all be responsible.” In the past, Johnson has been dismissive about the potential negative consequences of a no-deal exit. 

The talks Monday came hours before a vote in Parliament that is expected to be the last before the House of Commons goes into recess for over a month. As he did repeatedly last week, Johnson is forecast to lose, with opponents in the House of Commons teaming up to block the election that the prime minister craves. 

Monday’s events came as Downing Street — and Britain as a whole — reeled from a manic political week in which the prime minister lost his majority in Parliament, lost his attempt to ram through a no-deal departure and even lost the support of his own brother, a minister who quit because of “unresolvable tension” between family loyalty and the national interest. 

Another minister, Amber Rudd, followed him out the door over the weekend, saying she was protesting the purge of 21 Tory members of Parliament who had defied the prime minister.

Rumors of additional departures swirled on Monday. But for the moment, at least, no additional resignations appeared imminent. 

Downing Street confirmed Monday that Parliament would be suspended as of Monday night and would not come into session until mid-October, just before the end-of-month deadline for Britain to leave the E.U.

The suspension had originally appeared aimed at allowing Johnson a free hand to take Britain out by Halloween, with or without a deal.

But that plan backfired spectacularly, as did his backup plan to call for a new election

With his options limited, Johnson appears focused on talking up the possibility of a breakthrough in long-stalled talks with the E.U. 

Rudd, in her resignation, said she had seen little evidence that Johnson’s government was serious about trying to strike a new deal, and was instead focused on planning for a no-deal crash-out. 

But the prime minister insisted in Dublin Monday that there was still plenty of time to come to terms with his European counterparts before E.U. leaders meet for a summit Oct. 17-18.

“There is a way forward,” he said. “If we really focus, I think we can make a huge amount of progress.”

He declined, however, to specify new proposals. And Varadkar maintained that he had not seen any.

After their joint news conference, the pair met for a half-hour over breakfast and then for another half-hour with their delegations. A joint statement following the meeting said that “common ground was established in some areas although significant gaps remain.”

The question of how to handle the border between Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom, and the Republic of Ireland, which will remain a member of the E.U., has bedeviled Britain’s Brexit plans from the start. 

Both the British and Irish governments say they don’t want a hard border, complete with checkpoints and barriers, dividing the island. But the Irish, and the E.U., have insisted on a “backstop” that would in effect keep Britain in the E.U.’s customs union until a solution can be found that allows for two different trading systems to exist side-by-side.

Johnson has rejected such an arrangement, arguing it will keep Britain from striking deals with other countries, such as the United States, and reaping the benefits of life outside the E.U.

As Johnson and Varadkar spoke, dozens of people from the border region protested outside Leinster House, the seat of Ireland’s parliament. They said they want Johnson to visit the area to see for himself the impact that a disorganized British exit could have on an area that thrives on cross-border trade.

“No deal would be disastrous for the border community,” said Bernard Boyle, a 67-year-old accountant. “I want him to come and speak to the people in the border areas. Don’t be flying in and out of Dublin. Livelihoods are under threat.”

Witte reported from London.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/irelands-leader-does-johnson-no-favors-as-the-british-prime-minister-seeks-to-unblock-brexit/2019/09/09/de680eaa-d0e4-11e9-a620-0a91656d7db6_story.html

LIVE UPDATES

This is CNBC’s live blog tracking Tuesday’s developments on the war in Ukraine. See below for the latest updates. 

The European Union has agreed on a plan to block more than two-thirds of Russian oil imports as part of new punitive measures against the Kremlin.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the move would effectively cut around 90% of oil imports from Russia to the bloc by the end of the year.

The EU has also agreed on sanctions to cut Russia’s largest bank, Sberbank, from the SWIFT messaging system and to ban three more state-owned broadcasters.

Meanwhile, Russia has claimed it now controls one-third of the city of Sievierodonetsk as the Kremlin’s troops continue their offensive in the Donbas region.

Russian forces claim a third of Sievierodonetsk is now under their control

Russian forces claimed to have seized control of one-third of the city of Sievierodonetsk, as they continue their offensive in Ukraine’s Donbas region.

The Donbas refers to two eastern Ukrainian regions of Luhansk and Donetsk — a major strategic, political and economic target for the Kremlin.

“We can state it already that one-third of the city is under our control already,” Leonid Pasechnik, head of the Russian-backed Luhansk People’s Republic, told Russian state media agency Tass.

Pasechnik conceded that Russian forces had not been able to advance as quickly as hoped in the key eastern city, with fighting currently raging in an urban area.

— Sam Meredith

Zelenskyy says 32 media workers have been killed in the war

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says 32 media workers have been killed since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24.

Among them is Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff, a French journalist with the TV channel BFM TV, who suffered a fatal neck wound while riding in an armored evacuation vehicle that was shelled by Russian forces, Sky News reported.

“A little over a month ago, I gave an interview to this particular TV channel,” Zelenskyy said in his nightly address. “This was my first interview with the French media during a full-scale war.”

“My sincere condolences to Frédéric’s colleagues and family,” Zelenskyy said.

— Chelsea Ong

Oil prices rise after EU agrees to ban about 90% of Russian crude

Crude prices rose during Asia hours after EU leaders agreed to ban about 90% of Russian oil by the end of 2022.

The move would immediately affect 75% of Russian oil imports, says Charles Michel, president of the European Council.

The ban is part of the European Union’s sixth sanctions package on Russia since it invaded Ukraine.

“The European Council agrees that the sixth package of sanctions against Russia will cover crude oil, as well as petroleum products, delivered from Russia into Member States, with a temporary exception for crude oil delivered by pipeline,” according to a May 31 statement from the European Council.

That temporary exception covers the remaining Russian oil not yet banned, European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen said in a press conference.

— Weizhen Tan

Sanctioned Russian billionaire completes the sale of the British soccer team he owned

A British soccer team owned for 19 years by a sanctioned Russian-Israeli billionaire linked to Vladimir Putin has been sold.

A consortium led by Los Angeles Dodgers co-owner Todd Boehly has purchased the Chelsea soccer team from Roman Abramovich, the billionaire who was sanctioned by the British government over his ties to Putin following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in a £4.25 billion ($5.38 billion) deal.

Abramovich put the Chelsea team up for sale on March 2, a week after the invasion and a few days before the British government added his name to a list of sanctioned Russian oligarchs. Among other conditions, the sanctions barred the Chelsea team from signing new players or offering new contracts.

With the team now under new ownership, those restrictions will be lifted.

— John Rosevear

Read CNBC’s previous live coverage here:

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/05/31/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html

ADVERTENCIA: Contiene imágenes que pueden herir su sensibilidad.

Image copyright
EPA

Image caption

Muchos emigrantes intentan hacer el peligroso trayecto desde Bodrum en Turquía hasta la isla de Kos en Grecia.

Era un nuevo grupo de casi 30 sirios el que intentaba llegar a Grecia. Al menos 12 de ellos se ahogaron frente a las costas de Turquía cuando se hundió su pequeña embarcación.

La tragedia cobró mayor dimensión cuando empezaron a circular fotografías de una de las víctimas: un niño pequeño que yace boca abajo sobre la arena de la playa.

Es el más reciente costo de una crisis que ya ha cobrado innumerables vidas humanas.

La imagen, distribuida por una agencia de noticia de Turquía ha circulado en Twitter acompañada por el hashtag #KiyiyaVuranInsanlik (que en castellano se traduciría como “la humanidad que trajo la marea”).

Miles de migrantes han muerto este año intentando llegar a las costas de Europa.

La Guardia Costera de Turquía indicó que los migrantes habían partido en la mañana del miércoles de la península turca de Bodrum rumbo a la isla griega de Kos, pero las dos embarcaciones en las que viajaban se hundieron poco después de zarpar.

ADVERTENCIA: La imagen abajo puede herir su sensibilidad.

Image copyright
AP

Image caption

La imagen del cadáver del niño ahogado fue divulgada en una serie de fotografías de una agencia de noticias turca.

Doce cadáveres, incluyendo los de cinco niños, fueron recuperados. Se informó que otras 15 personas lograron sobrevivir, algunas de las cuales pudieron llegar a la orilla usando chalecos salvavidas.

La Guardia Costera continuaba trabajando en la búsqueda de tres personas que aún están desaparecidas.

Tragedia migratoria en progreso

La imagen del niño, vistiendo una camiseta roja y acostado boca abajo en la arena cerca de Bodrum, fue publicada poco después del suceso.

Se informó que el niño, de unos tres años de edad, respondía al nombre de Aylan. También que se ahogó junto hermano Galip, de cinco años, y su madre, Rihan. Su padre, Abdullah Kurdi, sobrevivió.

La BBC ha decidido publicar sólo una fotografía del niño, en la que aparece siendo cargado por un agente de la policía turca.

Sin embargo, varios medios de comunicación han publicado fotografías más explícitas del pequeño.

Lea también: El otro lado de la crisis migratoria europea: los miles de islandeses que ofrecen sus hogares

El diario británico The Independent afirmó que había decidido usar las imágenes en su página web porque “en medio de las palabras frecuentemente superficiales sobre la ‘actual crisis migratoria’ resulta muy fácil olvidar la situación desesperada que enfrentan muchos refugiados”.

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Getty

Image caption

Las historias de tragedias no detiene a los migrantes que siguen huyendo del conflicto en Siria.

Pese a las reacciones que la fotografía ha causado en internet, ha habido pocas declaraciones de los políticos en toda Europa.

Yvette Cooper, una de las aspirantes a liderar el Partido Laborista de Reino Unido, dijo que la imagen muestra que “no podemos seguir dando la espalda” a este tema.

Peligroso trayecto

“Cuando las madres están desesperadamente intentando evitar que sus bebés se ahoguen cuando sus botes se han volcado (…) Reino Unido necesita actuar”.

La agencia de noticias turca Dogan informó que el niño y el resto de los náufragos eran sirios procedentes de la asediada ciudad de Kobane que huyeron a Turquía el año pasado intentando escapar de las milicias de Estado Islámico.

Familiares de las víctimas confirmaron que se trata de ciudadanos sirios.

Unos 350.000 emigrantes han recorrido el peligroso trayecto para alcanzar las costas de Europa desde enero de este año, de acuerdo con datos divulgados el martes por la Organización Internacional de Migraciones (OIM).

En ese lapso, más de 2.600 emigrantes se han ahogado intentando cruzar el Mediterráneo, según la OIM.

A inicios de esta semana, el gobierno de Turquía aseguró que su Guardia Costera rescató a más de 42.000 emigrantes en el Mar Egeo durante los primeros cinco meses de 2015 y a más de 2.160 durante la última semana.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2015/09/150902_foto_menor_ahogado_inmigrante_sirio_polemica

When Heather Mack finally stepped into a federal courtroom Wednesday in Chicago’s Loop, her legs shackled and her eyes darting over her face mask, years of waiting finally ended.

Seven years of waiting ended for the loved ones of Mack’s mother, Sheila von Wiese-Mack, the Oak Park woman whose 2014 murder became international news fodder after her body was discovered in a suitcase outside the St. Regis Bali Resort.

Four years of waiting ended for U.S. prosecutors, who secretly secured the indictment of Mack and her former boyfriend, Tommy Schaefer, in 2017. The five-page document became public Wednesday as a flight carrying Mack neared O’Hare Airport.

The waiting even ended for Mack, 26, who now knows she is far from a free woman despite her release last week from an Indonesian prison. Rather, Mack ended her first day back in the United States since her mother’s death in the custody of the federal government, facing charges that carry a maximum sentence of life in prison.

Still, her arrest at O’Hare marks the start of a new chapter in Mack’s yearslong international drama — one that could take years more to play out and puts the welfare of Mack’s 6-year-old daughter, Stella, into question.

The charges became public after Mack’s lead defense attorney told the Chicago Sun-Times “it’s gonna be a war” if Mack were to be arrested. Another attorney pleaded not guilty on Mack’s behalf Wednesday.

Mack wore a tan turtle-neck sweater, black tights and white shoes, her hair in a ponytail, when she appeared in the 23rd-floor courtroom of U.S. District Judge Charles Norgle. She looked uncertain at times in what can be an intimidating federal courtroom. But she answered in a clear, strong voice when the judge asked for her name.

“Heather Mack, your honor,” she said.

Mack said little else during that proceeding. But von Wiese-Mack’s siblings, William Wiese and Debbi Curran, later released a statement calling the last seven years “incredibly long and stressful for us and our entire family.”

“We are forever thankful to all the FBI agents and the U.S. Justice Department officers who have spent endless hours finding and preserving evidence as well as searching for the truth in order to obtain meaningful justice for Sheila,” they wrote. “Every single one of them should be recognized because they all contributed to today’s arrest and indictments of Heather and Tommy.”

The Sun-Times reported the existence of U.S. investigation in August 2015, and Mack’s attorneys previously acknowledged a grand jury probe here. They even pointed to an “ongoing federal criminal proceeding” back in February 2017. The indictment against Mack and Schaefer would be filed under seal five months later, on July 26, 2017.

Mack and Schaefer, 28, each face two counts of conspiring to kill von Wiese-Mack overseas, and one obstruction of justice count. Schaefer remains imprisoned in Indonesia. Federal prosecutors have said von Wiese-Mack was bludgeoned to death with the metal handle of a fruit stand so that Mack, Schaefer and Schaefer’s cousin, Robert Bibbs, could enrich themselves with the proceeds of von Wiese-Mack’s $1.5 million estate.

Bibbs was prosecuted in Chicago’s federal court and sentenced to nine years in prison. He is due to be released in December 2024.

Thomas Anthony Durkin, Schaefer’s defense attorney, told the Sun-Times that, “having represented him since 2014, I was surprised to learn that the government indicted him in 2017, and I never learned of that until today.”

Court records show Mack and Schaefer traded text messages ranging from giddy to tense all the way up to the Aug. 12, 2014, murder. They called each other Bonnie and Clyde and used the phrase “saying hi” as code for the killing, records show.

They later took a loaded luggage cart to the resort’s entrance and placed a large suitcase and other items in the trunk of a taxi before reentering the resort and fleeing the property through another exit.

Von Wiese-Mack’s body was then found stuffed in the suitcase, and Mack and Schaefer were arrested the next day. Mack was pregnant with Schaefer’s daughter, Stella, at the time. She gave birth during the couple’s 2015 trial. Schaefer was sentenced to 18 years in prison overseas for beating von Wiese-Mack to death, and Mack was sentenced to 10 years for helping. She was released after serving seven years and two months.

Indonesian officials have asked that Mack be banned from the country for life.

Defense attorney Brian Claypool said arrangements had originally been made for Mack to travel to Los Angeles, but the FBI directed her to Chicago. Her anticipated arrival Wednesday at O’Hare led to a circus-like atmosphere. Dozens of reporters crowded around the arrival gate waiting for any sign of Mack and her daughter. They went away disappointed.

Kia Walker
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

Kia Walker, Schaefer’s mother, appeared there too. She said she last saw her granddaughter in Bali when she was born but has seen her only online in six years. Tears streamed down her face as she addressed the media, calling herself both “Stella’s voice” and her son’s.

“Please don’t judge my son quite yet,” she said. “You don’t know the half of it.”

She also said she plans to fight for custody of Stella.

“My granddaughter — she’s 6 years old,” Walker said. “She’s been in prison already. Not many 6-year-olds can say they’ve been to prison.”

Cook County Circuit Court records show a judge this week appointed Vanessa Favia as Stella’s guardian. Favia has previously served as an attorney for Mack and declined to comment through her secretary Wednesday.

Mack purportedly asked that Stella remain with her foster family overseas, but Indonesian officials refused, saying “minors must be accompanied by their mothers when their mothers are deported.”

Schaefer’s mother also appeared at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse to see Mack in person. She was among roughly 20 people in the wood-paneled courtroom during which the judge set a Nov. 10 detention hearing for Mack. But that also led to the first point of contention between prosecutors and Mack’s defense attorney.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Terry Kinney made note of the long history of police calls to the Mack home in Oak Park before von Wiese-Mack’s murder. Kinney said the reports mentioned psychological evaluations of Mack. He said he wanted to subpoena those evaluations and have them sent to his office.

Defense attorney Keith Spielfogel objected, telling Norgle, “I don’t want the government to see it first.”

“No doubt you don’t,” Norgle said.

Contributing: Associated Press

Not displaying properly? Read the indictment here.

Contributing: Associated Press

Source Article from https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/2021/11/3/22761085/heather-mack-returns-chicago-ohare-fbi-charged-conspiracy